Sister Carrie By Theodore Dreiser Book Summary
In August, 1889, Caroline Meeber
boards the train at her family home in Columbia City and travels to Chicago.
Filled with fears, tears, and regrets, she is nonetheless determined to make
her way in the big city.
On the long train ride she meets a
handsome young traveling salesman
named Charles Drouet. Shy at first, she is
warmed and made confident by Drouet's easy manner and flashy clothes. He seems
to her the epitome of wealth and influence. When the train arrives in Chicago,
she and Drouet make plans to meet again the following week so that he can show
her the sights of the city.
Carrie is met at the station by her
sister Minnie Hanson. The two girls travel to the flat where Minnie lives with
her husband Sven and their baby. The couple plan to have Carrie live with them
while she works in the city. It is thought that Carrie will pay for her room
and board in order to help the Hansons reduce expenses.
Carrie is thrilled by the prospect
of finding work in Chicago. She imagines herself part of the great swirl of
activity in the city. Her hopes are somewhat dampened when she finally obtains
a job in a shoe factory at four and a half dollars a week.
Carrie realizes that she must
abandon some of her more ambitious and fantastic plans. The Hansons disapprove
of her wish to go to the theater. Minnie points out to Carrie that after paying
four dollars for room and board, she will hardly have enough money left for
carfare. Because the flat is so small, Carrie is unable to invite Drouet to
visit.
As the cold winter sets in, Carrie
finds that it is impossible to keep up the hard work at the factory. Finally,
the combination of long hours, hard work, and inadequate clothing causes Carrie
to become ill and she loses her job. The Hansons talk of sending her back to
Columbia City, but she is determined to remain in Chicago.
One day as she wanders about
downtown looking for a new job, she meets Drouet on the street. He buys her a
splendid meal and "lends" her twenty dollars to buy decent clothes.
Eventually he persuades Carrie to leave the Hansons and take a room of her own,
offering to support her until she is settled. Soon Carrie and Drouet are living
together in a cozy apartment. As time passes, Carrie perceives that Drouet is
not nearly such an ideal figure as she had first imagined. He is egotistical and
insensitive, but he is also kind and generous, and so she accepts her lot
graciously. Drouet takes it upon himself to "educate" the untutored
girl in the ways of society, teaching her to Aress and behave according to
fashion.
One evening the young couple are
visited by George Hurstwood, a friend of Drouet's, the manager of a "way
up, truly swell saloon." He is mature and attractive; he finds Carrie
naive and pretty. The two are struck by an instantaneous fascination for each
other and meet together frequently whenever the salesman is out of town.
Without Carrie's knowledge, Drouet
enlists her talents as an actress in an amateur performance. To the surprise of
Carrie, as well as her two admirers, the girl is a brilliant success. The next
day Hurstwood confesses his love to Carrie and she responds favorably.
Eventually Drouet discovers that
Carrie and Hurstwood have been seeing a great deal of each other and he moves
out of the flat in order to frighten her. Hurstwood's wife, meanwhile, a shrewd
and selfish woman, accuses Hurstwood of having an affair and initiates a
divorce action against him.
One night when he stays late in his
office to finish some paperwork, Hurstwood discovers that the safe has been
left unlocked with over ten thousand dollars in it. While he is debating with
himself whether to take the money, the door of the safe slams shut as he holds
the entire amount in his hands. He is frightened and decides to flee. He rushes
to Carrie's flat, tells her that Drouet has been injured and wishes to see her
and whisks her away with him on a train to Canada.
Carrie is repelled by Hurstwood now,
for she has learned from Drouet that he is married. Hurstwood argues that he
has left his wife in order to be with Carrie. She believes him and agrees to
remain with him if he will marry her.
In Canada, Hurstwood is tracked down
by a private detective and returns most of the stolen money on the promise that
his employers will not prosecute. The couple are married in a hasty ceremony,
although the marriage is not valid.
The couple continue on to New York,
where they find a comfortable apartment. Hurstwood is forced to invest the
little money he has retained in a second-rate saloon. He and Carrie settle down
to a routine existence in New York, never going out or meeting anyone.
Carrie strikes up a friendship with
her neighbor, Mrs. Vance, a young lady of fine manners and expensive taste.
Through the influence of Mrs. Vance and her cousin Bob Ames, Carrie begins to
feel dissatisfied with being an ordinary housewife.
Hurstwood's business venture
terminates and he finds himself unable to find employment. After a while he
gives up searching and simply settles back to watch his meager savings dwindle.
He loses his pride and dignity. He hardly ever leaves the house. Conditions become
so difficult that Carrie decides to find work. She eventually finds a part as a
chorus girl in a Broadway opera. Her fortunes rise steadily after that. Carrie
decides to leave Hurstwood on his own, for he has become a deadweight to her.
In a few years Carrie gains fame and
fortune as a stage comedienne. Hurstwood continues to decline until he becomes
a Bowery tramp and finally commits suicide.
At the time of Hurstwood's suicide,
Carrie has gained all that she had originally hoped for: wealth, finery, and
prestige. Nevertheless she remains unsatisfied, always pondering the vagaries
of fortune that make her desire something new and indefinable. It is clear that
she will never gain the happiness she dreams of.
Sister Carrie About Sister Carrie
Sister Carrie, Dreiser's first novel, was presented
to a reading public not yet ready for its stark realism and pessimistic view of
life. The manuscript had already been refused by two publishers when Frank
Norris, author of the powerful naturalistic novel McTeague, and also an
editor for Doubleday, Page and Company, read the manuscript and proclaimed it
to be one of the best novels he had ever read. Walter Page, a partner in the
firm, joined Norris in his praise of Sister Carrie and signed an agreement
with Dreiser to publish it. Then, Frank Doubleday, the senior partner, upon
returning from Europe, read the proof sheets and stopped publication.
It was not only Doubleday's dislike of the novel, but also
his business acumen which prompted him to halt publication. He knew that any
novel full of such vulgarity and moral laxity would not sell. Dreiser insisted
that the publisher abide by the contract, and so a thousand copies were run off
and bound. The book was displayed in the wholesale showroom and listed in the
company's catalog. Through Norris' intervention, over four hundred copies were
sent out to reviewers. When orders came in they were promptly filled. There is
no foundation to Dreiser's charge that it was "suppressed" or
"buried away in a cellar." Nevertheless, it is fair to say that the
book, through Doubleday's influence, received the very minimum of publicity.
Favorable reviews were very few. Most reviewers were
violently adverse and insulting. Sister Carrie was labeled immoral and
vulgar. The book-purchasing public had no quarrel with the reviewers. Dreiser
had much faith both in the book and the public. He bought the printing plates
of his own novel and had it republished in successively larger editions in 1907,
1908, 1911, and 1932. Dreiser had finally triumphed over the genteel literary
tradition.
Judged by the stiff-necked moral and esthetic standards of
1900, Sister Carrie was a shocking book. In McTeague, the most
daring novel of the times, lust and vice were punished in the end to furnish
the reader with a moral lesson. Carrie, far from being punished, involves
herself compromisingly with two men and winds up in luxury, a successful
actress, "with glory ringing in her ears" as she collects an enormous
salary — a denouement that could be interpreted as advocating an unchaste life.
In addition to this, the novel may have offended public
taste for any of the following reasons: It presented uneducated people who
spoke ungrammatically and colloquially; it was vulgar. Dreiser compounds his
offenses by showing sympathy for such vulgar characters in their sordid
entanglements. All of its characters were "adrift on a storm sea,"
unable to steer any course, able only to grasp whatever comfort was washed
their way. This violated the current moral doctrine of progress and free will,
which taught that every man could choose his own ways of good or evil. The
pessimism of Sister Carrie offended the contemporary taste for
sweetness.
Walter Page wrote to Dreiser that, although his
workmanship was "excellent," his choice of characters was
"unfortunate." He feared that Sister Carrie would corrupt the
public.
Sister Carrie was in fact a book so far ahead of
its time that it is as alive and valid today as when it was written. Beyond
that, it allows the present-day reader to enter into the consciousness of an
era that is no more. Dreiser's talent lies in his ability to present life as he
saw it, raw and ungrammatical, unpolished and tragic. Dreiser saw his role as a
craftsman of detail, not of words or style.
Reminiscing over the novel he once wrote: "It is not
intended as a piece of literary craftsmanship, but as a picture of conditions
done as simple and effectively as the English language will permit." (See
notes on Style.) It is through an overwhelming mass of detail — of clothing,
manners, speech, actual news items — that Dreiser creates a mosaic of the
experience of its two central characters in a specific time and place. Without
such a range of detail, Sister Carrie would be simply another
sentimental tale. Details are "things," and in Dreiser's brand of
materialism, "things" determine the fortunes of men and women. It is
through details that the reader recognizes the ironic rise and fall of
Dreiser's characters.
The central theme of Sister Carrie is the effect of
the misguided and misdirected American dream of success. The novel traces the
separate but nonetheless individual stories of its characters in their efforts
to realize the fabulous American dream. Carrie, seeking happiness and rising to
stardom, reaches the verge of discovering personal fulfillment is an illusory
dream. Money, clothes, and success fail to provide the happiness that they
promise, but the darkest part of Carrie's tragedy is that she fails to
understand this completely. Hurstwood, once having fallen from the "walled
city" of the wealthy and influential, resigns himself too readily to
failure and defeat. He also fails to recognize the shortcomings of a society
whose values are based upon material things. Neither Carrie nor Hurstwood ever
denies the values of the society that makes money its god. Charles Drouet, the
"drummer," although he is relegated to the background midway through
the novel, represents another important aspect of Dreiser's portrait. Drouet
unconsciously assumes all the values of his day without a trace of rebellion.
Thus, the figure of Drouet completes the picture by adding the tragedy of
ignorance to Hurstwood's tragedy of failure and Carrie's tragedy of success.
In Sister Carrie Dreiser takes his central
characters from the three classes of American economic life. He shows how they
are harmed and corrupted by the fraudulent claims of the spurious American
dream. The blame falls on the society that compels its individuals to become
hideous and grotesque parodies of themselves.
Character List
Caroline (Carrie) Meeber A naive young girl who
goes to Chicago to seek her fortune and succumbs to the "cosmopolitan
standard of virtue."
Charles Drouet A "drummer," or traveling
salesman, who rescues Carrie from starvation and makes her his mistress.
Minnie Hanson Carrie's married elder sister, with
whom she stays when she first arrives in Chicago.
Sven Hanson Minnie's husband, severe and practical.
George Hurstwood A friend of Drouet's who steals a
great deal of money from his employers and virtually kidnaps Carrie. Once a
pillar of society, he is later struck low by fortune.
Julia Hurstwood George Hurstwood's wife is a
jealous, self-centered woman who is largely responsible for his ruin.
Jessica Hurstwood The Hurstwoods' snobbish,
supercilious daughter is sixteen years old as the novel begins.
George Hurstwood, Jr. The Hurstwoods' son is
nineteen at the beginning of the story. He is independent and self-important.
Mrs. Frank Hale An attractive thirty-five-year-old
woman who has an apartment in the 29 Ogden Place building where Carrie lives
with Drouet. Mrs. Hale stimulates Carrie's craving for wealth and elegance. Her
husband is manager of the Standard theater.
Harry Quincel Member of the Custer Lodge of the
Elks who supervises the amateur performance of Augustin Daly's "Under the
Gaslight."
Mr. Millice An imperious young man who directs the
amateur production of "Under the Gaslight" at Avery Hall.
Mrs. Morgan A young woman who plays the part of
Pearl in "Under the Gaslight".
Mr. Bamberger Member of the original cast of
"Under the Gaslight." He is replaced in the part of Ray by Patton, a
"loafing professional."
Mr. Kenny A Chicago stockbroker whom Hurstwood
encounters in Montreal.
Shaughnessy Hurstwood's partner in the Warren
Street bar in New York.
Mrs. Vance A young woman who sets Carrie's
standards of taste in New York.
Bob Ames Cousin to Mrs. Vance; a studious young man
whose serious view of life gives Carrie cause to question her own values.
Mr. Cargill Chicago stable-owner who meets
Hurstwood by chance in New York.
Lola Osborne A young actress; Carrie's roommate and
confidante.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 1
Summary
Caroline Meeber, an
eighteen-year-old innocent, boards the train for her first trip to Chicago from
her small home town in Wisconsin. Carrying all her worldly belongings, an
imitation alligator satchel, a yellow purse, and four dollars in cash, she
looks forward to Chicago with mixed timidity and hope, ignorance and youthful
expectancy. As the train rushes out of town, all the bonds which tie her to
childhood are irrevocably broken. Carrie is ignorant of the traps and disasters
that lie in wait for her in the big city. It is certain that without someone to
guide and counsel her she will fall prey to the cosmopolitan morality.
Aboard the train her prettiness and
naiveté attract the attention of a bold and dapper traveling salesman named
Charles Drouet. Although her maidenly reserve and sense of propriety forestall
immediate familiarity with Drouet, she is gradually won over by the drummer's
slangy charm. Because of the seeming shabbiness of her dress and her worn
shoes, Carrie feels reticent and socially inferior to Drouet in his dashing
attire. Soon, however, she becomes fascinated with Drouet's elegant appearance.
In the lengthy conversation which ensues, Drouet flatters Carrie and finally
obtains her Chicago address, making a tentative date to meet her again the
following week.
As the train approaches the great
city, Carrie sees the many telegraph poles set out in the still undeveloped
prairie and solitary houses, "lone outposts of the approaching army of
homes." Carrie is nearly transfixed by the sight of the city as they enter.
When the train stops, she experiences a moment of terror and feels choked for
breath so far away from Columbia City, her old home.
Once they are off the train, Drouet
gallantly waits in the background for Carrie's sister Minnie to find her, and
when she does, he departs with a smile that only Carrie sees. When Drouet
disappears Carrie feels his absence greatly; she is "a lone figure in a
tossing, thoughtless sea."
Analysis
In any novel, and particularly in Sister
Carrie, the first chapter is extremely important. In it the author
introduces his theme and plot through foreshadowing, careful arrangement of
details, and introductory characterization. He begins the careful work of
describing the setting. He introduces himself as the narrator of the story. Dreiser's
attention to details is everywhere evident, from the description of Drouet's
attire to the depiction of the outskirts of Chicago. Dreiser begins his story
in such a way that Carrie herself is as unfamiliar with each situation as the
reader is. Next to nothing is told of her life before leaving Columbia City,
except for a few details that reveal how pedestrian it must have been.
By shifting between exposition and
dramatic techniques, Dreiser succeeds in providing the reader with full
information about Carrie without sacrificing any of the immediacy of her new
venture. By carefully describing Carrie externally and internally, he manages
to make the reader sympathetic as well as intimate with her. Thus, in a single
paragraph it is revealed that Carrie "was possessed of a mind rudimentary
in its power of observation and analysis" and also that she "could
scarcely toss her head gracefully."
In dramatizing much of the first
meeting of Carrie and Drouet, that is, by presenting it largely in dialog,
Dreiser permits the Carrie he has already described to show herself in action.
In addition to expository and dramatic techniques, part of Dreiser's method
consists in making direct addresses to the reader, thus providing a thematic
account of the action. By interpreting explicitly some of the story, Dreiser
prepares the reader for interpreting other parts for himself. "When a girl
leaves her home at eighteen, she does one of two things. Either she falls into
saving hands and becomes better, or she rapidly assumes the cosmopolitan
standard of virtue and becomes worse." When Carrie therefore finally
accepts Drouet's bold overtures, the reader realizes that she is rapidly
assuming "the cosmopolitan standard" and that her virtue is likely to
suffer.
Carrie's keen interest in attractive
clothing and the deficiency of her own clothing is an integral part of the
future outcome of the novel. Much of Carrie's story is presented in terms of
the clothing she acquires.
Foreshadowing occurs throughout the
chapter; the title of the chapter itself — "The Magnet Attracting: A Waif
Amid Forces — is significant. The forceful Drouet flatters the impressionable
Carrie by saying that she resembles a popular actress of the day. In a few
short years Carrie will actually become a famous stage personality. Finally,
the last image of Carrie adrift in the sea, bobbing endlessly, is one that will
reappear in various forms throughout the novel.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 2-4
Summary
Minnie takes her sister Carrie to
the flat where she lives with her husband and baby. The flat is small and
poorly furnished. Sven Hanson, Minnie's husband, works long hours in the
stockyards while Minnie remains at home occupied with the steady toil of caring
for the child and keeping house. The whole workaday atmosphere of the flat
contrasts with the bustle of activity of the city itself and with Carrie's
expectations.
Carrie writes to Drouet that she
cannot see him again because the flat is much too small for visitors. Then she
sits quietly in a rocking chair before going to bed. In the morning she takes a
trip to the manufacturing area of the city, where she can think only of people
counting money, dressing magnificently, and riding in carriages. The enormous
cluster of warehouses and factories strikes her with awe, and she shrinks away
from the notion of asking any of these mighty men for a chance to earn a day's
pay.
Finally, she meekly asks for
employment at several places but is turned away. Carrie finds herself adrift in
the afternoon rush of the city, but finally a job offer at four and a half
dollars per week raises her spirits. The foreman who hires Carrie looks her
over as if she were a package, for this is a world where individuals are of no
real importance. Once again, she looks forward to the pleasure and amusement of
the city and the company of Drouet.
For the next two days Carrie
speculates concerning the amusements and privileges that will fall her way.
Minnie wonders if her sister will make enough money to pay for carfare after
paying her four dollars room and board. Carrie arouses a shade of disapproval
when she suggests that Minnie and Sven go with her to the theater, where a
popular melodrama is playing. Minnie and Sven are rather disappointed with
Carrie's strong craving for pleasure, the "one stay of her nature."
Unless Carrie submits to a solemn round of industry and realizes the necessity
of hard and steady work, her presence will afford the Hansons no economic
advantages.
Carrie does not go to the theater.
Friday night is spent loitering on the front stairs of the apartment building.
On Saturday Carrie walks through a more fashionable part of the city and
wonders whether Drouet will call on Monday after all. Arising at six o'clock on
Monday morning, Carrie eats her breakfast in silence, wondering about her new
job. She has a vague feeling that she will come in contact with the "great
owners" and that she will be performing her work in a place where
well-dressed men will look upon her with interest. Her first day of work is a
nightmare. She is a link in a chain; she must at once keep up with the average
speed of the assembly line or all those beyond her station will be delayed.
Carrie works incessantly for a time,
finding relief for her fears in the dull, mechanical operation of the
machinery. As the morning wears on slowly, the room becomes hotter and the work
becomes even more tedious. She sits on a backless stool working without fresh
air or water. When she stands up to work, cramps develop in her neck and
shoulders.
Besides the tedious nature of the
work, there is the unending and inane chatter of the other girls and the brazen
advances of the young men for her to contend with. The work becomes nearly
unbearable; Carrie's body is wracked with aches and pains; her eyes are
strained. Then the dull bell clangs for lunch.
Her co-workers fill her with such
disgust with their catty badinage and useless conversation that Carrie is glad
when the half-hour lunch period is over and the work begins again. Wondering if
the dull routine will ever stop, she continues the monotonous operation until
six o'clock. As she walks home Carrie thinks that she deserves something more
than a lifetime of such work and her spirit protests.
Analysis
The main point of these three
chapters is to suggest Carrie's inability to understand either the mechanical
lives of the Hansons or the superhuman activity of the rapidly growing city.
Neither the Hanson household nor the city takes time to slacken the daily pace
to admit her gradually. It is revealed that the Hansons are counting upon
Carrie to help them reduce household expenses. The city offers no interesting
employment to someone as inexperienced as Carrie.
In the department store Carrie
realizes how far removed she is from its glamour and attraction. Although she
desires for herself the frilly dresses, the jewelry and trinkets heaped upon
the counters, she keenly feels how none of these are in the range of her
purchase. "An outcast without employment," a mere job-seeker, even
the shop girls could see she was poor and in need of a paying job.
Nevertheless, observing the attire
and manner of both the shop girls and the patrons, Carrie sees how much the
city holds in the way of wealth, fashion, and ease, and she longs for luxury
with her whole heart. Then, filled with optimism, she begins to think of the
city once more as a "great, pleasing metropolis," a place where she
will live and be happy. Dreiser's belief that a person's financial condition
determines the manner in which he perceives the world is evident throughout these
chapters: in Carrie's materialistic response to the wealth of the city lies a
great deal of the plot of the novel.
When Carrie begins to work, her
naive expectations are quickly driven underground by the dull, hard routine of
the assembly line. Not only does she suffer physically, but she is insulted and
abused by the young men who work in the factory. The detailed description of
the work which Carrie must perform and her revulsion to it contrast sharply
with her vague and extravagant desires and speculations about the future.
Instead of well-dressed and gracious owners Carrie finds a gruff foreman who
seems a very ogre. Instead of finding exciting work that would be a challenge
to her intellect and imagination, she finds herself chained to a machine in a
room full of nearly mechanical people.
In his effort to leave a
well-documented record of a time that has passed, Dreiser departs from the
story line to describe how inferior working conditions were even when compared
with those of twenty years later. Carrie and the others perform the same
laborious task all day without benefit of a change in routine or a brief rest.
The hours are long, the factory is without proper lighting or ventilation. No
effort is made for the employees' comfort, in the belief that hard conditions
are advantageous.
Nor does Dreiser overlook the
symbolic import of the assembly line and the workhouse. Work in a factory is
very similar to the grand scale of life as he saw it. Each individual becomes a
cog in a wheel; each is a package of energy. The poor and weak are exploited by
the strong and wealthy. Such conditions make dull animals of all they
encompass. The weaker of the species must be sacrificed to the stronger; this
is the ethos of cut-throat capitalism.
The poor working conditions, the uncouth
boys, the long hours, and the tedium all serve to make Drouet stand out in
Carrie's mind as the epitome of the good life. Carrie constantly compares her
experiences with her memory of Drouet, who gains much by the contrast. Carrie
is learning the hard lesson that drives its wedge between expectation and
reality. Knowing as much as he does about Carrie's character and her strivings
for pleasure, the reader wonders what will become of Carrie in the grotesque
world she has fallen into. Carrie had hoped to visit the theater and wear fine
clothes, but already she is trapped by economic conditions. Although her spirit
rebels, she seems resigned to her fate.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 5
Summary
Because of the letter, Drouet does
not visit Carrie on Monday evening. After dining in a rather exclusive
restaurant, he stops in at Fitzgerald and Moy's saloon to have a drink with the
manager, his friend George Hurstwood. After a brief discussion of business
associates and acquaintances, Drouet leaves for the theater. Just as he is
leaving, Drouet mentions the "little peach" he met on the train, but
Hurstwood is unimpressed.
Analysis
Most of this short chapter consists
of Dreiser's commentary on the manner in which social status is achieved and
maintained. Drouet dines frequently at Rector's because it is a resort for
actors and professional men and thus it inflates his vanity and stirs his
ambition. For the same reason he seeks the comforts of Fitzgerald and Moy's
saloon, which Dreiser describes in his awkward style as a "truly swell
saloon."
The introduction of Hurstwood, who
some critics believe is the central character of the novel, shows him to be
just under forty, vigorous, urbane, and distinguished by fine clothing and
conservative good taste. Hurstwood is of that class of people who bow only to
the luxuriously rich. He maintains a rigidly graduated scale of informality and
friendship which covers all patrons of the "gorgeous saloon."
Dreiser embarks on a discussion of
the institution of the men's saloon. Visitors there seek pleasure as well as
the satisfaction of shining among their betters. In a society which equates
wealth with individual worth, the worst such an institution would do is stir up
the ambition of the materialist, such as Drouet, so that he too could conduct
his life on a splendid basis. It is not the richness of the establishment which
does this, however; it is the inner workings of the mind. This is the genuine
masculine counterpart of the world of Carrie's dreams of fine clothes and
manners, wealth, position, and enjoyment.
By implication Dreiser says that to
a newcomer this saloon must seem a "strange and shiny thing." Then
with a measure of irony he adds, "what a lamp-flower it must bloom; a
strange, glittering night-flower, odor-yielding, insect-drawing,
insect-infested rose of pleasure." Thus by contrasting what such a place
seems to its regular patrons with what it would seem to an outsider, Dreiser as
narrator invites the reader to see the aimlessly wandering, dressy, greedy
company as not terribly different from Carrie herself, only "luckier"
and wealthier.
The thematic and structural import
of the chapter lies in its final paragraph. Determined to show the inexplicable
workings of fate, Dreiser provides justification for diverting the reader's
attention away from Carrie so early in the novel. The story of Carrie will be
the story of Drouet and Hurstwood as well: "Thus was Carrie's name bandied
about in the most frivolous and gay of places, and that also when the little
toiler was bemoaning her narrow lot, which was almost inseparable from the
early stages of this, her unfolding fate."
Summary and Analysis Chapters 6-7
Summary
That same evening Carrie returns
home from her first day of work. To Minnie and Sven's anxious questioning, she
answers that she does not like her job because it is too hard. Minnie feels
sympathetic toward Carrie but hides her feelings because she knows how much
Sven is counting on the extra money Carrie could contribute to the household.
After supper Carrie changes her
clothes and stands on the steps of the apartment building, half expecting to
see Drouet. The life on the street interests Carrie. She never tires of
wondering where its streetcars are going or how the people on them entertain
themselves. Her imagination constantly takes her to places of delight, full of
handsome, well-dressed, and wealthy people enjoying themselves.
The daily work at the factory
continues in its hard, dull routine. At the end of a week Carrie hands over
four dollars to Minnie, keeping fifty cents for herself. Like a flower that is
transplanted, Carrie has trouble adjusting to the climate. Winter sweeps over
the city before Carrie can save enough money to buy warm clothes. She is taken
ill and must rest in bed for three days. Hanson wants Carrie to return to her
family before she becomes a burden.
After she recovers from her cold,
Carrie searches four full days for a new position until, quite by accident, she
meets Drouet. Surprised to see her, he buys her a sumptuous steak in an
expensive restaurant. To Carrie, Drouet seems the very picture of substantial
living. Well-dressed and outspoken, he impresses Carrie with his knowledge of
faraway places and with his easy manners. Carrie nevertheless refuses to join
him at the theater because she cannot stay out late, but she does agree to meet
him the next day.
Drouet forces upon Carrie a
"loan" of twenty dollars for her to buy herself new shoes and a
jacket. Carrie feels "as though a great arm had slipped out before her to
draw off trouble." In Drouet's presence Carrie does not even think that
Minnie will wonder where the new clothes came from, but as soon as she leaves
Drouet she begins to worry.
The narrator begins Chapter 7 with
one of his frequent discussions on the meaning of money. What Carrie does not
understand, a fault she has in common with almost all of humanity, is that
money should be paid out as "honestly stored energy," not as a
"usurped privilege." Carrie's definition of money would be simple and
straightforward "something everybody else has and I must get."
As she walks away from Drouet Carrie
feels ashamed that she had been weak enough to take his money, but since her
needs were so desperate, she is glad to have the power of privilege that
"two soft, green, handsome ten-dollar bills" can bring. As usual, her
visions of what she can purchase — a nice new jacket, a pair of button shoes,
stockings, a skirt — far exceed the reality.
Carrie fully realizes that unlike
the stranger who accosted her in the street some days before, Drouet is of good
heart and intends no evil. There is nothing in his character to trigger her
instinct to fly away from him. His overtures do not arouse her sense of
self-preservation.
When she reaches home, Carrie's good
feelings are somewhat dampened because she can imagine no way to explain her
good fortune to Minnie. Ironically trapped, having money and not being able to
spend it, Carrie resolves to return the money to Drouet the next day. The next
morning she returns to the wholesale district and wanders about, trying only
one place for work. Carrie enters a large department store, where she is torn
between material desire and moral conscience. Indecision continues until it is
time for her to meet Drouet. Drouet takes charge of things and causes Carrie to
buy a new jacket, button shoes, and stockings, to which he adds a purse and
gloves. Then he helps her find a furnished room where she can deposit the new
finery and even move in herself if she desires.
In the evening Carrie returns to the
flat for dinner with Minnie and Sven. After dinner she writes a note explaining
that she is leaving them but she is not returning to Columbia City. She will
remain in Chicago and look for work. She then announces that she will stand
outside for the last time. Nearby Drouet is waiting for her; together the
couple leave the neighborhood in a streetcar.
Analysis
Carrie begins to realize that her
ties with her sister and brother-in-law are merely economic. As a companion and
confidante, Minnie is of no worth to Carrie. The struggle for survival in the
big city has destroyed in her any of the soft qualities that bind sisters
together. Carrie is not given to sentimental notions, however, and so the
subversion of sisterly relations does not bother her. She would sooner realize
her imaginary wealth and pleasure than find lasting human relationships.
By showing Carrie again and again
moving through the same dull routine, day after day, Dreiser presents rather
than describes the tedious nature of Carrie's life. It is obvious to the reader
that Carrie's imagination will not allow her to continue on this treadmill very
much longer. By dramatizing little incidents, such as her reaction to the
passes made at her by the young men at work, Dreiser accomplishes far more than
ordinary description could do. The continued repetition involves the reader in
the mechanical round of activities. By sympathizing with Carrie, the reader is
willing to overlook her minor indiscretions.
In the midst of these activities
Dreiser makes an analogy between Carrie and a flower. Carrie is no part of this
mechanical world; she is a growing organism which may blossom, but she requires
richer soil and a better climate even to continue her natural growth. Abrupt
transplantation is dangerous to the tender plant. The analogy becomes even more
striking when one remembers that cruel winter is setting in, making it
continually more difficult for plants to grow. Overall conditions, in fact —
the urgent necessity for finding work, the nature of the work itself and
situations in the factory, Carrie's lack of proper clothing or money to buy it,
the attitudes of Minnie and Sven — combine to make Carrie physically ill.
Although a perceivable set of
conditions causes Carrie to become ill and lose her job, it is fate or chance
which causes Carrie and Drouet to meet once again on the downtown street.
Dreiser frequently refers to Carrie as a "little soldier of fortune";
although she is not herself aware of it, Carrie is a follower of the fate of
human existence.
In Drouet's presence, Carrie feels
thoroughly at ease and sees the world clearly. Through Drouet the world reveals
more of its possibilities. She becomes something of an insider of the world of
wealth, fashion, and pleasure. She cannot think of the complications his
"loan" will create, but when he is gone she is once again cast into a
sea of doubt and indecision
The story of Carrie Meeber is at all
times the story of a young and innocent girl who must suddenly find her way in
an alien metropolis. Beyond that story is the tale of a young and naive America
coming of age. In many respects Carrie is similar to Isabel Archer in Henry
James' novel, The Portrait of a Lady. Carrie might easily be seen in
retrospect as the backwoods, small-town American society emerging from
innocence to the cosmopolitan standards of the end of the nineteenth century.
By bringing to bear upon Carrie the economic and fateful determinism that so
thoroughly pervaded the thought of his own day, Dreiser makes of her a symbolic
figure who must sacrifice a certain amount of innocence in order to make
progress of any kind. Thus Carrie's dream is the American Dream as well; it is
a dream of rich finery, financial success, and power. Like America itself,
Carrie must learn not only how to acquire her wealth and power, but must also
learn the meaning and extent and correct use of these.
Drouet's character is one that
requires careful analysis. He is a "nice, good-hearted man." There is
nothing evil in Drouet, but he is an opportunist. Drouet is largely
unreflective and unphilosophical. "In his good clothes and fine health, he
was a merry, unthinking moth of the lamp." With only a sudden change in
fortune for him, he, too, would become as helpless as Carrie.
Despite his continued success with
women, Drouet is no man of the world. He would be as easily
"hornswaggled" by a villain as an ordinary shop girl might be duped
by him. Unlike Carrie, Drouet shows no potential for growth and change. His
ambition is directed toward material success and display and affable company. He
does not share Carrie's inner dissatisfaction with the world as it is. He lacks
the imagination necessary to be prone to brooding and emotional decisions.
On the very first page of the novel
Dreiser writes that when a young girl leaves home, she does one of two things.
"Either she falls into saving hands and becomes better, or she rapidly
assumes the cosmopolitan standard of virtue and becomes worse. Of an
intermediate balance, under the circumstances, there is no possibility."
The major portion of Sister Carrie is devoted to exploring the
implications of that statement. Here in this chapter is found a variation on
that theme. Although Drouet does put forth a hand to save Carrie, his gesture
requires that she change her standards of virtue. The rapid change effected in
Carrie's nature is given specific form in the department store. Deciding the
night before to return Drouet's money intact, she avoids spending it, not
because of her staunch virtue, but because of indecision. Carrie is apt to put
off decisions until it becomes too late for her to do anything. Very often she
is the bark that is swept along on the enormous sea with the tide. By avoiding
decisions, Carrie entrusts herself to fate.
The question of Dreiser's writing
style deserves special attention (see notes on Dreiser's Style), but, awkward
as it is, it is still the product of conscious craft. In the following passage,
Dreiser makes masterful use of rhythm, punctuation, strategic placing of
adjectives, inflation, and deflation. The movement of the passage imitates the
movement of Carrie's mind: "Now she would have a nice new jacket! Now she
would buy a nice pair of pretty button shoes. She would get stockings, too, and
a skirt, and, and until already, as in the matter of her prospective salary,
she had got beyond, in her desires, twice the purchasing power of her
bills." This is style at its best.
Summary
Very early the next morning Minnie
awakes to find Carrie's note. Minnie is severely upset because she knows what
ill fortune might befall a young girl alone in the city. Hanson is not the
least upset by Carrie's departure; he is probably glad to be rid of her.
Already Carrie's life has changed
significantly, for even while the Hansons are discussing her departure, she is
sound asleep in a furnished room of her own in another part of the city. When
Drouet calls to take her out to breakfast, she tells him that she is anxious to
begin looking for work again. Drouet sweeps away her worrying by telling her
not to hurry, to take her time seeing the city and getting "fixed
up." The conversation turns to Carrie's new clothes and Drouet's promise
to buy her more. With that, her misgivings about leaving the Hansons and her
anxiety over what Drouet intends to do with her are cast aside.
The couple spend their days together
shopping and sightseeing. Carrie gradually begins to realize how pretty she is
and begins to feel the thrill of being an attractive well-dressed woman with a
gallant escort. In the evenings they visit the theater and dine in the more
fashionable restaurants of the city.
One evening as Carrie and Drouet are
walking to the theater while the rest of the world is hurrying home from work,
a pair of eyes meets Carrie's in recognition. The eyes are those of one of the
factory girls with whom Carrie used to work: She is poorly dressed in shabby
garments. As the two exchange glances, Carrie feels "as if some great tide
had rolled between them. The old dress and the old machine came back."
Carrie is so startled that she bumps into a pedestrian.
Stopping for an after-theater snack,
Carrie is not troubled by the lateness of the hour or any household law which
will drag her home. The combined influence of the many occurrences of the day
makes Carrie relaxed and carefree, once again a victim of the city's hypnotic
powers.
Drouet walks Carrie to the house
where she is staying and, although it is only suggested by Dreiser, it seems
safe to assume that he asks Carrie to live with him. While Carrie and Drouet
stand on the doorstep, sister Minnie dreams a succession of nightmares. In her
several dreams Minnie and Carrie stand together at the brink of a dark
precipice and then Carrie slips away and falls out of sight.
About a week later Drouet strolls
into Fitzgerald and Moy's to invite his friend Hurstwood to spend an evening
with him and Carrie. Hurstwood accepts warmly. He is always glad to get away
from his family and home life, for there are no bonds of understanding.
Although the house is fashionably and opulently appointed, it lacks warmth. His
children are irresponsible and snobbish; his wife is a social climber and a bit
of a shrew.
The Hurstwood household, the
narrator concludes, "ran along by force of habit, by force of conventional
opinion. With the lapse of time it must necessarily become dryer and dryer must
eventually be tinder, easily lighted and destroyed."
Now that Carrie and Drouet have set
up housekeeping, Drouet is pleased by his conquest; Carrie is at times full of
somber misgivings. Drouet has rented a small furnished apartment in Ogden
Place, facing Union Park. Through Carrie's "industry and natural love of
order," the place is made very pleasing.
Carrie's difficulties, more basic in
the recent past, have now become mental ones, "and altogether so turned
about in all of her earthly relationships that she might well have been a new
and different individual." In the mirror she sees a pretty face, but when
she looks within herself she sees an image composed of her own judgments and
those of society that makes her experience a certain moral queasiness. Carrie
wavers between these two reflections, wondering which one to embrace. Her
conscience, "only an average little conscience," is shaped by the
world, her own past life, habit, and convention, all welded together in a
confused way. Her conscience bothers her because she failed to live with moral
correctness even before she tried. Carrie is in a "winter" mood, full
of silent brooding. Nevertheless the secret voice of her conscience grows more
and more feeble.
Drouet is together with Carrie most
of the time, except for sporadic, short business trips. Drouet continually
procrastinates about marriage to Carrie, telling her there is a business deal
he must close before he can give himself over to thoughts of legal marriage.
Carrie seeks marriage, for that would salve her conscience and justify her
actions of late. Carrie herself knows that she feels no special love for
Drouet, but she thinks that marriage would be insurance against losing his
affection and generosity.
Hurstwood arrives and deports
himself with a grace and polish that the young Drouet lacks. Accustomed to
pleasing men in his work, Hurstwood is even more tactful and attentive to
pretty women in his desire to please them and be of service. His conservative
but rich apparel further contrasts him to Drouet. Carrie compares little
details, such as the dull shine of Hurstwood's black calf shoes with Drouet's
shiny patent leather shoes, and she favors the soft rich leather.
The three play euchre, a card game
popular at the time. Hurstwood behaves so deferentially and warmly that even
Drouet feels closer to him than ever before. In Carrie's presence Hurstwood
replaces his everyday "shifty, clever gleam" of the eyes with
geniality and kindness and innocence.
Hurstwood contrives the game so that
Carrie wins all the dimes that they have been playing for. He invites them to
go to the theater with him before Drouet's impending trip. Hurstwood reveals
his "magnanimity" by offering to visit Carrie when Drouet is out of
town and Carrie and Drouet remark how kind he is. After a snack and a bottle of
wine, Hurstwood leaves the young couple nearly dazed by his charm.
Analysis
One aspect of Dreiser's
"naturalistic" method which a good many critics find fault with is
his frequent and lengthy editorial intrusions. It is characteristic of
Dreiser's method to present a repetitive discussion of fate or morality and
then drive home the point by showing a character undergoing nearly the same
process of thought. It is up to the individual reader to discover for himself
whether this method is entirely successful. Chapter 9 opens with a short essay
on the relationship of morality and evolution. Mankind in his present state of
civilization is scarcely a beast in that he is no longer wholly guided by
instinct; neither is he completely human, because he is not yet wholly guided
by reason. Mankind must constantly waver between instinctual harmony with
nature or rational harmony with his own free will.
Carrie finds herself in such a
position. Her instincts and desires have driven her to Drouet, but her reason
and understanding cause her to have misgivings about it. In the statement,
"She was as yet more drawn than she drew," the future of Carrie's
self-control is suggested. Worldly experience will teach her to align her
instincts with her reason.
In the episode where Carrie meets
one of the girls with whom she used to work she sees what a great tide had
rolled between the nearly animal existence of the past and her present
situations. Her "vain imaginings" reveal to her what it is to be wholly
human," to have power and position and to conduct herself as her reason or
will would permit. To Carrie as well as to Dreiser, the presence of wealth and
fine clothing indicates a wide freedom of choice. Thus, those "magnificent
people" are more closely aligned with free will.
The two antithetical portions of
Carrie's mind, her conscience and her desire, make another appearance in
Chapter 10. There, standing before the mirror, she sees that her face reveals a
more attractive girl than she was before but that her mind, "a mirror
prepared of her own and the world's opinions," reveals a worse"
creature than she had been before. She wavers between these two images,
uncertain of which one to believe.
The "inner" mirror, the
reservoir of social and acquired moral opinion, must be watched closely by the
reader. Sister Carrie is a study in depth of character; what happens
inside Carrie's mind is actually far more important than her outward fortune or
trials and tribulation.
Dream symbolism provides a method of
revealing what the world outside thinks of Carrie's behavior. Minnie, Carrie's
sister, functions in the novel as a choric figure. In her dream is
revealed what the standard judgment of Carrie's actions would be. Carrie is
leaving the world of her sister to go to a dark and dangerous world below the
surface of the ground. The swirling waters or unplumbed darkness of that world
without a rigid morality seem certain to destroy the naive girl. It is no more
necessary to accept Minnie's dream as absolute truth, however, than it is to
accept Carrie's estimate of her sister Minnie as absolute and unbiased truth.
Each girl unconsciously sees the other as a projection of herself, and thus
interprets the life of the other as it would seem to herself. In the structure
of the novel Carrie and Minnie, as well as Drouet and Hurstwood, are paired for
comparison and contrast.
The irony of Carrie's belief that
wealthy people have an unlimited freedom of choice is made apparent by the
description of Hurstwood's family life. Hurstwood is practically a stranger in
his own home, but his position is so inextricably related to his home life that
he can make no changes: "He could not complicate his home life, because it
might affect his relations with his employers. They wanted no scandals. A man,
to hold his position, must have a dignified manner." It is ironic also
that it is Carrie herself who will eventually cause Hurstwood to
"complicate" his condition. Still another irony appears in these
chapters; this takes the form of ironic foreshadowing. To Drouet's remark,
after Hurstwood ends his visit, that he is a "nice man" and a
"good friend," Carrie responds with unconscious irony, "He seems
to be."
Very often readers of Dreiser take
his seeming simplicity of technique too lightly, even though it should be
apparent that he possesses a talent for making symbolic use of ordinary
details. Thus, for example, in the card game played at the first meeting of
Carrie and Hurstwood, Dreiser provides a microcosm, or miniature model, of the
characters, forces, and movement of the novel. In this game of chance and skill
Hurstwood manipulates his hand so that Carrie can win all the money while
Drouet remains ignorant of what is happening. "Don't you moralize,"
Hurstwood says to Carrie, "until you see what becomes of the money."
Summary and Analysis Chapters 11-13
Summary
Carrie continues to grow more
graceful and charming as the days pass. Drouet seeks to help along her change
by making tactless and stupidly cruel comparisons with other women; he has no
awareness of Carrie's extreme sensitivity. One evening as she sits alone
listening to a piano being played in the next apartment she is moved to tears
by the combination of its wistful sadness and her own mood. She is crying when
Drouet arrives; he makes the absurd suggestion that they waltz to the music.
"It was his first great mistake."
Returning from a business trip one
evening, Drouet meets an old female acquaintance and invites her to dinner. To
the chagrin of Drouet, Hurstwood enters the same restaurant and sees the two
together. Drouet feels embarrassed and guilty, thinking correctly that
Hurstwood will interpret this as a sign that Drouet is already growing tired of
Carrie.
A few days later the couple receives
an invitation from Hurstwood to join him at the theater. Carrie is concerned
that Drouet might notice her readiness to break an engagement for Hurstwood
that she was reluctant to break for him. His egotism is so strong, however,
that the detail escapes his notice. Carrie recognizes not only that Hurstwood
is the superior man, but also that he looks upon her with more than
companionable affection. Drouet is losing Carrie's heart as quickly as
Hurstwood gains it, but he is too sure of himself ever to suspect this.
In the meantime, Mrs. Hurstwood
suspects her husband's tendencies, although she is not yet aware of his
"moral defection." It is her nature to wait and brood upon revenge.
Because much of his property is in her name Hurstwood behaves very carefully,
since he could not be sure what she might do if she became dissatisfied.
Realizing that all love between them has been lost over the years, Hurstwood is
inclined to turn his back on the relationship, but Mrs. Hurstwood expects
complete adherence to the forms of marriage, even though the spirit has waned.
Nevertheless, Hurstwood begins to excuse himself more and more from family and
social matters.
His interest in "Drouet's
little shop girl" grows in proportion to his marital discontent. As for
Carrie herself, she begins to acquire a sense of taste and wealth which guides
her desire. Her neighbor, Mrs. Hale, with whom she walks and rides frequently,
awakens the "siren voice of the unrestful" whispering in Carrie's
ear. Sadly, Carrie longs for the power of affluence, which she is certain
dispels all care and bestows every felicity.
One afternoon after a drive with
Mrs. Hale, Carrie sits at home in her rocking chair by the window, feeling
lonely and forsaken. Although she has seen little of Hurstwood through the long
winter, she has kept him in mind by the strong impression their few meetings
together had made on her. The manager arrives at that moment, and his presence
and graceful manner and warmth cause Carrie to brighten until "all her
best side is exhibited." Hurstwood's glances and light touches of the hand
are as effective upon Carrie as the spoken words of a lover. They require no
immediate decision or answer, only a warm response. Eventually, Hurstwood
forces Carrie to admit that she is unhappy and dissatisfied with her life as it
is. She becomes distressed by her own frankness and when Hurstwood departs,
troubled and ashamed, she looks into the mirror, saying aloud, "I'm
getting terrible... I don't seem to do anything right."
Hurstwood feels that a liaison with
Carrie would provide him with a new opportunity for real life. Carrie's youth,
naiveté, and vitality seem to compensate for all the deceit experience has led
him to find in women. He wants to win Carrie and sincerely believes that
"her fate mingled with his" would be far "better than if it were
united with Drouet's."
Carrie compares the two men in her
mind and sees that Drouet is the type who carries the "doom of all
enduring relationships in his own lightsome manner and unstable fancy." He
is too youthful to grieve long over a departed lover. She does realize,
however, that Hurstwood has not yet formulated any plans except to accelerate
the progress of their affection for each other.
Two days after their previous
meeting, Hurstwood returns once again and he and Carrie go for a walk. Because
he feels that he might be seen by someone who should not see him, Hurstwood
suggests that they take a drive on the Boulevard, a country road where houses
are just beginning to appear.
Hurstwood turns on his full
passionate charm, confessing to Carrie that he loves her. This produces no
visible effect, so he turns next to an appeal to her pity. Carrie can form no
words or even thoughts; but she sees that Hurstwood's complaint of having no
one to sympathize with him or show more than indifference is her complaint as
well.
"Tell me that you love
me," says Hurstwood. "Own to it." Carrie makes no answer but
simply responds to Hurstwood's kiss. He asks then if she is now his "own
girl." In response, she lays her head upon his shoulder.
Analysis
Chapters 11, 12, and 13 might well
be subtitled "Hurstwood's Courtship of Carrie." The courtship is
simply one more variation on the theme of forbidden love, and its development
is self-explanatory. Nevertheless, Dreiser's employment of imagery, symbol, and
setting warrants some attention. The wresting away of Carrie from Drouet is
presented with the imagery of battle and games. After the theater, Drouet is
not aware "that a battle had been fought and his defenses weakened. He was
like the Emperor of China, who sat glorying in himself, unaware that his
fairest provinces were being wrested from him." On the way home, Drouet
foolishly leaves Carrie to go to the forward platform of the streetcar to
smoke, "and left the game as it stood." (For the relevance of games,
see Commentary on Chapter 10.)
Another important source of imagery
throughout the novel is the sea. When Hurstwood asks Carrie (in Chapter 12) if
she is unhappy, she is described as "getting into deep water" and
"letting her few supports float away from her." The prairie outside
the city, a "flat, open scene," resembles the sea when Hurstwood
confesses his love to Carrie. Throughout the novel Carrie experiences
"floods" of emotion and frequently "drifts" off into
thought. Hurstwood tells Carrie that before he met her, he was wont to
"drift" about. Many times Carrie is shown rocking endlessly in a
chair as if she were "a lone figure in a tossing, thoughtless sea."
The rocking chair itself is a symbol
of Carrie's continued frustration and her inability to make a choice, wavering instead
from one possibility to the other. Just before the first of Hurstwood's two
visits which occur in these chapters Carrie sits rocking in her chair. Dreiser
takes the opportunity to foreshadow the future outcome of her desire: "She
hummed and hummed as the moments went by... and was therein as happy though she
did not perceive it, as she ever would be."
Another important symbol is the
mirror in which Carrie attempts to see inside herself to discover the truth or
to reflect upon some problem. Like the rocking chair, the mirror represents the
two poles of Carrie's thought, for it is also used by her simply to admire her
appearance in new clothes. Both the rocking chair and the mirror fuse the
desire for material satisfaction with the realization that Carrie is never
happy if she continually desires something new. Naturally, Carrie is never
conscious of the symbolic import of these articles, but certainly the author
is, and so, it is hoped, is the reader.
The events of these particular
chapters occur in the spring, traditionally a time of the emergence or
reawakening of love. Hurstwood's attraction to Carrie seems "a flowering
out of feelings which had been withering in dry and almost barren soil for many
years." In a touch of humor rarely found in Dreiser, Hurstwood is
overheard telling his wife that he saw the play "Rip Van Winkle" with
Carrie and Drouet. In Carrie's presence Hurstwood feels as fresh as "one
who is taken out of the flash of summer to the first cool breath of
spring." References to the season abound throughout these chapters and
provide a steady counterpoint to the frequent mention of winter in the first
ten chapters. Carrie's affair with Drouet had been in the winter, but her new
love occurs in the spring. On the prairie, as Hurstwood slips his arm about
Carrie, "A breath of soft spring wind went bounding over the road, rolling
some brown twigs of the previous autumn before it."
Attention has been called earlier to
the method in which Drouet occasionally interrupts the narrative to present an
idea or comment or theory, then eventually causes a character or situation to
repeat the theme of the discussion in a different light. A fine example of this
technique appears in Chapters 12 and 13. Dreiser interrupts a conversation
between Carrie and Hurstwood to offer the following comment: "People in
general attach too much importance to words. They are under the illusion that
talking effects great results. As a matter of fact, words are, as a rule, the
shallowest portion of all the argument. They but dimly represent the great
surging feelings and desires which lie behind. When the distraction of the
tongue is removed, the heart listens."
In Hurstwood and Carrie there
appear, respectively, one who attaches "too much importance to words"
and one whose "heart listens." Thus at the close of Chapter 13
Hurstwood repeatedly tries to spill out his thoughts and feelings in words and
tries to require the same of Carrie. Carrie, sensitive soul that she is, can
only respond with looks and gestures. Throughout the progress of their
attachment, Carrie has been aware of the meaning of Hurstwood's glances and
gestures, but he seems to require that she spell out her emotions in careful
words and well-formed phrases.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 1
Even
as her neighbor Mrs. Hale is spreading gossip about the rooming house, Carrie
reflects on her situation with Drouet and begins to see hope of a way out,
mistakenly perceiving in Hurstwood an advance toward honor and self-respect.
Hurstwood, however, thinks only of
"pleasure without responsibility." He wishes to do nothing that would
"complicate his life." During their next meeting Hurstwood realizes
that Carrie takes their love "on a much higher basis" than he
believed. She holds him off, granting only "tokens of affection."
Hurstwood sees that Carrie will be no easy conquest and so resolves to control
his ardor.
Hurstwood pretends to believe that
Carrie is actually married to Drouet, and hopes that Drouet will not tell
Carrie that he has a wife and family. When Drouet returns home from his
business trip, Carrie once again poses the question of marriage. Of course Drouet
does not plan to marry her, even in the distant future. Carrie therefore feels
justified in her affair with Hurstwood, believing that it will lead to the
secure and honorable state of matrimony.
Drouet and Carrie accept an
invitation from Hurstwood to attend the theater. A secret letter to Carrie from
Hurstwood asks her to meet him in the afternoon before the performance. At that
time the lovers agree not to show any interest in each other when Drouet is
present.
That evening, Hurstwood is
particularly attentive to his old friend Drouet and strives to avoid "that
subtle ridicule which a lover in favor may so secretly practice before the
mistress of his heart." It is difficult, because in the play "The
Covenant," a young wife listens willingly to her seductive lover while her
husband is away. "Served him right," remarks Drouet, speaking of the
husband, "I haven't any pity for a man who would be such a chump as
that." Hurstwood answers gently that "you can never tell";
perhaps the man thought he was right.
Emerging from the theater Hurstwood
is approached by a panhandler but, blinded by the presence of Carrie, he does
not even see the fellow. The good-natured Drouet quickly responds to the man's
plight "with an upwelling feeling of pity in his heart." The occurrence
is scarcely noticed by the lovers.
At home, the details of Hurstwood's
marriage show that it is going into a crisis. He is continually more put off by
his wife's self-centered demands and his children's shallow behavior. Hurstwood
begins writing daily letters to Carrie from his office. Each new sentence
allows him to feel the subtleties that he tries to express. He loves Carrie for
her youth, beauty, and her good nature. She is sympathetic and kind to him and
full of pity for all who suffer. All these qualities make Carrie a "waxen
lily" in Hurstwood's eyes. He begins to feel youthful himself.
The lovers meet in the park to
discuss the future. Carrie says that she is willing to leave Drouet anytime if
Hurstwood consents to marry her. Her refusal merely to become his mistress
causes Hurstwood to be even more in love with her. To test her affection for
him, Hurstwood asks with unconscious irony if she would leave Chicago with him
without notice. Of course she will, if he will marry her, is the reply. Hurstwood
did not mean the question to be taken so seriously. He replies jokingly,
"I'll come and get you one of these evenings," and then laughs.
Analysis
It is necessary to consider Carrie's
motives in allowing herself to forsake Drouet for Hurstwood. She recognizes
that Drouet is not interested in building any kind of sincere relationship. His
interest in Carrie is kindled by his own desires for pleasure and his
egotistical good nature. He has chosen to make of Carrie a kind of Pygmalion's
Galatea. He delights in her growth of intellect, her growing charms, her newly
acquired wit and blooming natural graces. Directing and watching her growth is
a hobby for him; his primary interest is to be a successful businessman, well
liked by all. Carrie is to him an object of pride or a project for
satisfaction. Not once does he realize that she is far more spirited and
sensitive and cleverer than he is.
Carrie knows full well that Drouet
will not marry her. He is not a marrying man. Her conscience, as well as her
growing self esteem, requires that she find a man who is willing to marry her.
She has been led by Hurstwood to believe that he is free to marry; whereas in
reality he merely wishes to set her up in a South Side apartment as his
mistress. Ironically, she finds her own justification for leaving Drouet in her
knowledge that she will never be more than his mistress.
In addition to the possibility of
finding honor and self-respect with Hurstwood, there is yet another reason for
her attraction to him. This is the matter of sympathy which he arouses in her.
Hurstwood realizes that Carrie is of a sympathetic nature and so with her he
capitalizes upon this quality which he has found lacking in other women. Also,
in extending toward Hurstwood her own sympathies in recompense for the lack of
understanding and the indifference he meets in other people, she begins to see
that she herself suffers the same plight. Yet Carrie is still naive enough to
believe that Hurstwood loves her in the same manner in which she loves him.
Carrie, furthermore, is flattered
that Hurstwood, "a man of the world," should find her, a shop girl,
so interesting and attractive. Hurstwood is an ideal figure to Carrie, a
visitor from the "higher world" of wealth, power, and influence. She
can hardly believe that Hurstwood is ready to invite her to join that higher
world.
Irony, which might be defined as the
difference perceived by the author and reader between the world of intention or
desire and the real world, appears in various forms in these chapters. The
point of Carrie's mistaken belief that Hurstwood is prepared to marry her has
already been mentioned. There is an even deeper irony in Hurstwood's intended
desire to keep his life uncomplicated and free of entanglements which would
endanger his standing in the business and social community. When Carrie finally
does "win" Hurstwood, it happens at the expense of his fine
reputation and powerful influence.
There is dramatic irony in Drouet's
unconscious commentary upon his own plight after the theater, when he says that
a man should be more attentive to his wife if he wants to keep her. Finally,
ironic detail is used in these chapters. In the presence of Drouet, who once
made her feel she had found a calm spot in a "sea of trouble," Carrie
feels "all at sea mentally" when discussing Hurstwood. It is with a
further ironic twist, then, that Carrie is shown wearing a "sailor
hat" when she meets her new lover in the park in Chapter 15.
Dreiser continues to dramatize the
theme of the editorial intrusion of Chapter 12. He is careful to show how words
are often irrelevant to human situations; but he also wishes to demonstrate the
paradoxical opposite of the idea — that is when a character seeks to find words
to express his imagined subtlety of feeling, he begins to feel what has never
existed until he described it: "Hurstwood surprised himself with his
fluency.... He began to feel those subtleties which he could find words to
express. With every expression came increased conception."
Summary and Analysis Chapter 16
Summary
Drouet, having promised his lodge
brothers that he would find an actress for their fund-raising theatrical, turns
to Carrie as a last resort. After some coaxing she becomes very willing to try
a part in the melodrama. Because the members of the lodge to which he belongs
know he is not married, Drouet has Carrie's name listed on the program as
"Carrie Madenda," explaining to her that this would be to her
advantage if she doesn't "make a hit."
Carrie learns her part very quickly,
immersing herself in its sorrowful demeanor, the tremolo music, the long,
explanatory cumulative addresses.
Analysis
Carrie's imagination makes her
suitable for an actress. She begins to learn her part avidly. Once again
Dreiser uses the combined imagery of the rocking chair and the sea, in addition
to the imagery of the theater: "As she rocked to and fro she felt the
tensity of woe in abandonment, the magnificence of wrath after deception, the
languor of sorrow after defeat. Thoughts of all the charming women she had seen
in plays every fancy, every illusion which she had concerning the stage — now
came back as a returning tide after the ebb." For Carrie the world of the
stage, like the world of her imagination, is the most real of all possible
worlds.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 17-19
Summary
During her next visit with
Hurstwood, Carrie tells him all about her role in the forthcoming melodrama. He
is pleased to learn that Carrie has capabilities and ambition. Hurstwood
assures Carrie that he will contrive to keep Drouet from knowing that she told
him about the theatrical. When Drouet does stop by at Fitzgerald and Moy's,
Hurstwood remarks that they must give Carrie "a nice little send-off' and
insists that Carrie and Drouet take supper with him after the play.
At the rehearsal, Carrie's natural
acting ability is noticed by the director, who is surprised to learn that she
has no stage experience. While Carrie rehearses, Hurstwood does not sit idle.
He becomes a behind-the-scenes public relations man, taking every opportunity
to publicize the show among his friends in the order, in which both he and
Drouet are members.
Carrie is very nervous about the
forthcoming performance, imagining all manners of horror and embarrassment if
she fails to do well. Once she arrives at the theater, however, all the
"nameless paraphernalia of disguise" transport her into a new and
friendly atmosphere. Here she is part of the world of beautiful clothes,
flowers, and elegant carriages. "She had come upon it as one who stumbles
upon a secret passage, and, behold, she was in the chamber of diamonds and
delight!" The gaslights, the makeup, and the costume transform Carrie into
"Laura, the Belle of Society." Hurstwood has enticed to the theater a
host of gentlemen and their wives. Here, he is the star, the center of
attraction: "It was greatness in a way, small as it was."
For a while, all of Carrie's earlier
fears are realized; the performance of all the actors is terrible. As the
female lead, Carrie seems the worst of all. As Drouet and Hurstwood sit
nervously in their box, Hurstwood stares at Carrie onstage, "as if to
hypnotize her into doing better." When Carrie exits, Drouet goes backstage
to bolster her waning courage. Gradually she gains more confidence and moves onstage
"with a steady grace, born of inspiration." Her performance moves the
entire audience, but especially Drouet, who resolves to marry her, and
Hurstwood, who becomes even more determined to take her from Drouet.
After the drama, Carrie is elated by
her newfound powers. For once she looks down upon Hurstwood and not up at him.
After the supper, she promises secretly to meet Hurstwood the next day and
returns home with the enthusiastic Drouet.
Analysis
In striving to show the workings of
fate, Dreiser found it necessary to draw heavily from the well of unforeseen
coincidence. Therefore, he inserts this theatrical episode where it is not
entirely dramatically feasible but still necessary to his philosophy. Dreiser's
view of life saw coincidence and external and unforeseeable incidents or
episodes as a very real part of man's existence. Thus, he felt it quite
relevant to introduce the Elks' benefit melodrama at this point. Despite the
many new resolutions made by Drouet and Hurstwood, then, it appears to be part
of Carrie's fate to become an actress, even if through the most curious
sequence of causes.
In her brief taste of theatrical
life, Carrie finds a sure way of climbing into the world of her imagination.
Carrie is never so introspective as to inquire why "An Hour in Elf
Land" holds such great appeal for her. Nevertheless, in her performance it
is impossible to ignore the great changes that have come over the young girl
who climbed on the train from Columbia City. At that time "she could
scarcely toss her head gracefully"; now waiting in the wings for her cue,
she is encouraged by Drouet to "get that toss" of her head that is
characteristic of the Belle of Society.
The very world over which she reigns
onstage is a pack of "Siberian wolves," who move away from her scornfully
as she enters. Not only in the speeches themselves which she delivers but also
in their effect upon Drouet and Hurstwood there lies much irony. Many of her
speeches bear direct relevance to Carrie's situation — it is a sad thing to
want for happiness, but it is a terrible thing to see another groping about
blindly for it, when it is almost within the grasp"; "my existence
hidden from all save two in the wide world, and making my joy out of that
innocent girl who will soon be his wife"; "her beauty, her wit, her
accomplishments, she may sell to you; but her love is the treasure without
money and without price."
In her role as Laura, Carrie is the
woman damned by society, yet desired by all, she is incapable of giving love.
Laura remains an outcast of the very society she rules. Surrounded by willing
lovers, clothed in finery, Laura will never be able to find love or
satisfaction. In the figure of Laura, there is the ironic foreshadowing of the
popular famous actress, Miss Carrie Madenda.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 20-21
On
the morning after Carrie's performance, Hurstwood is troubled with the problem
of getting her away from Drouet. Since both he and his wife are in a bad mood,
they bicker over family details. Mrs. Hurstwood is determined to receive more
"ladylike treatment" in the future.
Carrie is basking in the glory of
her own achievement, Hurstwood's passion for her forming a pleasant background.
She begins to feel the subtle change in feeling that transfers one from the
charity line into the ranks of almsgivers. Now she will dispense the favors.
Drouet is suddenly more attentive to
Carrie and promises sincerely to marry her. He is beginning to sense her
independence and hopes to avoid any possible danger.
Carrie leaves the house right after
Drouet. Drouet, upon returning to retrieve some papers, finds the apartment
empty, except for the chambermaid. As he flirts with the girl he learns that
Hurstwood has been visiting Carrie nearly every day during his absence. Drouet
broods upon this new information and resolves to "find out, b'George,
whether she'll act that way or not."
Carrie and Hurstwood meet in the
park once more. After much ado, Carrie consents to leave Drouet at the end of a
week. Hurstwood agrees to marry her then: "He would promise anything,
everything, and trust to fortune to disentangle him." Carrie begins to
believe that she is actually in love with the man.
Analysis
These two very short chapters are
used by Dreiser to build suspense. Their brevity suggests the emotional
intensity in the situations of the three characters. Although the chapters are
short, they are extremely important to the structure of the novel. Drouet
begins to suspect Carrie's infidelity at nearly the same moment she resolves to
leave him. In the intensity of the moment, Drouet forgets to maintain his
beguiling charm with the chambermaid and Carrie forgets she is
"married" to Drouet. Hurstwood, determined to have "Paradise,
whatever might be the result," forgets to reason carefully. He lies and throws
himself into the sea of his selfish passion.
Carrie, desiring marriage above all
else, commits herself to Hurstwood on the very day that Drouet resolves to
marry her. Hurstwood, promising marriage, is unaware of the danger that his
wife is presently holding in store for him.
The imagery of the sea continues in
the scene between Carrie and Hurstwood. (Compare this with the imagery of
storms and upheaval in Chapter 22.) Hurstwood wants to "plunge in"
and expostulate with Carrie, but finds himself "fishing for words."
For Carrie the "floodgates" are open, and she finds herself
"still illogically drifting and finding nothing at which to catch,"
"drifting... on a borderless sea of speculation." Hurstwood beats on
against the current of Carrie's indecision. The imagery reveals Drouet's
intention to show the nature of man's existence in a world of flux and
irresistible change. Man is dominated and controlled by the forces of nature.
At those times when he most needs it, his reason abandons him.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 22-23
"The misfortune of the
Hurstwood household was due to the fact that jealousy, having been born out of
love, did not perish with it." Mrs. Hurstwood maintains a form of jealousy
that turns itself into hatred. She is resentful and suspicious of Hurstwood as
she observes his youthful demeanor.
Mrs. Hurstwood learns from the
family doctor that Hurstwood had been driving recently on the Boulevard. Since
she knows it was not their daughter Jessica who was with him and certainly not
herself, she concludes that Hurstwood is seeing another woman.
The day after Carrie's theater
appearance, Mrs. Hurstwood hears from a few acquaintances how sorry they were
to learn she was "ill" and could not attend. She broods herself
"into a state of sullen desire for explanation and revenge."
Hurstwood returns home from business
in a sunny mood, hoping to improve relations somewhat with his wife. With a
"wrathful sneer" Mrs. Hurstwood accuses him of "trifling
around." It seems to Hurstwood that she knows much more about his recent activities
then she reveals. As tempers flare, Mrs. Hurstwood threatens to consult her
lawyer and Hurstwood leaves the room.
Once again Carrie is fraught with
doubt and indecision. Is it wise to leave the secure relationship she has with
Drouet on the chance that Hurstwood will marry her?
Upon returning home that evening,
Drouet begins to cross examine Carrie about her relations with Hurstwood,
revealing to her that Hurstwood is married. To his surprise Carrie attacks him
for not warning her earlier about Hurstwood. The argument wavers back and forth
until Drouet packs his clothes and leaves in a fit of jealous anger.
Analysis
Dreiser shows in these chapters two
of the ways in which jealousy manifests itself. Drouet's jealousy is in keeping
with his penchant for fantasy and his blundering kindness. He seeks no revenge
over Carrie; he is willing to accept her indiscretions, and when that becomes
futile he shows a real concern for her welfare. But even as Carrie begins to
consider it better to stay with Drouet rather than go with Hurstwood, a married
man, Drouet's temper suddenly flares and he leaves, slamming the door. Carrie
is astonished at the sudden rise of passion in the "good-natured and
tractable" drummer. The narrator remarks that it is not possible for
Carrie to see "the wellspring of human passion. A real flame of love is a
subtle thing. It burns as a will-o'the-wisp, dancing onward to fairylands of
delight. It roars as a furnace. Too often jealousy is the quality upon which it
feeds."
Mrs. Hurstwood's jealousy is of an
entirely different type. It is not passionate and sudden as in Drouet. It is
cold and calculated to produce harm. It is the result of her resentment of
Hurstwood's charm and "the airy grace with which he still took the world."
She is in search of the clear proof of "one overt deed" which will
release her wrath. As she broods she becomes "impending disaster
itself." When she attacks Hurstwood, she remains cool and cynical, "a
pythoness in humor." In contrast to Drouet, who shows a concern for
Carrie's welfare, Mrs. Hurstwood wishes to strangle and crush her husband. She
will consider her revenge unfinished until this happens.
Dreiser draws his imagery in these
two chapters from savage nature. The vision of doom finds expression in images
of stormy weather and "blackening thunderclouds" pouring forth
"a rain of wrath." In the tempest of his wife's savage jealousy,
Hurstwood is "like a vessel, powerful and dangerous, but rolling and
floundering without sail." Similarly, in the onslaught of Drouet's
discovery about her and Hurstwood and her own discovery about Hurstwood's
marriage, Carrie is shaken loose from her "mooring of logic" and
becomes "an anchorless, storm-beaten little craft which could do
absolutely nothing but drift." Through such imagery Dreiser demonstrates
his "naturalistic" philosophy, showing his belief that man is merely
an object battered about by the dark forces of the natural universe. The ship,
a conventional image of man's temporary but heroic triumph over nature, is cast
adrift and battered about mercilessly.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 24-25
Hurstwood leaves his home to take a
room in a hotel. Uncertain of what his wife will do next, he is forced into
inaction. Mrs. Hurstwood, on the contrary, proceeds to press her advantage and
begins to make heavy demands of money. Cursing himself for placing his property
in her name some years ago, Hurstwood is further distressed by the possibility
that she will carry news of his behavior to his employers. He turns from these
thoughts to thoughts of Carrie, telling himself that she will wait for him.
In the morning he goes to his office
to check the mail, dreading to hear from his wife but hoping to hear from
Carrie. Next he goes to the park to wait for Carrie but she does not appear. As
he mounts a streetcar, it begins to rain, which only adds to his distress. Once
again he checks his mail. After lunch, a messenger arrives with a demand for
money from Mrs. Hurstwood, but he sends the boy away with no reply. Later
another demand arrives, threatening to expose him to Fitzgerald and Moy if he
does not send the money asked.
Hurstwood decides to deliver the
money himself, and takes a cab through the dreary rain only to find himself
locked out of his own home. He returns dejectedly to his office. In the
meantime, he has received no word from Carrie and begins to suspect that
perhaps she has heard all about him. All day his thoughts range back and forth
between Carrie and his new problems. The weekend is spent in much "mental
perturbation."
Monday's mail brings a letter from
his wife's attorneys asking him to call. Hurstwood does not respond. On Tuesday
he drives out to Carrie's apartment but leaves before seeing her because he
thinks he is being followed.
On Wednesday another note from the
attorneys reveals that Mrs. Hurstwood has begun divorce proceedings. Now
Hurstwood knows what to expect. If he does not see the lawyers he will be sued
for divorce promptly. If he does, he will "be offered terms that would
make his blood boil."
Analysis
The presentation of these chapters
resembles that of Chapter 4, wherein Carrie's grueling factory job is
presented. Nearly every moment of time is registered both by the character and
reader, with the result that time appears to be an endless progression of minute
and distressing details. In his anxiety Hurstwood seems to be on the treadmill
of his own destruction. He must do something or else "drift along to
catastrophe."
Throughout the novel up to this
point, Hurstwood has been characterized as a man of great persuasive qualities
and power, but even he is laid low by the great demonic force of jealousy and
revenge that drives his wife. Just as much as Drouet or Carrie, he is capable
of being victimized by a set of circumstances beyond his control. Now, locked out
of his own house, he sees that the power he had wielded there is lost to him.
The dreary, rainy setting of Chapter
24 serves to put the images of storm and doom of the preceding chapters on an
external plane. The "lowering clouds of suspicion" have produced a
literal rain in which Hurstwood wanders back and forth from office to home. In
addition, Hurstwood finds he must frequently wipe the moisture from his brow, a
detail which is perhaps too literal.
It should be noted that here,
precisely in the middle of the novel, the reader's attention has been drawn
away from Carrie to Hurstwood. The story of Hurstwood's fall becomes
inextricably connected with the story of Carrie's rise to eminence; the fate of
one is entangled with the other. Appearing before only as a minor"
character, Hurstwood has become more and more conspicuous while Carrie is at
times only mentioned as a background for Hurstwood's condition.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 26
The focus of the narrative shifts
back to Carrie sitting alone in her rocking chair after Drouet's departure. She
realizes that he may never return and so begins to formulate plans for the
future. Certainly she cannot go to Hurstwood for aid, for she is shocked by the
"evidence of human depravity" she sees in the man.
Pausing for a bite of food, Carrie
begins to wonder how much money she has left. She discovers she has but seven
dollars; however, the rent has been paid to the end of the month. She must
leave the apartment then, for she cannot go on living with Drouet even if he
did return.
On the next day, Friday, Carrie sets
out to find work, but she must return home because of the same rain that
dampened Hurstwood's spirits. Carrie visits a few shops on Saturday morning,
discovering how her new appearance causes the men of business to be much more
polite than they had been the previous winter. Nevertheless, she is determined
not to take advantage of special favors and gives up the search for the time
being.
Remembering Drouet's advice about
going on the stage, she arises Monday morning and begins the round of theaters,
looking for a small part. She meets two troupe managers, both of whom advise
her that she must seek theatrical work in New York. That afternoon she drafts a
letter to Hurstwood, telling him, "You have caused me more misery than you
can think. I hope you will get over your infatuation for me. We must not meet
any more."
The next morning she mails the
letter and begins in vain to seek employment in the large department stores.
While she is out, Drouet returns to make amends, but finding the apartment
empty, he leaves. He does plan to return soon, however.
Analysis
Carrie's search for a part in the
theater is reminiscent of her earlier search for a factory job. The world of
the theater is perhaps more hostile because the men she speaks to take
liberties with her that the shop men would not dare. To the shop men she was a
commodity; to the theater managers she is a toy or a source of low amusement.
Carrie's position is in many ways
worse than it had been when she first came to the city. Then, there was always
the opportunity to return to Columbia City or to seek momentary refuge with the
Hansons. Now she can do neither. Her fascination and awe for the world of the
theater is much greater than was her attraction to the business world. It seems
foolhardy to her to think of trying the large theater companies. "Her
spirits were materially reduced, owing to the newly restored sense of magnitude
of the great interests and the insignificance of her claims upon society, such
as she understood them to be."
Summary and Analysis Chapter 27
Hurstwood spends the day thinking of
his plight. Carrie no longer wants to see him. His wife is seeking to ruin him.
What can he do?
Noticing that Drouet is now living
at the Palmer House, Hurstwood rushes out to Carrie's apartment but finds she
is not at home. He returns to the saloon and begins to imbibe more than is his
custom. For a time he forgets his troubles and enjoys the society of wealthy
friends and acquaintances. After the saloon closes, Hurstwood works in his
office.
Checking the safe door, as is his
nightly custom, Hurstwood is astonished to discover that it had not been locked
and that about ten thousand dollars is in it. Before he shuts the safe he
pauses to consider what it would be like to have so much ready cash. He could
run off with Carrie and get rid of his wife. The liquor warms his imagination.
Hurstwood wavers back and forth for
some time, removing the money, then replacing it, and removing it again and yet
again. Suddenly, the lock snaps shut as he stands with the money in his hand.
The indecision turns to action. Hurstwood stuffs the money into a satchel and
rushes out. He takes a cab to Carrie's apartment and tells the servant girl to
fetch Carrie because Drouet is in the hospital and wishes to see her. Carrie is
so bewildered that she believes the story and the cab carries them off to the
railroad terminal.
Analysis
Hurstwood attempts to solve his
predicament in an action of the most crucial relevance. In dramatizing man's
complete helplessness against the forces which control him, Dreiser's handling
of the theft ranks among the most revealing scenes of all his work. The
incident was so integral to his philosophy of life that with variations it
appeared again twenty-five years later in the center of An American Tragedy.
The perfect balance of motive and accident leads Hurstwood into committing
a crime that will result in his own destruction. "When Waters Engulf Us We
Reach for a Star," the title Dreiser assigns to this episode, expresses
epigrammatically the clouding of intelligent self-interest in moments of panic
by any apparent solution that suggests itself. For a brief moment, illusion
overwhelms reality. A man takes one false step and his life is forfeit.
Intensely motivated by anger and by
the impending scandal which threatens to cost him his managerial position,
Hurstwood's balance is lost. Whether it is true that Hurstwood dominates Sister
Carrie, stealing all attention from the title character, is a matter of
dispute that can be settled only by personal taste. Dreiser does document the
man's decline and fall in long and minutely detailed sequence, yet it is
precisely through such extended contrast that the reader sees both Carrie and
Hurstwood in a clear light. Both walk a tightrope in the precarious material
world. One looks down and loses his balance, the other keeps her eyes on the
tether ahead.
The central image of
insecurity-Hurstwood's wavering between theft and resisted temptation-
symbolizes the whole society that Dreiser evokes. It is a society in which
there are no real equals, and no equilibrium, but only people moving up and
down. As they waver back and forth — Carrie in her rocking chair, Hurstwood in
front of the safe — they search in near hysteria for a way to the top.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 28-29
Hurstwood and Carrie board the
Detroit train. When the train is out of Chicago Hurstwood admits that Drouet's
injury was merely a ruse to get Carrie to go away with him. She makes an effort
to get away from Hurstwood but his pleadings and explanations make her
reconsider. She is drawn by his daring and power and is flattered by the
thought that he has left Chicago to be with her. Carrie is once again struck by
indecision, but decides in favor of Hurstwood when he offers to marry her.
From Detroit the couple continue in
a sleeping car to Montreal, where they register in a hotel under the name of
"G. W. Murdock and wife." In the lobby of the hotel Hurstwood
experiences the first of a series of encounters with his past life in Chicago,
a stockbroker named Mr. Kenny. The fear of being discovered causes him to
decline Kenny's invitation to breakfast with him. Next he spies a man who seems
to be a private detective and concludes that Montreal is too warm for him. He
plans to move to New York because "its mysteries and possibilities of
mystification" are "infinite."
Hurstwood reads the local papers,
wherein is published an account of his misdeeds, and he regrets his terrible
error. A knock at the door reveals a Chicago detective who threatens him with
exposure and arrest if he does not return the money. Hurstwood corresponds with
Fitzgerald and Moy, with the result that he repays $9,500 and keeps $1,300 as a
"loan." Carrie, of course, is ignorant of the whole affair.
The couple are married illegally
under the name of Wheeler, "by a Baptist minister, the first divine they
found convenient." The newlyweds board the New York train and arrive the
next morning. Carrie, who is beginning "to have a few opinions of her
own," does not like New York after her first impression.
Analysis
After the theft, Hurstwood becomes a
different man. He has lost his identity in the world of Chicago society.
Without his managerial position, family, or property, he is simply another
fugitive from the law, a creature driven by instinct and fantasy, haunted by
misgivings. It seems a blow to Hurstwood that the detective who tracks him down
is only of the "lowest stratum welcomed at the resort." He himself is
a thief and a safecracker, or so the newspapers say. Reading his own
description in the newspaper, Hurstwood realizes the nature of social injustice
which sees only one side of a tragedy. The newspapers report only that he stole
the money. How and why were only matters of indifferent speculation. All the
complications which preceded the theft are unknown. "He was accused
without being understood."
As the train rolls onward from
Chicago, the relationship between Carrie and Hurstwood changes dramatically.
Carrie realizes that she does not love the man, but sees in him the only way
out of a desperate situation. No longer is she so fascinated by Hurstwood that
she responds automatically to his every wish. She will have her way; she is
nominally free to leave him if she wishes, yet she has the apparent security of
marriage.
Throughout these chapters Dreiser
repeats the idea that the very motion of travel has a deep psychological
effect. The progress of the train is an important factor in Carrie's decision
to remain with Hurstwood. "The speeding wheels and disappearing country
put Chicago farther and farther behind." Dreiser opens Chapter 29,
"The Solace of Travel: The Boats of the Sea," with a discussion of
travel. To the untraveled, new places are fascinating. Travel "solaces and
delights." New things and places to see are so fascinating that they
cannot be neglected, and the mind, "which is a mere reflection of sensory
impressions, succumbs to the flood of objects." One forgets lovers, puts
aside sorrow, and suspends impending problems. Thus Carrie is fascinated by her
entry into New York with its boats and highways, and especially the East River,
"the first sign of the great sea."
Summary and Analysis Chapters 30-31
Approximately the first two years in
New York is sketched in briefly. Hurstwood purchases a one-third partnership in
a downtown establishment, one not nearly so "swell" as Fitzgerald and
Moy's. After a few months, business improves and Hurstwood begins to resume his
old public self He occasionally gambles and attends the theater with friends
but cherishes his home life greatly. He begins to enlarge his wardrobe, but
does not encourage Carrie to do so. It seems to him that she is content to be a
housewife and so he begins to relax his demeanor before her and treat her with
"easy familiarity."
For Carrie the routine of running
the flat and basking in Hurstwood's affection seem interesting for a time. She
attempts to understand that Hurstwood must spend his money frugally and so
makes no demands for luxuries or entertainment. Because she is "passive
and receptive" and she does not love Hurstwood, she is not jealous of his
public life. Gradually, however, she becomes aware of the changes in Hurstwood
and begins to resent being neglected.
In the second year, Carrie meets a
new neighbor, Mrs. Vance, whose elegant clothing and fashionable behavior begin
to awaken her old desires. One day she attends a matinee with Mrs. Vance, and
she becomes fascinated with the "showy parade" of "pretty faces
and fine clothes" on Broadway. "With a start she awoke to find that
she was in fashion's crowd, on parade in a show place — and such a show
place!" Carrie is "cut to the quick" by her own lack of quality
and stylish apparel and she resolves never to walk upon Broadway again until
she looks better. She feels her old desire to enter into the world of fashion
as an equal; "then she would be happy!"
Analysis
The treatment of passing time in
these chapters, in contrast to the plodding sequences of the last days in
Chicago or the hectic compressed time of the departure and trip through Canada,
is leisurely and without incident. Nearly two years pass by in New York,
whereas before only about six months had elapsed since Carrie's arrival in
Chicago. Such a treatment of time reveals the routine existence into which
Carrie and Hurstwood have entered. Nothing much happens and so time passes
unnoticed.
Credit must be given Hurstwood for
his serious attempt to forestall the tragedy of disappearing into the walls of
New York. In contrast to Chicago, where celebrities were so few, New York is
full of notables and a man of Hurstwood's fallen station and age has no chance of
gaining prestige. In New York, the origin of all "wealth, place, and
fame," Hurstwood finds himself in the humiliating situation of searching
for work and living on a frugal budget. He lives in constant fear of the shame
that would come in meeting old friends.
Unfortunately, Hurstwood takes
Carrie for granted. Struggling with his own problems, he is unaware that she
requires more than mere affection, mortgaged furniture, and the vague promise
of more money in the future. "He failed therein to take account of the
frailties of human nature — the difficulties of matrimonial life." Dreiser
makes frequent mention of the fact that no great bond of love exists to hold
the couple together. Both go on, unaware and unadvised of the problems and
requirements of the other. Neither has enough faith to invite the other into
full confidence. Hurstwood lives in the frustration of the past and Carrie
lives in the fantasies of the future.
Hurstwood draws contentment from his
mistaken belief that Carrie is content with her lot, but as Carrie sees more
and more of New York, her early desires and frustrations are reawakened. Once
again she feels herself cut off from Hurstwood's world, as well as the higher
world beyond him.
In Hurstwood's attentive behavior
toward Mrs. Vance, Carrie perceives the changes that have come over their
relationship. She begins to feel stale and gloomy and begins to think of old
possibilities. "There were no immediate results to this awakening, for
Carrie had little power of initiative; but, nevertheless, she seemed ever
capable of getting herself into the tide of change where she would be easily
borne along."
In invoking the past and omitting
any specific reference to the future, Dreiser succeeds in building a kind of
suspense. By pointing out the recurrent parallel patterns of change in Carrie
and Hurstwood, the author invites the reader to speculate about "future
possibility."
Summary and Analysis Chapter 32
After the matinee Carrie returns
home to dwell upon what seems to her the extraordinarily beautiful world of the
theater and regrets in her heart that she cannot be part of it. Nevertheless,
New York seems to be a place filled with even more wonder and fantasy than
Chicago itself. She believes that she can "never live" until she
becomes a part of New York society.
When Hurstwood enters, Carrie is in
her rocking chair, moody, testy, and resentful of having her reveries broken in
upon. He invites her to the theater with him that same evening and she accepts.
About a month later, Carrie goes out
for dinner and theater as the guest of the Vance's and Mrs. Vance's cousin, Bob
Ames. As they dine at Sherry's, a very exclusive restaurant of the period,
Ames, a "clear-eyed, fine-headed youth," suggests to Carrie that
wealth and fashionable attire are only unnecessary luxuries. Ames seems
"wiser than Hurstwood, saner and brighter than Drouet." His sincere
rejection of excessive wealth removes some of the bitterness of the contrast
between the society life and Carrie's life. Yet Carrie is attracted by his
intelligence, and sees that his "calm indifference" is not the
response of a bitter loser. When the evening is over Carrie retires to her
rocking chair to think over the events of the day. "Through a fog of
longing and conflicting desires . . . she was beginning to see."
Analysis
Ever since leaving Chicago, Carrie
has desired little in the way of entertainment and worldly possessions. It is
an inexplicable quirk of character, yet one of which even Carrie herself is not
aware. Dreiser has prepared the reader for a revelation on Carrie's part for
several chapters through his choice of imagery and detail and the carefully
delineated presentation of the "love" between Carrie and Hurstwood,
and especially through his handling of time. Since her afternoon with Mrs.
Vance, Carrie has been experiencing the aftereffects of "the great
awakening blow." Even if she retreats briefly from her reveries, she will
return to them again: "Time and repetition — ah, the wonder of it! The
dropping water and the solid stone — how utterly it yields at last!"
Mrs. Vance, who has become Carrie's
fashion adviser, just as Drouet had been, is eager to show Carrie the ways of
the higher world. Yet her plan backfires because her own cousin, Bob Ames,
invites Carrie to question seriously the values and assumptions she has held.
Ames is happy and successful, even though he is all alone. Indeed, wonders
Carrie, why can't I reach my goals alone? Why not try to find a part in the
theater? At the "feast of Belshazzar" the handwriting on the wall
becomes clear with Ames as the seer. Suddenly, after three years of being a
mere housewife to the tired Hurstwood, Carrie is beginning to see that the
possibilities of New York exist for her only if she is willing to take
advantage of them.
Realizing that not only Hurstwood,
but she herself, has become rather dull and uninteresting, Carrie is now on the
verge of turning her imaginary world of the theater into a reality. The water
is striking through the stone at last.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 33-35
Even though she does not see Ames
again for some time, Carrie thinks of him as an ideal to contrast other men by.
Compared to the youthful Ames, Hurstwood seems old and uninteresting, while
Drouet seems foolish and shallow.
Hurstwood himself is sliding past
the prime of life, and largely because of that, he begins to lose the
decisiveness that had once made him prosperous and successful. For a time this
is not apparent even to him, but gradually he begins to see himself outside
"the walled city" of youth and easy money and fine clothes.
The narrator postulates that this
change for the worse is the result of "certain poisons in the blood,
called katastates." The poisons arising from remorse work against the
system and finally produce "marked physical deterioration." Subject
to these, Hurstwood becomes a brooder.
Reading the daily newspaper reports
of the celebrities with whom he used to associate, Hurstwood becomes even more
depressed with his own lowly state. In an effort to avert disaster, Hurstwood
decides that he and Carrie should move into a smaller apartment and dismiss the
maid. Carrie is very gloomily affected by the change, "more seriously than
anything that had yet happened." She begins to recall that Hurstwood
"had practically forced her to flee with him."
As Hurstwood continues to brood,
only the newspapers and his own thoughts seem of any importance to him.
"The delight of love had again slipped away." To make matters worse,
the lease on the Warren Street establishment expires and Hurstwood finds himself
facing the coming winter without any income. He begins to search halfheartedly
for a new position. He visits a few saloons but realizes that his meager $700
is not nearly enough for a substantial investment.
Hurstwood's appearance is still
excellent, however; he continues to dress well and looks prosperous. Now
forty-three years old and "comfortably built" he finds walking about
the city makes his legs tired, his shoulders ache, and his feet hurt. It makes
him bitter to have to enter business places announcing that he was looking for
"something to do."
His days are largely spent lounging
in the lobbies of the larger New York hotels watching the world pass before
him. At night he returns home to read the papers and lose himself in the
"Lethean waters . . . of telegraphed intelligence." So he reads and
rocks himself in the warm room near the radiator.
The routine he falls into consists
of reading the morning newspapers, leaving the house in search of work only to
rest in a hotel lobby, and returning home to read the evening papers. As winter
sets in he leaves the house even less, except to go on household errands as a
means of justifying his presence. He deteriorates quickly, wearing his worst
clothes, and shaving only once a week. His very appearance becomes revolting to
Carrie, and she begins to sleep alone.
By doing all the daily errands,
Hurstwood cuts household expenses to a minimum and never gives any money to
Carrie. When he is not out buying food or coal, he sits by the radiator,
reading and rereading his newspaper.
Analysis
Dreiser suggests in one of his many
editorial asides that Hurstwood's failing condition is the universal lot of
men. After a certain time the balance of youth and age begins to tip in favor
of age. The body and mind lose their vitality. Therefore Hurstwood suddenly
finds himself an outsider to the small circumscribed world to which he used to
belong. The realization of this removes him even farther.
Hurstwood still believes that by
economizing severely for a year so that he can reinvest, he and Carrie can rise
again to a state of financial well-being. Unfortunately, he is fooling himself.
He begins to forget how sullen and depressed he has become so that everything
he tries is doomed to failure.
By showing Hurstwood going through
almost exactly the same motions as Carrie as he searches for work, Dreiser
underscores his philosophy of fate and fortune. Through a few incidental
changes, as they are altered and increased by time, Hurstwood has slipped from
very high on his own social ladder to a point below the register. Like Carrie
had been, he is forced to walk the streets and realize his own inexperience in
the ways of the working world. He has few skills, for his past career was built
upon his excellent appearance and jovial personality. He is forced to consider
any opportunity that gives him "something to do."
As Hurstwood slips down into
decadence, Carrie becomes more and more independent and detached from him. She
does not fall with him but remains a "soldier of fortune," somehow
believing that fate, even though it ruins Hurstwood, will provide for her. She
continues to believe that the theater is a possible way out of the situation
for her.
The parallels between Hurstwood and
the Carrie of old suggest how different both have become. Now it is Hurstwood
who sits idly rocking back and forth in the chair. His newspapers serve to
banish the worries of the day. So far removed is he from the world of society,
that it becomes a dream world, a land of fantasy where he flees to forget his
troubles.
As Hurstwood sits daily in the
Broadway hotel lobbies, he recalls how he used to be an important member of the
clan of idle and gay people and reminisces bitterly how much money it takes to
live in that manner. As he sits in one of the many plush lobbies, Hurstwood is
approached by Mr. Cargill of Chicago. When Carrie made her debut in the Elks'
theatrical three years ago, Cargill took advantage of the situation to
introduce his wife and shake the hand of the influential and powerful
Hurstwood. How clear and yet how far away that event seems to Hurstwood. Both
men are now embarrassed by Hurstwood's obviously fallen condition.
In Chicago Carrie had nowhere to go
but up. In New York, approaching age and constant depression make it possible
for Hurstwood to go nowhere but down. He is now the walking shell of the man he
used to be. Carrie cannot fully comprehend the changes in Hurstwood, for she
does not know what it means to be completely without hope. As Hurstwood's
respect for himself vanishes, it perishes for him in Carrie. She knows that he
still has some money left and presentable clothes and that he is not
unattractive when dressed up. She does not forget her own difficult struggle in
Chicago, but neither does she forget that she never ceased trying to find work.
It seems to her that Hurstwood never tried. He does not even consult the
employment notices anymore. What Carrie does not understand is what Hurstwood
understands too well: that a middle-aged man in a state of depression and
without skills has no chance of finding work in New York when 80,000 people are
unemployed.
Finally her patience and
understanding reach the breaking point. When Hurstwood reminds her how
expensive is the butter that she uses to flavor their meager half-pound of
steak, she remarks archly, "You wouldn't mind if you were working."
All feeling between them has perished.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 36
Although Carrie has avoided Mrs.
Vance since she and Hurstwood have moved to the commonplace Thirteenth Street
address, she experiences mixed feelings when she meets the young woman on the
street by chance one day. She invites Mrs. Vance to visit "some
time," afraid to have her see Hurstwood in his bedraggled condition.
Hurstwood, however, does not always
sit about with his four-day beard and in a condition of "utmost
nonchalance." Occasionally, he shaves and dresses merely to wander about
the city. At times he joins in a poker game, neither winning nor losing
significantly. One day he wins a few dollars, and the dim phantom of hope draws
him back for another game the next day. Hurstwood is so keen to win, however,
that his facial expressions give him away. He loses over sixty precious
dollars. He resolves to play no more.
He continues to sit about the house,
lacking pride or interest in his own or Carrie's welfare. While Carrie is out
one day, Mrs. Vance stops to visit and is dismayed by Hurstwood's appearance.
An argument ensues when Carrie learns of this. Hurstwood is ashamed of himself;
he dresses carefully and leaves the house. After treating himself to an
expensive dinner, he decides to try his hand at another poker game. This time
he loses nearly a hundred dollars.
Wondering what is becoming of
himself, he wavers between extreme frugality and ridiculous self-indulgence.
When it comes time to pay the rent, Hurstwood discovers that he is
"nearing his last hundred dollars."
Analysis
The significance of this chapter
lies in the irony of Hurstwood's attempt to make money by playing poker.
Through a series of chance occurrences combined with a certain ineptitude in
responding wisely to these occurrences, Hurstwood has lost at the game of life.
It is no wonder, then, that he fails so miserably at this backroom game of
chance. Making the irony particularly incisive is the fact that while Hurstwood
was prosperous and important, he had no difficulty in manipulating a game of
euchre for Carrie to win. Now himself a pawn of fate, Hurstwood cannot believe
that he has lost his skill at poker. Hurstwood does not "introspect";
consequently he fails to see that he is not "the old Hurstwood — only a
man arguing with a divided conscience and lured by a phantom." He is no
longer a master of the bluff. Carrie learns this shortly before he does
himself.
Each chapter in the story of
Hurstwood's dissolution is also a chapter in the tale of Carrie's
disillusionment. In each chapter she learns a new lesson or discovers something
new about her relationship with Hurstwood. In this episode she discovers that
her "marriage" is not legal or binding. It does not exist; like
"Murdock," "Wheeler," or even Hurstwood, it is merely one
more trumped-up phantom of belief. When Hurstwood leaves the apartment, Carrie
thinks for a moment that he is gone for good. This does not distress her; still
dependent upon him for financial support, she is merely concerned that he has
left her without money.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 37-39
As in Chicago, the idea of working
in the theater comes to Carrie as a last resource in distress. One morning over
breakfast she announces her intention of finding a job. Hurstwood is secretly
afraid that she will become successful and desert him. He does not understand
Carrie's mental ability; he does not realize that a person can be
"emotionally — instead of intellectually — great."
To prevent Carrie from making any
definite plans, Hurstwood lies that he anticipates obtaining a hotel job
through an old friend and that he is beginning to hear from his
"contacts" once more. He reflects that Carrie might work for a while
until the job materializes.
Searching for work one day, Carrie
returns with a copy of the Clipper, wherein are listed the names and
addresses of the New York theatrical agents. Hurstwood picks a few at random and
Carrie visits them to no avail, for minimal experience and a cash deposit are
required before an agent will consider managing a young actress. Carrie decides
to see the theater managers directly.
As she stops at various theaters of
the city, Carrie must deal with all sorts of self-important types, from pompous
doormen and box-office clerks to the "lords" themselves of these
little businesses. All expect her to be very humble, and they resent her small
intrusion upon their precious time. Finally, the manager of the Casino tells
Carrie to return the following week, at which time there may be an opening in
the chorus line.
When the week of waiting is over,
Carrie returns to the Casino theater, where she is told to report the next
morning for rehearsal. As the girl walks homeward, her delight turns to
dissatisfaction with Hurstwood, whose "handicap of age" she does not
comprehend.
Once again taking the name Carrie
Madenda, the young chorine works hard at rehearsal every day, "the sound
of glory ringing in her ears." It seems to Carrie that Hurstwood has
decided to sit about the house waiting for her to bring home her weekly twelve
dollars. This annoys her, because she is anxious to buy new clothes with her
salary.
Hurstwood stays home the night of
the opening performance. The play is a hit and Carrie is assured of work for
some time.
As Carrie works hard at the theater,
Hurstwood sits home for a month reading the newspaper, his determination to
seek work overclouded more and more by the conviction "that each particular
day was not the day." Laying aside a few dollars for shaves and carfare,
he announces to Carrie that he is finally out of money. Now the two are wholly
dependent upon her for subsistence. When Hurstwood does "borrow"
money for household expenses, he always returns the exact change to Carrie.
At the theater, Carrie makes friends
with Lola Osborne, a "little gaslight soldier." The two spend much of
their free time together looking for new work and shopping.
The theater manager and the ballet
master agree that Carrie is a much better dancer than the average run of the
girls and put her in charge of a "line," raising her salary to
eighteen dollars. Nevertheless, after buying a few things for herself Carrie
discovers again and again that she simply cannot support two people.
Carrie takes advantage of every
opportunity to be out of the house away from Hurstwood, who makes mild and
ineffectual protests against her absence. This only serves to widen the gap
between them. While Carrie is visiting Lola one afternoon, two of the young
lady's gentlemen admirers stop by to take her for a drive. Carrie is persuaded
to join them and naturally forgets to return home in time to cook dinner for
Hurstwood. As he sits home, grumbling to himself that Carrie is getting ahead
now and he is "out of it," Carrie dines at the famed Delmonico's
restaurant. The setting reminds her of the time she dined with the Vances and
Bob Ames, whose ideals "burned in her heart." A sense of obligation
forces her to go home directly after the performance, and so she must decline
the offer of the youths to continue the day's festivities.
Analysis
One of the major ironies, or
reversals, of the novel arises from Carrie's desperate decision to become an
actress. Up until now she had considered the theater only a part of her
impossible fantasy world. The stage was "a door through she might enter
that gilded state which she had so much craved."
As a "soldier of fortune,"
Carrie had always accepted the dictates of fate without question. She had been
content to remain passive as Drouet or Hurstwood presided over her actions and
provided financial security. Now that Hurstwood is unable to provide, he is
also unable to direct Carrie's behavior. At this point, the brutal reality of
starvation and the omnipresent fantasy of the theater converge to provide a
course of action for the "little soldier."
The world in which she imagines
herself is far less removed from the real world than are the realms of fantasy
she has previously visited. Poverty and the fear of starvation make it a
necessity for her to take a part in a Broadway show. She must go to the theater
every evening to apply her makeup. After each performance she sees the elegant
carriages waiting about with amorous youths in them seeking her attention. In
just a short time, she will enjoy a generous income and will be able to buy the
clothes she desires. As her mind wanders over these fantasies, Hurstwood's
dreary state makes their beauty "more and more vivid." As the beauty
of the fantasy become more vivid, it also becomes more and more realistic. For
once, Carrie's fantasies do not fade; instead, the conditions of the world
change, allowing them to become actual.
In Dreiser's world view such a
drastic change in conditions is part of the ordinary flux of life. At one
moment Carrie drifts along on a tempestuous sea; the next moment she finds
herself on the crest of a wave riding toward success. Looking over her
shoulder, she sees Hurstwood slipping beneath the stormy surface.
Dreiser never chose his details
without great care. The publication Clipper, although it momentarily
sets Carrie off on an uncertain course through the offices of Mrs. Bermudez and
other theatrical agents, ultimately does provide her with the determination to
stop at the port of the Casino theater.
Suggestions of the eternal sea of
flux upon which the drama unfolds continue to appear in the minutest details.
The very name "Carrie" suggests the girl's relation to the workings
of fate. Similarly, "Madenda," coming from a Latin root meaning
"wet" or "soaked," continues to enforce the imagery.
As Carrie's fortunes rise steadily,
Hurstwood continues to become more defeated and bitter. Every minor advance for
Carrie becomes a major setback for him, until finally he comes to blame Carrie
for his own dissolution. He believes that Carrie is now satisfied and content
with her lot and that her success will go to her head. Even as he sits brooding
over this, however, Carrie sits with her friend Lola and two gallants, thinking
not of her financial success or popularity, but of the emotional fulfillment
that comes with being a good actress. The ideals of Bob Ames burn in her heart.
It is not for Carrie to be content with the present; she forces herself always
to look to the future for satisfaction.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 40-41
The remainder of the summer and the
autumn pass. Carrie obtains another part at a higher salary when the opera in
which she played a part goes on the road. Hurstwood continues to sit in the
rocking chair, reading his newspaper, promising himself that things will go
better for him. Of course, the hotel job he talked about never materializes.
One winter day, after Carrie
complains to Hurstwood that she cannot possibly pay all their bills by herself,
Hurstwood reads an advertisement in the newspaper announcing that because of a
labor strike, a Brooklyn trolley line is seeking motormen and conductors.
Although his sympathy lies with the strikers, he decides to go to Brooklyn to
find work because Carrie seems to suspect him of stealing her money.
Making his way through the cold to
the trolley yard, he offers his services. The manager of the line is so pressed
for workers that he decides to hire and train Hurstwood as a motorman. After a
day of instruction and a cold night in the loft of the car storage barn,
Hurstwood begins his first day of work in many months. The hours are long and the
weather is cold, but the hardest and most dangerous part of the job is facing
the angry strikers. Although there are policemen aboard the car for protection,
Hurstwood is attacked and dragged off in a skirmish. He is finally rescued by
the policemen, but as he is climbing back aboard the car, he is struck by a
bullet.
The violence and the misery are too
much for Hurstwood and he leaves nervously. After a long walk in the snow, he
arrives home, tends to the slight wound he has received in the arm, and settles
down comfortably to read his paper with relief.
Analysis
Even though the reader has had mixed
feelings about Hurstwood up to this point, the events of the Brooklyn episode
are enough to compel anyone to feel sympathy for the man. Hurstwood seems
selfish and stuffy until he is shown trying to deal with the impossible
situation he faces. His sympathy lies with the striking workmen, for he knows
what it is never to have enough money to survive, yet the strike offers him an
opportunity to prove to Carrie and himself that he is "not down yet,"
that there must be something he could do.
Furthermore, Hurstwood is no longer
as robust and alert as he used to be, and the cold and danger would be
sufficient to dissuade a much younger man from attempting to operate a streetcar
under such conditions. As he sets out for the yard in Brooklyn, he gains for a
while some of the dignity of the old Hurstwood. He seems to possess a
"shrewd and pleasant strength." Those conditions do not prevail for
long, however; for when the manager of the trolley line asks, "What are
you — a motorman?" he is forced to answer, "No; I'm not
anything." Hurstwood's reply is a response to much more than the simple
question. In his own eyes he is nothing but the ghost of what he once had been.
A charge often laid against
naturalistic authors is that they often present factual or social data to
achieve the "reality" of actual life and conditions without properly
integrating such material into the structure of the novel. Although Dreiser's theories
frequently caused him to view life as a series of unexpected events, the charge
does not apply in this case. Hurstwood has for some time been reading about the
unemployment situation in the city. By his own standards he is unemployable.
Nevertheless, in times of strife and strike a job-seeker and a labor-seeker
must both alter their standards. It is only a combination of the prevalence of
unemployment and the occurrence of a strike that will provide the situation in
which Hurstwood is able to force himself to try anything.
Dreiser combines the naturalist's
talent for rendering the social phenomenon known as the labor strike with the
artist's conception of structural development and character portrayal. The
strike episode, then, is not only an accurate rendering of a strike but also a
very integral part of the story of Hurstwood and Carrie.
As Carrie actually entered the
fantasy world of the stage, so does Hurstwood enter for a while his own fantasy
world of newspaper headlines; but, unlike Carrie, he fails to make a place for
himself in his own world. The indignity and fear he experiences are too harsh
for the faltering Hurstwood. "The real thing was slightly worse than
thoughts of it had been." As Carrie rises, Hurstwood descends, and
together their individual stories comprise the plot of Sister Carrie.
In contrast to Carrie's new
clothing, which makes her part of her new world, Hurstwood's clothing is now
threadbare and worn. It is not sufficiently warm for him to weather the cold
winter. The incongruity of a trolley motorman in worn gentleman's garb reveals
Hurstwood's inability to cope with the world changing about him. Clothing
reveals the complete inversion of the "marriage" of Carrie and
Hurstwood. A few short years ago he was the struggling breadwinner who occasionally
indulged himself in new clothing to meet the world, while Carrie remained home,
running the household in her outdated garb. Now, however, Carrie is the
hard-working breadwinner. She buys new dresses in order to be a more complete
part of the world luck and fate have brought to her. It is Hurstwood who stays
home now. It is he who dresses poorly, and when he is not immersed in his
fantasies, he fetches the groceries and deals with the tradesmen. The original
relationship between them has been totally inverted.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 42
Carrie misunderstands Hurstwood's
Brooklyn trolley venture, thinking that "he had encountered nothing worse
than the ordinary roughness." The same night that Hurstwood spends in the
car barn Carrie gains the approval of the star of the show through a clever ad
lib remark. The line remains in the show, and soon thereafter she wins her
first speaking part.
Having now "tried and
failed," Hurstwood sinks lower and begins to experience reveries of
glorious past times when he was the center of attention in Chicago society. He
is continually harassed at home by creditors.
As Carrie's salary increases, so
does her resentment at having to support Hurstwood's dead weight. She debates
leaving him to take a room with Lola Osborne. When a new part is given to her,
she spends for costumes all the rent money she has been saving. The thought of
leaving the pathetic Hurstwood fills her with sadness; nevertheless, one spring
day she gathers her clothes and belongings and leaves the apartment. In a note
to Hurstwood, she explains that she needs all the money she makes for clothes
and costumes and that it is no use trying to keep up the flat. She gives him
twenty dollars and all their furniture.
When Hurstwood returns after a day of
wandering, he reads the note and is struck by a powerful sensation of coldness.
He sits in the rocker for a long time, staring at the floor.
Analysis
A counterpoint to the ebbing
Hurstwood's pathetic answer "No; I'm not anything" is Carrie's clever
remark to the star of the show one evening. Part of a group of Oriental
beauties in a comic opera, she is led before the potentate, who asks,
"Well, who are you?" Her answer, "I am yours truly," rocks
the audience with appreciative laughter. Compared to Hurstwood's tight-lipped
admission of defeat, Carrie's is a sign of her growing belief in herself and in
her blossoming talents. Carrie, although she is somewhat timid, is a very
capable young lady. She has learned much by experience.
Among the things she has learned is
the manner in which to treat men. "No longer the lightest word of a man
made her head dizzy. She had learned that men could change and fail." She
is no longer won over through personal flattery. To win her over now a man must
show the "kindly superiority" that Bob Ames had shown.
Through frequent reference to Ames,
Dreiser reminds the reader that Carrie is capable of a purely emotional and
mental response to a man without overtones of materialistic desire.
Unfortunately for her, however, Ames has forgotten her and is working faraway
in another city. The one man who can move her is lost to her. With
characteristic irony Dreiser reveals that life for Carrie is largely the
process of substituting one form of desire and frustration for another.
Hurstwood does move her slightly,
but he also repels her. Just before Carrie leaves him, she feels guilty and
begins to act solicitously toward him. He is no longer worthless or shiftless
to her, but run down and "beaten by chance." His eyes are no longer
sharp and keen; his hair is beginning to turn gray; his hands are flabby and
his face shows great wear. Perhaps, she thinks, his failure is not all his own
fault. Nevertheless, he is still a burden to her and she resolves to leave him.
Summary and Analysis Chapters 43-44
When she first leaves Hurstwood,
Carrie fears that he may wait around for her at the theater, but as the days
pass she forgets him. "In a little while she was, except for occasional thoughts,
wholly free of the gloom with which her life had been weighed in the
flat." Now the "showy world" of the theater absorbs her
interest.
As time passes, Carrie continues to
receive larger and more attractive roles. Her photograph is published in a Sunday
paper and she receives occasional notices.
Although her salary has been
increased, Carrie finds that she is still as far removed as ever from the upper
strata of society. Those who amiably approach her are interested only in their
own pleasure; their advances lack any promise of genuine friendship.
Carrie's part as a pert, frowning
Quakeress in a summer production at the Casino theater is the chief attraction
of the play. One critic, musing about the unpredictability of public taste,
writes, "The vagaries of fortune are indeed curious." Another coins
the catch phrase, "If you wish to be merry, see Carrie frown." The
manager of the theater and the author of the play send her congratulatory
messages. Her salary is increased once again, this time to the incredible sum
of one hundred and fifty dollars a week. Carrie finds that she has more money
than she could possibly spend.
In a third-rate hotel downtown,
Hurstwood reads of Carrie's successes and recognizes that she is now in
"the walled city." She has become a celebrity of the sort he used to
know so well. With a last gesture of pride, he resolves never to bother her.
The manager of a brand new hotel
offers to Carrie a suite overlooking Broadway at a greatly reduced rate. The
young star moves in with her friend Lola. The wealthy Mrs. Vance pays her a
visit.
For a time Carrie enjoys the life of
a popular young celebrity. She receives love letters and proposals from rich
men, which she ignores. She is asked to perform at benefits. A young author
seeks her out to show her his script. All the time, however, her understanding
that she has not found "the door to life's perfect enjoyment"
continues to grow. Carrie finds that there is nothing that she does which she
really enjoys, and she begins to grow weary of such a life.
Analysis
There are at least three different
versions of the story of Carrie's sudden popularity. First, there is the public
story blurted out in press releases and critical reviews. Next, there is
Hurstwood's view that Carrie is selfish and has entered the "walled
city" of wealth and influence, purposely leaving him outside the gate.
Finally, there is Carrie's own ambivalent version. She is thrilled by her own
talent and success and justifiably proud of the notice she receives. Yet, even
as her income and popularity increase, she discovers more and more that the
real world of eminence is an illusory place that is never "here," but
always someplace above her or sometime in the future. She feels severely
limited by her own judgment and intelligence, desiring to be serious like Bob
Ames and wishing to be divorced from the heady world of theatrical comedy and
pretense.
Carrie realizes that no one except
Lola is actually interested in her. The world, she discovers, is very much like
Drouet and Hurstwood. It merely wishes to amuse itself at her expense,
regardless of the consequences. It is a world full of strangers out for all
they can get.
Everything seems "rosy and
bright" when Carrie receives her first large salary payment and she
remembers how difficult it was when she worked in the miserable shoe factory in
Chicago. Yet it is not long before the newly won money reveals its own
"impotence," for Carrie's desires are now "in the realm of
affection." At times it seems that not only Carrie but Dreiser as well is
confused about what her desires really are: At one moment Carrie's foremost
wish is for "affection," but a few sentences later it is revealed
that Carrie must have more money. "If she wanted to do anything better or
move higher she must have more — a great deal more."
It is a matter for speculation
whether the Hotel Wellington, in which Carrie is installed, is the same hotel
that Hurstwood spoke about in connection with a job. Whether it is, is actually
unimportant, for the extravagance of the place is the important thing. The
Wellington is the kind of hotel that Hurstwood used to lounge in while he
pretended to seek work. Now Carrie resides in its opulent luxury and warmth,
far removed from the struggles on the street below. Hurstwood has moved into a
third-rate... moth-eaten hotel"; to him, any decent hotel seems a
"walled city."
Summary and Analysis Chapter 45
Hurstwood spends the summer and fall
moving about the lower part of the city, drifting from one cheap hotel to
another. Finally, when he has spent all the money he received for the furniture
in the apartment, he walks to a large Broadway hotel to find a job. His story
interests the sympathetic manager, who gives him work as an odd-jobs man and a
place to sleep. He must take orders from cooks, porters, and firemen. On an
errand one February day, he gets a thorough soaking and chill which result in
pneumonia. Until the following May, he recuperates at Bellevue Hospital.
Hoping to meet Carrie outside the
theater one evening, Hurstwood misses his chance to see her when she arrives
suddenly and rushes inside. With an aching stomach and sore feet, he joins a
group of fellow unfortunates and is provided free lodging for the night through
the efforts of a self-appointed social worker.
Analysis
The indignity of Hurstwood's
situation is made more severe by the remnants of pride that are left to him. In
fact, weakened in body and mind, he seems to be in a state of chronic shock.
Often he finds himself repeating out loud snatches of conversation and the tag ends
of jokes he remembers from the days when he had been a successful manager in
Chicago. "As the present became darker, the past grew brighter, and all
that concerned it stood in relief."
The man manages to survive for a
time by learning the science of face reading. Some people, he discovers, are
more easily touched for handout than others. In the incident outside the
theater in Chicago Hurstwood ignored a panhandler seeking money for a night's
keep. It was finally the good-natured Drouet who gave the man a dime, while
Hurstwood continued his animated conversation with Carrie. Now, through a
series of fateful reversals, he is the panhandler.
Summary and Analysis Chapter 46
Preparing in her dressing room one
evening, Carrie is disturbed by a commotion outside the door. In walks Drouet,
who has just bribed the doorman. The next evening over dinner Drouet tells
Carrie about Hurstwood's theft from Fitzgerald and Moy's. She is moved to a
genuine sorrow for Hurstwood, thinking that he must have done it for her sake.
Drouet had hoped to win Carrie back
again, but eventually he sees that his efforts are in vain. As a matter of
fact, Carrie's reticence is noticed by more people than Drouet; she has
acquired a reputation among the public as a somewhat mysterious, withdrawn
figure.
One night Hurstwood finally
approaches Carrie outside the theater and asks for money. He is so ashamed and
downtrodden that he slips away as soon as Carrie hands him the contents of her
purse. Their exchange of remarks has been very brief and perfunctory.
After returning to New York from a
London engagement, Carrie meets Bob Ames several times; he urges her to alter
her repertoire to include more serious drama. "If I were you," he
tells her, "I'd change." The effect of his remark is like "roiling
helpless waters." It causes Carrie to despond in her rocking chair for
several days. "It was a long way to this better thing — or seemed so — and
comfort was about her; hence the inactivity and longing."
Analysis
By parading through Carrie's new life
the three major figures of her past, Dreiser succeeds in providing
"closure" or completeness to the structure of the novel. One cycle
has completed itself and now another begins. Carrie is able to weather the
reappearance of Drouet and the news he brings of the past Chicago incident; she
is able even to overcome her hostility toward Hurstwood.
Carrie cannot escape unscathed,
however, from the influence of Bob Ames. Believing that Ames holds a key to the
future, she idolizes the man and hangs on his every word. There is, of course,
a certain amount of truth in Ames' observation: "Most people are not
capable of voicing their feelings. They depend upon others. That is what genius
is for. One man expresses their desires for them in music; another one in poetry;
another one in a play.
Sometimes nature does it in a face —
it makes the face representative of all desire. That's what has happened in
your case." Ames further observes that Carrie will lose this quality if
she persists in expressing only personal desire and neglects the desires of the
rest of humanity. It is then that Carrie retires to her rocker in the attempt
to root out her personal desire. She hopes to find "that better
thing."
Summary and Analysis Chapter 47
Hurstwood spends his time wandering from
one charity line to another. He often thinks of suicide, but usually does not
have the fifteen cents required for a cell with a gas jet. Once he attempts to
see Carrie backstage at the theater, but the doorman throws him out bodily.
Hurstwood wanders off helplessly, crying, begging, "losing track of his
thoughts, one after another, as a mind decayed is wont to do."
Carrie sits with Lola in their
comfortable chambers in the Waldorf, reading Père Goriot, a novel about
misery and suffering that Ames had prescribed for her. The night is cold and
stormy, so Carrie decides to take a coach to the theater.
Drouet meets another bachelor in the
lobby of another luxurious hotel. The two young men agree to invite two girls
out for dinner.
Mrs. Hurstwood, her daughter
Jessica, and Jessica's wealthy husband ride eastward in a Pullman somewhere
between Chicago and New York. The three are headed for a holiday in Rome.
Hurstwood stands outside a Bowery
flophouse waiting for the doors to open. When they do, he pays his fifteen
cents, retires to his cell, locks the door, and seals the crack beneath it with
his ragged overcoat. Sighing to himself, "What's the use?" he turns
on the gas jet and settles down on the cot. In her rocking chair by the window
Carrie sings and dreams of the "tangle of human life." Carrie is a
"harp in the wind," one of the "emotionally great"
"who respond to every breath of fancy, voicing in their moods all the ebb
and flow of the ideal."
Analysis
The panoramic technique of the final
chapter is used to illustrate the ebb and flow of life. Some, like Hurstwood,
fall along the way. He has become part of the "class which simply floats
and drifts, every wave of people washing up one, as breakers do driftwood upon
a stormy shore." Some, like Carrie, rise, always grasping for the next
narrow ledge, but never know the happiness of which they dream. Others, like
Drouet and Hurstwood's wife and daughter, simply continue along the same dead
run, never knowing what the future may bring.
Sitting alone, [Carrie] was now an
illustration of the devious ways by which one who feels, rather than reasons,
may be led in the pursuit of beauty. Though often disillusioned, she was still
waiting for that halcyon day when she should be led forth among dreams become
real. Ames had pointed out a farther step, but on and on beyond that, if
accomplished, would lie others for her. It was forever to be the pursuit of
that radiance of delight which tints the distant hilltops of the world.
Oh, Carrie, Carrie! Oh, blind
strivings of the human heart! Onward, onward, it saith, and where beauty leads,
there it follows.... In your rocking chair, by your window dreaming, shall you
long, alone. In your rocking chair, by your window, shall you dream such
happiness as you may never feel.
The famous closing passage reveals
Dreiser's attempt to gather together the major themes of the novel. After
rendering a final glimpse of all the important characters, he turns his
attention to Carrie as a representative of the universal striving of humanity.
Those who "reason" can ultimately find only the sordid and the ugly.
The man of reason cannot answer his own question, "What's the use?"
Those who live by emotion can at least dream of an answer to their question,
"Where is beauty?"
Character Analysis Carrie Meeber
Carrie is the central character of the novel, but in many
ways she is no ordinary protagonist. She is not notably courageous, honest,
intelligent, or unselfish. She is the result of Dreiser's desire to portray
"life as it is," sympathetically showing imperfect humanity in an
uncertain world. Carrie has little influence over the events of the novel, and
her actions and decisions are for the most part "passive." She is
sent to Chicago by her parents, seduced by Drouet, and abducted by Hurstwood.
She does make a crucial break from Hurstwood in New York, but by that time her
fate has been decided.
Throughout the novel, Carrie is presented as "a lone
figure in a tossing, thoughtless sea," and the repeated appearance of
related metaphors shows Carrie to be almost without blame for her compromising
morality, her adultery, and her lack of natural feeling.
Because of the conflicts within her — between "the
flesh" and "the spirit," or the pursuit of pleasure and her
inherited morality — Carrie is never able to make decisions and thus finds
herself continually exploited by others. Although the mainstay of her character
is her "desire for pleasure," Carrie possesses a deep moral sense
which prevents her from acting spontaneously. This moral sense abates, however,
and eventually she allows herself to ride the waves of fortune, on the lookout
always for wealth and attention.
In her fantastic dreams of desire, Carrie mistakes success
for happiness. The novel ends with Carrie still ignorant of her terrible
mistake. A large part of Carrie's tragedy is that she is unable to feel in real
life the emotions she feels onstage. Like Madame Bovary, she is unable to
reconcile the world of fancy with the world of reality, and thus she is
destined to remain alone, rocking in the darkness.
Carrie is, finally, a sentimental character, not a
passionate one. In the melodrama of the novel, Carrie begins as the heroine of
a popular romance, the naive, dreamy-eyed, ambitious but virtuous youngest
sister; she emerges as a sort of nun, a "sister of the poor,"
dedicated to charity, lonely and celibate. Even though she undergoes very
obvious outward changes and even though her life style is drastically altered,
Carrie never achieves any significant insights about herself or the world at
large. In this respect she remains static in a world of flux and constant
change.
Character Analysis Charles Drouet
The portrayal of Drouet is intentionally sketchy and
shallow, for no subtleties or complexities of action or motivation lie beneath
his flashy facade. He is generous to Carrie, but his generosity springs from
his natural egotistical attempt to make Carrie a creature of his desire.
Although he is good-natured and sympathetic, he is prevented from understanding
Carrie by his own immaturity. While Carrie and Hurstwood learn to some extent
at least that material possessions and smart appearances are false signs of a
person's worth, Drouet continues to embrace the materialistic values
responsible for Carrie's heartsore sadness and Hurstwood's suicide.
Drouet's function in the novel is to serve as a fixed
point for measuring the changes that come over Carrie and Hurstwood. He is the
first person Carrie meets when she leaves Columbia City and very nearly the
last one she speaks with at the end of the novel. Ironically, it is Drouet who
affects Carrie's life most drastically, planning her debut as an actress,
introducing her to Hurstwood, and above all, making her aware of herself as a
woman; nevertheless, Drouet himself remains unchanged and insensitive to the
changes he has wrought.
Character Analysis George Hurstwood
Hurstwood is an "ambassador" sent from the world
of wealth and fashion and fine manners to Carrie's pedestrian world. Dreiser
uses the character of Hurstwood to show the workings of uncertainty; for as
Carrie unexpectedly rises to wealth and fame, Hurstwood loses his ability to
maintain his status and gradually sinks into the depths of poverty and despair.
Because of his selfish desire to recapture his youth and
find excitement at Carrie's expense, Hurstwood evokes little sympathy until the
final stages of his ruination. Nevertheless, he is not willfully cruel. His
fine manners and wealthy appearance show him to be very much a man of his time.
He knows that his place in a carefully ordered society is well near the top,
and he behaves accordingly. He believes that his attraction to Carrie will
result only in a harmless flirtation that would benefit Carrie as well as
himself.
Never really questioning the security of his position, he
simply chooses to take the precautions necessary to guard his fine reputation.
He does not wish to alter his relationship with his family or cause unfavorable
publicity for his employers. He simply wants to have Carrie to himself. A
complex set of circumstances and events causes him, however, to operate
completely on impulse and he becomes a "man of action" for a time.
In New York, Hurstwood begins to lose the confidence and
self-assurance that made him seem so hardy, dignified, and decisive. As his
meager resources dwindle Hurstwood finds it impossible to obtain employment
suitable to a man of his former means and position. He finds that with
increasing age he is losing his vitality and drive. He bitterly resigns himself
to failure, for he cannot understand the mechanics of a world that flings a man
down from success to beggary. Only part of the blame rests on Hurstwood; the
rest comes from the society itself, with its oppressive morality and barbaric
economy.
Shortly before the final stages of his dissolution,
Hurstwood evokes sympathy as never before. He is then the shadow of the man he
once had been. Time and again he gathers the vestiges of his dignity and pride
to search for any kind of work. His ruin is total and complete when he throws
aside all his pride to work as a streetcar motorman, only to discover that even
at that he is a failure.
Character Analysis Julia Hurstwood
Julia Hurstwood's presence in the novel enables Dreiser to
construct a neat symmetry of parallels, contrasts, and conflicts among the cast
of two men and two women in the novel. Drouet remains virtually unchanged after
Carrie's departure; similarly, Mrs. Hurstwood continues in her self-centered
ways after her divorce from Hurstwood. Also like Drouet, Mrs. Hurstwood resists
change and seems to thrive on her own willful selfishness. Thus, their futures,
in contrast to those of Carrie and Hurstwood, lie safe from the vicissitudes of
fortune, for they are both incapable of extending any feeling or emotion beyond
their own sphere of interest. Finally they are both the jealous jilted partner
in their individual domestic situations, yet they fail to place any blame upon
themselves.
To the extent that his philosophy would permit it, Dreiser
shows Mrs. Hurstwood to be an active agent in the shaping of events that result
in the cycle of Carrie's ironic rise and Hurstwood's descent from affluent good
fellow to seedy panhandler. Mrs. Hurstwood seems the very figure of doom
waiting to fall upon the other main characters; she is the "villain"
of the novel, the only character whose motives are purely negative. Her
relationship with Hurstwood, for example, is maintained only "by force of
habit, by force of conventional opinion." Because of her cold
self-centeredness, she is continually frustrated, suspicious, and jealous, but
her jealousy is not the product of passion, rather it is calculating and
vengeful. She is aptly described as "a pythoness in humor."
In her actions and pronouncements Mrs. Hurstwood
represents the upper part of the society to which she belongs. She is a moral
hypocrite, eager to set adrift and forget anyone who does not conform to her
narrow standards. Her values are only those of wealth, social status and
appearance.
Sister Carrie By Theodore Dreiser Character Analysis
Minor Characters
In addition to the four central
characters who have the strongest effect upon and among one another, there are
several who are in various ways instrumental in shaping conditions or events in
the novel or who in some way serve as parallel or contrasting figures. Carrie's
sister Minnie is a dull prig, staid and solemnly adapted to her
situation. Phlegmatic Minnie stands in opposition to all of Carrie's ambitions
and dreams. As Carrie becomes more able to adapt, Drouet and eventually
Hurstwood take the place of Minnie in epitomizing a fate she must avoid.
Hurstwood's children, Jessica and
George, Jr., serve as parallel figures to Carrie and Drouet. Because
they had the good fortune of being born well off, however, George, Jr., and
Jessica are indifferent to the plight of anyone else and are insufferably
snobbish. But like Carrie they are greedy for wealth and status.
Carrie's social mentors, Mrs.
Hale in Chicago and Mrs. Vance in New York, lead her to discover a
host of detailed refinements concerning dress and demeanor that augment a
woman's charm. They play their part in opening the girl's eyes to the decorum
of those above her on the social ladder. Along with Drouet, Mrs. Hale prepares
Carrie to catch Hurstwood's notice. Later on, Mrs. Vance coaches Carrie further,
making her able to continue without Hurstwood.
Lola Osborne, eager and callow, lacks the drive or boldness to abandon
herself to fortune. Unlike Carrie, Lola has taken the short route directly from
home to the theater, and so she has neglected to provide herself with the
"emotional greatness" that Carrie has found in life's experience.
Lola replaces Hurstwood when he is no longer fit to offer constant praise to
Carrie.
Bob Ames, finally, combining vitality and mature wisdom, or so it
seems to Carrie, serves as direct contrast to both Drouet and Hurstwood. He
appeals to Carrie because he never appears to be in open pursuit of her and
because he seems to have found the proper balance of personality and action.
Actually, however, Ames is the third man in Carrie's life who seems to hold the
key to happiness. The reader should be somewhat wary of Ames when he points out
to Carrie "a farther step," the possibility of a career in straight
dramatic roles instead of musicals and comedies.
Theodore Dreiser Biography
Born August 27, 1871, Theodore Dreiser was the second
youngest of a family of ten children. Dreiser's father had come from Germany
twenty-five years before and through hard work became a man of wealth and
position. Just before Theodore's birth, a series of misfortunes had struck the
family, rendering them penniless. John Paul Dreiser, the father, was crippled
shortly after his weaving mill had burned down. While he convalesced, his wife
was cheated out of the remainder of the family property by creditors. The elder
Dreiser was unable to secure employment to support his large family. Always a
devout and orthodox Roman Catholic, he grew increasingly fanatical in his
concern for salvation. Forever on guard to preserve the virtue of his children
and to pay off his debts lest he die owing money, he became an unbearable
despot and led the family into near beggary. Even as an infant, Theodore
learned the difficult lessons of poverty, chance, and morality.
Dreiser's mother, in contrast to the stern religious fanaticism
of the father, was full of tender sentiment and not subject to his adamant
morality. Quiet by nature, sympathetic and gentle, she was nonetheless endowed
with endless strength and patience. Sarah Dreiser was eager to be helpful and
stood by to aid any child with whom the father was angry.
The father's religious fanaticism, the mother's abiding
tenderness, and the family's unbearable poverty worked together in shaping the
young Dreiser. As a product of these conditions, Dreiser was possessed of a furious
energy, a determination to succeed, and an unalterable will.
In 1879 it was decided that the family should split up.
The three youngest children, including Theodore, went with the mother. Free now
from the stern wrath of his father, Theodore roamed the open fields and played
along the waterways and streams of Evansville, Indiana. He learned much from
nature, perceiving in it many analogies to human life. Passenger trains heading
for Santa Fe, San Francisco, Denver, and Chicago fired his imagination of
faraway places. The boy dreamed especially of Chicago, the magic city where
young men and women of the Midwest sought their fortunes.
Appearing after a four-year absence, dressed in silk hat
and fur coat, the oldest brother Paul, now a successful song writer, returned
to lift the family out of its poverty. In the figure of Paul, Theodore found
the concept of fortune in the affairs of men. The strangest of coincidence
seemed to him to be the origin of a powerful, arbitrary, interfering fate. The
concept of fate finds expression throughout all of Dreiser's novels, in which
the loosest of coincidences play a decisive role in human existence.
Although he was a poor grammar student and barely passed
in his studies, Dreiser read widely in the classics. His teacher was able to
convince him, however, that he was worth something despite his own harsh
judgment of himself. At the age of sixteen Dreiser announced to his mother that
he was going to Chicago. With the six dollars that she gave him, he took his
first steps on the long way to fame and fortune.
After innumerable setbacks and disappointments, he
eventually found work in a hardware store. Working closely with the sons of
wealthy Eastern executives, he came to hate the disparity between their wealth
and his poverty. Out of the comparison of his own lot with that of those more
fortunate, he came to see for himself how life was organized. Through contrast
of affluence and poverty, Dreiser thought, individuals come to enjoy or disdain
what they possess or do not possess.
Through a stroke of fortune, which he believed to be fate
itself, Dreiser was given money by his former schoolteacher to attend Indiana
University. For the first time in his life he felt important. But the
university did not offer the opportunities for learning he had so much hoped
for. Life itself was destined to be Dreiser's college. Books were of some value
to him but they would never supplant the direct observations of the human
struggle that the adolescent Dreiser was already used to. The university only
confirmed his notion that success in life came with luck and money and good
clothes. He left the university after his freshman year.
Determined to rise above the struggles of the poor, he
moved from job to job until he eventually found trial employment with the Daily
Globe, Chicago's smallest newspaper. For the next decade he was occupied
solely with the work of journalism. He worked as a reporter and editor and
wrote scores of feature articles for popular magazines. Journalism offered
nothing to change his ideas of life's vicissitudes; it merely reinforced them
and gave them shape. He gathered up experience in the "grim, fierce
struggle of life," and although he felt no identification with the
oppressed, his sympathy lay with the underdog.
Throughout the ten years of his newspaper career Dreiser
was continually and forcefully struck by the severe contrast between the truth
in life as he saw it daily and the illusion of actual life he was required to
present in his articles. Dreiser was invited to New York by his elder brother
Paul and decided to go. Perhaps there, Dreiser thought, a man could write the
truth and still find success.
He wandered about for five months — Toledo, Cleveland,
Buffalo, Pittsburgh — before finally arriving in New York. Much of the panorama
of American life in a greatly formative era had passed before his observant
eyes.
Finally obtaining a reporting job that sometimes did not
even pay for his carfare, Dreiser combed every corner of the city for news. He
roamed the East Side, the Bowery, the waterfronts of Brooklyn, Wall Street, and
Fifth Avenue. Human survival seemed far more difficult in New York than it was
in Chicago or the steel centers of the North. Everywhere he turned he saw in
humanity an overwhelming desire for pleasure or wealth, along with a
heartlessness which destroyed the soul or caused it to freeze over with misery
and deprivation.
It is not surprising that at the time Dreiser read heavily
in Balzac, Hardy, and Tolstoy, writers whose views complemented his own. He
began to think of becoming a short story writer. Dreiser's overwhelming desire
was to record his observations and conclusions about life, not as they had been
distorted to fit the requirements of newspaper reporting but as he felt them to
be. His first story to be published, "The Shining Slave Makers,"
presented a portrait of a jungle world where two rival ant colonies meet for a
gruesome combat to the death.
A friend of Dreiser's, Arthur Henry, persuaded him to try
his hand at a novel. Reluctantly, in the autumn of 1900 Dreiser sat down and
wrote at random the title Sister Carrie. It is said that Dreiser had no
conception of the plot of the novel when he began to write, but soon after
recalling the tragedies of his youth — the injustices which he had seen chance,
ignorance, and passion play upon those whom he had known firsthand — he began
to write furiously. In the novel are found the wealth of details and the range
of ideas which wide experience had brought to him. In this first novel Dreiser
succeeded in pointing out the tragic possibilities inherent in the conflict
between the individual and a society characterized by narrow and repressive
convention on the one hand and the deification of material success on the
other.
Despondent and embittered by the poor reception of Sister
Carrie, Dreiser contemplated suicide until he was once again rescued by his
brother Paul, who got him a job as a magazine editor. Dreiser succeeded so well
in this position that he became head of the firm in a few years. Encouraged in
his writing by Paul and a few discerning critics, Dreiser published Jennie
Gerhardt in 1911. Like Sister Carrie, it is a sympathetic portrait
of a "sinful" woman, yet it met with a much better reception than did
the first novel and Dreiser began to acquire the reputation he justly deserved.
In 1912 The Financier was published, the first of a
"trilogy of desire" concerning the life of Frank Cowperwood, a
character, who like many of Dreiser's characters, was based upon an actual
person. The Titan, second in the trilogy (1914), shows Cowperwood as a
superman who clawed his way upward from poverty to wealth and position. Both
novels were very well documented in the tradition of literary naturalism, which
was Dreiser's hallmark.
The Genius (1915) centers upon another superman,
Eugene Witla, an artist who was the fictional combination of Dreiser himself,
along with an artist who fascinated him and a bright young editor who committed
suicide. Dreiser's next novel to appear was An American Tragedy (1925),
based upon the notorious Chester Gillette-Grace Brown murder case of 1906. Not
only Clyde Griffiths, the man who is convicted for the murder of his pregnant
mistress, but society as well is held responsible for the tragedy. The society
has erred in fascinating Griffiths with its glitter and wealth without
providing him with a background of moral restraint. By suggesting the
possibility of social reform, An American Tragedy seems to be less
pessimistic than Dreiser's earlier works with their pervading sense of purposelessness.
Rejecting his own early fatalism, Dreiser eventually
turned to socialism as a way of answering the needs of the people. Two books, Dreiser
Looks at Russia (1928) and Tragic America (1931), express his faith
in socialist reform.
Theodore Dreiser died of a heart attack in December, 1945.
Two novels were published after his death. The Bulwark (1946) is an
awkward story patched together over a period of thirty-six years. Its hero,
Solon Barnes, a Quaker, suffers through an oversimplified view of life, for he
has divided the world into good and evil. Solon learns that the world is so
corrupt that no compromise between idealism and materialism is possible. The
Stoic (1947), last of the Cowperwood trilogy, suffers because by the time
it was completed Dreiser had abandoned the attitudes which hold together the
first two parts. This novel presents a discussion of Oriental philosophy, which
Dreiser studied seriously for some time before his death. In the leap to
"pure Spirit" Dreiser seems to have found for himself a method of
transcending the purposeless wandering of the materialistic flux.
Dreiser's theories of art and philosophy of life are set
down at length in his nonfictional autobiographical works: A Traveler at
Forty (1913), A Hoosier Holiday (1916), A Book About Myself (1922)
(later published as Newspaper Days), and especially Hey-Rub-a-Dub-Dub:
A Book of the Mystery and Terror and Wonder of Life (1920). By the time of
his death the tide of naturalism had turned and Dreiser's popularity had waned
substantially.
Critical Essays Dreiser's Ideas and Philosophy
Although he was to embrace Oriental mysticism as a
philosophy of life in his later years, at the time he was writing Sister
Carrie Theodore Dreiser ascribed to a "mechanistic" theory of
reality. His early life impressed him with the brutality and necessity of a
blind fate that imposed itself upon the weak. He came to hate ill luck and
blind chance, which invariably ground to shreds any effort the common man made
to raise himself, He did not rebel against fate as one rebels against evil;
instead, he was so overpowered by the experiences and sights of human suffering
that he saw it as a universal principle.
In the 1890's Dreiser began to read the philosophy of
nineteenth-century mechanism in Darwin and Spencer, in Tyndall and Huxley.
These writers afforded no new revelations but cemented and gave authority to
what he had long suspected. Human life was without purpose or meaning; man is
an underling, a worthless blob of protoplasm on a dying planet whirling
aimlessly through space — in Dreiser's own words, "a poor, blind
fool."
Hating from early childhood anything to do with religion,
Dreiser found in mechanism a scientific sanction for suffering. The theory of
evolution, as it was then conceived, revealed nature as a ruthless process of
the struggle for survival; this was merely an extension on a larger scale of
what Dreiser had observed in his boyhood and youthful travels through the
eastern United States.
Untrained in logical thought, he had little trouble in
transferring the theories of evolution to everyday reality. Mechanism, although
it was rather more complicated than Dreiser perceived it, became his notion of
"chemisms." Chemic compulsions consist of those desires and drives
which are usually unconscious. Dreiser coined the term to evoke the sense of
something largely out of human control. "Chemism" attempts to explain
human behavior in the terms of chemical or physical science. Through chemisms
Dreiser sought to explain all phenomena, organic as well as inorganic. Life is
chemism, personality is chemism, emotions and needs are chemisms. Thus, Dreiser
makes no distinction between the behavior of beasts, the human sex urge, or any
sentiment which people agree to call higher or noble.
Materialism is simply mechanism as it appears in the human
order. The world of men, like the world of indifferent nature, is a savage
place where only the strongest can survive. Society is an aggregate whole of
atomic underlings, each one an independent unit of force and desire, determined
somehow by mechanical forces, pushing or making way for other forces as it
bumps crazily along. Each individual encounters obstacles which destroy him or
meets with fortuitous currents which help him toward his goal. The strong surge
ahead, the weak fall back, or worse yet, become the slaves of their betters.
This is "Darwinism" at its starkest.
Dreiser combines both the biological determinism of Darwin
and the concept of blind fate in Sister Carrie. Severely handicapped by
her innocence and poverty, Carrie appears to be caught in an inevitable spiral
of disappointment and poverty, were it not for a series of circumstances and
coincidences that lift her out of her condition. If Carrie had not met Drouet
accidentally on the street after she lost her job, she would have returned home
to Columbia City. If the safe door had not by unaccountable chance closed as
Hurstwood stood by with his employers' money in his hands, Carrie would not
have gotten to New York or become a famous actress. In such a world each one
must take advantage of what little opportunity he has, even though it means
abandoning or injuring others.
In the bleak world of Dreiser's philosophy, morality is a
myth for assuaging the weak. It is a cynical agreement on the part of master
and slave to keep the whole system of chemisms from running amuck. Dreiser also
believed, however, that "life was somehow bigger and subtler, and darker
than any given theory or order of life." It is through this loophole that
Dreiser finds the way to write novels of life as it is.
Dreiser not only responds to his fellow man in a very
immediate and sympathetic manner, but more importantly, despite the limits of
his vision, he understands human beings. His understanding goes far beyond the
determinism and chemisms through which he seeks to explain them. Were Dreiser
unable to understand humanity in terms other than his restrictive philosophy,
readers would not discover in his novels insights about other human beings
which they did not have before. In short, Theodore Dreiser is a better artist
than his philosophy would allow him to be.
Critical Essays Symbolism in Sister Carrie
The naturalistic writer presents his theme through
symbolic detail. In this way the symbolic level of the narrative is laid directly
over the events and occurrences of the simple story itself. Dreiser's use of
symbolic detail permeates the novel, ranging from careful descriptions of dress
and adornment to descriptions of great American cities and their surroundings.
The author must make the reader aware that the details are
important to the meaning. Dreiser generally accomplishes this end through a
kind of "incremental repetition" of important details. Occasionally,
however, he shows a lack of subtlety when he addresses his reader directly to
reveal his intention.
By registering carefully Carrie's reaction to specific
details, Dreiser shows her moving from her early naive optimism to her final
disillusionment and despair. Carrie's sensitivity to details provides the
emotional center of the novel. The most important patterns of details, in
addition to clothing and money, are the theater, hotels, and restaurants. These
comprise the walled and gilded city to which Carrie seeks entrance. Perhaps the
most important single group of objects is the various rocking chairs upon which
Carrie rides to dreamland, beginning in her sister's flat, continuing through
the several rooms and apartments where she lives, and culminating in her vast
suite in the Waldorf.
Dreiser's symbolism reveals the separate and distinct
worlds of Sister Carrie. There is the realistic world of the
"reasonable" mind and the imagined world of the "emotional"
world, a world described in the novel as "Elf-land," "Dream
Land," or "The Kingdom of Greatness." This is the world from
which Hurstwood emerges as an "ambassador" to bring Carrie back with
him. It is this world in which Carrie ironically becomes a citizen —
ironically" because it never seems to yield the rewards and beauty it
promises. Life is a constant battle fought between the giant armies of
frustration and desire.
Critical Essays Dreiser's Style
The adjective "elephantine" has been reserved by
critics exclusively to describe the style of Dreiser, "the world's worst
great writer." It is generally awkward and ponderous; it lacks precision
and it moves with a lumbering gait. Even Dreiser's sincerest admirers admit
that his style is atrocious, his sentences chaotic, his grammar and syntax
faulty. His wordiness and repetitions are at times unbearable; he has no feeling
for words, no sense of diction, no ear for euphony. The following sentences
from Sister Carrie are examples of Dreiser's writing style at its worst:
"The, to Carrie, very important theatrical performance was to take place
at the Avery on conditions which were to make it more noteworthy than was at
first anticipated"; "They had young men of the kind whom she, since
her experience with Drouet, felt above, who took them out."
Dreiser's style is, nevertheless, important to the
totality of his work. It is as valid a part of his art as his creation of
characters and selection of detail. If the style seems to indicate something
that is muddled, commonplace, undiscerning, cheap, and shoddy, it does so for
the sake of artistic accuracy. When Dreiser writes that he seeks to present
"an accurate description of life as it is," he means among other
things that a graceful and measured style would detract from or contradict the
reality it seeks to present. The reader, like Carrie, must learn the hard
lesson of undecorated truth. After reading the novel, one feels this is the way
life was, and is.
A page of Dreiser's writing is as distinctive as a page
from any other author. To Dreiser, the conscious artifice of a high style
seemed to contradict his whole idea that life is something largely out of
control. He relaxes his grip on the words and the pieces fall together as they
may. Style itself is a model of the universe he sought to interpret and
describe.
Critical Essays Chapter Titles in Sister Carrie
The original title of Sister Carrie was to have
been The Flesh and the Spirit; this reveals the kind of symbolic pattern
Dreiser had in mind. Carrie's craving for pleasure — as represented chiefly by
money and clothes — shows the forces at work on the "flesh." Her
wonder and awe, and her awareness of "the constant drag to something
better" signify the workings of spirit." Carrie seems to see herself
in terms of this conventional division. Although she knows she has a powerful
appreciation for material possession, she also realizes that she has an
emotional depth quite beyond the scope of the genial but egotistical Drouet. It
is this "sympathetic, impressionable nature" that attracts Hurstwood
toward her.
A good many of the chapter titles enforce this division
between body and spirit. The titles seem to provide a symbolic or allegorical
framework for the narrative. They are, incidentally, cast in the style of
popular magazine verse, and generally appear as metrical lines of eleven or
twelve syllables. Dreiser seems to rely upon them to reveal his intentions.
"The Lure of the Spirit: The Flesh in Pursuit" gives title to two
successive chapters in which Hurstwood becomes seriously stirred by Carrie and
asks her to go away with him. Dreiser continues to present Carrie as an
ignorant but gradually awakening seeker after the significance of life in the
chapter, "A Pilgrim, an Outlaw: The Spirit Detained." In this chapter
Hurstwood has virtually kidnapped Carrie and is taking her to Canada with him.
Carrie's "spirit" is once again stirred when she realizes that the
unfortunate Hurstwood has failed and that she must strike out for herself in
"The Spirit Awakens: New Search for the Gate."
It seems to be characteristic of the chapter titles to
describe briefly a situation and indicate a possible reaction to it; thus the
greatest part of them take the following form: "The Lure of the Material:
Beauty Speaks for Itself," "A Glimpse Through the Gateway: Hope
Lights the Eye," and "A Pet of Good Fortune: Broadway Flaunts Its
Joys."
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