It is probable that Clark’s
invasion of the State of Michigan made more impression
on the people of St. Marys than any other of his activities,
even though it came in the midst of great undertakings.
Here was the definite impression of a central power
that stretched octopus arms from out of their own
town. Even Manson, who was recognized as the
champion pessimist, seemed impressed. But St.
Marys remained for the most part still inactive.
The people looked on, admired the works, discussed
each new development, read much about their home town
in outside papers, and that was in a general way about
all. They saw in Clark a constantly more arresting
and suggestive figure. They had nodded approvingly
when he secured a private car for the use of himself,
his directors and shareholders, and considered it
a natural thing when it was announced that he was
building upon the hill a large and expensive residence.
The blockhouse, they pointed out, had long since become
too small to accommodate his many and important visitors.
St. Marys had physically changed.
Old streets were paved with asphalt and new ones
opened. The car line that ran up to the works
branched out across the railway into ground that a
few years before was solid bush, but was now covered
with substantial houses, occupied by a new population.
Parts of old St. Marys were left in the lurch because
the owners refused to sell, Dibbott amongst them,
and Worden, whose broad river-fronting lawn was surrounded
by the commercial section of the rejuvenated town.
Filmer’s store had been enlarged twice, and
so complete was the popularity of the mayor that,
with his sound business instinct, it still held place
as the local emporium.
At the terminus of the car line a
new town had sprung up. In Ironville dwelt the
brawn and bone of the works. The place was not
restful like St. Marys, but a heterogeneous collection
of sprawling cabins, corner saloons and grocery stores
where the food was piled on sidewalk stands and gathered
to itself the smoke and grime of the works when the
wind came up from the south. Here were the Poles
and Hungarians and Swedes, with large and constantly
increasing families, and to them the sun rose and
set in pulp mills and machine shops, blast furnaces
and the like. They were mostly big men and strong,
who sweated all day and came back, grimy, to eat and
then spend the long evenings at the corner saloons
or fishing in the upper bay, or sometimes taking the
car down to St. Marys, and walking about surveying
the comfortable old houses and carefully kept lawns.
And of Ironville, St. Marys did not think very much,
save that it was dirty and unattractive and, unfortunately,
quite a necessary evil.
Back in the country new farms were
cleared on heavily timbered land and the farmers found
instant market for all they could raise. But
the bush still stretched unbroken a little further
to the north, and while Clark’s engineers spent
millions to harness the mighty flow of Superior, the
beaver were building their dams in a tamarac swamp
not five miles from the works.
All this was indissolubly linked with
Philadelphia. Parties of shareholders, large
and small, came up in special cars to inspect the
plant. These visits were well organized.
They found everything going at full blast, everything
was explained by the magnetic Clark and there followed
banquets at the new hotel, when both shareholders and
directors spoke and Filmer voiced the sentiments and
pride of the town, and the shareholders went away
a little staggered by the size and potentiality of
their business but determined to back Clark to the
limit and carrying away with them ineffaceable impressions
of his strong and hypnotic personality. It was,
after all, as they said, a one man show.
Interest grew in Philadelphia, and
thousands, swayed as though by the compelling voice
of the rapids, plunged deeper. The discovery
of iron was but one of the inviting incentives which,
from time to time, stimulated support. Million
after million was subscribed and sent to this man
who inspired such abounding faith in himself and his
gigantic plans. It may be that in one of those
moments of profound insight which Clark periodically
experienced, he became finally convinced that life
was short and there must be, in his case at any rate,
compressed into it the maximum of human effort ere
the day ran out. His brain oscillated between
the actual work itself and those extraneous affairs
which might at some time affect it.
Amongst those to whom his attention
turned was Semple, member of the provincial parliament,
in whom he recognized the official voice of the district
in certain regions of authority. As the works
grew in size and their importance increased, Semple
found himself more and more the subject of attention.
It flattered him, as well it might, for at this time
the Consolidated Company was the largest single undertaking
in the country. It did Semple good to refer
to “my constituency” with the reflection
that in the midst of that wilderness was an undertaking
whose capital surpassed that of the greatest railway
in the Dominion. In the house of parliament he
was listened to attentively, and in St. Marys his
office took on a new significance. It was on
one of his informal visits to the works that Clark
expressed pleasure at the way in which the community
was represented.
“I’m all right as far
as this company is concerned,” said Semple, “but
you know the Liberal majority in Ontario is mighty
slim and I’m a Liberal. It’s
here to-day and gone to-morrow.”
“Not for you,” answered
Clark impressively, “and you haven’t had
much trouble in getting what we wanted.”
“No,” grinned Semple,
“our majority is too small. The Premier
couldn’t very well refuse. But,”
he added with a little hesitation, “opinions
differ down there.”
“About the works?”
Semple nodded. “Yes, and
about you they’re not true believers
by any means, you must understand.”
Clark grunted a little. “What do they
say?”
“It’s more what they don’t
say, since they’re mostly Scotch. I mean
the financial crowd most of Toronto is like
that. The Scotch got their hooks in long ago
and it was a good thing for the country. They
reckon it should take twenty-five years to build up
a concern like this not five. You’re
too fast for that lot.”
“Ah! Perhaps I’d better go down
and see them.”
Semple gazed in astonishment, then
concluded he had not made the other sufficiently aware
of the criticism as to himself and his affairs that
was now so widely spread.
“What’s the object?”
he blurted; “you’ve got all you want.”
Clark shook his head. “You
don’t understand me and these people
don’t understand their own country, that’s
all. They don’t believe it because they
don’t know it. They’ve never tried
to know it. To Toronto the district of Algoma
is a howling wilderness where there’s good fishing
and shooting. You may call Canadians pioneers,
but some of them are the stickiest lot imaginable.
I’m an American, but I have more faith in their
country than they have.”
“Just what do you propose to do?”
“What would you say was the
most influential body of business and financial men?”
“The Toronto Board of Trade without
question; bankers, and, by the way, the president
of your bank here is the president of the Board; manufacturers,
brokers, commission men, oh, most every
one who is worth anything.”
“Then I’d better go and
talk to them. There ought to be some Canadian
money in this concern and there isn’t a cent.
The only thing we got in Canada was one hundred and
thirty thousand dollars but that was debt St.
Marys’ debt ” laughed Clark.
“We’ll get some Canadian directors, too;
I don’t know but that new blood would be good
for us.”
“Well,” hazarded Semple, “I’d
like to be there.”
“You will. We’ll
go together as soon as it’s arranged. You
ought to be there. They’ll probably ask
you to confirm what I assert.” He touched
a bell and a moment later said to his secretary, “See
Mr. Bowers and ask him to get in touch with our Toronto
solicitors at once. I want them to arrange that
I address the Toronto Board of Trade as soon as convenient
to that body. I’ll speak of developments
in Northern Ontario. You understand that this
will not be a suggestion from me, but will come from
them. Get the idea going in the Toronto papers.
You might let it be known that a special car will
leave for St. Marys the evening of the address with
the Company’s guests that’s
all.”
The door closed and he turned again
to Semple. “I’m no prophet, but I
don’t mind saying that a month from to-day your
Conservative opposition won’t be so stiff necked.
Man alive! it’s nothing but ignorance.
This district of yours ” he added
very slowly, “is a bigger, richer thing than
even I imagined.”
Semple went away shaking his head
doubtfully. He knew better than Clark that chilling
regard with which Toronto financiers contemplated
an undertaking in which they had little faith.
They were a cold-nosed group, immune, he considered,
to the dramatic and strangers to any sudden impulse.
And Clark, to their minds, was tarred with the same
brush as his undertakings. He might be big and
imaginative, but he was over impetuous and haphazard.
Clark himself was disturbed by no
discomfort, nor did he make any special preparations
for that address, and gave it as arranged some two
weeks later, and the manner and substance and effect
of it will be vividly remembered by every man who
was a member of that Board of Trade some twenty-five
years ago. There were the bankers and the rest
of them, just as Semple had said, and Clark, surveying
them from the platform with steady gray eyes, knew
what make of men they were and knew also that they
had come there not so much with a thirst for knowledge
about their own country as that they might coldly analyze
him and that vast undertaking of which they had, as
yet, but a fantastic and fragmentary knowledge.
It is without question that the speaker
had to an infinitely greater extent than any of the
men who stared at him through a blue haze of cigar
smoke, a fluid mind and the capacity for instantly
seizing upon a situation and determining how to meet
it. He possessed as well a voice unrivaled in
magnetic power and above all an unshakable faith in
the potentiality of the district in which he labored,
so that, estimating the mental and professional characteristics
of those he faced, Clark began to talk in the coolest
and most level way possible without any trace of flamboyant
enthusiasm. Touching first of all on the development
of the far West, a subject with which, since much Toronto
money was involved, they were directly familiar, he
diverted to St. Marys, describing Arcadia as he found
it, the apparently unpromising nature of the surrounding
territory and his own conclusion as to its possible
future. Then the rapids became woven into his
speech, the nucleus of power which made so many things
possible. From this he moved into the wilderness
and before his listeners there began to unroll the
north country in its primeval silence, broken only
by the occasional tap of a prospector’s pick
or the heavy crash of a moose through a cluster of
saplings. And with the story of the wilderness
came that of pulp wood and great areas now tributary
to St. Marys. And after the pulp mills came
the discovery of iron.
At this a stir went through the audience.
In another part of the north country was Cobalt,
that prodigious reservoir of silver, and it was realized
that while Cobalt lay almost next door to Toronto,
the Canadian investor had for the most part looked
on incredulously, till, too late, he realized that
the American had seized and acted with characteristic
energy. And now the thing had happened again.
“The iron was there,”
went on Clark’s voice with a subtle and impelling
note, “and it only took a year or so to find
it. The country was unexplored, that is, in
a scientific manner, and no geological maps worth
anything were in existence. We have proved by
now not less than fifteen million tons of excellent
ore. The formation near St. Marys carries an
abundance of limestone and the rapids furnish ample
power. I think you will admit, gentlemen, that
this is non-speculative.”
Then one by one he spoke of various
phases of the works. In every case the product
was there the merchantable produce to
prove the point; and the evident fact that Clark was
actually selling goods over his gigantic counter,
coupled with the cool confidence of the man, was all
that was needed to convert an audience of critics into
one of friendly believers.
He saw the change as it took place.
His voice lifted a little and became that of one
crying in the wilderness.
“What I have been able to do
any man can do. If you don’t believe in
it, other people do; if you don’t develop it,
other people will. From Canada we have moved
across to Michigan and are developing power on the
south side of the river. You Canadians could
have done all this. In a few months Canadian
railways will be buying steel rails made of Ontario
ore, but the rails will be made and sold by Americans
in Ontario. Gentlemen, all I ask is that you
have faith in your own country, as much faith as has
been shown by your neighbors across the line.
Your Dominion is now what the United States was fifty
years ago and we did not waver. The capital
of our allied companies is twenty-seven million dollars.
It comes, every cent of it, from Philadelphia.
We do not need your money, but will welcome any who
wish to join us. Once again, gentlemen, and
last of all, have faith in your own country!”
Then, with a graceful acknowledgment of the assistance
of Semple and the Ontario Government, he sat down.
For a moment there was silence, till
came applause, moderate at first, as befitted the
meeting, but swelling presently into great volume.
Louder and deeper it grew while Clark sat still with
the least flush on his usually colorless cheek and
a keen light in his gray eyes. He had touched
them to the quick, touched them not only by his own
evident faith and courage, but also by his superlative
energy and the inexorable comparison he had made.
It was true! Cobalt was nearly lost to them,
and now the iron of Algoma had passed into other hands.
Old bankers and financiers cast their minds back and
were surprised at the number of similar instances
they recalled. And here was Clark, the protagonist,
Clark the speculator, Clark the wild man from Philadelphia,
demonstrating in the cold language to which they were
accustomed and which they perfectly understood, that
he had done the same thing over again and on a more
imposing scale than ever before.
The denouement was what he had anticipated
and what invariably takes place when men with calculating
and professionally critical brains are for the first
time profoundly stirred by a supremely magnetic spirit
that appeals not to their emotions but to those instincts
in which the memory of lost opportunities is effaced
by confidence in future success. There was,
too, a general feeling that Clark in the past was
misunderstood. They had been hard on him.
It was strange for men who were daily besought to
invest in this or that to be told that their money
was not asked for; that, as Clark had put in the
job was nearly done, capital expenditure nearly over
and steady returns about to begin. And these
returns, they reflected, would go straight out of the
country to Philadelphia. All this and much more
was moving through their minds when the president
moved a vote of thanks which was tumultuously carried,
whereupon Clark announced that the private car would
leave that night for St. Marys, and that he and Mr.
Semple would accompany such visitors as cared to spend
a day or two at the works.
That afternoon he sent a short letter
to his mother. “I have been giving a talk
on Toronto it went quite well,” he
wrote in closing. “Canadians do not attract,
but certainly interest me. There’s much
underneath that needs work to discover, and I have
so little time for work of that kind.”
He glanced at the last sentence and
nodded approvingly. Perhaps Canadians were too
Scotch to be spontaneous. They were worthy, he
admitted, but the word implied to him certain attributes
that made life a little difficult, and, he silently
concluded, a little cold. He would have desired
them to be a trifle less deliberate and a shade more
responsive. He felt that, however, he might persuade
they would never fundamentally understand him, and
perceived in this the cause of that condescension
he had observed in so many Canadians toward the American.
It did not worry him in the slightest as an American.
He put it down to that self-satisfaction which is
not infrequently acquired by self-made men in the
process of their own manufacture, and to remnants
of that cumulative British arrogance of forebears who
had for centuries led the world.
Early next morning the private car
swung through the mining district of Sudbury.
Clark’s Toronto visitors were still asleep,
but he was up and dressed and on the rear platform.
The district, covered once by a green blanket of
trees, now seemed blasted and dead. Close by
were great piles of nickel ore, from which low clouds
of acrid vapor rose into the bright air. Clark
knew that the ore was being laboriously roasted in
order to dissipate the sulphur it contained, prior
to further treatment.
The scene, naked and forbidding, struck
him forcibly, and the great mining buildings towering
in the midst of the desolation they had created looked
like ugly castles of destruction. He had noted
the place often before, but this morning, refreshed
by the incidents of the previous day, his mind was
working with unexampled ease and insight. Here,
he reflected, two things of value sulphur
and vegetation were being arduously obliterated.
It suddenly appeared fundamentally against nature,
and whatever violated nature was, he held, fundamentally
wrong.
The train stopped for a few moments
and, jumping from the platform, he ran across to the
nearest pile. Here he picked up several pieces
of ore fresh from the mine, inhaling as he stood the
sharp and killing fumes. At St. Marys he made
but one kind of pulp mechanical pulp in
which the soft wood was disintegrated by revolving
stones against which it was thrust under great pressure.
But he had always desired to make another kind of
pulp, so now he thrust the ore samples in his pocket
and climbed back into the private car.
Two days later the chief chemist of
the works stood beside the general manager’s
desk looking from the nickel samples into Clark’s
animated face.
“These are from Sudbury,”
the latter was saying, “where they waste thousands
of tons of sulphur a year, and it costs them a lot
to waste it. I want the sulphur to make sulphite
pulp.”
“Yes?” The reply was a little uncertain.
“To buy what we want is out
of the question at the present price. In Alabama
and Sicily they are spending a lot of money to get
sulphur; in Sudbury they’re spending a lot of
money to get rid of it. The thing is all wrong.”
“Have we any nickel mine, sir?”
“No, but that’s the small
end of it. I want you to analyze this ore and
see if you can devise a commercial process for the
separation of nickel from sulphur and save both.
If you can, I’ll buy a mine. Incidentally
we’ll produce some pretty cheap nickel.
Get busy!”
The chemist nodded and went out, and
Clark, glancing after him, fell into profound contemplation.
He himself was neither engineer, chemist nor scientist,
but had a natural instinct for the suitable uses of
physical things. Thus, though without any advanced
technical training, his brain was relieved from any
consciousness of difficulties which might be encountered
in the working out of the problems he set for others
with such remarkable facility. He was, in truth,
a practical idealist, who, ungrafted to any particular
branch of effort, embarked on them all, radiating
that magnetic confidence which is the chief incentive
toward accomplishment.
The visit of the Toronto financiers
had been a success. Clark went round with them,
unfolding the history of the works. Nor was this
by any means the first tour he had made with similar
intent. It was now an old story with him to
watch the faces of men reflect their gradual surrender
to the spell of his mesmeric brain. What the
Torontonians saw was physical and concrete, and, as
their host talked, they perceived the promise of that
still greater future which he had put before them.
Here, they decided, was not a speculation, but an
investment of growing proportions. Then from
the works to the backwoods by the new railway, where
was iron by millions of tons and pulp by millions
of cords, the foundations on which were built the
gigantic structures at St. Marys. So they had
gone back in the glow of that sudden conversion which
in its nature is more emotional than the slow march
of a purely intellectual process, Clark smiled a little
at the thought. He had seen it all so often
before.
A little later a knock sounded at
his door and Fisette entered, stepping up to the desk,
one brown hand in his pocket. Clark glanced
at him.
“Well, mon vieux?”
The half-breed laid on the desk half
a dozen pieces of bluish gray rock. They were
sharp, angular and freshly broken. Through them
ran yellow threads, and floating in their semi-translucent
depths were fine yellow flakes.
“Gold,” said Fisette quietly.