登陆注册
14821000000069

第69章

"True in its leading facts; untrue in some of its details, and in the impression it creates. During the Presidential election which took place eight years ago last autumn, there was, as you may remember, a violent contest and a very close vote. We believed (though I was not so prominent in the party then as now), that the result of that election would be almost as important to the nation as the result of the war itself. Our defeat meant that the government must pass into the blood-stained hands of rebels, men whose designs were more than doubtful, and who could not, even if their designs had been good, restrain the violence of their followers. In consequence we strained every nerve. Money was freely spent, even to an amount much in excess of our resources.

How it was employed, I will not say.

I do not even know, for I held myself aloof from these details, which fell to the National Central Committee of which I was not a member. The great point was that a very large sum had been borrowed on pledged securities, and must be repaid. The members of the National Committee and certain senators held discussions on the subject, in which I shared. The end was that towards the close of the session the head of the committee, accompanied by two senators, came to me and told me that I must abandon my opposition to the Steamship Subsidy. They made no open avowal of their reasons, and I did not press for one. Their declaration, as the responsible heads of the organization, that certain action on my part was essential to the interests of the party, satisfied me. I did not consider myself at liberty to persist in a mere private opinion in regard to a measure about which I recognized the extreme likelihood of my being in error. I accordingly reported the bill, and voted for it, as did a large majority of the party. Mrs. Baker is mistaken in saying that the money was paid to me. If it was paid at all, of which I have no knowledge except from this letter, it was paid to the representative of the National Committee. I received no money. I had nothing to do with the money further than as I might draw my own conclusions in regard to the subsequent payment of the campaign debt."

Mrs. Lee listened to all this with intense interest. Not until this moment had she really felt as though she had got to the heart of politics, so that she could, like a physician with his stethoscope, measure the organic disease. Now at last she knew why the pulse beat with such unhealthy irregularity, and why men felt an anxiety which they could not or would not explain. Her interest in the disease overcame her disgust at the foulness of the revelation. To say that the discovery gave her actual pleasure would be doing her injustice; but the excitement of the moment swept away every other sensation. She did not even think of herself. Not until afterwards did she fairly grasp the absurdity of Ratcliffe's wish that in the face of such a story as this, she should still have vanity enough to undertake the reform of politics. And with his aid too!

The audacity of the man would have seemed sublime if she had felt sure that he knew the difference between good and evil, between a lie and the truth; but the more she saw of him, the surer she was that his courage was mere moral paralysis, and that he talked about virtue and vice as a man who is colour-blind talks about red and green; he did not see them as she saw them; if left to choose for himself he would have nothing to guide him. Was it politics that had caused this atrophy of the moral senses by disuse?

Meanwhile, here she sat face to face with a moral lunatic, who had not even enough sense of humour to see the absurdity of his own request, that she should go out to the shore of this ocean of corruption, and repeat the ancient r?le of King Canute, or Dame Partington with her mop and her pail. What was to be done with such an animal?

The bystander who looked on at this scene with a wider knowledge of facts, might have found entertainment in another view of the subject, that is to say, in the guilelessness ot Madeleine Lee. With all her warnings she was yet a mere baby-in-arms in the face of the great politician. She accepted his story as true, and she thought it as bad as possible; but had Mr. Ratcliffe's associates now been present to hear his version of it, they would have looked at each other with a smile of professional pride, and would have roundly sworn that he was, beyond a doubt, the ablest man this country had ever produced, and next to certain of being President. They would not, however, have told their own side of the story if they could have helped it, but in talking it over among themselves they might have assumed the facts to have been nearly as follows: that Ratcliffe had dragged them into an enormous expenditure to carry his own State, and with it his own re-election to the Senate; that they had tried to hold him responsible, and he had tried to shirk the responsibility; that there had been warm discussions on the subject; that he himself had privately suggested recourse to Baker, had shaped his conduct accordingly, and had compelled them, in order to save their own credit, to receive the money.

Even if Mrs. Lee had heard this part of the story, though it might have sharpened her indignation against Mr. Ratcliffe, it would not have altered her opinions. As it was, she had heard enough, and with a great effort to control her expression of disgust, she sank back in her chair as Ratcliffe concluded. Finding that she did not speak, he went on:

"I do not undertake to defend this affair. It is the act of my public life which I most regret--not the doing, but the necessity of doing. I do not differ from you in opinion on that point. I cannot acknowledge that there is here any real divergence between us."

"I am afraid," said Mrs. Lee, "that I cannot agree with you."

This brief remark, the very brevity of which carried a barb of sarcasm, escaped from Madeleine's lips before she had fairly intended it. Ratcliffe felt the sting, and it started him from his studied calmness of manner.

同类推荐
  • The Marriage Contract

    The Marriage Contract

    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。
  • THE TALISMAN

    THE TALISMAN

    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。
  • 大方广佛华严经疏卷

    大方广佛华严经疏卷

    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。
  • 写像秘诀

    写像秘诀

    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。
  • 谈天

    谈天

    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
  • 勇者希尔的冒险故事

    勇者希尔的冒险故事

    (已停更)作为神使的希尔,生来就可以神之力。在一次又一次的冒险中,他逐渐成长,明白了自己的使命,成为了传奇的勇者。
  • 异界杀手传说

    异界杀手传说

    龙腾大陆是一个魔法与斗气的世界。大陆上只有人类与魔兽。精灵、兽人等种族只留下了一个个美好的传说。他们种族已经灭亡,还是去了别的空间?位面共有九种普通法则:金、木、水、火、土、风、雷、光明、黑暗。四大至高法则:生命、命运、时间、空间。地球上最顶尖的杀手来到这个世界,走上传奇的一生。————————————————看书的童鞋,能把你们手中的推荐票或者收藏点击一下吗?~~~~(>_<)~~~~这成绩,太悲摧了~~~~~~~~~
  • 致青春中深爱的那三个男孩

    致青春中深爱的那三个男孩

    有人说,专情不是只爱一个人,而是爱一个人的时候专心地爱一个人。在青春懵懂的时候,你有没有陷入某种困境,我究竟更喜欢谁。年轻时我们不懂的,时间用痛来教我们认识。本书分为三个大部分讲述了女主在对三个男主的爱恋中的逐步成长与蜕变。从一个无忧无虑的女学霸到一个“忧伤的诗人”,她只说,我不后悔我回来了。
  • 文学理论向度研究

    文学理论向度研究

    本书以向度作为考察文学理论的全新视角,通过分析并探讨载体向度、本体向度、读者向度与文学之外的文论向度,对古今中外的文学理论进行了全方位的综合创新研究,可作为文艺学、美学、艺术学等专业学生考研、专升本、自学考试时的重要参考资料。被评为“有见解的、内容扎实的、有益于我国文学理论建设的值得一读的一书”。
  • 总裁爱上哥哥

    总裁爱上哥哥

    当豪门千金大小姐夏晴因家庭斗争本算计抛弃,22年后,以世界私企前五的骄傲出现在媒体眼前,让庞大家族南宫家族南宫问天想要找回丢失的大孙女,经历5万元资金白手起家的夏晴,有一个一直对她好的学长南宫允玹
  • 单良

    单良

    单良总会梦见自己背生双翼,趴在床上,翅膀一动一动,清晨醒来时只会看见被自己的哈喇子浸湿的枕套。
  • 添月风惜:独我为魔

    添月风惜:独我为魔

    她由天地灵气所化,却身负诅咒,遇到魔界魔皇该何去何从?世间独有的爱情,到底能否给她?你从前天真的笑容是我一生最大的期盼……添月的辛酸:一生的信任换来一世的背叛……在此感谢墨星免费小说封面支持,没封面的赶快去领取!http://www.mx-fm.com
  • 恶魔狩猎档案

    恶魔狩猎档案

    你相信恶魔的存在吗?仔细想想书本与网络中所得到的消息真实性有多少?不用怀疑,其实……恶魔就在所有人的身边。末法时代,失去信仰的神灵离开的离开,沉睡的沉睡,唯独恶魔依然潜伏在世间。这是一个半魔,一个吸血鬼,“一只”变异魔物开办事务所的故事。我叫亚诺,我喂自己袋盐。
  • 炫丽的烟火

    炫丽的烟火

    青亦,一个庞大家族中的公主,从小备受族中大小喜爱,但是她从小就有自己的思想,就如夜空中的耀眼星辰。越泽,溪辰,云洛等绝色美男,同时拥有神秘的身份及背景,冷酷腹黑嚣张却只为她展颜屈膝。
  • 听说你爱上了阳光

    听说你爱上了阳光

    她,有些笨笨的,坚信世界上有很多美好。他,尝透了人情冷漠,坚信世界上有很多黑暗。“林阳光”她有些不好意思的笑了“我的名字”“鹿晗”他面无表情“我的名字”