登陆注册
37817700000146

第146章 CHAPTER XXIV INDIAN SUMMER (1898-1899)(5)

C. Whitney, Samuel J. Tilden -- men who played the game for ambition or amusement, and played it, as a rule, much better than the professionals, but whose aims were considerably larger than those of the usual player, and who felt no great love for the cheap drudgery of the work. In return, the professionals felt no great love for them, and set them aside when they could. Only their control of money made them inevitable, and even this did not always carry their points. The story of Abram Hewitt would offer one type of this statesman series, and that of Hay another. President Cleveland set aside the one; President Harrison set aside the other. "There is no politics in it," was his comment on Hay's appointment to office.

Hay held a different opinion and turned to McKinley whose judgment of men was finer than common in Presidents. Mr. McKinley brought to the problem of American government a solution which lay very far outside of Henry Adams's education, but which seemed to be at least practical and American. He undertook to pool interests in a general trust into which every interest should be taken, more or less at its own valuation, and whose mass should, under his management, create efficiency. He achieved very remarkable results.

How much they cost was another matter; if the public is ever driven to its last resources and the usual remedies of chaos, the result will probably cost more.

Himself a marvellous manager of men, McKinley found several manipulators to help him, almost as remarkable as himself, one of whom was Hay; but unfortunately Hay's strength was weakest and his task hardest. At home, interests could be easily combined by simply paying their price; but abroad whatever helped on one side, hurt him on another. Hay thought England must be brought first into the combine; but at that time Germany, Russia, and France were all combining against England, and the Boer War helped them.

For the moment Hay had no ally, abroad or at home, except Pauncefote, and Adams always maintained that Pauncefote alone pulled him through.

Yet the difficulty abroad was far less troublesome than the obstacles at home. The Senate had grown more and more unmanageable, even since the time of Andrew Johnson, and this was less the fault of the Senate than of the system. "A treaty of peace, in any normal state of things," said Hay, "ought to be ratified with unanimity in twenty-four hours. They wasted six weeks in wrangling over this one, and ratified it with one vote to spare. We have five or six matters now demanding settlement. I can settle them all, honorably and advantageously to our own side; and I am assured by leading men in the Senate that not one of these treaties, if negotiated, will pass the Senate. I should have a majority in every case, but a malcontent third would certainly dish every one of them. To such monstrous shape has the original mistake of the Constitution grown in the evolution of our politics. You must understand, it is not merely my solution the Senate will reject. They will reject, for instance, any treaty, whatever, on any subject, with England. I doubt if they would accept any treaty of consequence with Russia or Germany. The recalcitrant third would be differently composed, but it would be on hand. So that the real duties of a Secretary of State seem to be three: to fight claims upon us by other States; to press more or less fraudulent claims of our own citizens upon other countries; to find offices for the friends of Senators when there are none. Is it worth while -- for me -- to keep up this useless labor?"

To Adams, who, like Hay, had seen a dozen acquaintances struggling with the same enemies, the question had scarcely the interest of a new study.

He had said all he had to say about it in a dozen or more volumes relating to the politics of a hundred years before. To him, the spectacle was so familiar as to be humorous. The intrigue was too open to be interesting.

The interference of the German and Russian legations, and of the Clan-na-Gael, with the press and the Senate was innocently undisguised. The charming Russian Minister, Count Cassini, the ideal of diplomatic manners and training, let few days pass without appealing through the press to the public against the government. The German Minister, Von Holleben, more cautiously did the same thing, and of course every whisper of theirs was brought instantly to the Department. These three forces, acting with the regular opposition and the natural obstructionists, could always stop action in the Senate.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 少女间的友情

    少女间的友情

    各位使者在异世界偶然相遇,结下了友情,但是黑暗的阴谋也随即展开,“她”,会对各位使者做出怎样的事情呢
  • 晚归舟

    晚归舟

    他第一次来到长安,觉得那是盛世。在回到自己的家乡时,却发现西域已经被军队夷为平地,西域公主云岚成为俘虏,他第二次回到长安,剑指女帝,想要讨个说法。一举轰动长安。最后一个他走了,所有人都认为他被自己的骄傲挫败了,……第三次,他再度执剑重回,他不为掀起任何波澜,岁月冲淡他的怨恨。
  • HP同人之达芙妮艾德默

    HP同人之达芙妮艾德默

    当一个名叫达芙妮·艾德默的女孩打破了原来HP世界的格局。女主是本土人,不是穿越女,没有什么金手指。故事基调会努力和HP风格差不多。不会特意美化或者黑化哪个原著人物。以上帝视角展开全局,而不单单是从主角的视角揭露。
  • 苏明

    苏明

    应该是个末日的文吧反正习惯性的把人写s……
  • 终极之穿越

    终极之穿越

    王雪琳,意外车祸,醒来居然成了汪大东的姐姐??谁来解释一下,这破万点的战力是什么情况?谁来解释一下身边这么多的帅哥是怎么样?我出国学习一年,回来后,老弟成了ko.三,兄弟反目,这都是怎么回事?
  • 武魁星十世转生之逆天改命

    武魁星十世转生之逆天改命

    据郭氏传记记载:武魁星有三,为首魁沥,二星魁泩,三星魁魅。至于是如何来的呢?便要从涿鹿之战说起了。涿鹿之战黄帝打败蚩尤,后因为怕蚩尤依旧作祟,便令人斩其首级,分开埋葬,让其身首异处。蚩尤被斩下首级后,身体依旧有所意识,但因为找不到头颅所在,无法持续生命,于是双手,身体,双脚化作三颗武魁星,也就是我们前面所说的魁沥,魁泩,魁魅了。天帝得知后,派人日夜看着,生怕其恢复身形为祸人间。终于在这一天三颗武魁星化作三兄妹,天帝得知后立即召见,却发现其早已失去戾气,就如新生婴儿一般毫无记忆。天帝大喜,下旨其兄妹三人下凡轮回十世,方可回归星位。如此我们的故事便由此开始了。。。
  • 深情似水又似火

    深情似水又似火

    她是一个即将毕业的穷学生,也是一个奋斗青年,更是一个才华横溢的少女。他是一个主管命运的高富帅,也是一个白手起家的穷小子,更是一个神秘的救援者。看似本无交集的两个人,却因种种事情居住在一起。自从他们俩在一起后,纷纷有人投诉,说太腻歪了。可惜投诉屡屡失败。无论什么场合,虐朋友,虐家人,虐路人,甚至还...虐狗。谈起花式秀恩爱哪家强,还属金城俩傻子。当爱情和阴谋同时来临,他会如何抉择?
  • 南风轻请泪

    南风轻请泪

    属于她的两年的假期,怎么就变成了这样?狼狈的相遇,初见的惊艳,意外的失忆,一见钟情,她是撩妹的一把手,偏偏对感情很是迟钝!“我拿你当兄弟,你却想要睡我?!”某女咆哮。“乖~媳妇儿,你从一开始就是我的。”某男很是淡定的说。
  • 蚀骨之恋:亿万首富的心尖宠

    蚀骨之恋:亿万首富的心尖宠

    【甜宠文】自打叶兮涵被墨亦辰拐卖领证之后,每晚都休息不成,就连假期,亦是。别人娶了媳妇都是用来疼的,可叶兮涵,却是每晚都要做苦工,一纸休书,带上球开始跑。“想跑?叶兮涵,我记得你以前可是小白兔,怎么,有了包子就胆大,以为我不敢欺负你吗'?”“哼,如果你不怕我和你离婚,那就欺负我吧!”这要是放在以前,墨亦辰才不会在乎区区一个女人的威胁,他可是身价上万亿,坐拥汽车豪宅无数,但现在,他已中了一种叫叶兮涵的毒,除她,无药可解。男女双处,纯身心,欢迎入坑~
  • 荒古圣祖

    荒古圣祖

    玄州,大楚帝国,天月镇天家一名十六岁少年,天生圣体。可惜招人嫉妒,至使圣体变废体。不过圣体终究是圣体,区区禁锢又如何能镇压住他呢?!