登陆注册
18995300000078

第78章

Those were great days in mid autumn. The Republic was in grave peril of dissolution. Liberty that had hymned her birth in the last century now hymned her destiny in the voices of bard and orator.

Crowds of men gathered in public squares, at bulletin boards, on street corners arguing, gesticulating, exclaiming and cursing.

Cheering multitudes went up and down the city by night, with bands and torches, and there was such a howl of oratory and applause on the lower half of Manhattan Island that it gave the reporter no rest. William H. Seward, Charles Sumner, John A. Dix, Henry Ward Beecher and Charles O Connor were the giants of the stump. There was more violence and religious fervour in the political feeling of that time than had been mingled since '76. A sense of outrage was in the hearts of men. 'Honest Abe'Lincoln stood, as they took it, for their homes and their country, for human liberty and even for their God.

I remember coming into the counting-room late one evening. Loud voices had halted me as I passed the door. Mr Greeley stood back of the counter; a rather tall, wiry grey-headed man before it. Each was shaking a right fist under the other's nose. They were shouting loudly as they argued. The stranger was for war; Mr Greeley for waiting. The publisher of the Tribune stood beside the latter, smoking a pipe; a small man leaned over the counter at the stranger's elbow, putting in a word here and there; half a dozen people stood by, listening. Mr Greeley turned to his publisher in a moment.

'Rhoades,'said he, 'I wish ye d put these men out. They holler 'n yell, so I can't hear myself think.

Then there was a general laugh.

I learned to my surprise, when they had gone, that the tall man was William H. Seward, the other John A. DiL Then one of those fevered days came the Prince of Wales - a Godsend, to allay passion with curiosity.

It was my duty to handle some of 'the latest news by magnetic telegraph, and help to get the plans and progress of the campaign at headquarters. The Printer, as they called Mr Greeley, was at his desk when I came in at noon, never leaving the office but for dinner, until past midnight, those days. And he made the Tribune a mighty power in the state. His faith in its efficacy was sublime, and every line went under his eye before it went to his readers. I remember a night when he called me to his office about twelve o clock. He was up to his knees in the rubbish of the day-newspapers that he had read and thrown upon the floor; his desk was littered with proofs.

'Go an'see the Prince o'Wales,'he said. (That interesting young man had arrived on the Harriet Lane that morning and ridden up Broadway between cheering hosts.) 'I've got a sketch of him here an'it's all twaddle. Tell us something new about him. If he's got a hole in his sock we ought to know it.

Mr Dana came in to see him while I was there.

'Look here, Dana,'said the Printer, in a rasping humour. 'By the gods of war! here's two colunms about that perfonnance at the Academy and only two sticks of the speech of Seward at St Paul. I ll have to get someone if go an'burn that theatre an'send the bill to me.

In the morning Mayor Wood introduced me to the Duke of Newcastle, who in turn presented me to the Prince of Wales - then a slim, blue-yed youngster of nineteen, as gentle mannered as any I have ever met. It was my unpleasant duty to keep as near as possible to the royal party in all the festivities of that week.

The ball, in the Prince's honour, at the Academy of Music, was one of the great social events of the century. No fair of vanity in the western hemisphere ever quite equalled it. The fashions of the French Court had taken the city, as had the Prince, by unconditional surrender. Not in the palace of Versailles could one have seen a more generous exposure of the charms of fair women.

None were admitted without a low-cut bodice, and many came that had not the proper accessories. But it was the most brilliant company New York had ever seen.

Too many tickets had been distributed and soon 'there was an elbow on every rib and a heel on every toe, as Mr Greeley put it.

同类推荐
  • 扫迷帚

    扫迷帚

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 丹台玉案

    丹台玉案

    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。
  • 报恩论

    报恩论

    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。
  • 地持义记

    地持义记

    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。
  • 大方等陀罗尼经

    大方等陀罗尼经

    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
  • 爱的穿越

    爱的穿越

    她真的是想寻一个没有人清楚的地点再开始,可是那就是跳槽啊?怎么可能穿越去了马鲁国呢?什么?说这里的男人女人都文武双全?并且男人多女人少,这生育的权力由女子掌握,而男人们却为了可以嫁个好人家,都得学会一门手艺再或是可以有自己的事业。情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 霸王弓

    霸王弓

    公元历末年,神秘的水晶飞舰降临地球掀起大海啸。妖魔侵略,人类把反抗成功那天称为新生历。许多年后有个少年,他着迷武道,修了世人眼中的“杀人弓”。未曾杀人先杀己,杀人弓又名霸王弓,练骨成弓,练筋成弦。不低头,不仗外物,少年纯粹了这生,于是博了这世风华绝代。
  • 邪天大圣

    邪天大圣

    光,能否脱离暗而独明?正义,又是否能脱离邪恶而自存?天上诸神屠尽阳间妖魔,却招致邪气反噬,众仙成邪,玉帝自封妖皇,霸绝天域;一个气焰张狂,傲桀不驯的少年,却竟敢挑战玉帝权威,反天道而行……
  • 火辣王妃炮王爷

    火辣王妃炮王爷

    性格倔强的她陆小蔓,穿越时空遇到了坏脾气的王爷,两人为了各自的目地结成了临时婚姻,各种矛盾从这里开始,两人就像两座活火山,一触即发,却又在打打闹闹中情谊渐长,到底是谁先动了心?情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 冰冷小姐酷相公

    冰冷小姐酷相公

    解除婚约时,微凉的笑意,她应得毫不在意。但是,“我要十万两。”微凉的要求,提得理所当然。“你果然是个无情无意贪婪自私的女人!”他看不懂。“没错!我的惯例就是别人对我好,我不一定对他也好;别人对我狠,我会回敬一百倍!所以,下次遇到我,不要急于出手相救,更不要妄想我会道谢!”
  • 逆天修神:妖孽魔君爱专宠

    逆天修神:妖孽魔君爱专宠

    踏入轮回,究竟为何而来?一世情缘,又是为谁而钟?匡扶正义,却备受阴谋陷害。四面楚歌,谁又将与我患难与共。规则,被我打破!信念,唤我入魔!昔日亲人形同陌路,踏血归来!傲视黄泉!我命由我不由天!若修仙道,必修人道!既然天道不公,我便逆了这天!既然人道无情,我便永不为人!仙又何妨,人又何妨,你一心想要成人!而我,只想成神!!
  • 黄河出版传媒集团简史

    黄河出版传媒集团简史

    本书分上中下三篇,上篇主要浓缩50年来宁夏人民出版社的历史。中篇主要反映黄河出版传媒集团改制的历史,比较详尽地叙述了集团成立后的组织结构、为建立现代企业制度而做的努力以及转企改制之后的初步效果。下篇从各个子分公司的角度分别叙述了它们各自的发展情况。
  • 肉弱强食2之天启

    肉弱强食2之天启

    肉弱强食1之人性,所描写的是四个主人公消灭丧失拯救世界的故事,可是现在天启却即将开启,又把他们从幸福美满的生活中拉回现实。难道吸血鬼、狼人和鬼魂就真的不配在这个世界生存吗?让我们看看接下来他们会发生什么事情吧…
  • 福妻嫁到

    福妻嫁到

    前有侯夫人嫡亲的大姑娘堪称典范,后有继母生的四姑娘嚣张跋扈。侯府外还来了个领着弟弟的美人三姑娘。死了亲娘的二姑娘苏昭宁表示,我有一个小目标,斗倒一个是三个!关于身份,男主说,我其实十分普通,只是家里祖宗稍微发愤了点,所以房子有些大,仆从有点多,钱,恩……当然也有点多。关于老婆大人,男主说,我这个人对姻缘其实很随缘的。男配们跳脚了:死缠烂打跟我们抢的人是谁!
  • 不是穿越

    不是穿越

    “你来了”“我来了”“你还是来了”“我还是来了”“其实我不希望你来的”“但我TM还是来了,你以为我想来啊”世界毁灭,男主踏上最后一趟避难船,但悲剧的是还未逃离就被黑洞吸了进去,醒来后发现自己竟然重生了,既然老天给我一次重生的机会,那么,今生的目标就是不枉此生!