J.P. Morgan |
Morgan did travel throughout Europe and rode down the Nile. In a New York Times article dated December 31st, 1911, Morgan is reported to have said, “I am going up the Nile from Cairo in a steel dahabeah that I have had constructed after my own ideas of comfort." When the reporter asked for the date of return, Morgan said, "That I do not know as my plans are not definitely fixed. I like Egypt very much and enjoy the Winter climate there." According to this interview, Morgan planned to stay in Egypt due to the appealing winter weather. The book The Great Pierpont Morgan states that in 1877 Morgan and friends spent a year abroad. “In Egypt they chartered a steamer to go up the Nile and had their pictures taken in front of the ruins of Karnak in a group of eighteen—family, friends, doctor, maid, dragoman, waiter, and consular agent—Pierpont standing very straight and solid looking” (Allen, 42). It is evident that Morgan liked to travel and entertain friends. He showed off the steamer that he financed and took trips through Europe. Ragtime expresses J.P. Morgan’s desire to die following his trip to Egypt and Rome; “But he was far from unhappy, having concluded that his physical deterioration was exactly the sign for which he had been waiting” (312). Morgan anticipated his death and was not afraid. It is a fact that J.P. Morgan died in Rome shortly after his trip to Egypt with his daughter. It is also known that Morgan truly did collect old Roman artifacts. “Morgan was a collector of ancient Egyptian relics, classical art, and all kinds of books. The books were eventually donated to the New York Public Library, while the art and relics found their way into New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art.” He died on March 31, 1913, in Rome, Italy, while returning from a trip to Egypt. However, Morgan was not interested in building his own pyramid, as expressed in the novel. He was accelerating his business abroad and built a home in order to oversee workers that he had hired for his company.
Doctorow incorporated and manipulated these facts pertaining to J.P. Morgan because they express Morgan’s superiority, arrogance and ambition. The novel attributes little to Morgan’s business successes because the book is not business oriented. Major themes of exploration and desire are evident in the novel, and Morgan’s ambition and aspiration to have a pyramid further contribute to these themes. For the most part however, Doctorow’s accounts on J.P. Morgan prove to be true.
By Brooke DeWitt
Baber, Mark. "J. P. MORGAN SAILS; IS GOING TO EGYPT." Encyclopedia Titanica. New
York Times, 2010. Web. 9 May 2011.
Allen, Frederick Lewis. The Great Pierpont Morgan. New York: Harper & Brothers
Publishers, 1949. Print.
Carey, Charles W. "J.P. Morgan Dug Into Egypt's Past." American History Online.
Facts on File, 2011. Web. 9 May 2011.
currently reading ragtime for a book club. thanks for this blog!
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