Margaret Chalmers. Twenty-seven
years of age; a strong, mature woman, but quite feminine
where her heart or sense of beauty are concerned.
Her eyes are wide apart. Has a dazzling smile,
which she knows how to use on occasion. Also,
on occasion, she can be firm and hard, even cynical
An intellectual woman, and at the same time a very
womanly woman, capable of sudden tendernesses, flashes
of emotion, and abrupt actions. She is a finished
product of high culture and refinement, and at the
same time possesses robust vitality and instinctive
right-promptings that augur well for the future of
the race.
Howard Knox. He might have been
a poet, but was turned politician. Inflamed with
love for humanity. Thirty-five years of age.
He has his vision, and must follow it. He has
suffered ostracism because of it, and has followed
his vision in spite of abuse and ridicule. Physically,
a well-built, powerful man. Strong-featured rather
than handsome. Very much in earnest, and, despite
his university training, a trifle awkward in carriage
and demeanor, lacking in social ease. He has
been elected to Congress on a reform ticket, and is
almost alone in fight he is making. He has no
party to back him, though he has a following of a few
independents and insurgents.
Thomas Chalmers. Forty-five to
fifty years of age. Iron-gray mustache.
Slightly stout. A good liver, much given to Scotch
and soda, with a weak heart. Is liable to collapse
any time. If anything, slightly lazy or lethargic
in his emotional life. One of the “owned”
senators representing a decadent New England state,
himself master of the state political machine.
Also, he is nobody’s fool. He possesses
the brain and strength of character to play his part.
His most distinctive feature is his temperamental
opportunism.
Master Thomas Chalmers. Six years
of age. Sturdy and healthy despite his grandmother’s
belief to the contrary.
Ellery Jackson Hubbard. Thirty-eight
to forty years of age. Smooth-shaven. A
star journalist with a national reputation; a large,
heavy-set man, with large head, large hands everything
about him is large. A man radiating prosperity,
optimism and selfishness. Has no morality whatever.
Is a conscious individualist, cold-blooded, pitiless,
working only for himself, and believing in nothing
but himself.
Anthony Starkweather. An elderly,
well preserved gentleman, slenderly built, showing
all the signs of a man who has lived clean and has
been almost an ascetic. One to whom the joys of
the flesh have had little meaning. A cold, controlled
man whose one passion is for power. Distinctively
a man of power. An eagle-like man, who, by keenness
of brain and force of character, has carved out a
fortune of hundreds of millions. In short, an
industrial and financial magnate of the first water
and of the finest type to be found in the United States.
Essentially a moral man, his rigid New England morality
has suffered a sea change and developed into the morality
of the master-man of affairs, equally rigid, equally
uncompromising, but essentially Jesuitical in that
he believes in doing wrong that right may come of it.
He is absolutely certain that civilization and progress
rest on his shoulders and upon the shoulders of the
small group of men like him.
Mrs. Starkweather. Of the helpless,
comfortably stout, elderly type. She has not
followed her husband in his moral evolution.
She is the creature of old customs, old prejudices,
old New England ethics. She is rather confused
by the modern rush of life.
Connie Starkweather. Margaret’s
younger sister, twenty years old. She is nothing
that Margaret is, and everything that Margaret is
not. No essential evil in her, but has no mind
of her own hopelessly a creature of convention.
Gay, laughing, healthy, buxom a natural
product of her care-free environment.
Feux Dobleman. Private secretary
to Anthony Starkweather. A young man of correct
social deportment, thoroughly and in all things just
the sort of private secretary a man like Anthony Starkweather
would have. He is a weak-souled creature, timorous,
almost effeminate.
Linda Davis. Maid to Margaret.
A young woman of twenty-five or so, blond, Scandinavian,
though American-born. A cold woman, almost featureless
because of her long years of training, but with a
hot heart deep down, and characterized by an intense
devotion to her mistress. Wild horses could drag
nothing from her where her mistress is concerned.
Junus Rutland. Having no strong
features about him, the type realizes itself.
John Gifford. A labor agitator.
A man of the people, rough-hewn, narrow as a labor-leader
may well be, earnest and sincere. He is a proper,
better type of labor-leader.
Matsu Sakari. Secretary of Japanese
Embassy. He is the perfection of politeness and
talks classical book-English. He bows a great
deal.
Dolores Ortega. Wife of Peruvian
Minister; bright and vivacious, and uses her hands
a great deal as she talks, in the Latin-American fashion.
Senator Dowsett. Fifty years of age; well preserved.
Mrs. Dowsett. Stout and middle-aged.