登陆注册
14821000000005

第5章

Society was kind; there was no reason for its being otherwise. Mrs.

Lee and her sister had no enemies, held no offices, and did their best to make themselves popular. Sybil had not passed summers at Newport and winters in New York in vain; and neither her face nor her figure, her voice nor her dancing, needed apology. Politics were not her strong point. She was induced to go once to the Capitol and to sit ten minutes in the gallery of the Senate. No one ever knew what her impressions were; with feminine tact she managed not to betray herself But, in truth, her notion of legislative bodies was vague, floating between her experience at church and at the opera, so that the idea of a performance of some kind was never out of her head. To her mind the Senate was a place where people went to recite speeches, and she naively assumed that the speeches were useful and had a purpose, but as they did not interest her she never went again. This is a very common conception of Congress; many Congressmen share it.

Her sister was more patient and bolder. She went to the Capitol nearly every day for at least two weeks. At the end of that time her interest began to flag, and she thought it better to read the debates every morning in the Congressional Record. Finding this a laborious and not always an instructive task, she began to skip the dull parts; and in the absence of any exciting question, she at last resigned herself to skipping the whole. Nevertheless she still had energy to visit the Senate gallery occasionally when she was told that a splendid orator was about to speak on a question of deep interest to his country. She listened with a little disposition to admire, if she could; and, whenever she could, she did admire. She said nothing, but she listened sharply. She wanted to learn how the machinery of government worked, and what was the quality of the men who controlled it. One by one, she passed them through her crucibles, and tested them by acids and by fire.

A few survived her tests and came out alive, though more or less disfigured, where she had found impurities. Of the whole number, only one retained under this process enough character to interest her.

In these early visits to Congress, Mrs. Lee sometimes had the company of John Carrington, a Washington lawyer about forty years old, who, by virtue of being a Virginian and a distant connection of her husband, called himself a cousin, and took a tone of semi-intimacy, which Mrs. Lee accepted because Carrington was a man whom she liked, and because he was one whom life had treated hardly. He was of that unfortunate generation in the south which began existence with civil war, and he was perhaps the more unfortunate because, like most educated Virginians of the old Washington school, he had seen from the first that, whatever issue the war took, Virginia and he must be ruined. At twenty-two he had gone into the rebel army as a private and carried his musket modestly through a campaign or two, after which he slowly rose to the rank of senior captain in his regiment, and closed his services on the staff of a major-general, always doing scrupulously enough what he conceived to be his duty, and never doing it with enthusiasm. When the rebel armies surrendered, he rode away to his family plantation--not a difficult thing to do, for it was only a few miles from Appomatox--and at once began to study law; then, leaving his mother and sisters to do what they could with the worn-out plantation, he began the practice of law in Washington, hoping thus to support himself and them. He had succeeded after a fashion, and for the first time the future seemed not absolutely dark. Mrs. Lee's house was an oasis to him, and he found himself, to his surprise, aimost gay in her company. The gaiety was of a very qulet kind, and Sybil, while friendly with him, averred that he was certainly dull; but this dulness had a fascination for Madeleine, who, having tasted many more kinds of the wine of life than Sybil, had learned to value certain delicacies of age and flavour that were lost upon younger and coarser palates. He talked rather slowly and almost with effort, but he had something of the dignity--others call it stiffness--of the old Virginia school, and twenty years of constant responsibility and deferred hope had added a touch of care that bordered closely on sadness. His great attraction was that he never talked or seemed to think of himself. Mrs. Lee trusted in him by instinct. "He is a type!" said she; "he is my idea of George Washington at thirty."

One morning in December, Carrington entered Mrs. Lee's parlour towards noon, and asked if she cared to visit the Capitol.

"You will have a chance of hearing to-day what may be the last great speech of our greatest statesman," said he; "you should come."

"A splendid sample of our na-tive raw material, sir?" asked she, fresh from a reading of Dickens, and his famous picture of American statesmanship.

"Precisely so," said Carrington; "the Prairie Giant of Peonia, the Favourite Son of Illinois; the man who came within three votes of getting the party nomination for the Presidency last spring, and was only defeated because ten small intriguers are sharper than one big one. The Honourable Silas P.

Ratcliffe, Senator from Illinois; he will be run for the Presidency yet."

"What does the P. stand for?" asked Sybil.

"I don't remember ever to have heard his middle name," said Carrington.

"Perhaps it is Peonia or Prairie; I can't say."

"He is the man whose appearance struck me so much when we were in the Senate last week, is he not? A great, ponderous man, over six feet high, very senatorial and dignified, with a large head and rather good features?" inquired Mrs. Lee.

同类推荐
  • 佛说无常经

    佛说无常经

    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。
  • 法华义记

    法华义记

    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。
  • 文殊师利所说不思议佛境界经

    文殊师利所说不思议佛境界经

    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。
  • 太清调气经

    太清调气经

    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。
  • 墉城集仙录

    墉城集仙录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 十年忆梦

    十年忆梦

    记录杨家千金回国后的初中校园生活点滴,与朋友共度一次次难关的故事~
  • 鬼帝宠妃:逆天纨绔绝色妃

    鬼帝宠妃:逆天纨绔绝色妃

    【新书推荐,求票票收藏】她,萧家第一废物,上街抢美男,被自己所爱的太子羞辱上吊而死;她,华夏医学天才,一次实验爆炸,重生到异世大陆,废物?她修炼速度堪比飞机。灵兽很强大?抱歉,神兽之王麒麟认她为主。炼丹师可贵,她手拿一本医学圣典,活死人肉白骨轻轻松松,如此妖孽的她却遇到另一个妖孽,众人畏惧的鬼帝,为她卖萌,更是要把整个天下送给她。“夫人,你如果生气了,可以打我,知道你解气”“林宇轩,你有东西掉了”“什么”“节操”
  • EXO之如若生梦

    EXO之如若生梦

    女主段生梦是一个智商超人,但情商偏低的人,又不为人知的性格阴暗面。与灿烈是重组家庭的哥哥妹妹。段生梦为了鹿晗回国。来到了圣南商学院,与同为新城上流家族的十二人之间产生着友情,爱情的火花。最后他们在毕业后投入到各自的生活中。我们最后都会变成一半天使,一半恶魔的人。
  • 孤梦录

    孤梦录

    因为来自和同学的约定一起写小说,我一冲动就写了。一个人的梦,源自于什么?我想应该是来自于本人的渴望,我有时会在看完小说就有一种自己写一本的冲动,现在我把这本书当成自己的梦,而我就是书中的主角了了。
  • 华里胡韶

    华里胡韶

    我这辈子做过的最奢侈的事,就是用整个青春来爱你。可能是老爸打了十年麻将稳赔不赚的缘故,也可能是恐龙灭绝的缘故,在那个开学时开着豪车溅了我一身泥的富二代竟然和我同班同桌且同床,最后竟然还把我睡了!!!本以为会平平淡淡和他度过一生,没想到命运之轮却不肯让我们这么幸运。百转千回,最终结局如何?在这平凡的一生中,惟愿我们无岁月可回首,且以情深共白头。超好看,快戳!
  • 葬灵书

    葬灵书

    灵星陨落,异灵大陆将迎来新的灵王她,被大探灵师认定是一个毫无灵识的废柴女子七岁杀人复仇,苦修肉身,只为在大陆上活出自己的天地十岁那年,是什么改变了这一切让她走上了遇佛杀佛之路葬灵书的秘密到底是什么又是谁助她登上灵皇宝座,睥睨天下
  • 神之遗忘

    神之遗忘

    神之遗忘万年前这里出现过大量拥有神一样力量的修炼者,后来这些人又无声无息的消失了。“龙浩,一个从小被家族遗弃,还要逃避家族的追杀。为了挽救自己在家族里的亲人,而努力变强的少年,将会一步一步的变强从而走向一个传奇,,,,,,,,,”!
  • 穿过星星遇见你

    穿过星星遇见你

    高智商的俞雯,遇上冷漠腹黑的舒桖,会擦出什么样的火花?表白时俞雯:我对你的爱就像天空中的星星一样多。舒桖:嗯,我对你的……像拉普为佳。俞雯:o>_<o舒桖:像拉普为佳那么唯一。争吵时俞雯:你是太空中漂浮的拉多蔓。(一种太空垃圾)舒桖:你是拉普为佳的爱梦纱(镇星之宝)俞雯:你说我自私狂妄?舒桖:不,圣洁美丽,我心头的至宝。
  • 豪门娇宠:腹黑老公带回家

    豪门娇宠:腹黑老公带回家

    齐大上校齐洛说:“乔小妞你就是个祸害,祸害了我哥大半辈子。”乔依依表示不服,明明她才是被祸害的那一个。她白天要忙着斗白莲花,晚上还要被傅安爵缠着祸害,她表示很无辜。傅安爵,傅家二少,堂堂帝皇集团总裁,集万千华贵于一身的天之骄子。这辈子却只爱一个乔依依,他只想宠她入怀,爱她入骨。本文男女主身心干净,宠文一对一,欢迎大家入坑!读者群:571491537
  • 异世重生天才冰山大小姐

    异世重生天才冰山大小姐

    一代神医穿越时空,来到异世大陆,看她用一根银针,玩转大陆,却不知惹上了一只腹黑的家伙……但最后谁又知道呢?