登陆注册
19464300000069

第69章 GOVERNORS OF NEW YORK STATE(3)

"I rang the bell," he said, "and when the door was opened I saw Governor Tilden coming down the stairs. I rushed in and told him hastily who I was before the man at the door could stop me, and he invited me into his library. I stated my mission, and he said he was so overwhelmed with applications that he did not think he could do anything. 'But, governor,' I said, 'my case differs from all others. My congregation is composed of miners, honest, hardworking people. They have hitherto been Republicans on the protection issue, but they were so impressed by you as a great reformer that they all voted for you in the last election.' The governor said: 'Tell that story again.' So I started again to tell him about my church, but he interrupted me, saying: 'Not that, but about the election.' So I told him again about their having, on account of their admiration for him as a reformer, turned from the Republican party and voted the Democratic ticket. Then the governor said: 'Well, I think you have a most meritorious case, and so I will give you all I have.'"Doctor Buckley interrupted him hastily, saying: "Great heavens, are you going to build a cathedral?""No," answered the clergyman; "all he had in his pocket was two dollars and fifty cents."Governor Tilden had many followers and friends whose admiration for him amounted almost to adoration. They believed him capable of everything, and they were among the most intelligent and able men of the country.

John Bigelow, journalist, author, and diplomat, was always sounding his greatness, both with tongue and pen. Abram S. Hewitt was an equally enthusiastic friend and admirer. Both of these gentlemen, the latter especially, were, I think, abler than Mr. Tilden, but did not have his hypnotic power.

I was dining one night with Mr. Hewitt, whose dinners were always events to be remembered, when Mr. Tilden became the subject of discussion. After incidents illustrating his manifold distinctions had been narrated, Mr. Hewitt said that Mr. Tilden was the only one in America and outside of royalties in Europe who had some blue-labelled Johannisberger. This famous wine from the vineyards of Prince Metternich on the Rhine was at that time reported to be absorbed by the royal families of Europe.

Our host said: "The bouquet of this wonderful beverage is unusually penetrating and diffusing, and a proof is that one night at a dinner in the summer, with the windows all open, the guests noticed this peculiar aroma in the air. I said to them that Governor Tilden had opened a bottle of his Johannisberger."The governor's residence was on the other side of Gramercy Park from Mr. Hewitt's. The matter was so extraordinary that everybody at the table went across the park, and when they were admitted they found the governor in his library enjoying his bottle of blue-labelled Johannisberger.

When Mr. Tilden was elected governor, my friend, General Husted, was speaker of the assembly, which was largely Republican. The governor asked General Husted to come down in the evening, because he wanted to consult him about the improvements and alterations necessary for the Executive Mansion, and to have the speaker secure the appropriation. During the discussion the governor placed before the speaker a bottle of rare whiskey, with the usual accompaniments. In front of the governor was a bottle of his Johannisberger and a small liqueur glass, a little larger than a thimble, from which the governor would from time to time taste a drop of this rare and exquisite fluid. The general, after a while, could not restrain his curiosity any longer and said:

"Governor, what is that you are drinking?"The governor explained its value and the almost utter impossibility of securing any.

"Well, governor," said Speaker Husted, "I never saw any before and I think I will try it." He seized the bottle, emptied it in his goblet and announced to the astonished executive that he was quite right in his estimate of its excellence.

The governor lost a bottIe of his most cherished treasure but received from the Republican legislature all the appropriation he desired for the Executive Mansion.

It has been my good fortune to know well the governors of our State of New York, commencing with Edmund D. Morgan. With many of them I was on terms of close intimacy. I have already spoken of Governors Seymour, Fenton, Dix, Tilden, Cleveland, and Roosevelt.

It might be better to confine my memory to those who have joined the majority.

Lucius Robinson was an excellent executive of the business type, as also were Alonzo B. Cornell and Levi P. Morton. Frank S. Black was in many ways original. He was an excellent governor, but very different from the usual routine. In the Spanish-American War he had a definite idea that the National Guard of our State should not go into the service of the United States as regiments, but as individual volunteers. The Seventh Regiment, which was the crack organization of the Guard, was severely criticised because they did not volunteer. They refused to go except as the Seventh Regiment, and their enemies continued to assail them as tin soldiers.

General Louis Fitzgerald and Colonel Appleton came to me very much disturbed by this condition. General Russell A. Alger, secretary of war, was an intimate friend of mine, and I went to Washington and saw him and the president on the acute condition affecting the reputation of the Seventh Regiment.

General Alger said: "We are about to make a desperate assault upon the fortifications of Havana. Of course there will be many casualties and the fighting most severe. Will the Seventh join that expedition?"The answer of General Fitzgerald and Colonel Appleton was emphatic that the Seventh would march with full ranks on the shortest possible notice. Governor Black would not change his view of how the National Guard should go, and so the Seventh was never called.

It seems only proper that I should make a record of this patriotic proposition made by this organization.

同类推荐
  • 悔过自新说

    悔过自新说

    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。
  • 理惑论

    理惑论

    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。
  • 登鹳雀楼

    登鹳雀楼

    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。
  • 五字鉴

    五字鉴

    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。
  • 得遇龙华修证忏仪

    得遇龙华修证忏仪

    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
  • 呐喊(鲁迅作品精选)

    呐喊(鲁迅作品精选)

    本套丛书选文广泛、丰富,且把阅读文学与掌握知识结合起来,既能增进广大读者阅读经典文学的乐趣,又能使我们体悟人生的智慧和生活哲理。
  • 花开似夏

    花开似夏

    这个世上,命运总是那么得多骜,谁和谁会相守一生,谁又和谁只是有缘无份,或许早是已被命运安排,后来我才知道认识你纯属意外,茫茫人海里一次擦肩而过,我却义无反顾的爱上了你,当你不辞而别的那一天,我渐渐地恍惚过来,我们都只是在最美的年华里,挥霍了青春!!!
  • 近代中国的故事之一:鸦片战争的故事

    近代中国的故事之一:鸦片战争的故事

    中国近代的历史是一部民族屈辱史。封建统治阶级的昏庸腐朽导致丧权辱国,帝国主义侵略者的铁蹄踏遍中国大地,中国民族处于水深火热之中。中国近代的历史又是一部救亡图存史。为寻求救国救民的真理与道路,一大批爱国志士进行了可贵的探索和英勇无畏的斗争。
  • 荣耀王者

    荣耀王者

    五器时代,乱世纷争,战火滔天!少年安和从幻灭中崛起,血火之中,唯有手中利剑才是永恒!他也不知这是个怎样的世界,他要去打造一个属于自己的世界!
  • 爱的交换

    爱的交换

    拥有亿万身家的他,隐藏到一所普通高校里,寻找命中人,因此认识了美女教师。送礼物、认干姐,各种名义的约会接踵而至,他救她于火场,顺理成章带回家……于是一场推倒计划慢慢进行中。
  • 李鑫传奇

    李鑫传奇

    秦朝埋下的苦恨在明朝延续,谁输谁赢?乱世纷纷中原国土,李鑫何以保卫家国抗击敌人。
  • 英雄联盟之最强天下

    英雄联盟之最强天下

    高考落榜,浩晨陪着女朋友到上海,一个偶然的机会成为LOL职业战队m3战队的2队正式队员,开始了征战世界的旅途!
  • 漠殊流年之情感集

    漠殊流年之情感集

    漠殊流年的一些情感小文章,大家欣赏一下!!!
  • 铠甲勇士之修罗铠甲

    铠甲勇士之修罗铠甲

    只要你有最强之气,就能发出改变一切的巨大力量,到时候连天和地都无法阻止你想做的事情。已离去的王者铠甲、在见证着新的铠甲勇士的信念、不要被骄傲蒙蔽了你的心、修罗铠甲气息一直都在。林洋的梦中,脑海里面一直重复着这一句话。一个偶然之间捡到的手机改变了林洋的命运,林洋的身世之谜也在他拯救这个世界的过程中逐渐揭开,他能否改变自己的过去,改变苏仙的未来,拯救这个世界的未来,铠甲勇士刑天同人作品,六道修罗,主角当然是我们属于的小天,小飞,小刚,还有我们的林洋,但是不一样的时空,一样的精彩故事,战斗吧,做自己的英雄。
  • 奥林匹克的传播学研究

    奥林匹克的传播学研究

    伴随着中国“申奥”成功,“奥运”上升为中国社会的重要议题,有关奥运与媒介传播的研究逐渐成为新闻传播学界的一个关注方向。作为该研究领域具有奠基意义的中外学者交流和研讨的盛会,2006年7月28日至29日中国传媒大学广播电视研究中心与美国宾夕法尼亚大学安南堡传播学院联合召开了“2006传播论坛——体育与大众媒介”国际学术研讨会。来自美国宾夕法尼亚大学、密苏里大学圣路易斯分校、法国巴黎政治学院、英国利物浦大学等学术研究机构的国外学者,与来自中国传媒大学、中国人民大学、北京体育大学、上海体育学院等国内高校的中国研究者共聚一堂,就广泛的议题进行了深入交流,为奥运传播研究提供了多元的观点与研究的路径。