登陆注册
15467900000023

第23章 CHAPTER X(1)

WHO LOBBIED FOR IT

It was a midsummer's day in Washington. Even at early morning, while the sun was yet level with the faces of pedestrians in its broad, shadeless avenues, it was insufferably hot. Later the avenues themselves shone like the diverging rays of another sun,--the Capitol,--a thing to be feared by the naked eye. Later yet it grew hotter, and then a mist arose from the Potomac, and blotted out the blazing arch above, and presently piled up along the horizon delusive thunder clouds, that spent their strength and substance elsewhere, and left it hotter than before. Towards evening the sun came out invigorated, having cleared the heavenly brow of perspiration, but leaving its fever unabated.

The city was deserted. The few who remained apparently buried themselves from the garish light of day in some dim, cloistered recess of shop, hotel, or restaurant; and the perspiring stranger, dazed by the outer glare, who broke in upon their quiet, sequestered repose, confronted collarless and coatless specters of the past, with fans in their hands, who, after dreamily going through some perfunctory business, immediately retired to sleep after the stranger had gone. Congressmen and Senators had long since returned to their several constituencies with the various information that the country was going to ruin, or that the outlook never was more hopeful and cheering, as the tastes of their constituency indicated. A few Cabinet officers still lingered, having by this time become convinced that they could do nothing their own way, or indeed in any way but the old way, and getting gloomily resigned to their situation. A body of learned, cultivated men, representing the highest legal tribunal in the land, still lingered in a vague idea of earning the scant salary bestowed upon them by the economical founders of the Government, and listened patiently to the arguments of counsel, whose fees for advocacy of claims before them would have paid the life income of half the bench. There was Mr. Attorney-General and his assistants still protecting the Government's millions from rapacious hands, and drawing the yearly public pittance that their wealthier private antagonists would have scarce given as a retainer to their junior counsel. The little standing army of departmental employes,--the helpless victims of the most senseless and idiotic form of discipline the world has known,--a discipline so made up of caprice, expediency, cowardice, and tyranny that its reform meant revolution, not to be tolerated by legislators and lawgivers, or a despotism in which half a dozen accidentally-chosen men interpreted their prejudices or preferences as being that Reform. Administration after administration and Party after Party had persisted in their desperate attempts to fit the youthful colonial garments, made by our Fathers after a by-gone fashion, over the expanded limits and generous outline of a matured nation. There were patches here and there; there were grievous rents and holes here and there; there were ludicrous and painful exposures of growing limbs everywhere; and the Party in Power and the Party out of Power could do nothing but mend and patch, and revamp and cleanse and scour, and occasionally, in the wildness of despair, suggest even the cutting off the rebellious limbs that persisted in growing beyond the swaddling clothes of its infancy.

It was a capital of Contradictions and Inconsistencies. At one end of the Avenue sat the responsible High Keeper of the military honor, valor, and war-like prestige of a great nation, without the power to pay his own troops their legal dues until some selfish quarrel between Party and Party was settled. Hard by sat another Secretary, whose established functions seemed to be the misrepresentation of the nation abroad by the least characteristic of its classes, the politicians,--and only then when they had been defeated as politicians, and when their constituents had declared them no longer worthy to be even THEIR representatives. This National Absurdity was only equaled by another, wherein an ex-Politician was for four years expected to uphold the honor of a flag of a great nation over an ocean he had never tempted, with a discipline the rudiments of which he could scarcely acquire before he was removed, or his term of office expired, receiving his orders from a superior officer as ignorant of his special duties as himself, and subjected to the revision of a Congress cognizant of him only as a politician. At the farther end of the Avenue was another department so vast in its extent and so varied in its functions that few of the really great practical workers of the land would have accepted its responsibility for ten times its salary, but which the most perfect constitution in the world handed over to men who were obliged to make it a stepping stone to future preferment. There was another department, more suggestive of its financial functions from the occasional extravagances or economies exhibited in its payrolls,--successive Congresses having taken other matters out of its hands,--presided over by an official who bore the title and responsibility of the Custodian and Disburser of the Nation's Purse, and received a salary that a bank-President would have sniffed at. For it was part of this Constitutional Inconsistency and Administrative Absurdity that in the matter of honor, justice, fidelity to trust, and even business integrity, the official was always expected to be the superior of the Government he represented. Yet the crowning Inconsistency was that, from time to time, it was submitted to the sovereign people to declare if these various Inconsistencies were not really the perfect expression of the most perfect Government the world had known. And it is to be recorded that the unanimous voices of Representative, Orator, and Unfettered Poetry were that it was!

同类推荐
  • 存复斋文集

    存复斋文集

    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。
  • 诊家枢要

    诊家枢要

    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。
  • 三教出兴颂注

    三教出兴颂注

    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。
  • 急救便方

    急救便方

    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。
  • 静学文集

    静学文集

    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
  • 龙骸战甲

    龙骸战甲

    当血红的眼睛盯着他时,他才发现他错了,错在他不应该去惹那个人,那个人血腥,暴力,更不知道的是他的那一双眼睛,血红色的眼睛,如同深渊一般,看不到任何的光芒,只有黑暗。他是尼德霍格,他是一条龙,但是……他同样是人。
  • 我喜欢你,一直与你无关

    我喜欢你,一直与你无关

    我就是喜欢你,可是……你永远也不会知道我喜欢你……
  • 霸爱腹黑萌公子

    霸爱腹黑萌公子

    前世他与她携手走过,他许诺:来世定不负卿。她莞尔道;你若忘怀,便再寻我不得。彼岸花开,是谁之过。彼尔斜斜,谁知祸。。。林家有女初长成,一如清冷如她,一如腹黑如他。遇上他是她的劫,亦或是他的殇。。。欢迎亲们来看几许的新文《霸爱腹黑萌公子》。
  • 快穿之炮灰的逆袭之路

    快穿之炮灰的逆袭之路

    [PS:男主始终都是一个人,只不过后期才会出现,请小天使们放心入坑。]夏昕遭到未婚夫和妹妹的背叛,出门就出车祸而亡,但渣男一脸愧疚不舍的表情是怎么回事。突然天上掉下来个系统,系统说:我们都是主神大人创建的系统,只要你帮助炮灰完成各种各样的心愿,就会得到永生。但是如果你不答应,就会魂飞魄散,且不能轮回。夏昕被迫无奈答应了。但是为什么有一天系统口里无所不能的主神大人会出现在他面前,还代替了系统的工作。夏昕表示她真的是受宠若惊啊……
  • 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!)
  • 放逐之城

    放逐之城

    这是一群人漂流到无人足迹的荒岛,从零开始,建造城市的故事。我们的目标很纯粹,那就是活下去!
  • 超级近身狂少

    超级近身狂少

    秦家灭亡前夕主脉唯一后裔秦弘被父亲送入深山里一名老者手中,老者将一身的武功与多年的情场经验传授与秦弘。得知家族遭遇不测后复入都市的少年却桃运不断,美丽大姐姐、美女老师、校花、护士……他将如何一并收入囊中?又将如何复仇?
  • 天域圣主

    天域圣主

    天域大地,万族林立,群雄荟萃,一名名天之骄子开启绝世道种,璀璨天地间。少年从南灵域走出,纨绔之身雄霸天地间,一枚能进阶的道种,一部吞噬万物的法决,剑魄藏心,剑意冲九霄!圣主之争,谁主沉浮,一沙一世界,蛋养天地间……
  • 谁许我十里桃花

    谁许我十里桃花

    她不过是一个丞相千金,因顽皮出府,偶然遇见了他(不会写简介,所以短)
  • 阴阳彼端

    阴阳彼端

    我叫谢必安,是一名普通大学生。因为和白无常的名字一样,所以大家都叫我小白丶七爷。