登陆注册
37249500000011

第11章 IN PUBLIC LIFE(5)

I have never known in any canvass any one incident which had greater effect than Sheridan's victory in the Shenandoah Valley, and never an adventure which so captured the popular imagination as his ride from Washington to the front; his rallying the retreating and routed troops, reforming them and turning defeat into victory.

The poem "Sheridan's Ride," was recited in every audience, from every platform, and from the stage in many theatres and created the wildest enthusiasm.

My friend, Wayne MacVeagh, who was at Yale College with me, had succeeded as a radical leader in defeating his brother-in-law, Don Cameron, and getting control for the first time in a generation against the Cameron dynasty of the Republican State organization of Pennsylvania. He had nominated a radical ticket, with Andrew G. Curtin as a candidate for governor.

MacVeagh wrote to me, saying: "You are running at the head of the Republican ticket in New York. Your battle is to be won in Pennsylvania, and unless we succeed you cannot. Come over and help us."I accepted the invitation and spent several most exciting and delightful weeks campaigning with Governor Curtin and his party.

The meetings were phenomenal in the multitudes which attended and their interest in the speeches. I remember one dramatic occasion at the city of Reading. This was a Democratic stronghold;there was not a single Republican office-holder in the county.

The only compensation for a Republican accepting a nomination and conducting a canvass, with its large expenses and certain defeat, was that for the rest of his life he was given as an evidence of honor the title of the office for which he ran, and so the county was full of "judges, Mr. District Attorneys, State Senators, and Congressmen" who had never been elected.

We arrived at Reading after midday. The leading street, a very broad one, was also on certain days the market-pIace. A friend of the governor, who had a handsome house on this street, had the whole party for luncheon. The luncheon was an elaborate banquet. Governor Curtin came to me and said: "You go out and entertain the crowd, which is getting very impatient, and in about twenty minutes I will send some one to relieve you." It was raining in torrents; the crowd shouted to me encouragingly: "Never mind the rain; we are used to that, but we never heard you." As I would try to stop they would shout: "Go ahead!" In the meantime the banquet had turned into a festive occasion, with toasts and speeches. I had been speaking over two hours before the governor and his party appeared. They had been dining, and the Eighteenth Amendment had not been dreamed of. I was drenched to the skin, but waited until the governor had delivered his twenty-minute speech; then, without stopping for the other orators, I went over to the house, stripped, dried myself, and went to bed.

Utterly exhausted with successive days and nights of this experience, I did not wake until about eight o'clock in the evening. Then I wandered out in the street, found the crowd still there, and the famous John W. Forney ****** a speech. They told me that he had been speaking for four hours, delivering an historical address, but had only reached the administration of General Jackson. I never knew how long he kept at it, but there was a tradition with our party that he was still speaking when the train left the next morning.

Governor Curtin was an ideal party leader and candidate. He was one of the handsomest men of his time, six feet four inches in height, perfectly proportioned and a superb figure. He never spoke over twenty minutes, but it was the talk in the familiar way of an expert to his neighbors. He had a cordial and captivating manner, which speedily made him the idol of the crowd and a most agreeable companion in social circles. When he was minister to Russia, the Czar, who was of the same height and build, was at once attracted to him, and he took a first place among the diplomats in influence.

When I returned to New York to enter upon my own canvass, the State and national committees imposed upon me a heavy burden. Speakers of State reputation were few, while the people were clamoring for meetings. Fortunately I had learned how to protect my voice. In the course of the campaign every one who spoke with me lost his voice and had to return home for treatment. When I was a student at Yale the professor in elocution was an eccentric old gentleman named North. The boys paid little attention to him and were disposed to ridicule his peculiarities. He saw that I was specially anxious to learn and said: "The principal thing about oratory is to use your diaphragm instead of your throat." His lesson on that subject has been of infinite benefit to me all my life.

The programme laid out called upon me to speak on an average between six and seven hours a day. The speeches were from ten to thirty minutes at different railway stations, and wound up with at least two meetings at some important towns in the evening, and each meeting demanded about an hour. These meetings were so arranged that they covered the whole State. It took about four weeks, but the result of the campaign, due to the efforts of the orators and other favorable conditions, ended in the reversal of the Democratic victory of the year before, a Republican majority of thirty thousand and the control of the legislature.

In 1864 the political conditions were very unfavorable for the Republican party, owing to the bitter hostility between the conservative and radical elements. Led by such distinguished men as Thurlow Weed and Henry J. Raymond, on the one side, and Horace Greeley, with an exceedingly capable body of earnest lieutenants on the other, the question of success or defeat depended upon the harmonizing of the two factions.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我就是明星之青春引爆

    我就是明星之青春引爆

    小说主要讲述几个大学生创新、创业的故事。陆仁嘉作为一名大四的学生,误打误撞的情况下和几个学财经的同学一起合力打造校园明星,经过一番啼笑皆非的经历……几位同学终于明白了,只要你努力,在那个行业都可以成为明星。
  • 无极仙路

    无极仙路

    现代生活中一个毕业大学生,偶然穿越到了一个狼孩的身上,开始了一段不一样的人生物竞天择,死者生存在这个强者为尊的大陆他究竟究竟是虫还是龙看洛云,如何一点一滴,从平凡到不朽的传奇人生
  • 孟婆汤的那些事

    孟婆汤的那些事

    这个世界上,为什么会有孟婆的传说?是因为孟婆犯的错。
  • 人才

    人才

    怎样为官?怎样才能做好官? 本书从《资治通鉴》《史记》《左传》《论语》《孟子》等中华传统典籍中精选了420余则历史故事,旨在为官员提供向历史学习的资料,向历史要观念、要经验、要成果。 唐太宗李世民曾把历史比作一面镜子,说它照出了兴衰更迭。其实兴衰不仅是朝代,也包括个人命运。读历史,联系自己,可以达到正衣冠的效果。 本书从价值、德才、君子小人、态度、条件、知人、识别、举用、掌控等9个方面介绍了古代人才理念及实践。人是一切因素中最可宝贵的,治政之术的实施,关键在人才,所谓“治本在得人”。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 晚风不过晴春风不及你

    晚风不过晴春风不及你

    我目光比较短浅,只能看见你。也只有两个心愿:你在身边,在你身边。 突然,有一天某个网站发表了两条声明说:第一条是“国民老公”已经结婚了!!并且“国民老公”居然是女生!!第二条是风家的第一顺位继承人即将病逝还是个gay,他不行啊,性格不好,残忍无情,冷血!第三条是舒家的小公主找回来,真实身份是……一群吃瓜群众们看到这三条消息都只剩下一个表情震惊,然后就是心塞了…“老公,听他们在网上说,你,快要死了,而且说好的对女人不感兴趣呢,我看怎么不像呢,大骗子,哼。”女人有点生气,撅嘴。 “哈哈哈,我只对你感兴趣,我的眼里只有你,我确实要死了,爱你爱得要死…”谁打翻了这盆狗粮,恋爱的酸臭味!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 半夜请关门

    半夜请关门

    大一新生林曦重回故乡,却意外发现,小时候骗人的鬼居然真的存在!!!突然出现的自称顾霖的人为什么一直帮她。那个恐怖的偷孩子的传说之下有隐藏了什么阴谋??敬请观看半夜请关门ヽ(〃?〃)?我是辣个喜欢半夜写鬼故事的高冷白晏(并不)
  • 任天堂

    任天堂

    这个世界很精彩,但绝大多数人一辈子都无法看到。因为基地的城墙之外是人类的禁区,魔鬼的乐园。只有所有人类共同努力,才有可能走出去,把那些曾经沦陷的土地夺回来。等到人类胜利的那一天城外的世界叫景区,而不再是禁区。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!