登陆注册
37249500000122

第122章 SOCIETIES AND PUBLIC BANQUETS(6)

The bishop was a remarkably fine preacher and an unusually attractive public speaker and past master of all the social amenities of life.

The guest of the evening was the famous Canon Kingsley, author of "Hypatia" and other works at that time universally popular.

The canon had the largest and reddest nose one ever saw. The bishop, among the pleasantries of his introduction, alluded to this headlight of religion and literature. The canon fell from grace and never forgave the bishop.

On Lotos nights I have heard at their best Lord Houghton, statesman and poet, Mark Twain, Stanley the explorer, and I consider it one of the distinctions as well as pleasures of my life to have been a speaker at the Lotos on more occasions than any one else during the last half century.

In Mr. Joseph Pulitzer's early struggles with his paper, the New York World, the editorial columns frequently had very severe attacks on Mr. William H. Vanderbilt and the New York Central Railroad. They were part, of course, of attacks upon monopoly.

I was frequently included in these criticisms.

The Lotos Club gave a famous dinner to George Augustus Sala, the English writer and journalist. I found myself seated beside Mr. Pulitzer, whom I had never met. When I was called upon to speak I introduced, in what I had to say about the distinguished guest, this bit of audacity. I said substantially, in addition to Mr. Sala: "We have with us to-night a great journalist who comes to the metropolis from the wild and woolly West. After he had purchased the World he came to me and said, 'Chauncey Depew, I have a scheme, which I am sure will benefit both of us. Everybody is envious of the prestige of the New York Central and the wealth of Mr. Vanderbilt. You are known as his principal adviser. Now, if in my general hostility to monopoly I include Mr. Vanderbilt and the New York Central as principal offenders, I must include you, because you are the champion in your official relationship of the corporation and of its policies and activities. I do not want you to have any feeling against me because of this. The policy will secure for the World everybody who is not a stockholder in the New York Central, or does not possess millions of money. When Mr. Vanderbilt finds that you are attacked, he is a gentleman and broad-minded enough to compensate you and will grant to you both significant promotion and a large increase in salary.'" Then Iadded: "Well, gentlemen, I have only to say that Mr. Pulitzer's experiment has been eminently successful. He has made his newspaper a recognized power and a notable organ of public opinion; its fortunes are made and so are his, and, in regard to myself, all he predicted has come true, both in promotion and in enlargement of income." When I sat down Mr. Pulitzer grasped me by the hand and said: "Chauncey Depew, you are a mighty good fellow. I have been misinformed about you. You will have friendly treatment hereafter in any newspaper which I control."The Gridiron Club of Washington, because of both its ability and genius and especially its national position, furnishes a wonderful platform for statesmen. Its genius in creating caricatures and fake pageants of current political situations at the capital and its public men is most remarkable. The president always attends, and most of the Cabinet and justices of the Supreme Court. The ambassadors and representatives of the leading governments represented in Washington are guests, and so are the best-known senators and representatives of the time. The motto of the club is "Reporters are never present. Ladies always present." Though the association is made up entirely of reporters, the secrecy is so well kept that the speakers are unusually frank.

There was a famous contest one night there, however, between President Roosevelt and Senator Foraker, who at the time were intensely antagonistic, which can never be forgotten by those present. There was a delightful interplay between William J. Bryan and President Roosevelt, when Bryan charged the president with stealing all his policies and ideas.

If the speaker grasped the peculiarities of his audience and its temperament, his task was at once the most difficult and the most delightful, and my friend, Mr. Arthur Dunn, has performed most useful service in embalming a portion of Gridiron history in his volume, "Gridiron Nights."Pierpont Morgan, the greatest of American bankers, was much more than a banker. He had a wonderful coIlection in his library and elsewhere of rare books and works of art. He was always delightful on the social side. He was very much pleased when he was elected president of the New England Society. The annual dinner that year was a remarkably brilliant affair. It was the largest in the history of the organization. The principal speaker was William Everett, son of the famous Edward Everett and himself a scholar of great acquirements and culture. His speech was another evidence of a very superior man mistaking his audience. He was principal of the Adams Academy, that great preparatory institution for Harvard University, and he had greatly enlarged its scope and usefulness.

Mr. Everett evidently thought that the guests of the New England Society of New York would be composed of men of letters, educators, and Harvard graduates. Instead of that, the audience before him were mainly bankers and successful business men whose Puritan characteristics had enabled them to win great success in the competitions in the great metropolis in every branch of business.

They were out for a good time and little else.

同类推荐
  • 居易录

    居易录

    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。
  • 李文忠公选集

    李文忠公选集

    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。
  • 怀远人

    怀远人

    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。
  • 内经博议

    内经博议

    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。
  • 圆悟佛果禅师语录

    圆悟佛果禅师语录

    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
  • 悟空灭世传

    悟空灭世传

    西游路上,真假悟空之争,原本该死去的悟空,激活残缺灭世磨盘获传承。救紫霞,战仙佛,屠域外众神。灭世或救世,只在一念之间。且看悟空归来,再续传奇。
  • 如若没有满天星

    如若没有满天星

    待到,零零碎碎的记忆重回脑海;待到,满天星散布在黑色的幕布上;我想我会回到你的身边……“卫亦桪,你回来!”“时呓,我一直都在。”……“时呓,我不会再让你在噩梦时呓语。”“时呓,我爱你。”……星际探险家VS地球陨石收藏家卫亦桪love时呓
  • 出门在外

    出门在外

    当背上行囊,打点亲人絮絮不休的叮咛和牵挂,踏上外出的旅途时,外面世界的光怪陆离,令人既兴奋惊奇又懵懵困惑。出门在外时,你有可能四处碰壁,学迷惘,失落。这时,你需要得到指点,学习一些切实的出门常识,才能跨过生活中的磕磕绊绊,穿越生命的丛林,更好地在外创造属于自己的天地。《出门在外:独闯天下的38堂必修课》针对出门求学、出差、外出打工经商、旅行度假、探亲访友等各类人群,精编了大量最新、最实用、最完备的外出常识,使出门者在遇到难题时,能够及时地得到解答和指导。
  • 荣耀之宇宙外挂

    荣耀之宇宙外挂

    妲己宝宝被宇宙4维空间的王者系统派来地球寻找合适人选,拯救宇宙4维空间的王者大陆
  • NBA最强毛巾侠

    NBA最强毛巾侠

    2016年4月14日以后,我以球迷身份从NBA退役了。无所谓历史第十三人也好,历史第一打铁匠也罢,曼巴精神,永垂不朽。2004年,NBA横空出世了一位毛巾侠。进能上场远投加暴扣,退能板凳秧歌甩毛巾。这不是一本严谨的NBA编年史,YY无罪,请不要在意细节。湖人总。。。会赢下一场比赛的。
  • 鬼神都市

    鬼神都市

    半文盲王治同学,从来看不进课堂书,要看也只看XX书,除了偷看女同学,就剩鬼混等辍学。伪修仙王治道友,八年不打坐,十年不修法,偏偏还是觉得自己无敌天下。懒工人王治同志,胸有大志,脑无本事,每天挣六十,依然随时幻想金钱无数,美女如云。本来,王治哥哥的人生是美好的,是逍遥的。偏偏就有不长眼的大神仙,不让知足常乐的王治大爷享受美满的生活,硬逼着他修炼绝世功法,还甩给他金钱无数,顺便又惹来了美女一群,妖孽一堆。从此,他的身边。不止火辣性感的非主流女汉子,严肃认真的清丽女警,娇俏羞涩的女同学,腼腆清纯的女护士。更有满嘴獠牙的恶鬼,神出鬼没的妖怪,颠倒众生的妖精。王治大仙,你,扛得住么?
  • 萝莉星球

    萝莉星球

    “禽兽!你一大老爷们,在春梦里,偷偷给一个陌生女孩子换衣服,脸不红心不跳的,竟然还唱歌!别以为黑暗能够包庇了你的罪恶!老娘我可是在这盯着呢!”“废物!一把年纪了,连个小火球都射不出来,就算你活得不蛋痛,老娘我看得都很胸痛啊!”“滚蛋!求我给你保密没用!明天我就让你因‘亵尸罪’,被送上火刑架!除非……你帮我个忙!嗯,这个忙很简单……”当一个五颜六色的星球,出现在了凯蒂喵的爪中时,西特拉慌张了……因为他看到,这个星球中貌似有一堆……额,一堆未成年的小萝莉在里面向他牛叉哄哄的竖着中指!!!
  • 我真不想成道尊啊

    我真不想成道尊啊

    “滚和挨打,你选一个!”“孩儿至纯至孝,一定会紧遵父命,那我就选滚好了……”“我现在只数三下:一,三!”“孩儿立马滚,不过爹,你只数了两下啊!”看见爹爹又祭出杀器,天明落荒而逃。就这样一步一步的,天明被老爹逼上了修炼之路
  • 一剑倾尘

    一剑倾尘

    林天宇,一场惊变让他出生十月就成了孤儿。幸得师傅相救并在玉峰传授武艺。一直认为父母抛弃了他,但当那一晚他知道一切以后,性情大变。他的笑只留给了他的兄弟,还有那个和他一起长大的姐姐。他们虽不同姓,却情同亲姐弟,而她成了他的逆鳞,原以为凭自己所学本事下山后大仇得报,哪知山下逢乱世仇人踪影不现。见惯了人民的生活,他想在这天下做些什么。
  • 倾城无欢

    倾城无欢

    许你一世,还我一世,生生世世,轮回不止。未曾想过,我们的纠葛,绵延了七世。