登陆注册
19405900000039

第39章

There was nothing very encouraging in all this, but it was better than New York. At least it gave her something to look at, and to think about. Even Lord Dunbeg preached practical philanthropy to her by the hour. Ratcliffe, too, was compelled to drag himself out of the rut of machine politics, and to justify his right of admission to her house. There Mr. French discoursed at great length, until the fourth of March sent him home to Connecticut; and he brought more than one intelligent member of Congress to Mrs. Lee's parlour. Underneath the scum floating on the surface of politics, Madeleine felt that there was a sort of healthy ocean current of honest purpose, which swept the scum before it, and kept the mass pure.

This was enough to draw her on. She reconciled herself to accepting the Ratcliffian morals, for she could see no choice. She herself had approved every step she had seen him take. She could not deny that there must be something wrong in a double standard of morality, but where was it? Mr. Ratcliffe seemed to her to be doing good work with as pure means as he had at hand. He ought to be encouraged, not reviled. What was she that she should stand in judgment?

Others watched her progress with less satisfaction. Mr. Nathan Gore was one of these, for he came in one evening, looking much out of temper, and, sitting down by her side he said he had come to bid good-bye and to thank her for the kindness she had shown him; he was to leave Washington the next morning. She too expressed her warm regret, but added that she hoped he was only going in order to take his passage to Madrid.

He shook his head. "I am going to take my passage," said he, "but not to Madrid. The fates have cut that thread. The President does not want my services, and I can't blame him, for if our situations were reversed, I should certainly not want his. He has an Indiana friend, who, I am told, wanted to be postmaster at Indianapolis, but as this did not suit the politicians, he was bought off at the exorbitant price of the Spanish mission. But I should have no chance even if he were out of the way. The President does not approve of me. He objects to the cut of my overcoat which is unfortunately an English one. He also objects to the cut of my hair.

I am afraid that his wife objects to me because I am so happy as to be thought a friend of yours."

Madeleine could only acknowledge that Mr. Gore's case was a bad one. "But after all," said she, "why should politicians be expected to love you literary gentlemen who write history. Other criminal classes are not expected to love their judges."

"No, but they have sense enough to fear them," replied Gore vindictively; "not one politician living has the brains or the art to defend his own cause. The ocean of history is foul with the carcases of such statesmen, dead and forgotten except when some historian fishes one of them up to gibbet it."

Mr. Gore was so much out of temper that after this piece of extravagance he was forced to pause a moment to recover himself.

Then he went on:-- "You are perfectly right, and so is the President. I have no business to be meddling in politics. It is not my place. The next time you hear of me, I promise it shall not be as an office-seeker."

Then he rapidly changed the subject, saying that he hoped Mrs.

Lee was soon going northward again, and that they might meet at Newport.

"I don't know," replied Madeleine; "the spring is pleasant here, and we shall stay till the warm weather, I think."

Mr. Gore looked grave. "And your politics!" said he; "are you satisfied with what you have seen?"

"I have got so far as to lose the distinction between right and wrong. Isn't that the first step in politics?"

Mr. Gore had no mind even for serious jesting. He broke out into a long lecture which sounded like a chapter of some future history:

"But Mrs. Lee, is it possible that you don't see what a wrong path you are on. If you want to know what the world is really doing to any good purpose, pass a winter at Samarcand, at Timbuctoo, but not at Washington. Be a bank-clerk, or a journeyman printer, but not a Congressman. Here you will find nothing but wasted effort and clumsy intrigue."

"Do you think it a pity for me to learn that?" asked Madeleine when his long essay was ended.

"No!" replied Gore, hesitating; "not if you do learn it. But many people never get so far, or only when too late. I shall be glad to hear that you are mistress of it and have given up reforming politics. The Spaniards have a proverb that smells of the stable, but applies to people like you and me:

The man who washes his donkey's head, loses time and soap."

Gore took his leave before Madeleine had time to grasp all the impudence of this last speech. Not until she was fairly in bed that night did it suddenly flash on her mind that Mr. Gore had dared to caricature her as wasting time and soap on Mr. Ratcliffe. At first she was violently angry and then she laughed in spite of herself; there was truth in the portrait. In secret, too, she was the less offended because she half thought that it had depended only on herself to make of Mr. Gore something more than a friend. If she had overheard his parting words to Carrington, she would have had still more reason to think that a little jealousy of Ratcliffe's success sharpened the barb of Gore's enmity.

"Take care of Ratcliffe!" was his farewell; "he is a clever dog. He has set his mark on Mrs. Lee. Look out that he doesn't walk off with her!"

A little startled by this sudden confidence, Carrington could only ask what he could do to prevent it.

"Cats that go ratting, don't wear gloves," replied Gore, who always carried a Spanish proverb in his pocket. Carrington, after painful reflection, could only guess that he wanted Ratcliffe's enemies to show their claws. But how?

同类推荐
  • 台案汇录庚集

    台案汇录庚集

    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。
  • 华严法相槃节

    华严法相槃节

    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。
  • 青溪寇轨

    青溪寇轨

    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。
  • 中恶门

    中恶门

    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。
  • 续武林西湖高僧事略

    续武林西湖高僧事略

    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。
热门推荐
  • 梦书

    梦书

    《梦书》是一名女子用两年时间凝视自己的梦境。以梦,中景象审问自身生活及心灵遭遇,省视女性世界在真实与内在之问最游离的光束。每天的记录各自独立成篇,并以主要人物的性格、情爱见解和想象为轴心,呈现了位现代女性最机灵最敏感的种种面向,还原本真状态的心灵、性、成长。
  • 深空迷失

    深空迷失

    故事发生在公元2290年的地球,此时的联邦已经掌握了往外太空发展的科技,人类渴望能够寻找到地外生命的存在,向着外太空发射了无数电磁波以期得到智慧生命的回应,可是前来的却不是友善的地外生命,而是贪婪的智慧种族,被人类称作虫族,保卫太阳系的战争迫在眉睫。罗文的父亲是一名物理学家,神秘的消失在罗文10岁的时候,然而他也给罗文留下了一个东西--MIC芯片,而罗文10岁前的记忆也因此消失。为了找回记忆深处的梦境,罗文踏上了前往银河系银心的坎坷道路。。
  • 一颗耳钉的约定

    一颗耳钉的约定

    五年前她因为一些不得已的理由不得不离开。五年后他对着全国的电视观众说他不喜欢女人逼她回来!只是她的记忆不在,有的只是对他的爱一场由耳钉引发的恋爱,一个又一个的计谋不断展开!最后是她被他找回,还是她又离开?本文是一篇一分悬念二分小白三分虐心四分情深的文。讲述的是一个腹黑和一个扮猪吃老虎的小腹黑发生的故事!
  • 拒爱520次:花心校草专属爱

    拒爱520次:花心校草专属爱

    【宠文】他学校里出名的花心校草,她万年不化的冰山脸,只因开学第一天直接无视他,却成了那位花心校草捕捉的猎物。“小苏苏,当我女朋友嘛,当我女朋友嘛,当我女朋友嘛!”他贯彻着重要的事情说三遍的原则。某女选择无视、无视,再无视。次日某男又来告白:“小苏苏,当我女朋友,当我女朋友,当我女朋友”N次后……某女黑着一张脸:“你有完没完了”某男委屈兮兮说:“人家就是缠上你了”
  • TFboys之云彩下恋爱

    TFboys之云彩下恋爱

    凌薇,梦璐,雨汐是全国首富千金,也是tfboys的女友,他们的爱情有着酸甜苦辣咸,时间都被他们感动。如果有什么意见在评论区评论,我会按照大家的意见写的
  • 铁血杀

    铁血杀

    千年前的神话离奇殒灭,天地间的浩劫无声隐埋,线索与希望寄存于一丝血脉。他叫任尘,曾一招斩尽十八将,也曾在惊鸿天下时拂袖随风去,可怎奈逃不出冥冥中的宿命与孽缘。
  • 末日危机之救世主系统

    末日危机之救世主系统

    末日来临,我需要生存下去。我用系统,拯救世界。
  • 趣味文化常识竞赛题库

    趣味文化常识竞赛题库

    精心编就1000多道形式新颖、内容精彩的知识竞赛题,内容涵盖人们应该懂得而又易于掌握的各门各类知识。既突出知识性,又把知识性同思想性、艺术性和趣味性和谐地融为一体,增强可读性,让读者游弋在逸闻趣事点缀的知识星空里,自由翱翔,体味知识带来的无限乐趣。
  • 穿越之即为公主亦为妃

    穿越之即为公主亦为妃

    一道圣旨,让胆小懦弱的五公主奉旨成婚,不娶不嫁,以公主居之,亦可以王妃居之,一个是青帝的第五个女儿,一个是青帝认养的质子,闲王苍醒钥有着作为质子的觉悟,在没达到目的之前,绝对做个听话的小白羊,只是这真的是大门不出二门不迈,大字不识,身体孱弱,胆小如鼠的五皇妹吗。青瑶作为二十一世纪的女青年,被闺蜜和丈夫背叛,一时心灰意冷,了却残生,不想竟穿到一个不知名的古代,成为五公主,醒来的一件事就是自己要成亲了,还是原身父亲认的儿子,这太乱来了,虽没有血缘关系,好歹也是兄妹,虽然做不了亲兄妹,也别这么撮合做夫妻啊。
  • 逆神则

    逆神则

    飘忽人生一虚幻,回望大笑逆天神!