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    Sylvia's Marriage


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      The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sylvia's Marriage, by Upton Sinclair

      (#15 in our series by Upton Sinclair)

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      Title: Sylvia's Marriage

      Author: Upton Sinclair

      Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5807]

      [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]

      [This file was first posted on September 4, 2002]

      Edition: 10

      Language: English

      Character set encoding: ASCII

      *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, SYLVIA'S MARRIAGE ***

      This eBook was produced by Charles Aldarondo and the Online Distributed

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      SYLVIA'S MARRIAGE

      SOME PRESS NOTICES

      "The importance of the theme cannot be doubted, and no one hitherto

      ignorant of the ravages of the evil and therefore, by implication,

      in need of being convinced can refuse general agreement with Mr.

      Sinclair upon the question as he argues it. The character that

      matters most is very much alive and most entertaining."--_The Times._

      "Very severe and courageous. It would, indeed, be difficult to deny

      or extenuate the appalling truth of Mr. Sinclair's indictment."--

      _The Nation._

      "There is not a man nor a grown woman who would not be better for

      reading Sylvia's Marriage."--_The Globe_

      "Those who found Sylvia charming on her first appearance will find

      her as beautiful and fascinating as ever."--_The Pall Mall.

      "A novel that frankly is devoted to the illustration of the dangers

      that society runs through the marriage of unsound men with

      unsuspecting women. The time has gone by when any objection was

      likely to be taken to a perfectly clean discussion of a nasty

      subject."--_T.P.'s Weekly._

      SYLVIA'S MARRIAGE

      A NOVEL

      BY

      UPTON SINCLAIR

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

      LONDON

      CONTENTS

      BOOK I SYLVIA AS WIFE

      BOOK II SYLVIA AS MOTHER

      BOOK III SYLVIA AS REBEL

      SYLVIA'S MARRIAGE

      BOOK I

      SYLVIA AS WIFE

      1. I am telling the story of Sylvia Castleman. I should prefer to

      tell it without mention of myself; but it was written in the book of

      fate that I should be a decisive factor in her life, and so her

      story pre-supposes mine. I imagine the impatience of a reader, who

      is promised a heroine out of a romantic and picturesque "society"

      world, and finds himself beginning with the autobiography of a

      farmer's wife on a solitary homestead in Manitoba. But then I

      remember that Sylvia found me interesting. Putting myself in her

      place, remembering her eager questions and her exclamations, I am

      able to see myself as a heroine of fiction.

      I was to Sylvia a new and miraculous thing, a self-made woman. I

      must have been the first "common" person she had ever known

      intimately. She had seen us afar off, and wondered vaguely about us,

      consoling herself with the reflection that we probably did not know

      enough to be unhappy over our sad lot in life. But here I was,

      actually a soul like herself; and it happened that I knew more than

      she did, and of things she desperately needed to know. So all the

      luxury, power and prestige that had been given to Sylvia Castleman

      seemed as nothing beside Mary Abbott, with her modern attitude and

      her common-sense.

      My girlhood was spent upon a farm in Iowa. My father had eight

      children, and he drank. Sometimes he struck me; and so it came about

      that at the age of seventeen I ran away with a boy of twenty who

      worked upon a neighbour's farm. I wanted a home of my own, and Tom

      had some money saved up. We journeyed to Manitoba, and took out a

      homestead, where I spent the next twenty years of my life in a

      hand-to-hand struggle with Nature which seemed simply incredible to

      Sylvia when I told her of it.

      The man I married turned out to be a petty tyrant. In the first five

      years of our life he succeeded in killing the love I had for him;

      but meantime I had borne him three children, and there was nothing

      to do but make the best of my bargain. I became to outward view a

      beaten drudge; yet it was the truth that never for an hour did I

      give up. When I lost what would have been my fourth child, and the

      doctor told me that I could never have another, I took this for my

      charter of freedom, and made up my mind to my course; I would raise

      the children I had, and grow up with them, and move out into life

      when they did.

      This was when I was working eighteen hours a day, more than half of

      it by lamp-light, in the darkness of our Northern winters. When the

      accident came, I had been doing the cooking for half a dozen men,

      who were getting in the wheat upon which our future depended. I fell

      in my tracks, and lost my child; yet I sat still and white while the

      men ate supper, and afterwards I washed up the dishes. Such was my

      life in those days; and I can see before me the face of horror with

      which Sylvia listened to the story. But these things are common in

      the experience of women who live upon pioneer farms, and toil as the

      slave-woman has toiled since civilization began.

      We won out, and my husband made money. I centred my energies upon

      getting school-time for my children; and because I had resolved that

      they should not grow ahead of me, I sat up at night, and studied

      their books. When the oldest boy was ready for high-school, we moved

      to a town, where my husband had bought a granary business. By that

      time I had become a physical wreck, with a list of ailments too

      painful to describe. But I still had my craving for knowledge, and

      my illness was my salvation, in a way--it got me a hired girl, and

      time to patronize the free library.

      I had never had any sort of superstition or prejudice, and when I

      got into the world of books, I began quickly to find my way. I

      travelled into by-paths, of course; I got Christian Science badly,

      and New Thought in a mil
    d attack. I still have in my mind what the

      sober reader would doubtless consider queer kinks; for instance, I

      still practice "mental healing," in a form, and I don't always tell

      my secret thoughts about Theosophy and Spiritualism. But almost at

      once I worked myself out of the religion I had been taught, and away

      from my husband's politics, and the drugs of my doctors. One of the

      first subjects I read about was health; I came upon a book on

      fasting, and went away upon a visit and tried it, and came back home

      a new woman, with a new life before me.

      In all of these matters my husband fought me at every step. He

      wished to rule, not merely my body, but my mind, and it seemed as if

      every new thing that I learned was an additional affront to him. I

      don't think I was rendered disagreeable by my culture; my only

      obstinacy was in maintaining the right of the children to do their

      own thinking. But during this time my husband was making money, and

      filling his life with that. He remained in his every idea the

      money-man, an active and bitter leader of the forces of greed in our

      community; and when my studies took me to the inevitable end, and I

      joined the local of the Socialist party in our town, it was to him

      like a blow in the face. He never got over it, and I think that if

      the children had not been on my side, he would have claimed the

      Englishman's privilege of beating me with a stick not thicker than

      his thumb. As it was, he retired into a sullen hypochondria, which

      was so pitiful that in the end I came to regard him as not

      responsible.

      I went to a college town with my three children, and when they were

      graduated, having meantime made sure that I could never do anything

      but torment my husband, I set about getting a divorce. I had helped

      to lay the foundation of his fortune, cementing it with my blood, I

      might say, and I could fairly have laid claim to half what he had

      brought from the farm; but my horror of the parasitic woman had

      come to be such that rather than even seem to be one, I gave up

      everything, and went out into the world at the age of forty-five to

      earn my own living. My children soon married, and I would not be a

      burden to them; so I came East for a while, and settled down quite

      unexpectedly into a place as a field-worker for a child-labour

      committee.

      You may think that a woman so situated would not have been apt to

      meet Mrs. Douglas van Tuiver, _n�e_ Castleman, and to be chosen for

      her bosom friend; but that would only be because you do not know the

      modern world. We have managed to get upon the consciences of the

      rich, and they invite us to attend their tea-parties and disturb

      their peace of mind. And then, too, I had a peculiar hold upon

      Sylvia; when I met her I possessed the key to the great mystery of

      her life. How that had come about is a story in itself, the thing I

      have next to tell.

      2. It happened that my arrival in New York from the far West

      coincided with Sylvia's from the far South; and that both fell at a

      time when there were no wars or earthquakes or football games to

      compete for the front page of the newspapers. So everybody was

      talking about the prospective wedding. The fact that the Southern

      belle had caught the biggest prize among the city's young

      millionaires was enough to establish precedence with the city's

      subservient newspapers, which had proceeded to robe the grave and

      punctilious figure of the bridegroom in the garments of King

      Cophetua. The fact that the bride's father was the richest man in

      his own section did not interfere with this--for how could

      metropolitan editors be expected to have heard of the glories of

      Castleman Hall, or to imagine that there existed a section of

      America so self-absorbed that its local favourite would not feel

      herself exalted in becoming Mrs. Douglas van Tuiver?

      What the editors knew about Castleman Hall was that they wired for

      pictures, and a man was sent from the nearest city to "snap" this

      unknown beauty; whereupon her father chased the presumptuous

      photographer and smashed his camera with a cane. So, of course, when

      Sylvia stepped out of the train in New York, there was a whole

      battery of cameras awaiting her, and all the city beheld her image

      the next day.

      The beginning of my interest in this "belle" from far South was when

      I picked up the paper at my breakfast table, and found her gazing at

      me, with the wide-open, innocent eyes of a child; a child who had

      come from some fairer, more gracious world, and brought the memory

      of it with her, trailing her clouds of glory. She had stepped from

      the train into the confusion of the roaring city, and she stood,

      startled and frightened, yet, I thought, having no more real idea of

      its wickedness and horror than a babe in arms. I read her soul in

      that heavenly countenance, and sat looking at it, enraptured, dumb.

      There must have been thousands, even in that metropolis of Mammon,

      who loved her from that picture, and whispered a prayer for her

      happiness.

      I can hear her laugh as I write this. For she would have it that I

      was only one more of her infatuated lovers, and that her clouds of

      glory were purely stage illusion. She knew exactly what she was

      doing with those wide-open, innocent eyes! Had not old Lady Dee,

      most cynical of worldlings, taught her how to use them when she was

      a child in pig-tails? To be sure she had been scared when she

      stepped off the train, and strange men had shoved cameras under her

      nose. It was almost as bad as being assassinated! But as to her

      heavenly soul--alas, for the blindness of men, and of sentimental

      old women, who could believe in a modern "society" girl!

      I had supposed that I was an emancipated woman when I came to New

      York. But one who has renounced the world, the flesh and the devil,

      knowing them only from pictures in magazines and Sunday supplements;

      such a one may find that he has still some need of fasting and

      praying. The particular temptation which overcame me was this

      picture of the bride-to-be. I wanted to see her, and I went and

      stood for hours in a crowd of curious women, and saw the wedding

      party enter the great Fifth Avenue Church, and discovered that my

      Sylvia's hair was golden, and her eyes a strange and wonderful

      red-brown. And this was the moment that fate had chosen to throw

      Claire Lepage into my arms, and give me the key to the future of

      Sylvia's life.

      3. I am uncertain how much I should tell about Claire Lepage. It is

      a story which is popular in a certain sort of novel, but I have no

      wish for that easy success. Towards Claire herself I had no trace of

      the conventional attitude, whether of contempt or of curiosity. She

      was to me the product of a social system, of the great New Nineveh

      which I was investigating. And later on, when I knew her, she was a

      weak sister whom I tried to help.

      It happened that I knew much more about such matters than the

      average woman--owing to a tragedy in my life. When I was about

    &
    nbsp; twenty-five years old, my brother-in-law had moved his family to our

      part of the world, and one of his boys had become very dear to me.

      This boy later on had got into trouble, and rather than tell anyone

      about it, had shot himself. So my eyes had been opened to things

      that are usually hidden from my sex; for the sake of my own sons, I

      had set out to study the underground ways of the male creature. I

      developed the curious custom of digging out every man I met, and

      making him lay bare his inmost life to me; so you may understand

      that it was no ordinary pair of woman's arms into which Claire

      Lepage was thrown.

      At first I attributed her vices to her environment, but soon I

      realized that this was a mistake; the women of her world do not as a

      rule go to pieces. Many of them I met were free and independent

      women, one or two of them intellectual and worth knowing. For the

      most part such women marry well, in the worldly sense, and live as

      contented lives as the average lady who secures her life-contract at

      the outset. If you had met Claire at an earlier period of her

      career, and if she had been concerned to impress you, you might have

      thought her a charming hostess. She had come of good family, and

      been educated in a convent--much better educated than many society

      girls in America. She spoke English as well as she did French, and

      she had read some poetry, and could use the language of idealism

      whenever necessary. She had even a certain religious streak, and

      could voice the most generous sentiments, and really believe that

      she believed them. So it might have been some time before you

      discovered the springs of her weakness.

      In the beginning I blamed van Tuiver; but in the end I concluded

      that for most of her troubles she had herself to thank--or perhaps

      the ancestors who had begotten her. She could talk more nobly and

      act more abjectly than any other woman I have ever known. She wanted

      pleasant sensations, and she expected life to furnish them

      continuously. Instinctively she studied the psychology of the person

      she was dealing with, and chose a reason which would impress that

      person.

      At this time, you understand, I knew nothing about Sylvia Castleman

      or her fianc�, except what the public knew. But now I got an inside

      view--and what a view! I had read some reference to Douglas van

      Tuiver's Harvard career: how he had met the peerless Southern

      beauty, and had given up college and pursued her to her home. I had

      pictured the wooing in the rosy lights of romance, with all the

      glamour of worldly greatness. But now, suddenly, what a glimpse into

      the soul of the princely lover! "He had a good scare, let me tell

      you," said Claire. "He never knew what I was going to do from one

      minute to the next."

      "Did he see you in the crowd before the church door?" I inquired.

      "No," she replied, "but he thought of me, I can promise you."

      "He knew you were coming?"

      She answered, "I told him I had got an admission card, just to make

      sure he'd keep me in mind!"

      4. I did not have to hear much more of Claire's story before making

      up my mind that the wealthiest and most fashionable of New York's

      young bachelors was a rather self-centred person. He had fallen

      desperately in love with the peerless Southern beauty, and when she

      had refused to have anything to do with him, he had come back to the

      other woman for consolation, and had compelled her to pretend to

      sympathize with his agonies of soul. And this when he knew that she

      loved him with the intensity of a jealous nature.

      Claire had her own view of Sylvia Castleman, a view for which I

      naturally made due reservations. Sylvia was a schemer, who had known

      from the first what she wanted, and had played her part with

     

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