登陆注册
14821000000017

第17章

TO tie a prominent statesman to her train and to lead him about like a tame bear, is for a young and vivacious woman a more certain amusement than to tie herself to him and to be dragged about like an Indian squaw. This fact was Madeleine Lee's first great political discovery in Washington, and it was worth to her all the German philosophy she had ever read, with even a complete edition of Herbert Spencer's works into the bargain. There could be no doubt that the honours and dignities of a public career were no fair consideration for its pains. She made a little daily task for herself of reading in succession the lives and letters of the American Presidents, and of their wives, when she could find that there was a trace of the latter's existence. What a melancholy spectacle it was, from George Washington down to the last incumbent; what vexations, what disappointments, what grievous mistakes, what very objectionable manners! Not one of them, who had aimed at high purpose, but had been thwarted, beaten, and habitually insulted! What a gloom lay on the features of those famous chieftains, Calhoun, Clay, and Webster; what varied expression of defeat and unsatisfied desire; what a sense of self-importance and senatorial magniloquence; what a craving for flattery; what despair at the sentence of fate! And what did they amount to, after all?

They were practical men, these! they had no great problems of thought to settle, no questions that rose above the ordinary rules of common morals and homely duty. How they had managed to befog the subject! What elaborate show-structures they had built up, with no result but to obscure the horizon! Would not the country have done better without them? Could it have done worse? What deeper abyss could have opened under the nation's feet, than that to whose verge they brought it?

Madeleine's mind wearied with the monotony of the story. She discussed the subject with Ratcliffe, who told her frankly that the pleasure of politics lay in the possession of power. He agreed that the country would do very well without him. "But here I am," said he, "and here I mean to stay." He had very little sympathy for thin moralising, and a statesmanlike contempt for philosophical politics. He loved power, and he meant to be President.

That was enough.

Sometimes the tragic and sometimes the comic side was uppermost in her mind, and sometimes she did not herself know whether to cry or to laugh.

Washington more than any other city in the world swarms with simple-minded exhibitions of human nature; men and women curiously out of place, whom it would be cruel to ridicule and ridiculous to weep over. The sadder exhibitions are fortunately seldom seen by respectable people; only the little social accidents come under their eyes. One evening Mrs. Lee went to the President's first evening reception. As Sybil flatly refused to face the crowd, and Carrington mildly said that he feared he was not sufficiently reconstructed to appear at home in that august presence, Mrs. Lee accepted Mr. French for an escort, and walked across the Square with him to join the throng that was pouring into the doors of the White House. They took their places in the line of citizens and were at last able to enter the reception-room. There Madeleine found herself before two seemingly mechanical figures, which mlght be wood or wax, for any sign they showed of life.

These two figures were the President and his wife; they stood stiff and awkward by the door, both their faces stripped of every sign of intelligence, while the right hands of both extended themselves to the column of visitors with the mechanical action of toy dolls.

Mrs. Lee for a moment began to laugh, but the laugh died on her lips. To the President and his wife this was clearly no laughing matter. There they stood, automata, representatives of the society which streamed past them. Madeleine seized Mr. French by the arm.

"Take me somewhere at once," said she, "where I can look at it.

Here! in the corner. I had no conception how shocking it was!"

Mr. French supposed she was thinking of the queer-looking men and women who were swarming through the rooms, and he made, after his own delicate notion of humour, some uncouth jests on those who passed by. Mrs. Lee, however, was in no humour to explain or even to listen. She stopped him short:--"There, Mr. French! Now go away and leave me. I want to be alone for half an hour. Please come for me then." And there she stood, with her eyes fixed on the President and his wife, while the endless stream of humanity passed them, shaking hands.

What a strange and solemn spectacle it was, and how the deadly fascination of it burned the image in upon her mind! What a horrid warning to ambition!

And in all that crowd there was no one besides herself who felt the mockery of this exhibition. To all the others this task was a regular part of the President's duty, and there was nothing ridiculous about it. They thought it a democratic institution, this droll a ping of monarchical forms. To them the deadly dulness of the show was as natural and proper as ever to the courtiers of the Philips and Charleses seemed the ceremonies of the Escurial. To her it had the effect of a nightmare, or of an opium-eater's vision, She felt a sudden conviction that this was to be the end of American society; its realisation and dream at once. She groaned in spirit.

"Yes! at last I have reached the end! We shall grow to be wax images, and our talk will be like the squeaking of toy dolls. We shall all wander round and round the earth and shake hands. No one will have any object in this world, and there will be no other.

It is worse than anything in the 'Inferno.' What an awful vision of eternity!"

Suddenly, as through a mist, she saw the melancholy face of Lord Skye approaching. He came to her side, and his voice recalled her to reality.

"Does it amuse you, this sort of thing?" he asked in a vague way.

"We take our amusement sadly, after the manner of our people," she replied; "but it certainly interests me."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 网游之天下风华

    网游之天下风华

    成败转眼荣光,祭天台上扬起的帜幡你在的地方,就是我的家乡执手永恒之光,立在你我心中的长幡也许一夜功成,刹那后脆骨焚身不悔哭过笑过痛过的伤痕。
  • 女皇血玲妖

    女皇血玲妖

    “血玲妖”现代世家继承人,因爱错人,弄的遍体鳞伤,此生恨透男人,悬崖边上。“如有来生,吾愿天下男儿为我伤。”一朝穿越女尊国,真如前世说:无数男儿为她伤,这世在她主宰的世界里,她还有勇气再找一份真爱吗《我为妖狂,你为我狂吗,本文虐文》
  • 缥缈天宗

    缥缈天宗

    世间乱,神耀劫。天宗出,乾坤定。神耀大陆一直流传着一个传说,每当世间动乱,天地万物遭受劫难之时,天宗传人便会现身世间,解决劫难,让神耀大陆重新恢复安宁。然而身为天宗当代传人的云天,生活得却是非常的苦恼,因为他很缺钱,偏偏还要养着一位嗜酒如命,好吃懒做的师傅。这样的生活,直到他十六岁那年,无意中救下一位携带上古至宝‘神皇珠’的绝世美女,才发生了改变……PS:本书每天19点整更新一章,不定时爆发。
  • 阴阳医道

    阴阳医道

    刘尚高上高中时意外的得到一本华佗的《枕中灸刺经》。阴差阳错的进入地府,认识崔判官的妹妹,从此卷入一场危险的纷争。淡定从容,有担心但从不畏惧。一路上坚持本心,玩转阴阳两界。
  • 最强修真保镖

    最强修真保镖

    江山意外被游戏角色附身了,还掌握了游戏角色的生活技能,烹饪炼药打造巧匠强身暗器奇门翰墨,样样牛逼!加起来还不牛逼爆了?!烹饪技能制作的药酒强身健体壮阳补肾,让你重振男人雄风;炼药技能制作的定颜丹让你青春永驻,神奇五龙丹可解世间万毒;强身术让你变身武林高手,飞檐走壁偷窥妹纸……咳咳说错了,是行侠仗义!娇俏可爱的姐姐、芳心暗许的校花、甜美傲娇的空姐、温婉可人的老师、性感魅惑的秘书、暗藏心机的豪门千金……为了保护美丽的姐姐,江山话说校园护花保镖。拳打纨绔,脚踩二代,狂野彪悍的人生!???
  • 春风又度玉门关

    春风又度玉门关

    万里黄沙,落日孤烟。因为一则极其诱人的宝藏传闻,浅浅姑娘被永远不记得吃药的那人拐入了大漠。于是乎,剧情全面崩坏,旅途全程高能……怪力乱神迷糊女与病弱腹黑轮椅公子的恋爱养成。宝藏愤愤不平:我呢?说好的给我加戏份呢?!
  • 清狂天下

    清狂天下

    前世是暗夜女神,第一杀手的冷悠凝在完成任务时被一道彩光带到了异世。这是一个玄幻世界,魔法师,元素师,召唤师,战士,且看她征服天下。骂她?呵呵,活太长了。敢动她家人?她要那人生不如死。扮猪吃老虎神马的最有爱了,腹黑坑人最有趣了。偶尔逗逗呆萌师兄,心情一等一。身份如谜,她到底是谁?本文美男多多,女强爽文一对一
  • 死神少女的迷途

    死神少女的迷途

    死神少女的抉择修订版。阎默,一个丧失所有亲人的神灵,为了让自己的姐姐重新回到自己的身边,她找到了一个人类。寻回姐姐的同时心也被偷走了,可是她忘了一件不能改变的事情,她是神,不能和他在一起。
  • 男神是前任

    男神是前任

    [毒舌少年与智障少女的三两事]程蓝新想过,有没有一个少年曾遗失在了心底深处。程蓝新曾以为就算是智障少女的她也会得到男神的喜欢,而事实证明智障少女是没有明天的。或许那个少年总是高高在上,可却会一边骂她蠢还低头剥糖喂她吃。只是当少年笑着对她说,“对不起,你太蠢了没办法和我在一起。”的时候,程蓝新才瑟瑟问道,“许记年,你是不是讨厌我了?”少年的薄唇轻启,“程蓝新,你已经蠢到让我无法讨厌。”
  • 九玄龟珠(兽王系列)

    九玄龟珠(兽王系列)

    云岩城事件过后不久,东西联邦政府因为旷日持久的战争而大伤元气,双方同时罢战,停战期间,东联邦政府境内不断发生有针对性的恐怖活动,于是东联邦政府派出了大量的人员进行调查,最后矛头直指森蚺城第一大组织黑龙帮,兰虎奉命前往调查,黑龙帮帮主丁屠天的寿宴上,兰虎联合其他的势力对黑龙帮发起了攻击,令人意想不到的是,独孤奇也在宴会上突然出现,独孤奇告诉兰虎,四大神兽之一的玄龟在外星陨落,全身生命精华分为九颗珠子散落四方,独孤奇邀请兰虎结盟,一同前往外星寻找九颗九玄龟珠,平分天下,兰虎断然拒绝,双方一场大战,独孤奇乘坐单人宇宙飞船破空而去,在桃花源的帮助下,兰虎最终飞向后羿星,开始九死一生的寻找九玄龟珠之旅。