登陆注册
26524100000162

第162章

Men whom one met in Washington were not unhappy about the state of things, as I had seen men unhappy in the North and in the West.

They were mainly indifferent, but with that sort of indifference which arises from a break down of faith in anything. "There was the army! Yes, the army! But what an army! Nobody obeyed anybody.

Nobody did anything! Nobody thought of advancing! There were, perhaps, two hundred thousand men assembled round Washington; and now the effort of supplying them with food and clothing was as much as could be accomplished! But the contractors, in the mean time, were becoming rich. And then as to the government! Who trusted it?

Who would put their faith in Seward and Cameron? Cameron was now gone, it was true; and in that way the whole of the cabinet would soon be broken up. As to Congress, what could Congress do? Ask questions which no one would care to answer, and finally get itself packed up and sent home." The President and the Constitution fared no better in men's mouths. The former did nothing--neither harm nor good; and as for the latter, it had broken down and shown itself to be inefficient. So men ate, and drank, and laughed, waiting till chaos should come, secure in the belief that the atoms into which their world would resolve itself would connect themselves again in some other form without trouble on their part.

And at Washington I found no strong feeling against England and English conduct toward America. "We men of the world," a Washington man might have said, "know very well that everybody must take care of himself first. We are very good friends with you--of course, and are very glad to see you at our table whenever you come across the water; but as for rejoicing at your joys, or expecting you to sympathize with our sorrows, we know the world too well for that.

We are splitting into pieces, and of course that is gain to you.

Take another cigar." This polite, fashionable, and certainly comfortable way of looking at the matter had never been attained at New York or Philadelphia, at Boston or Chicago. The Northern provincial world of the States had declared to itself that those who were not with it were against it; that its neighbors should be either friends or foes; that it would understand nothing of neutrality. This was often mortifying to me, but I think I liked it better on the whole than the laisser-aller indifference of Washington.

Everybody acknowledged that society in Washington had been almost destroyed by the loss of the Southern half of the usual sojourners in the city. The Senators and members of government, who heretofore had come front the Southern States, had no doubt spent more money in the capital than their Northern brethren. They and their families had been more addicted to social pleasures. They are the descendants of the old English Cavaliers, whereas the Northern men have come from the old English Roundheads. Or if, as may be the case, the blood of the races has now been too well mixed to allow of this being said with absolute truth, yet something of the manners of the old forefathers has been left. The Southern gentleman is more genial, less dry--I will not say more hospitable, but more given to enjoy hospitality than his Northern brother; and this difference is quite as strong with the women as with the men. It may therefore be understood that secession would be very fatal to the society of Washington. It was not only that the members of Congress were not there. As to very many of the Representatives, it may be said that they do not belong sufficiently to Washington to make a part of its society. It is not every Representative that is, perhaps, qualified to do so. But secession had taken away from Washington those who held property in the South--who were bound to the South by any ties, whether political or other; who belonged to the South by blood, education, and old habits. In very many cases--nay, in most such cases--it had been necessary that a man should select whether he would be a friend to the South, and therefore a rebel; or else an enemy to the South, and therefore untrue to all the predilections and sympathies of his life. Here has been the hardship. For such people there has been no neutrality possible. Ladies even have not been able to profess themselves simply anxious for peace and good-will, and so to remain tranquil. They who are not for me are against me, has been spoken by one side and by the other. And Isuppose that in all civil war it is necessary that it should be so.

I heard of various cases in which father and son had espoused different sides in order that property might be retained both in the North and in the South. Under such circumstances it may be supposed that society in Washington would be considerably cut up. All this made the place somewhat melancholy.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 乱世之宰辅路

    乱世之宰辅路

    大周皇朝立国六百年之久,忽有一日,天降异星,国一日而亡。几千年的英雄豪杰、谋臣良将因此汇聚到了一个时代,机缘巧合之下,主角附身穿越,开始了他波澜壮阔的一生。
  • 扑倒主子夫

    扑倒主子夫

    不过是应征做个仆役,没想到主人却是他。她爱过痛过之后,早已心如止水,也以为他早就死了却不知,一转身,他竟成了名满天下的情剑山庄的庄主。他忘记她,还要迎娶如花美眷。老天为什么要这么戏弄她?罢了罢了,他已忘记她。算了算了,她要离开她。可是为什么,他要找到她,还指控她杀了。
  • 魔鬼复仇

    魔鬼复仇

    父母的死亡,哥哥的背叛,同学的嘲笑声。。。一切不幸都围绕在她身边。她恨透了一切。。。
  • tfboys之青春往事

    tfboys之青春往事

    这本书主要讲述青春时的tfboys谈了一场轰轰烈烈的恋爱,想了解更多就翻开看吧!!!!
  • 疾风飞步

    疾风飞步

    虚拟飞步,一个新兴的虚拟游戏,一个属于满怀勇士精神的极限运动竞技者梦寐以求的挑战平台;一次偶然的机会,双腿截肢九年的大学生许岳人在如获重生的情况下成为了四分之一的改造人,自此,伴随青春、友谊、热血以及成长恋爱的新人生就此解开了序幕。
  • 百炼神王

    百炼神王

    天才少年江宁偶得神秘功法《百炼诀》,三年功法未能精进半步,受尽族人嘲讽。一朝崛起,锻体炼魂塑魄,一路披荆斩棘,终成百炼神王!
  • 塰旳囡兒

    塰旳囡兒

    也许,我该去闯闯,这总比当一辈子的傀儡好吧。或许,是时候放弃了,就保留这样的结局吧。可能,在坚持一下,就拨开迷雾了。。。也许或许可能也只有自己选择了。
  • 诗剑无双

    诗剑无双

    李白历劫练魂身,自创剑法‘诗剑无双’,穿越时空斗智斗勇斗奇谋,大战兽灵,鏖战群魔众妖邪,烟云万里星辰暗,逐鹿于天、神、圣、魔、异、玄、幻、仙、灵、怪、武、侠、人道境世见地,满路奇逢,驰骋纵横于万劫天下,斑斓精彩,终登顶神圣无疆大道。正是、群魔乱舞惊天下六世玄幻映人身魂灵炼就登天境诗剑无双道法扬
  • 中国十大文豪——杜甫

    中国十大文豪——杜甫

    杜甫(712—770),我国唐代伟大诗人。他出生在河南巩县一个叫瑶湾的地方。杜甫从小体弱多病,但勤奋读书,十四五岁时便显露了非凡的文学才能。从20岁起,他先是游历了江南各地,后又漫游了山东河北一带。这为他日后的创作打下了良好的基础。
  • 星空之本源

    星空之本源

    人类,曾在这片星域建立了辉煌的文明,无数年前,炼星兽突然崛起,它们毁灭了一切,无数年后,人类依靠黄金星宫,艰难的守卫着最后一片乐土,又无数年后,一个普通小子的崛起,神秘的际遇,带着他成长,寻觅……