登陆注册
26103700000102

第102章 ORATORS AND CAMPAIGN SPEAKERS(5)

The president of the village and leading citizens, one after another, mounted the platform, which was the piazza of Mr. Beecher's house, and expressed their confidence in him and the confidence of his neighbors, the villagers. Then Mr. Beecher said to me:

"You were born in this town and are known all over the country.

If you feel like saying something it would travel far." Of course, I was very glad of the opportunity because I believed in him.

In the course of my speech I told a story which had wonderful vogue. I said: "Mr. Lincoln told me of an experience he had in his early practice when he was defending a man who had been accused of a vicious assault upon a neighbor. There were no witnesses, and under the laws of evidence at that time the accused could not testify. So the complainant had it all his own way.

The only opportunity Mr. Lincoln had to help his client was to break down the accuser on a cross-examination. Mr. Lincoln said he saw that the accuser was a boastful and bumptious man, and so asked him: 'How much ground was there over which you and my client fought?' The witness answered proudly: 'Six acres, Mr. Lincoln.'

'Well,' said Lincoln, 'don't you think this was a mighty small crop of fight to raise on such a large farm?' Mr. Lincoln said the judge laughed and so did the district attorney and the jury, and his client was acquitted."The appositeness was in the six acres of ground of the Lincoln trial and of the six months of the Beecher trial. As this was a new story of Lincoln's, which had never been printed, and as it related to the trial of the most famous of preachers on the worst of charges that could be made against a preacher, the story was printed all over the country, and from friends and consular agents who sent me clippings I found was copied in almost every country in the world.

Mr. Beecher was one of the few preachers who was both most effective in the pulpit and, if possible, more eloquent upon the platform.

When there was a moral issue involved he would address political audiences. In one campaign his speeches were more widely printed than those of any of the senators, members of the House, or governors who spoke. I remember one illustration of his about his dog, Noble, barking for hours at the hole from which a squirrel had departed, and was enjoying the music sitting calmly in the crotch of a tree. The illustration caught the fancy of the country and turned the laugh upon the opposition.

Hugh J. Hastings, at one time editor and proprietor of the Albany Knickerbocker, and subsequently of the New York Commercial Advertiser, was full of valuable reminiscences. He began life in journalism as a very young man under Thurlow Weed. This association made him a Whig. Very few Irishmen belonged to that party. Hastings was a born politician and organized an Irish Whig club. He told me that he worshipped Daniel Webster.

Webster, he said, once stopped over at Albany while passing through the State, and became a guest of one of Albany's leading citizens and its most generous host and entertainer. The gentleman gave in Webster's honor a large dinner at which were present all the notables of the capital.

Hastings organized a procession which grew to enormous proportions by the time it reached the residence where Mr. Webster was dining.

When the guests came out, it was evident, according to Hastings, that they had been dining too well. This was not singular, because then no dinner was perfect in Albany unless there were thirteen courses and thirteen different kinds of wine, and the whole closed up with the famous Regency rum, which had been secured by Albany bon-vivants before the insurrection in the West Indies had stopped its manufacture. There was a kick in it which, if there had been no other brands preceding, was fatal to all except the strongest heads. I tested its powers myself when I was in office in Albany fifty-odd years ago.

Hastings said that when Webster began his speech he was as near his idol as possible and stood right in front of him. When the statesman made a gesture to emphasize a sentence he lost his hold on the balustrade and pitched forward. The young Irishman was equal to the occasion, and interposed an athletic arm, which prevented Mr. Webster from falling, and held him until he had finished his address. The fact that he could continue his address under such conditions increased, if that was possible, the admiration of young Hastings. Webster was one of the few men who, when drunk all over, had a sober head.

The speech was very effective, not only to that audience, but, as reported, all over the country. Hastings was sent for and escorted to the dining-room, where the guests had reassembled.

Webster grasped him by the hand, and in his most Jovian way exclaimed: "Young man, you prevented me from disgracing myself.

I thank you and will never forget you." Hastings reported his feelings as such that if he had died that night he had received of life all it had which was worth living for.

I do not know what were Mr. Webster's drinking habits, but the popular reports in regard to them had a very injurious effect upon young men and especially young lawyers. It was the universal conversation that Webster was unable to do his best work and have his mind at its highest efficiency except under the influence of copious drafts of brandy. Many a young lawyer believing this drank to excess, not because he loved alcohol, but because he believed its use might make him a second Webster.

Having lived in that atmosphere, I tried the experiment myself.

Happily for me, I discovered how utterly false it is. I tried the hard liquors, brandy, whiskey, and gin, and then the wines.

I found that all had a depressing and deadening effect upon the mind, but that there was a certain exhilaration, though not a healthy one, in champagne. I also discovered, and found the same was true with every one else, that the mind works best and produces the more satisfactory results without any alcohol whatever.

同类推荐
  • 既夕礼

    既夕礼

    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。
  • 胎藏金刚教法名号

    胎藏金刚教法名号

    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。
  • 王郭两先生崇论

    王郭两先生崇论

    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。
  • 洞神八帝元变经

    洞神八帝元变经

    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。
  • 隋天台智者大师别传

    隋天台智者大师别传

    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
  • 神魔俱灭

    神魔俱灭

    一名从墓地祭坛中走出的少年,当他离开遗弃之地的一刻,隐藏在他身上亿万年前的上古秘辛逐一被揭开。是神?是魔?这或许是他一生都在探寻的东西。
  • 老夫子品评墨子

    老夫子品评墨子

    墨子(约前468年—前376年),名翟,战国时期著名思想家、政治家、军事家、教育家,墨家学派创始人。墨子的思想共有十项主张:兼爱、非攻、尚贤、尚同、节用、节葬、非乐、天志、明鬼、非命,其中以兼爱为核心,以节用、尚贤为基本点。墨子天子聪颖、博学多才,甚至在科技领域也有一定成就,如在宇宙论、数学、物理学、机械制造等方面,都有突出贡献。墨子一生的活动、事迹、思想和科技成就,集中体现在《墨子》一书中。据《汉书·艺文志》载,《墨子》原有71篇,而流传至今的只有15卷53篇,流失18篇。学术界一般认为,《墨子》是由墨子的弟子及其后学在不同时期记述编纂而成,反映了前期墨家和后期墨家的思想。
  • 查理九世希望你不曾忘记

    查理九世希望你不曾忘记

    那些回忆不管悲伤或是喜悦我都希望你不曾忘记
  • LOVE

    LOVE

    魔幻言情的故事。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。
  • 可知我对你的爱

    可知我对你的爱

    一个是孤女,一个是总裁,原本两个不同世界的不可能有交集的人,就因一个项链联到了一起,而不曾想,原来命运之神早给两人画了圈,在圈里……
  • 嫉妒滋长

    嫉妒滋长

    李暮春来自农村却因为其舅舅的关系与富家女苏流年同在一所大学读书。一开始苏流年就招惹上她,随后,两人成了死党。苏流年喜欢李暮春,喜欢跟她玩。但是心里因为受其母影响,又有一种别扭的心理状态,经常神经性的嫉妒李暮春……
  • 洛克新宠传说

    洛克新宠传说

    初一渣吴隐冰穿越至洛克王国,遇到了前所未有的挑战!新宠物助阵主人公,一起打遍天下!黑暗军团无限增强,自己人也被“黑”!欲知详情,请点击观看!
  • 保持学生良好心态的故事全集——做个对自己负责的人

    保持学生良好心态的故事全集——做个对自己负责的人

    走进如歌的生命,走过诗意的青春。曾几何时,我们叹息时光的飞逝,叹惋落日的凄美,却任凭美好从身边转瞬即逝。不是青春短暂、岁月苍白,而是我们不曾将它涂上丰富的色彩。何不于喧闹中体会宁静,于繁杂中感受简约,以平静的心情看待得失,以良好的心态面对功利,“不以物喜,不以己悲”才是人生之大境界。
  • 屹立于世

    屹立于世

    在星空之下,人魔妖魂四族争雄。经过漫长岁月探索,人类形成了武修与灵修两大修炼体系。继人类四大无上至尊后,一名少年逆势而起,在错综复杂的势力纷争下,带领人类屹立于世,洞悉上古时留下的惊人秘密。。。。。。
  • 重生仙君归来

    重生仙君归来

    他是心若止水高高在上的离天仙君,曾以为所求不过是天道。但当那朵红莲在眼前坠入无尽鬼渊时,才知晓本心所愿。重来一世,他定不会再任那人因他而死……上一世,你招惹了本君,这一世,本君定要你对本君负责……既在本君手里了,你莫想在离开了……这次……本君定不会再放开你了……我,很想你……