The Cambridge Companion to Theodore Dreiser (Cambridge Companions to Literature)

seduced by a “masher” like Drouet was well within the grasp of any alert

reader of pulp fiction. But even an attentive and talented young man from

the house of Dreiser did not know enough about motive and circumstance

to go much further and still maintain the illusion of reality.

The writing came to a halt at the point where Carrie and Hurstwood

realize they are attracted to each other. She is the “wife” of Drouet, and

Hurstwood is married and has children. Dreiser could find no way to keep

their relationship going in the face of these obstacles. The entanglement

would be far less difficult for a novelist to resolve today; in the America of

1899, to do so without consigning the two to hell was near impossible. As

a result, the novel was stalled for months. Then suddenly, for reasons now

unknown, he began to compose again with a surer sense of direction.

The writing regained momentum as Dreiser began to draw on the bio-

graphical details of a family scandal involving his sister Emma and her lover

George Hopkins. Dreiser had lived with the couple when he first came to

New York in 1894. By then Hopkins had degenerated physically and men-

tally to the point at which he was abusive and a bad example to their two

children. Emma had talked out her troubles with her brother, and he had

taken mental notes. Brother and sister then devised a plot to help her to

escape from Hopkins. In those few months, Emma became the earliest in a

long line of women to confide such intimacies to him, and he responded in

a way that became habitual over a lengthy writing career: he became preoc-

cupied with describing the events that defined the major crisis of her young

womanhood. Emma, in effect, became the first member of a wide-ranging

“gallery of women” to appear in Dreiser’s writing.

He returned to his manuscript with new energy and began to fill out his

broad outline with the details of the affair of Emma and George Hopkins.

Like Hurstwood, Hopkins had been a married man with a family and was

older than Emma; he had stolen $3,500 (it became $10,000 in the novel)

from the safe of the saloon where he was employed; and the twosome had

36

Dreiser and the uses of biography

taken flight, first to Canada and then to New York. Dreiser had heard rumors

of all this as a boy. But he couldn’t piece together the details nor understand the consequences of the affair until he observed the couple firsthand and

heard Emma’s side of the story.

It was this grounding in the reality of Hopkins’ life that inspired what

has been widely considered one of the most dramatic sequences in American

literature, the “fall” of Hurstwood. In it Dreiser stood Marden’s formula

on its head and exposed how swiftly success could sink into a loss of social

identity. His later portrait of Hopkins tells the same story:

Hopkins, from being a onetime fairly resourceful and successful and aggressive

man, had slipped into a most disconcerting attitude of weakness and all but

indifference before the onslaughts of the great city . . . he had already failed spiritually and was now living a hand-to-mouth existence . . . He appeared, as

I saw it afterwards, to be spiritually done for – played out. Like so many men

who had fought a fair battle in youth and then lost, he was weary of the game.

He saw no interesting position for him anywhere in the future, and so he was

drifting.12

The reader here may turn to the last pages of Dreiser’s novel and seamlessly

conclude with the passage in which Hurstwood drifts to a seedy room in

the Bowery and turns on the gas: “he stood there, hidden wholly in that

kindness which is night, while the uprising fumes filled the room. When the

odor reached his nostrils he quit his attitude and fumbled for the bed. ‘What’s the use,’ he said wearily, as he stretched himself to rest.”13

How biographical is this? Did Hopkins commit suicide? There is no evi-

dence that Hurstwood’s death is anything other than a product of Dreiser’s

imagination. “I know I never saw him [Hopkins] but once after,” Dreiser

wrote, “a most washed-out and deteriorated-looking person, and then he

did not see me.”14 Of course, there is no one-to-one relationship between

Hopkins and Hurstwood, any more than there is between Emma and Carrie.

Dreiser recalled himself in 1894 sitting unemployed on a bench in New

York’s City Hall Park, watching the jobless, defeated men idling in the cold

December day: “I looked at them and then considered myself and these great

offices, and it was then, if ever, that the idea of Hurstwood was born.”15

Dreiser might have more precisely said that the vision of Hurstwood ex-

isted in him before any of these events, and that it became palpable to him

at certain moments: when he looked in the mirror and saw in his face the

stress of joblessness, when he gazed at the haggard men on the park benches,

when he contemplated the down-and-out Hopkins. And it came to him most

memorably when he created Carrie’s lover later in the decade.

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t h o m as p. r i g g i o

There were limits to what he could gather from Emma’s gossip. For one,

he was intent on making his heroine “artistic,” which for him meant she

possessed a certain refinement of temperament and a capacity for responding

to beauty. He also seemed intent on rewarding her, for which the old tale

about the sudden rise to stage celebrity was perfect. Emma was not an actress,

however, nor did she have a particularly artistic temperament. Moreover she

had children, and her instincts were more maternal than theatrical. But there

was a stage-struck sister who entered the family – and Dreiser’s imagination –

in the fall of 1899. It was then that a young woman named Louise Kerlin

walked into brother Paul Dresser’s Chicago office to audition for one of his

shows. There the famous songwriter discovered that Louise was the daughter

of William S. Kerlin, a railroad engineer and one of his boyhood heroes when

he worked on the trains peddling candy. He asked her to sing his songs,

including the beautifully sentimental Indiana State song, “On The Banks of

the Wabash.” By the time she had finished, Paul was in tears.

Suddenly he wheeled around in his chair and called a number on the telephone.

It was the Chicago Tribune . . . “I just want you to know that my kid sister,

Louise Dresser, is here in Chicago and is opening on the ‘Masonic Roof’ in a

few weeks . . . She’s been calling herself Louise Kerlin, but from now on she is Louise Dresser.”16

This encounter led to Louise Dresser’s meteoric climb to fame, first as a

vaudeville star, then as a stage actress and later in films. The story made headlines, so even if he weren’t Paul’s brother, Dreiser would have known about

his new “sister” by the time he decided to turn Carrie into an overnight stage

success. Like Emma and Hopkins, Louise Dresser provided a biographical

mechanism upon which the novelist could jumpstart his fiction when inven-

tion flagged. She had a profile that matched his heroine: the mid-western,

small town girl come to the metropolis, the discovery of talent, her early

disappointments, her swift transformation into a musical comedy star, the

title of “sister.”

Carrie Meeber’s story parallels the larger curve of Louise Dresser’s expe-

rience. But was Carrie modeled on Louise? No more (or less) than she was

modeled on Emma. In any case, Dreiser’s ability to give the time-worn pic-

ture of the fallen woman an intense aura of reality sprung in part from his

knowledge of the true adventures of these two very different sisters. More-

over, that image continued to influence Dreiser the writer over a long career –

to the point that we can see Carrie’s silhouette clearly and repeatedly behind

many a “real” fallen sister in his work.

Take, for example, Marcelle Itain. A biographical portrait of her appears

in A Traveler at Forty (1913). In 1912 Dreiser had met her in Paris where 38

Dreiser and the uses of biography

she lived as what was euphemistically called a “cocotte.” Like Carrie, she

was young and, in her untrained response to beauty, possessed the soul of an

artist, as well as an appetite for fine restaurants and hotels. Also like Carrie, she had been raised in poverty, which stimulated in her an amorphous but

ravenous desire for the fineries of the world at large. Dreiser depicts the sad, needy side of Marcelle but defends her in words that would fit easily into the

pages of Sister Carrie. “Desiring to get up, to see more of life, to entertain herself, and having an instinct for the best which the world had to offer,

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