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Upton Sinclair: The Metropolis

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Upton Sinclair The Metropolis

The Metropolis: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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CORNELL Jn UNIVERSITY LIBRARY Digitized by Microsoft Cornell - фото 1

^^ ^ CORNELL

^Jn UNIVERSITY

^^ LIBRARY

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Cornell Unlverstty Library PS 3537.I37M5

The metropolis,

Digitized by Microsoft This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in - фото 2

Digitized by Microsoft®

This book was digitized by Microsoft Corporation in

cooperation with Corneii University Libraries, 2007.

You may use and print this copy in iimited quantity

for your personai purposes, but may not distribute or

provide access to it (or modified or partiai versions of it)

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THE METEOPOLIS

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BY THE SAME AUTHOR

THE INDUSTRIAL REPUBLIC

THE JUNGLE

MANASSAS

THE OVERMAN

PRINCE HAGEN

KING MIDAS

THE JOURNAL OF ARTHUR STIRLING

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THE METROPOLIS

BY

UPTON SINCLAIR

AUTHOR OF "THE JUNGLE," "THE INDUSTRIAL REPUBLIC," ETC.

NEW YORK

MOFFAT, YARD & COMPANY

1908

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COPTEIOHT, 1907, BY

THE PHILLIPS PUBLISHING COMPANY.

COPYEIGHT, 1908, BY

UPTON SINCLAIR.

Published March, 1908.

All rights reserved,

including that of translation into foreign languages,

including the Scandinavian.

V

n'^.

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TO MAXIM GORKI ^ COMRADE

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The Metropolis - изображение 3

A Cornell University y Library

The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library.

There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text.

http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924021691112

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CHAPTER I

RETURN at ten-thirty," the General said to his chauffeur, and then they entered the corridor of the hotel.

Montague gazed about him, and found himself trembling just a little with anticipation. It was not the magnificence of the place. The quiet uptown hotel would have seemed magnificent to him, fresh as he was from the country; but he did not see the marble columns and the gilded carvings — he was thinking of the men he was to meet. It seemed too much to crowd into one day — first the vision of the whirling, seething city, the centre of all his hopes of the future; and then, at night, this meeting, overwhelming him with the crowded memories of everything that he held precious in the past.

There were groups of men in faded uniforms standing about in the corridors. General Prentice bowed here and there as they went to the rear and took the elevator to the reception rooms. In the doorway they passed a stout little man with stubby white mustaches, and the General stopped, exclaiming, "Hello, Major!" Then he added: " Let me introduce Mr. Allan Montague. Montague, this is Major Thorne."

A look of sudden interest flashed across the Major's face. "General Montague's son.?" he cried. And then he seized the other's hand in

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both of his, exclaiming, "My boy! my boy! I'm glad to see you !"

Now Montague was no boy — he was a man of thirty, and rather sedate in his appearance and manner; there was enough in his six feet one to have made two of the round and rubicund little Major. And yet it seemed to him quite proper that the other should address him so. He was back in his boyhood to-night — he was a boy whenever anyone mentioned the name of Major Thome.

"Perhaps you have heard your father speak of me.''" asked the Major, eagerly; and Montague answered, "A thousand times."

He was tempted to add that the vision that rose before him was of a stout gentleman hanging in a grape-vine, while a whole battery of artillery made him their target.

Perhaps it was irreverent, but that was what Montague had always thought of, ever since he had first laughed over the tale his father told. It had happened one January afternoon in the Wilderness, during the terrible battle of Chan-cellorsville, when Montague's father had been a rising young staif-ofEcer, and it had fallen to his lot to carry to Major Thorne what was surely the most terrifying order that ever a cavalry officer received. It was in the crisis of the conflict, when the Army of the Potomac was reeling before the onslaught of Stonewall Jackson's columns. There was no one to stop them — and yet they must be stopped, for the whole right wing of the army was going. So that cavalry regiment had charged full tilt through the thickets.

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and into a solid wall of infantry and artillery. The crash of their volley was blinding — men and horses were fairly shot to fragments; and the Major's horse, with its lower jaw torn off, had plunged madly away and left its rider hanging in the aforementioned grape-vine. After he had kicked himself loose, it was to find himself in an arena where pain-maddened horses and frenzied men raced about amid a rain of minie-balls and canister. And in this inferno the gallant Major had captured a horse, and rallied the remains of his shattered command, and held the line until help came — and then helped to hold it, all through the afternoon and the twilight and the night, against charge after charge. — And now to stand and gaze at this stout and red-nosed little personage, and realise that these mighty deeds had been his!

Then, even while Montague was returning his hand-clasp and telling him of his pleasure, the Major's eye caught someone across the room, and he called eagerly, " Colonel Anderson! Colonel Anderson!"

And this was the heroic Jack Anderson! "Parson" Anderson, the men had called him, because he always prayed before everything he did. Prayers at each mess, — a prayer-meeting in the evening, — and then rumour said the Colonel prayed on while his men slept. With his battery of artillery trained to perfection under three years of divine guidance, the gallant Colonel had stood in the line of battle at Cold Harbor — name of frightful memory! — and when the enemy had swarmed out of their intrenchments and swept

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back the whole Hne just beyond him, his battery had stood hke a cape in a storm-beaten ocean, attacked on two sides at once; and for the half hour that elapsed before infantry support came up, the Colonel had ridden slowly up and down his line, repeating in calm and godly accents, "Give 'em hell, boys — give 'em hell!"—The Colonel's hand trembled now as he held it out, and his voice was shrill and cracked as he told what pleasure it gave him to meet General Montague s son.

Why have we never seen you before ?" asked Major Thorne. Montague replied that he had spent all his life in Mississippi — his father having married a Southern woman after the war. Once every year the General had come to New York to attend the reunion of the Loyal Legion of the state; but someone had had to stay at home with his mother, Montague explained.

There were perhaps a hundred men in the room, and he was passed about from group to group. Many of them had known his father intimately. It seemed almost uncanny to him to meet them in the body; to find them old and feeble, white-haired and wrinkled. As they lived in the chambers of his memory, they were in their mighty youth — heroes, transfigured and radiant, not subject to the power of time.

Life on the big plantation had been a lonely one, especially for a Southern-born man who had fought in the Union army. General Montague had been a person of quiet tastes, and his greatest pleasure had been to sit with his two boys on his knees and "fight his battles o'er again." He

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