登陆注册
14821000000031

第31章

Mr. Keen made a note of the request, merely remarking that he had been very well acquainted with Baker, and also a little with his wife, who was supposed to know his affairs as well as he knew them himself; and who was still in Washington. He thought he could bring the information in a day or two. As he then rose to go, Mr. Ratcliffe added that entire secrecy was necessary, as the interests involved in obstructing the search were considerable, and it was not well to wake them up. Mr. Keen assented and went his way.

All this was natural enough and entirely proper, at least so far as appeared on the surface. Had Mr. Keen been so curious in other people's affairs as to look for the particular legislative measure which lay at the bottom of Mr. Ratcliffe's inquiries, he might have searched among the papers of Congress a very long time and found himself greatly puzzled at last. In fact there was no measure of the kind. The whole story was a fiction. Mr. Ratcliffe had scarcely thought of Baker since his death, until the day before, when he had seen his widow on the Mount Vernon steamer and had found her in relations with Carrington. Something in Carrington's habitual attitude and manner towards himself had long struck him as peculiar, and this connection with Mrs. Baker had suggested to the Senator the idea that it might be well to have an eye on both. Mrs. Baker was a silly woman, as he knew, and there were old transactions between Ratcliffe and Baker of which she might be informed, but which Ratcliffe had no wish to see brought within Mrs. Lee's ken. As for the fiction invented to set Keen in motion, it was an innocent one.

It harmed nobody. Ratcliffe selected this particular method of inquiry because it was the easiest, safest, and most effectual. If he were always to wait until he could afford to tell the precise truth, business would very soon be at a standstill, and his career at an end.

This little matter disposed of; the Senator from Illinois passed his afternoon in calling upon some of his brother senators, and the first of those whom he honoured with a visit was Mr. Krebs, of Pennsylvania. There were many reasons which now made the co-operation of that high-minded statesman essential to Mr. Ratcliffe. The strongest of them was that the Pennsylvania delegation in Congress was well disciplined and could be used with peculiar advantage for purposes of "pressure." Ratcliffe's success in his contest with the new President depended on the amount of "pressure" he could employ. To keep himself in the background, and to fling over the head of the raw Chief Magistrate a web of intertwined influences, any one of which alone would be useless, but which taken together were not to be broken through; to revive the lost art of the Roman retiarius, who from a safe distance threw his net over his adversary, before attacking with the dagger; this was Ratcliffe's intention and towards this he had been directing all his manipulation for weeks past. How much bargaining and how many promises he found it necessary to make, was known to himself alone. About this time Mrs. Lee was a little surprised to find Mr. Gore speaking with entire confidence of having Ratcliffe's support in his application for the Spanish mission, for she had rather imagined that Gore was not a favourite with Ratcliffe. She noticed too that Schneidekoupon had come back again and spoke mysteriously of interviews with Ratcliffe; of attempts to unite the interests of New York and Pennsylvania; and his countenance took on a dark and dramatic expression as he proclaimed that no sacrifice of the principle of protection should be tolerated. Schneidekoupon disappeared as suddenly as he came, and from Sybil's innocent complaints of his spirits and temper, Mrs. Lee jumped to the conclusion that Mr. Ratcliffe, Mr. Clinton, and Mr. Krebs had for the moment combined to sit heavily upon poor Schneidekoupon, and to remove his disturbing influence from the scene, at least until other men should get what they wanted. These were merely the trifling incidents that fell within Mrs. Lee's observation. She felt an atmosphere of bargain and intrigue, but she could only imagine how far it extended. Even Carrington, when she spoke to him about it, only laughed and shook his head:

"Those matters are private, my dear Mrs. Lee; you and I are not meant to know such things."

This Sunday afternoon Mr. Ratcliffe's object was to arrange the little manoeuvre about Carson of Pennsylvania, which had disturbed him in church.

His efforts were crowned with success. Krebs accepted Carson and promised to bring him forward at ten minutes' notice, should the emergency arise.

Ratcliffe was a great statesman. The smoothness of his manipulation was marvellous. No other man in politics, indeed no other man who had ever been in politics in this country, could--his admirers said--have brought together so many hostile interests and made so fantastic a combination. Some men went so far as to maintain that he would "rope in the President himself before the old man had time to swap knives with him." The beauty of his work consisted in the skill with which he evaded questions of principle. As he wisely said, the issue now involved was not one of principle but of power.

The fate of that noble party to which they all belonged, and which had a record that could never be forgotten, depended on their letting principle alone. Their principle must be the want of principles. There were indeed individuals who said in reply that Ratcliffe had made promises which never could be carried out, and there were almost superhuman elements of discord in the combination, but as Ratcliffe shrewdly rejoined, he only wanted it to last a week, and he guessed his promises would hold it up for that time.

同类推荐
  • King Henry VI Part 2

    King Henry VI Part 2

    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。
  • 鳳城瑣錄

    鳳城瑣錄

    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。
  • She Stoops To Conquer

    She Stoops To Conquer

    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。
  • 静春堂集

    静春堂集

    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。
  • 黄庭内外景经

    黄庭内外景经

    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
  • 开家赚钱的小餐饮店

    开家赚钱的小餐饮店

    本书介绍了如何充分利用小餐饮店的灵活性和方便性,根据餐饮市场状况,以及自身的条件,做出相应的变化,适当调整经营策略,改变经营方针和方向,使小餐饮店显示出旺盛的生命力。
  • 爱有几种语言

    爱有几种语言

    因为某人,锦婵舍弃了自己的梦想,只身来到这个陌生的国度,给东林集团当起了高级翻译,成为万千女性爱慕的亚洲人气组合pjc的外语老师。原本带着偏见的她,不知何时起,也不知道是被他的舞蹈,他的音乐,还是仅仅被没有任何包装的他的真诚吸引,慢慢沉迷其中,无法自拔。为“报复”她之前对其告白的拒绝,小气的他要求锦婵用10种语言进行倒追,起初她以为这对精通16国语言的她来说是小菜一碟。可真正爱上一个人的时候,她才发现,爱只有一种语言,听从心底的呼唤,她会告诉你怎样去爱,去付出,去希望,去体味,彼此给予的幸福的感觉……
  • 掌控者

    掌控者

    海华丝是生活在星云裳的一个人物,他每天都做着自己喜欢做的事情。他因为一个意外抛弃了自己的心爱的女人,来到了另一个地方。他来自另外一个地方,当然是想要在这里生活。那么他能否如愿以偿的把这里给掌控了呢?
  • 傲娇王妃:太子,妾本蛇蝎

    傲娇王妃:太子,妾本蛇蝎

    一朝穿越,她已不再是任人宰割的肥羊,害她之人,必要让他们血债血还,欺负她的人,必定踩在脚底!这一世,她要好好的活着,宁负天下人,不负自己!他觉得自己找对了人,她如此恶毒之女,巧的是他重口味,就喜欢这样的!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 残医悦王妃

    残医悦王妃

    老天,你这玩笑开大了吧!她好不容易才直起身子颤巍巍地学走路,你就让那不长眼的罪犯开车把我撞飞了?夏韵不敢置信地盯着地下鲜血淋漓的躯体,她还没能站稳呢!呃,那个自称为鬼差的接引大使怎么搞的?替人还阳?她的身份不小?什么?她二十一世纪少女,连男朋友都没谈过,怎的一穿就成了已婚妇女了。夏韵气急往腿上一拍,懵了。不,不会这么巧吧:搞什么!这王妃竟该死的也是个残废!难道她两世为人都要与轮椅为伴吗?好在,本小姐前世为医自身,医术精湛,如今依旧可以治好了双腿。哼哼~看本小姐怎么整治你这个自命风流,招来莺莺燕燕欺辱本小姐的王爷。只是……唉,怎的去个边关也这么难,是否前世桃花无一朵,今世怜她补偿多!
  • 天道之皇

    天道之皇

    诸天万界,万道争锋,无穷无尽的新奇法宝,人,妖,神,仙,魔,王,皇,帝,强者如林,群雄荟萃,演绎一个大争之世!星空之下,一个绝世少年穿越而来大声喊道:“天道不足凭,吾言可为法!诸天万界我为尊,千秋万代我称皇!此世我一定要登上九天之巅,一览这天下风光,让后世之人永记吾之大名!“-——-——真武大帝
  • 唯念伊人

    唯念伊人

    从相遇到相知,从相爱到相濡以沫,我们蹉跎了太多时光,若说人生是一场旅行,那么我愿意与你相携从日出到星辰,从朝阳到晚霞,这些话我不知道在心里默念了多少次,可是我怎能让你知道?——薛亦枫我费尽心思给你这下一封情书,可是到头来我发现我是多么胆小,以至于我连给你的勇气都没有——莫笙北他们一直爱着,只是两个人都有自己的骄傲,谁先表白,谁就输了一切,只是两只…胆小鬼青梅竹马,HE
  • 常青藤教育的99个法则

    常青藤教育的99个法则

    美国精英是怎样炼成的?本书介绍了常青藤教育的99条法则,教会父母如何教育孩子。当孩子具备了真正的常青藤素质,无论将来他遇到什么样的困难和携手,他都能从容面对,继续前行。无需走出国门,您也可以了解到美国精英教育的法则,让孩子在成长之路上与世界精英同步。
  • 永生术师

    永生术师

    或许正是因为经历了平凡,更不想再继续平凡或许正是因为死过一次,才更不想再死第二次开灵窍,凝灵脉,筑灵府,化法相,渡生死,闯轮回,最终方能证得永生仙位!
  • 万界大美食系统

    万界大美食系统

    “什么?一份九级火龙肉想换老子的至尊西红柿炒鸡蛋,没门!”“哦?你家大人身患重病,需要我的蟠桃,这个…看你们的诚意了。”“大人,您这个儿大红润、氤氲着雷光的绝世神药叫什么名字?”“这个啊,这个叫番茄,别名西红柿,我用紫极雷火树杂交的。吃了以后不仅能淬炼体魄,还能增长一个境界的修为呢,你看怎么样?”“如此神物,怎可起这样一个俗名,依老夫看,不如叫雷火番茄吧!”一个酒楼厨师林浩,幸运获得系统,种田开荒,美食修炼,前往各大世界历险的欢乐故事。美食入侵,降者不杀!