登陆注册
15471300000006

第6章 The Davis Government(1)

It has never been explained why Jefferson Davis was chosen President of the Confederacy. He did not seek the office and did not wish it. He dreamed of high military command. As a study in the irony of fate, Davis's career is made to the hand of the dramatist. An instinctive soldier, he was driven by circumstances three times to renounce the profession of arms for a less congenial civilian life. His final renunciation, which proved to be of the nature of tragedy, was his acceptance of the office of President. Indeed, why the office was given to him seems a mystery. Rhett was a more logical candidate. And when Rhett, early in the lobbying at Montgomery, was set aside as too much of a radical, Toombs seemed for a time the certain choice of the majority. The change to Davis came suddenly at the last moment.

It was puzzling at the time; it is puzzling still.

Rhett, though doubtless bitterly disappointed, bore himself with the savoir faire of a great gentleman. At the inauguration, it was on Rhett's arm that Davis leaned as he entered the hall of the Confederate Congress. The night before, in a public address, Yancey had said that the man and the hour were met. The story of the Confederacy is filled with dramatic moments, but to the thoughtful observer few are more dramatic than the conjunction of these three men in the inauguration of the Confederate President.

Beneath a surface of apparent unanimity they carried, like concealed weapons, points of view that were in deadly antagonism.

This antagonism had not revealed itself hitherto. It was destined to reveal itself almost immediately. It went so deep and spread so far that unless we understand it, the Confederate story will be unintelligible.

A strange fatality destined all three of these great men to despair. Yancey, who was perhaps most directly answerable of the three for the existence of the Confederacy, lost influence almost from the moment when his dream became established. Davis was partly responsible, for he promptly sent him out of the country on the bootless English mission. Thereafter, until his death in 1863, Yancey was a waning, overshadowed figure, steadily lapsing into the background. It may be that those critics are right who say he was only an agitator. The day of the mere agitator was gone. Yancey passed rapidly into futile but bitter antagonism to Davis. In this attitude he was soon to be matched by Rhett.

The discontent of the Rhett faction because their leader was not given the portfolio of the State Department found immediate voice. But the conclusion drawn by some that Rhett's subsequent course sprang from personal vindictiveness is trifling. He was too large a personality, too well defined an intellect, to be thus explained. Very probably Davis made his first great blunder in failing to propitiate the Rhett faction. And yet few things are more certain than that the two men, the two factions which they symbolized, could not have formed a permanent alliance. Had Rhett entered the Cabinet he could not have remained in it consistently for any considerable time. The measures in which, presently, the Administration showed its hand were measures in which Rhett could not acquiesce. From the start he was predestined to his eventual position--the great, unavailing genius of the opposition.

As to the comparative ignoring of these leaders of secession by the Government which secession had created, it is often said that the explanation is to be found in a generous as well as politic desire to put in office the moderates and even the conservatives.

Davis, relatively, was a moderate. Stephens was a conservative.

Many of the most pronounced opponents of secession were given places in the public service. Toombs, who received the portfolio of State, though a secessionist, was conspicuously a moderate when compared with Rhett and Yancey. The adroit Benjamin, who became Attorney-General, had few points in common with the great extremists of Alabama and South Carolina.

However, the dictum that the personnel of the new Government was a triumph for conservatism over radicalism signifies little.

There was a division among Southerners which scarcely any of them had realized except briefly in the premature battle over secession in 1851. It was the division between those who were conscious of the region as a whole and those who were not.

Explain it as you will, there was a moment just after the secession movement succeeded when the South seemed to realize itself as a whole, when it turned intuitively to those men who, as time was to demonstrate, shared this realization. For the moment it turned away from those others, however great their part in secession, who lacked this sense of unity.

At this point, geography becomes essential. The South fell, institutionally, into two grand divisions: one, with an old and firmly established social order, where consciousness of the locality went back to remote times; another, newly settled, where conditions were still fluid, where that sense of the sacredness of local institutions had not yet formed.

A typical community of the first-named class was South Carolina.

Her people had to a remarkable degree been rendered state-conscious partly by their geographical neighbors, and partly by their long and illustrious history, which had been interwoven with great European interests during the colonial era and with great national interests under the Republic. It is possible also that the Huguenots, though few in numbers, had exercised upon the State a subtle and pervasive influence through their intellectual power and their Latin sense for institutions.

In South Carolina, too, a wealthy leisure class with a passion for affairs had cultivated enthusiastically that fine art which is the pride of all aristocratic societies, the service of the State as a profession high and exclusive, free from vulgar taint.

同类推荐
  • 续济公传

    续济公传

    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。
  • 难二

    难二

    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。
  • 明刻话本四种

    明刻话本四种

    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。
  • 历代蒙求

    历代蒙求

    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。
  • 佛说大乘入诸佛境界智光明庄严经

    佛说大乘入诸佛境界智光明庄严经

    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
  • 吾名刺客

    吾名刺客

    他到底是紫禁城里混不吝的小混混,还是各大烟花之地竞相邀约的风流才子;他既是急公好义的江湖豪客,又是冷血无情的冷血杀手。他有着各种各样的身份,而这些不过是他隐秘自己的伪装。如果问他到底是谁,他会笑而不语,心道:难道我作为穿越大军一员的秘密能告诉你们么。
  • 冷帝心头宝:枭宠小狐妃

    冷帝心头宝:枭宠小狐妃

    她只是一个单纯的老司机,一次意外,穿越到了……一只狐狸身上……还被一美男王爷领养……从此节操尽毁……进宫第一次,被帅哥皇帝调戏进宫第二次,被公狐狸调戏……某日,某女化形成人。天地绝色,萌虐天下。“打算去哪?”某王爷的声音响起。某女理直气壮:“为自己一生的幸福做准备。”某王爷的凤眼微微眯起,大手一挥,某女滚到了床上。“蠢狐狸,你只能是我的。”ps不要被简介骗了……,标签才是正点。
  • 佛说五十颂圣般若波罗蜜经

    佛说五十颂圣般若波罗蜜经

    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。
  • 王俊凯插曲的梦

    王俊凯插曲的梦

    额额!边写边想!所以大概内容我也不知道,就凑合着看吧
  • 一界封王

    一界封王

    既然这个世界拒绝成就剑仙,既然你要封杀所有剑仙,纵然狂笑拼天劫又怎样。天威之后,灰飞烟灭。踏入轮回,转生新的世界,剑仙之名不再遥远。一剑伴前行,一剑逆天威,一剑独封王。
  • 赤子倾诚

    赤子倾诚

    在最美好的年纪遇见你,却不是和你相守的最好时机。我们前世一定擦过肩,今生才有彼此熟悉的眉眼。上天给我一个牵起你的机会,我怎能轻易错过,异世之中,任它雌雄转换,我再不愿错过你!
  • 天后设计师:总裁慢一点

    天后设计师:总裁慢一点

    "凌少嚣张,腹黑,高智商,手段铁血,大家都知道。大家不知道的是,这一切只对一个人例外。他宠她入骨,予所予求,却次次被她抛下。舒梓接连躲避:“凌少,我们都是成年人了,那晚的事情就算了吧!”凌少一个壁咚,将她紧紧桎梏,“女人,被我看上了,就别想跑!”"--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 做人四得:把得稳、行得正、熬得住、算得到

    做人四得:把得稳、行得正、熬得住、算得到

    许多人都在沉重的生活压力下摇头叹息:做事难,做人更难!因为生活的种种际遇常常让人心灰意冷。做人想八面玲珑,处处讨好,最后却疲惫不堪,失去自我;做事想轰轰烈烈,最后却失去方向,迷惘不已。我们不是不努力,也不是不够聪明,可为什么付出了那么多,收获却总是可怜的一点点?
  • 慕恋君心

    慕恋君心

    她,只是一个小小的花店服务员,而他,却是慕氏集团的未来继承人。她,只是想在受了情伤之后寻找一个安静的港湾疗伤,而他,却偏偏不能让她如愿。命运的捉弄,人事的纠葛,让他们在爱情的泥潭里越陷越深,爱痛了还不能走。她说:“放手吧,放过我也就等于放过你自己。”他说:“后半辈子,你要做我的老婆。”
  • 列国情谭:我的真命天子

    列国情谭:我的真命天子

    意外地嫁给自己的男神,安梓潼在经历狂喜后,努力扮演着自己豪门儿媳的角色。就在与丈夫和家人共同期待小生命降临的幸福日子里,一场突如其来的舆论风波让她看清楚了自己婚姻的‘真相’,从而背井离乡,重新开始只属于自己的人生。在异国陌生的城市,她凭借自己的努力,历经岁月的打磨,开始赢得事业的成功,也在这个过程里,收获了自己和儿子的成长。一切似乎都回到了正轨。只是,她与多位男子的情感纠葛,似乎才刚刚开始……生活就像是一盒巧克力,安梓潼永远不知道,等待她的将是什么。可是她始终相信,只要认真地活着,终究会有良人与自己并肩而立。当逢此时,纵使忡忡,终是安然。