登陆注册
15293000000018

第18章 ABRAHAM LINCOLN(2)

The compensations of my long delay in Washington trying to move the War Department were the opportunity it gave me to see Mr. Lincoln, to meet the members of the Cabinet, to become intimate with the New York delegation in Congress, and to hear the wonderful adventures and stories so numerous in Washington.

The White House of that time had no executive offices as now, and the machinery for executive business was very primitive.

The east half of the second story had one large reception-room, in which the president could always be found, and a few rooms adjoining for his secretaries and clerks. The president had very little protection or seclusion. In the reception-room, which was always crowded at certain hours, could be found members of Congress, office-seekers, and an anxious company of fathers and mothers seeking pardons for their sons condemned for military offenses, or asking permission to go to the front, where a soldier boy was wounded or sick. Every one wanted something and wanted it very bad. The patient president, wearied as he was with cares of state, with the situation on several hostile fronts, with the exigencies in Congress and jealousies in his Cabinet, patiently and sympathetically listened to these tales of want and woe. My position was unique. I was the only one in Washington who personally did not want anything, my mission being purely in the public interest.

I was a devoted follower of Mr. Seward, the secretary of state, and through the intimacies with officers in his department I learned from day to day the troubles in the Cabinet, so graphically described in the diary of the secretary of the navy Gideon Welles.

The antagonism between Mr. Seward and Mr. Chase, the secretary of the treasury, though rarely breaking out in the open, was nevertheless acute. Mr. Seward was devoted to the president and made every possible effort to secure his renomination and election.

Mr. Chase was doing his best to prevent Mr. Lincoln's renomination and secure it for himself.

No president ever had a Cabinet of which the members were so independent, had so large individual followings, and were so inharmonious. The president's sole ambition was to secure the ablest men in the country for the departments which he assigned to them without regard to their loyalty to himself. One of Mr. Seward's secretaries would frequently report to me the acts of disloyalty or personal hostility on the part of Mr. Chase with the lament: "The old man--meaning Lincoln--knows all about it and will not do a thing."I had a long and memorable interview with the president. As I stepped from the crowd in his reception-room, he said to me:

"What do you want?" I answered: "Nothing, Mr. President, I only came to pay my respects and bid you good-by, as I am leaving Washington." "It is such a luxury," he then remarked, "to find a man who does not want anything. I wish you would wait until I get rid of this crowd."When we were alone he threw himself wearily on a lounge and was evidently greatly exhausted. Then he indulged, rocking backward and forward, in a reminiscent review of different crises in his administration, and how he had met them. In nearly every instance he had carried his point, and either captured or beaten his adversaries by a story so apt, so on all fours, and such complete answers that the controversy was over. I remember eleven of these stories, each of which was a victory.

In regard to this story-telling, he said: "I am accused of telling a great many stories. They say that it lowers the dignity of the presidential office, but I have found that plain people (repeating with emphasis plain people), take them as you find them, are more easily influenced by a broad and humorous illustration than in any other way, and what the hypercritical few may think, I don't care."In speaking Mr. Lincoln had a peculiar cadence in his voice, caused by laying emphasis upon the key-word of the sentence. In answer to the question how he knew so many anecdotes, he answered:

"I never invented story, but I have a good memory and, I think, tell one tolerably well. My early life was passed among pioneers who had the courage and enterprise to break away from civilization and settle in the wilderness. The things which happened to these original people and among themselves in their primitive conditions were far more dramatic than anything invented by the professional story-tellers. For many years I travelled the circuit as a lawyer, and usually there was only one hotel in the county towns where court was held. The judge, the grand and petit juries, the lawyers, the clients, and witnesses would pass the night telling exciting or amusing occurrences, and these were of infinite variety and interest." He was always eager for a new story to add to his magazine of ammunition and weapons.

One night when there was a reception at the executive mansion Rufus F. Andrews, surveyor of the port of New York, and I went there together. Andrews was a good lawyer and had been a correspondent in New York of Mr. Lincoln, while he was active at the bar in Illinois. He was a confidential adviser of the president on New York matters and frequently at the executive mansion. As the procession moved past the president he stopped Andrews and, leaning over, spoke very confidentially to him.

The conversation delayed the procession for some time. When Andrews and I returned to the hotel, our rooms were crowded with newspaper men and politicians wanting to know what the confidential conversation was about. Andrews made a great mystery of it and so did the press. He explained to me when we were alone that during his visit to the president the night before he told the president a new story. The president delayed him at the reception, saying:

"Andrews, I forgot the point of that story you told me last night;repeat it now."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • TFBOYS之天作之合

    TFBOYS之天作之合

    为同样面貌的好友复仇,不惜一切,似乎爱上了她的青梅竹马……(内容后边可能会有与作品内型不一样的内容,请见谅。)
  • 百丈怀海禅师广录

    百丈怀海禅师广录

    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。
  • 一抹血红花事了

    一抹血红花事了

    爱情像一首小夜曲,在一抹残红后走上红地毯,同时也就步入了坟墓。人未死,玲珑了爱的离奇!心已碎,憔悴了情的伤悲。蓦然回首萧瑟处,那人却在灯火阑珊处。
  • 魔城启示录

    魔城启示录

    笼罩在恐惧之中的国家,充斥着被称为“魔”的怪物,人们在“魔猎者”的保护下,过着黑暗的生活。渐渐接近这一切的真相的道路上,充满了牺牲,充满了血泪,人们到底能否得到救赎,未来又会是怎样呢,却没有人知道。
  • 上尊天

    上尊天

    上尊路,万骨枯,尘世途,血作引,杀戮剑,难回鞘,宇内静,则法归…………
  • 极道师者

    极道师者

    古有美人,皓腕卷轻纱,撩拨英雄少年水中有卧龙,横眉怒目,故步自封北方有山庄,青衣挂玉璧,檀郎谢女,比翼齐飞雪山下有痴人,欲踏破这天险,羽化登仙中海有极道者,拖刀而舞,会与天下英雄豪杰!路漫漫,极道哉?极道也。
  • 落樱抄之百鬼琉璃物语

    落樱抄之百鬼琉璃物语

    少女体内的千年琉璃玉,穿越千年的跨国之恋。樱飞花雨,衣袂纷飞,你究竟是谁?一朝穿越千年,勾玉破碎。觉醒,千年魔京谁与我同行?因放假在日本旅游的宫晓无意中路过了一座神邸,从而开始了奇妙的旅行。片段:樱花盛开,如雨般的纷纷飘落,站在面前的白衣男子你到底是谁?“沙罗,我们永远不分开好吗?”你是谁,看得见我吗?“樱花雨是你的最爱,我想你。”你是谁,在和我说话吗?白色狩衣,乌色纱帽,是你吗?
  • 妖神传说之君临天下

    妖神传说之君临天下

    仇人三千奈我何,天逍地遥自成佛。有朝一日剑在手,杀尽天下负我狗。为情,落下凡尘,历经千劫,矢志不渝。为爱,拒绝千万红颜。魔中之神,即为君临,注定要颠覆天下
  • 我的错误世界们

    我的错误世界们

    它们有的可以篡改认知,有的可以改变规律,有的可以时间回溯,甚至有的可以吞噬存在。但是它们都有共同的喜爱,那就是混乱和毁灭。它们就是被人们称为【错误】的异物。篡改帝国、梦道杀戮、穿越狂潮……万千世界,灭毁只需一念。从这个世界开始的征程,踏上修复之神的巅峰!最后,谁知【错误】的真相竟然让人那般绝望!!“一个我,两个我,三个我……我到底是谁?”----------PS:别以为屏幕前的你能置身书外,也许你的存在,就是一个错误。欢迎点击进入,错误世界!!
  • 吃

    杀戮、吞噬,无限增强,无限强大,身负血海深仇的王淇为了报仇却在最后关头失手,死亡后穿越异界却失去了记忆,不过却拥有了吞噬进化的能力………