登陆注册
14821000000018

第18章

They stood for a time in silence, watching the slowly eddying dance of Democracy, until he resumed:

"Whom do you take that man to be--the long, lean one, with a long woman on each arm?"

"That man," she replied, "I take to be a Washington department-clerk, or perhaps a member of Congress from Iowa, with a wife and wife's sister. Do they shock your nobility?"

He looked at her with comical resignation. "You mean to tell me that they are quite as good as dowager-countesses. I grant it. My aristocratic spirit is broken, Mrs. Lee. I will even ask them to dinner if you bid me, and if you will come to meet them. But the last time I asked a member of Congress to dine, he sent me back a note in pencil on my own envelope that he would bring two of his friends with him, very respectable constituents from Yahoo city, or some such place; nature's noblemen, he said."

"You should have welcomed them."

"I did. I wanted to see two of nature's noblemen, and I knew they would probably be pleasanter company than their representative.

They came; very respectable persons, one with a blue necktie, the other with a red one: both had diamond pins in their shirts, and were carefully brushed in respect to their hair. They said nothing, ate little, drank less, and were much better behaved than I am.

When they went away, they unanimously asked me to stay with them when I visited Yahoo city."

"You will not want guests if you always do that."

"I don't know. I think it was pure ignorance on their part. They knew no better, and they seemed modest enough. My only complaint was that I could get nothing out of them. I wonder whether their wives would have been more amusing."

"Would they be so in England, Lord Skye?"

He looked down at her with half-shut eyes, and drawled: "You know my countrywomen?"

"Hardly at all."

"Then let us discuss some less serious subject."

"Willingly. I have waited for you to explain to me why you have to-night an expression of such melancholy."

"Is that quite friendly, Mrs. Lee? Do I really look melancholy?"

"Unutterably, as I feel. I am consumed with curiosity to know the reason."

The British minister coolly took a complete survey of the whole room, ending with a prolonged stare at the President and his wife, who were still mechanically shaking hands; then he looked back into her face, and said never a word.

She insisted: "I must have this riddle answered. It suffocates me. I should not be sad at seeing these same people at work or at play, if they ever do play; or in a church or a lecture-room. Why do they weigh on me like a horrid phantom here?"

"I see no riddle, Mrs. Lee. You have answered your own question; they are neither at work nor at play."

"Then please take me home at once. I shall have hysterics. The sight of those two suffering images at the door is too mournful to be borne. I am dizzy with looking at these stalking figures. I don't believe they're real.

I wish the house would take fire. I want an earthquake. I wish some one would pinch the President, or pull his wife's hair."

Mrs. Lee did not repeat the experiment of visiting the White House, and indeed for some time afterwards she spoke with little enthusiasm of the presidential office. To Senator Ratcliffe she expressed her opinions strongly. The Senator tried in vain to argue that the people had a right to call upon their chief magistrate, and that he was bound to receive them; this being so, there was no less objectionable way of proceeding than the one which had been chosen. "Who gave the people any such right?" asked Mrs.

Lee. "Where does it come from? What do they want it for? You know better, Mr. Ratcliffe! Our chief magistrate is a citizen like any one else. What puts it into his foolish head to cease being a citizen and to ape royalty?

Our governors never make themselves ridiculous. Why cannot the wretched being content himself with living like the rest of us, and minding his own business? Does he know what a figure of fun he is?" And Mrs. Lee went so far as to declare that she would like to be the President's wife only to put an end to this folly; nothing should ever induce her to go through such a performance; and if the public did not approve of this, Congress might impeach her, and remove her from office; all she demanded was the right to be heard before the Senate in her own defence.

Nevertheless, there was a very general impression in Washington that Mrs.

Lee would like nothing better than to be in the White House.

Known to comparatively few people, and rarely discussing even with them the subjects which deeply interested her, Madeleine passed for a clever, intriguing woman who had her own objects to gain. True it is, beyond peradventure, that all residents of Washington may be assumed to be in office or candidates for office; unless they avow their object, they are guilty of an attempt--and a stupid one--to deceive; yet there is a small class of apparent exceptions destined at last to fall within the rule. Mrs.

Lee was properly assumed to be a candidate for office. To the Washingtonians it was a matter of course that Mrs. Lee should marry Silas P. Ratcliffe. That he should be glad to get a fashionable and intelligent wife, with twenty or thirty thousand dollars a year, was not surprising. That she should accept the first public man of the day, with a flattering chance for the Presidency--a man still comparatively young and not without good looks--was perfectly natural, and in her undertaking she had the sympathy of all well-regulated Washington women who were not possible rivals; for to them the President's wife is of more consequence than the President; and, indeed, if America only knew it, they are not very far from the truth.

Some there were, however, who did not assent to this good-natured though worldly view of the proposed match. These ladies were severe in their comments upon Mrs. Lee's conduct, and did not hesitate to declare their opinion that she was the calmest and most ambitious minx who had ever come within their observation.

Unfortunately it happened that the respectable and proper Mrs.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 爆萌高校:校草大人是女生

    爆萌高校:校草大人是女生

    她不过是一个心血来潮,剪了短发,换上男装,上了高中,顺便被评选为新一季全民校草,怎么会引来这么多的桃花?班长献身,男神表白,她也就勉勉强强的接受了,可是,这位打酱油的兰生又是干什么的?哎哎哎,这位帅哥,本校草已经粉丝过千,女票上万,您这是?只见某打酱油兰生笑嘻嘻地厚着脸皮凑了过来“我想做校草您的第一万零一个女票。”额怎么会有这么变态的要求和这么变态的人?凌子诺想都没想,果断拒绝了他。只是,某兰生似乎表现得也太执着了一些。
  • 只差一个回头

    只差一个回头

    你爱过吗?你是我心里的一道刺,刺穿了我所有活着的岁月,在你离开后我以为我以后都会沉默,我被孤立,我不理所有人,可还是想念,Miss,即使想念,也是错过啊,从6岁开始,你就是我心里的光……直到小茹,直到他,直到我想要拍拖,摆脱对你的想,对你爱恨乱涌的思绪…………结果我又得到了什么,真是贱。renqian,任桥,你还爱我吗?我问不出,我只想问你:“你还记得我吗?”
  • 夏末奇迹

    夏末奇迹

    王启的游戏生涯和现实主义爱情的结晶。在游戏里认识的你,现实与你结婚。
  • 金色功勋

    金色功勋

    2060年,“缔造者”死灰复燃,已经成为地地道道的国际恐怖组织,在世界各地犯案累累。他们的首领杰克以重金收买了国际刑警组织的有关人员,劫走了海因茨和安蒂诺。然而,安蒂诺始终念念不忘他最出色的“研究成果”吴捷,并坚信这个年轻人仍然活着,为此,海因茨周密部署,派人绑架了童阅……
  • 吝啬女的守护王子

    吝啬女的守护王子

    “你本来就使我老婆,我们有娃娃亲的。”男孩也是靠在女孩的耳旁说着,还轻轻呼了口气......她有一头乌黑的炫亮的黑发,穿着白色的体恤,一条洗的脱了色的牛仔裤......
  • MALBONE

    MALBONE

    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。
  • karry一路我陪你

    karry一路我陪你

    “你是谁?”“我?你竟然不认识我?”“我为什么一定要认识你?”“哦,我叫王俊凯,大家都叫我karry!”“哦,你好,karry!”“你好!”
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 穷日子富过:理财改变你的人生

    穷日子富过:理财改变你的人生

    本书对储蓄、股票、基金、保险等理财工具进行了透彻的分析,并从消费、结婚、生子、旅游等几大方面做了深入浅出的解析,还针对经济不景气时期制定了特殊的理财方案。
  • 至尊邪妻之娘子万万岁

    至尊邪妻之娘子万万岁

    这是个无耻女子与假货太后他们之间“狼狈为奸”的故事。她是异世孤魂,命中犯煞,一不小心闯入架空古代,只是亲爹不疼祖母不爱;只不过她竟然还要下嫁太监!有谁比她还要悲催的?相公不行,太后盯得紧,她连找男人的机会都没有;秉着大树底下好乘凉,毅然决然巴结臭名昭著的太后。不想太后居然是个……男的?!那不正好?众里寻“他”千百度,蓦然回首,“那人”就在灯火阑珊处!既然都不想她好过,那她便与那权势滔天,恶贯满盈、人人畏惧的太后狼狈为奸,为非作歹!原本的利用,可那人却在她被万人唾弃千夫所指后,依旧将她视为掌中宝、心尖肉他能为她笑拋掌中权,护她一世长安;她又为何不敢,陪他笑坠九幽炼狱、颠覆这世间繁华。