登陆注册
26260700000106

第106章 CHAPTER XVIII FREE FIGHT (1869-1870)(2)

Material furnished by a government seldom satisfies critics or historians, for it lies always under suspicion. Here was a mystery, and as usual, the chief mystery was the means of ****** sure that any mystery existed. All Adams's great friends -- Fish, Cox, Hoar, Evarts, Sumner, and their surroundings -- were precisely the persons most mystified. They knew less than Adams did; they sought information, and frankly admitted that their relations with the White House and the Treasury were not confidential. No one volunteered advice. No one offered suggestion. One got no light, even from the press, although press agents expressed in private the most damning convictions with their usual cynical frankness. The Congressional Committee took a quantity of evidence which it dared not probe, and refused to analyze.

Although the fault lay somewhere on the Administration, and could lie nowhere else, the trail always faded and died out at the point where any member of the Administration became visible. Every one dreaded to press inquiry.

Adams himself feared finding out too much. He found out too much already, when he saw in evidence that Jay Gould had actually succeeded in stretching his net over Grant's closest surroundings, and that Boutwell's incompetence was the bottom of Gould's calculation. With the conventional air of assumed confidence, every one in public assured every one else that the President himself was the savior of the situation, and in private assured each other that if the President had not been caught this time, he was sure to be trapped the next, for the ways of Wall Street were dark and double. All this was wildly exciting to Adams. That Grant should have fallen, within six months, into such a morass -- or should have let Boutwell drop him into it -- rendered the outlook for the next four years -- probably eight -- possibly twelve -- mysterious, or frankly opaque, to a young man who had hitched his wagon, as Emerson told him, to the star of reform. The country might outlive it, but not he. The worst scandals of the eighteenth century were relatively harmless by the side of this, which smirched executive, judiciary, banks, corporate systems, professions, and people, all the great active forces of society, in one dirty cesspool of vulgar corruption. Only six months before, this innocent young man, fresh from the cynicism of European diplomacy, had expected to enter an honorable career in the press as the champion and confidant of a new Washington, and already he foresaw a life of wasted energy, sweeping the stables of American society clear of the endless corruption which his second Washington was quite certain to breed.

By vigorously shutting one's eyes, as though one were an Assistant Secretary, a writer for the press might ignore the Erie scandal, and still help his friends or allies in the Government who were doing their best to give it an air of decency; but a few weeks showed that the Erie scandal was a mere incident, a rather vulgar Wall Street trap, into which, according to one's point of view Grant had been drawn by Jay Gould, or Jay Gould had been misled by Grant. One could hardly doubt that both of them were astonished and disgusted by the result; but neither Jay Gould nor any other astute American mind -- still less the complex Jew -- could ever have accustomed itself to the incredible and inexplicable lapses of Grant's intelligence; and perhaps, on the whole, Gould was the less mischievous victim, if victims they both were. The same laxity that led Gould into a trap which might easily have become the penitentiary, led the United States Senate, the Executive departments and the Judiciary into confusion, cross-purposes, and ill-temper that would have been scandalous in a boarding-school of girls. For satirists or comedians, the study was rich and endless, and they exploited its corners with happy results, but a young man fresh from the rustic simplicity of London noticed with horror that the grossest satires on the American Senator and politician never failed to excite the laughter and applause of every audience. Rich and poor joined in throwing contempt on their own representatives. Society laughed a vacant and meaningless derision over its own failure. Nothing remained for a young man without position or power except to laugh too.

Yet the spectacle was no laughing matter to him, whatever it might be to the public. Society is immoral and immortal; it can afford to commit any kind of folly, and indulge in any sort of vice; it cannot be killed, and the fragments that survive can always laugh at the dead; but a young man has only one chance, and brief time to seize it. Any one in power above him can extinguish the chance. He is horribly at the mercy of fools and cowards. One dull administration can rapidly drive out every active subordinate.

At Washington, in 1869-70, every intelligent man about the Government prepared to go. The people would have liked to go too, for they stood helpless before the chaos; some laughed and some raved; all were disgusted; but they had to content themselves by turning their backs and going to work harder than ever on their railroads and foundries. They were strong enough to carry even their politics. Only the helpless remained stranded in Washington.

The shrewdest statesman of all was Mr. Boutwell, who showed how he understood the situation by turning out of the Treasury every one who could interfere with his repose, and then locking himself up in it, alone. What he did there, no one knew. His colleagues asked him in vain. Not a word could they get from him, either in the Cabinet or out of it, of suggestion or information on matters even of vital interest. The Treasury as an active influence ceased to exist. Mr. Boutwell waited with confidence for society to drag his department out of the mire, as it was sure to do if he waited long enough.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 灵异日常:奇奇怪怪

    灵异日常:奇奇怪怪

    由一个个意味深长的故事组成“黑色星期”它将颠覆人们的所有想象,为你带来前所未有的恐怖大反转,一章一个小故事,赶紧搬好小板凳过来围观吧。
  • 山海不尽此情长

    山海不尽此情长

    池晏元身是一株接骨草,成仙后她却做了天界唯一的女神君,事实证明,靠干爹上位是不会有好下场的,所以她被打下凡间了!干爹何许人也?正是曾被黄帝枭首、双乳为目、肚脐为口的刑天!如今身为战神的刑天脸面俱在,却如海心的方寸山一般,万年不化。上古瑞兽白泽,通万物之情,晓天下之事!小九就是一只白泽,可她是个早产儿,六百岁才有灵识,一千岁才化人形!故而上不知天文地理,下不知鸡毛蒜皮。丹缈是只呆头狐狸,可是后来吞吃了妖王内丹,化身九尾火狐,从此逆袭!无支祁能呼风雨,兴雷电,可遇风隐身,遇水遁形,法力通天,犹擅变化且不露痕迹,妖乎?仙乎?凌阙与羽徵互生情愫,可龙凤两族素来敌对,又值祸患四起,这段情、何去何从?
  • 锦瑟无疆

    锦瑟无疆

    【逆·战征文】【严肃向文案↓】他冷漠、自卑、自闭,将所有人隔绝在自己的世界之外;她美丽、善良、温柔,她就好像拥有了世间一切的美好。这样不堪的自己,却喜欢上了那样耀眼的她。意外地被她知道了自己的这份感情之后,她却没有丝毫反感,反而微笑着接纳了自己。当自己变得残暴、嗜杀、如同现世阎罗一般,自己都感到厌恶,恨不得毁灭自己的时候,她却像以前一样拥抱了自己,温柔地说道:“欢迎回家。”这样不堪的自己,总是被那样美丽的她所拯救。【非正常向文案↓】“锦儿……别摸……那个……”他咬着唇,目光有些躲闪。“有什么关系嘛~”她笑得像个无赖。“很不好意思……”他垂着眼不敢去看她的脸。“多可爱啊,我就喜欢摸~”她更加起劲儿地摸索着。他沉默,然后迟疑地开口:“可那只是个兔子馒头。”她停下,扭头与他对视。他的脸又渐渐红起来,可是表情依旧静如止水。她干净利落地拽过他在他脸上亲了一口,看着他害羞地把头越垂越低。唉~他哪里都好,就是面瘫死板说话太直,还不懂什么人情世故。嘛~可文郁锦就是很喜欢这样的他的啊~【不行了文案好恶心啊……各位凑合看吧……】
  • 一界之梦

    一界之梦

    众人寻仙山,一梦浮柯间!日落西山,西阳如血。一位白发苍苍的老人卧在软塌里,橘红色的阳光再也温暖不了他冰冷的身体,但他脸上却露出了幸福的微笑!身前有一本书,上面没有名字,但是有一个玄奥的图形印在图书左下角,整本书有种说不出的神秘!晚风吹来,书页翻动,一切都变得模糊不清。
  • 只缘

    只缘

    生命中有些人走着走着就散了,也有些人爱的爱的不爱了,阴差阳错,机缘巧合,冥冥之中又遇上了。味道一定不同了,怪怪的,难堪。这也是前世的缘分,因为注定无法消失,所以今生以各种形态相遇相知相守相离。
  • 王俊凯那年所追的梦是你

    王俊凯那年所追的梦是你

    夏心语,一枚花痴的四叶草兼小螃蟹,当她遇到他王俊凯会擦出怎样的火花呢
  • 一本关于tfboys的书

    一本关于tfboys的书

    一个从农村来的女孩,在一次逛街,遇到了王俊凯,还打了一架,在新的学校里,结实了两个性格不同,却能玩到一起的好朋友,因为一次天大的事情,才慢慢发现自己爱的人是谁,最后,有情人终成眷属……本书纯属虚构,不喜勿喷
  • tfboys之为什么这么做

    tfboys之为什么这么做

    “菲语我们分手吧!”“为什么?你什么意思啊千玺?是不是因为沐希落?”“这并不关希落的事,更不关你的事!以后我们的事情,你少管!”……
  • 邪王戏神女:误惹天才王妃

    邪王戏神女:误惹天才王妃

    她,前一世为世界巅峰强者,可惨遭爱的人背叛,她前一世爱的人亲手将匕首插入她心脏,世界巅峰的她就这样坠落了,这一世穿为羽沫大陆紫竹国安家唯一的大小姐身上,尽显逆天程度,在紫竹国大放光彩。他,紫竹国邪王殿下,冷酷邪魅强势霸道,武道天赋更是无与伦比,讨厌所有人,人人唯恐避之不及,唯独他强势霸道死命纠缠她,誓死不放手。且看他们如何强者与强者碰撞,上演一出追逐与被追逐的好戏....可是在无意间发现,他和她竟然都不是这个国家的人,他们俩的身份究竟是什么?他们母亲,父亲,究竟是何方神圣。为什么16年前会被送来紫竹国?他们俩的相遇究竟是偶遇,还是上天的安排?敬请期待《邪王戏神女:误惹天才王妃》。
  • 大学那些快乐时光

    大学那些快乐时光

    大学是人生最美好的青春时光,一直珍藏,记忆中,如此快乐。平凡中拥有梦想