登陆注册
26260700000181

第181章 CHAPTER XXXII VIS NOVA (1903-1904)(1)

PARIS after midsummer is a place where only the industrious poor remain, unless they can get away; but Adams knew no spot where history would be better off, and the calm of the Champs Élysées was so deep that when Mr. de Witte was promoted to a powerless dignity, no one whispered that the promotion was disgrace, while one might have supposed, from the silence, that the Viceroy Alexeieff had reoccupied Manchuria as a fulfilment of treaty-obligation. For once, the conspiracy of silence became crime. Never had so modern and so vital a riddle been put before Western society, but society shut its eyes. Manchuria knew every step into war; Japan had completed every preparation; Alexeieff had collected his army and fleet at Port Arthur, mounting his siege guns and laying in enormous stores, ready for the expected attack; from Yokohama to Irkutsk, the whole East was under war conditions; but Europe knew nothing. The banks would allow no disturbance; the press said not a word, and even the embassies were silent. Every anarchist in Europe buzzed excitement and began to collect in groups, but the Hotel Ritz was calm, and the Grand Dukes who swarmed there professed to know directly from the Winter Palace that there would be no war.

As usual, Adams felt as ignorant as the best-informed statesman, and though the sense was familiar, for once he could see that the ignorance was assumed. After nearly fifty years of experience, he could not understand how the comedy could be so well acted. Even as late as November, diplomats were gravely asking every passer-by for his opinion, and avowed none of their own except what was directly authorized at St. Petersburg. He could make nothing of it. He found himself in face of his new problem -- the workings of Russian inertia -- and he could conceive no way of forming an opinion how much was real and how much was comedy had he been in the Winter Palace himself. At times he doubted whether the Grand Dukes or the Czar knew, but old diplomatic training forbade him to admit such innocence.

This was the situation at Christmas when he left Paris. On January 6, 1904, he reached Washington, where the contrast of atmosphere astonished him, for he had never before seen his country think as a world-power. No doubt, Japanese diplomacy had much to do with this alertness, but the immense superiority of Japanese diplomacy should have been more evident in Europe than in America, and in any case, could not account for the total disappearance of Russian diplomacy. A government by inertia greatly disconcerted study.

One was led to suspect that Cassini never heard from his Government, and that Lamsdorf knew nothing of his own department; yet no such suspicion could be admitted. Cassini resorted to transparent blague: "Japan seemed infatuated even to the point of war! But what can the Japanese do?

As usual, sit on their heels and pray to Buddha!" One of the oldest and most accomplished diplomatists in the service could never show his hand so empty as this if he held a card to play; but he never betrayed stronger resource behind. "If any Japanese succeed in entering Manchuria, they will never get out of it alive." The inertia of Cassini, who was naturally the most energetic of diplomatists, deeply interested a student of race-inertia, whose mind had lost itself in the attempt to invent scales of force.

The air of official Russia seemed most dramatic in the air of the White House, by contrast with the outspoken candor of the President. Reticence had no place there. Every one in America saw that, whether Russia or Japan were victim, one of the decisive struggles in American history was pending, and any presence of secrecy or indifference was absurd. Interest was acute, and curiosity intense, for no one knew what the Russian Government meant or wanted, while war had become a question of days. To an impartial student who gravely doubted whether the Czar himself acted as a conscious force or an inert weight, the straight-forward avowals of Roosevelt had singular value as a standard of measure. By chance it happened that Adams was obliged to take the place of his brother Brooks at the Diplomatic Reception immediately after his return home, and the part of proxy included his supping at the President's table, with Secretary Root on one side, the President opposite, and Miss Chamberlain between them. Naturally the President talked and the guests listened; which seemed, to one who had just escaped from the European conspiracy of silence, like drawing a free breath after stifling. Roosevelt, as every one knew, was always an amusing talker, and had the reputation of being indiscreet beyond any other man of great importance in the world, except the Kaiser Wilhelm and Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the father of his guest at table; and this evening he spared none. With the usual abuse of the quos ego, common to vigorous statesmen, he said all that he thought about Russians and Japanese, as well as about Boers and British, without restraint, in full hearing of twenty people, to the entire satisfaction of his listener; and concluded by declaring that war was imminent; that it ought to be stopped; that it could be stopped: " I could do it myself;

I could stop it to-morrow!" and he went on to explain his reasons for restraint.

That he was right, and that, within another generation, his successor would do what he would have liked to do, made no shadow of doubt in the mind of his hearer, though it would have been folly when he last supped at the White House in the dynasty of President Hayes; but the listener cared less for the assertion of power, than for the vigor of view. The truth was evident enough, ordinary, even commonplace if one liked, but it was not a truth of inertia, nor was the method to be mistaken for inert.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 无限之卑微求存

    无限之卑微求存

    主神空间!亘古长存!这里既是一个没有法律,力量至上的空间!同时也是一片奇迹之地!随心所欲之地!肆意妄为,还是坚守心中的底线……何为人性?!在这里得到最真实的诠释……远古诸神,神话传说,今又何在?!大千世界,谁人谋划?!
  • 太上轮回录

    太上轮回录

    梦想的种子一旦埋下,总有一天会破土发芽,成长为一棵参天大树。这一刻迸发出的念头,在不久的将来,竟让林凡走上了一条艰辛坎坷却又充满无限可能的道路。这个平凡的少年也注定不平凡。
  • 全职骑士

    全职骑士

    进能肉身抗boss,退能翻手上buff;欺牧萨于水道,戏贼猎于刀锋,伤屌战于八码之外,斩残术于须臾之间作为一个全职骑士,他是否能夺回曾经的荣耀,重返巅峰...
  • 天命之界

    天命之界

    万年劫、万年现、万年掌控一朝变;万年生、万年死、万年宿命绝于此;超越生死、改写轮回、只在一念之间、一念众生醒、一念众生灭;掌控时间、操控空间、只在一息之间、一息天空笑、一息大地哭;看一个先天血液、体质、生命不足的少年、看一个先天被诅咒的少年;如何打破宿命、冲出规则、如何越己、越天、越道、越界!我命由我不由天、我命规则我自主、我命轮回我掌控!
  • 千金归来:金主大人欠调教

    千金归来:金主大人欠调教

    她郁闷:“肿么办?刚出道有人就跟我拼粉丝量……”他答:“宝贝没事儿,我给你刷。”“我不要僵尸粉啦!人家要活的那种!”他一通电话:“部队多少人?嗯?先来两千万够不够?”---他抱她上床,咬她耳垂:“老婆,今晚……”她拒绝:“我不要,拍戏好累!”他默默起身,换上帅气军装:“这样呢?制服控老婆?”她双眼发亮:“今晚七次妥妥的!”
  • 深宫似海佳人醉

    深宫似海佳人醉

    入宫?选秀?这事可把我惊到了,姐姐的背叛,宫里的明争暗斗,是我心惊胆战,我虽深的宠爱,可是
  • 乌龙俏冤家

    乌龙俏冤家

    嫁给一个冰做的人当妻子,佟未只有两个选择,一是同样成为冰人少奶奶,二是用自己的爱和热情融化她的冰相公……容家大宅幽深而诡秘,恶婆婆、弱寡嫂,善良小姑、狡猾小叔,刁钻的小婶子、还有几个没事找事的姨娘。看得出,容许游走在他们之间那么多年是挺不容易的。也许佟未不爱容许,可是她绝不会坐以待毙任人宰割,她是少奶奶,是名正言顺的容家少奶奶。既然没有选择第二次婚姻的权力,佟未就不能让自己一辈子活在阴霾里……
  • 弟弟的歌声

    弟弟的歌声

    幸运的乐果侥幸进入了一家全是女员工的公司上班,但又丑又穷的乐果却成了小透明。机缘巧合下他救出了一位在上古巫妖大战中被封印的上古巨神,就这样上古大神化名秘密和他一起做起了公司的小保安,并给乐果带来了开挂一样的别样人生。我其实并不想做一个俗气的作家,我只是想把男女之间的感情,用笔表达出来,但有时会表达的过份,有时又表达的不够。过份会被封,不够又太虚假。这让我的每一笔都写的好压抑,真爱哪有纯洁?欲望又真的是肮脏的吗?这些世人的禁忌,不应该是那人性中最美的一抹颜色吗?2017年换个名字转转运,老子写的碉堡了没人看,一定是运气的问题,嗯没错,一定是!
  • 霸道的公子哥:爱上霸道的她

    霸道的公子哥:爱上霸道的她

    她,冷漠寡言,但却因为种种原因,而爱上了一个对她好的人他,冷漠寡言,但却因为种种原因,而爱上了一个值得去爱的人两个人不知道是因为性格相似,掉进了爱情的漩涡从学院到职场上,他们哭过,笑过但还是阻止不了他们的两情相悦。甜到暖心,虐到痛心
  • 《冷血杀手化身清纯校花》

    《冷血杀手化身清纯校花》

    怎样的死亡他都想到了,但没想到竟会穿越,封建的古代思想,在这开放的现代,她有会创造出怎样的奇迹,受够了欺负的校花从此崛起,惹她谁敢。。。。。。。。