登陆注册
19618800000040

第40章 CHAPTER VII TREASON (1860-1861)(2)

Perforce, the student was thrown back on Northern precept and example; first of all, on his New England surroundings. Republican houses were few in Washington, and Mr. and Mrs. Adams aimed to create a social centre for New Englanders. They took a house on I Street, looking over Pennsylvania Avenue, well out towards Georgetown -- the Markoe house -- and there the private secretary began to learn his social duties, for the political were confined to committee-rooms and lobbies of the Capitol. He had little to do, and knew not how to do it rightly, but he knew of no one who knew more.

The Southern type was one to be avoided; the New England type was one's self. It had nothing to show except one's own features. Setting aside Charles Sumner, who stood quite alone and was the boy's oldest friend, all the New Englanders were sane and steady men, well-balanced, educated, and free from meanness or intrigue -- men whom one liked to act with, and who, whether graduates or not, bore the stamp of Harvard College. Anson Burlingame was one exception, and perhaps Israel Washburn another; but as a rule the New Englander's strength was his poise which almost amounted to a defect. He offered no more target for love than for hate; he attracted as little as he repelled; even as a machine, his motion seemed never accelerated. The character, with its force or feebleness, was familiar; one knew it to the core; one was it -- had been run in the same mould.

There remained the Central and Western States, but there the choice of teachers was not large and in the end narrowed itself to Preston King, Henry Winter Davis, Owen Lovejoy, and a few other men born with social faculty. Adams took most kindly to Henry J. Raymond, who came to view the field for the New York Times, and who was a man of the world. The average Congressman was civil enough, but had nothing to ask except offices, and nothing to offer but the views of his district. The average Senator was more reserved, but had not much more to say, being always excepting one or two genial natures, handicapped by his own importance.

Study it as one might, the hope of education, till the arrival of the President-elect, narrowed itself to the possible influence of only two men -- Sumner and Seward.

Sumner was then fifty years old. Since his election as Senator in 1851 he had passed beyond the reach of his boy friend, and, after his Brooks injuries, his nervous system never quite recovered its tone; but perhaps eight or ten years of solitary existence as Senator had most to do with his development. No man, however strong, can serve ten years as schoolmaster, priest, or Senator, and remain fit for anything else. All the dogmatic stations in life have the effect of fixing a certain stiffness of attitude forever, as though they mesmerized the subject. Yet even among Senators there were degrees in dogmatism, from the frank South Carolinian brutality, to that of Webster, Benton, Clay, or Sumner himself, until in extreme cases, like Conkling, it became Shakespearian and bouffe -- as Godkin used to call it -- like Malvolio. Sumner had become dogmatic like the rest, but he had at least the merit of qualities that warranted dogmatism. He justly thought, as Webster had thought before him, that his great services and sacrifices, his superiority in education, his oratorical power, his political experience, his representative character at the head of the whole New England contingent, and, above all, his knowledge of the world, made him the most important member of the Senate; and no Senator had ever saturated himself more thoroughly with the spirit and temper of the body.

Although the Senate is much given to admiring in its members a superiority less obvious or quite invisible to outsiders, one Senator seldom proclaims his own inferiority to another, and still more seldom likes to be told of it. Even the greatest Senators seemed to inspire little personal affection in each other, and betrayed none at all. Sumner had a number of rivals who held his judgment in no high esteem, and one of these was Senator Seward.

The two men would have disliked each other by instinct had they lived in different planets. Each was created only for exasperating the other; the virtues of one were the faults of his rival, until no good quality seemed to remain of either. That the public service must suffer was certain, but what were the sufferings of the public service compared with the risks run by a young mosquito -- a private secretary -- trying to buzz admiration in the ears of each, and unaware that each would impatiently slap at him for belonging to the other? Innocent and unsuspicious beyond what was permitted even in a nursery, the private secretary courted both.

Private secretaries are servants of a rather low order, whose business is to serve sources of power. The first news of a professional kind, imparted to private secretary Adams on reaching Washington, was that the President-elect, Abraham Lincoln, had selected Mr. Seward for his Secretary of State, and that Seward was to be the medium for communicating his wishes to his followers.

Every young man naturally accepted the wishes of Mr. Lincoln as orders, the more because he could see that the new President was likely to need all the help that several million young men would be able to give, if they counted on having any President at all to serve. Naturally one waited impatiently for the first meeting with the new Secretary of State.

同类推荐
  • 今言

    今言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • American Notes

    American Notes

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 溪山余话

    溪山余话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Sense and Sensibility

    Sense and Sensibility

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 经义考

    经义考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 沧海彼岸

    沧海彼岸

    一对恋人,世世被拆分。这一世,他们能否厮守终生……
  • 一锤定婚

    一锤定婚

    一条大学男子因情伤跳楼未遂的新闻,爆炸般地从K大传遍全市,而该事件的“罪魁祸首”却淡定极了。“罪魁祸首”叫田丝葵,是K大校园最大的女恶霸,四年交了两位数的男朋友不说,家里竟还有一个订婚二十多年的神秘未婚夫! 田丝葵因种种“恶行”被自家老爸扫地出门,又遇上前男友的恐怖纠缠,这时霸道未婚夫即刻上线!蜜语攻势、卖萌耍贱外加死皮赖脸,腹黑的个性下却是满满的宠溺。然而她却只爱初恋?这背后竟隐藏着惊天大秘密……
  • 奥巴马给年轻人的11个忠告

    奥巴马给年轻人的11个忠告

    成功需要方法,但更需要智慧,作为美国第一位黑人总统,奥巴马的成功可以说是空前的,本书汇集奥巴马成功智慧,总结了这位现任美国总统给年轻人的11个忠告。
  • 系统之穿越有点甜

    系统之穿越有点甜

    不是羞花闭月,不能一笑倾城,爹是皇上没用,娘是皇后不疼……师父很酷太冷,师兄太帅无情,宅斗失败,宫斗无能……系统、空间、金手指都是浮云。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 刷子传记

    刷子传记

    亿万年前,宇宙初诞之时,樱特尔人占领了宇宙中最大的一颗行星,并命名为樱特尔星。樱特尔人统治着樱特尔星亿万年,直到人类的出现人类的出现给樱特尔人带来了空前的灾难,他们的毒奶粉地沟油,杀伤力极其大强大!以至于使樱特尔人陷入了濒临灭绝的地步在广阔无垠的樱特尔星,有个叫做藤埙的帝国。藤埙帝国的首都是个名为蔻口的城池,在这座城池中有个名为刷子的公寓,刷子公寓中住着一群萌萌哒的刷子这群刷子有着各自不同的工作,而他们有一个共同的身份——写手,这不过是为了掩人耳目,他们还有另一冲身份——拥有特异功能的变异人!樱特尔人正需要这样的特异功能来拯救他们,经过数年的追踪,终于在蔻口城发现了变异人的踪迹……
  • 同胞,请淡定

    同胞,请淡定

    曾经,我们见面,亲切地问:吃了吗?现在,我们见面,急迫地问:买房了吗?又跳槽了吗?找到合适结婚的了吗?是什么让现在成为现在?我们认识到了焦虑和浮躁,又该用什么心态去面对?高房价、就业难、节奏过快、剩男剩女等现实问题充斥着当前中国人的生活,人们渐渐发现经济的高速发展除了付出资源和环境的代价之外,也牺牲了原本相对平和的心态。
  • 佣兵成相

    佣兵成相

    她,现代首席佣兵,狠戾无情,出手毒辣,凶名为各国特种军官所知,当生命走到尽头时,人生亦是就此重谱。他,凤朝重臣,却功高盖主,为帝王忌。一朝红颜内敛,官服披就,她与他生命就此纠缠。爱,可以粗茶淡饭,亦可以坐拥天下···她,从来不知道,这样的自己是如何能令得他的目光停驻,只是,当习惯了那个人的守候后,自己是否还能承受得了所谓的生离死别!*****************************************************************厚着脸皮各种求!!喵喵~~~
  • 羽时代之羽之复仇

    羽时代之羽之复仇

    她,明明自己都没有把握保护好自己,却还要关心他人,最后换来的却是……“我明明自己的仇都没报完,还要给你喊冤?!”她怒吼着,却还是答应下了这件事。没事,复仇的路上充满荆棘不假,但你不能阻止我开挂砍草!
  • 快乐怀孕280天

    快乐怀孕280天

    本书内容包括:孕期营养指导、孕期运动指导、孕期胎教提示、孕期检查提醒、孕期疾病护理、孕期心理调整等。
  • 无奈灰色

    无奈灰色

    哥哥说:“等攒够了钱、还完了债、我们开个小店,过安稳的日子”我相信他,他说过一定会做到,而且他一直在努力的做。