第 32 节
作者:朝令夕改      更新:2021-02-25 00:17      字数:9322
  ept。 This brief summary of his political progress assuredly does not bear out the charge that he was the victim of uncontrollable ambition。
  Roosevelt's Ananias Club caught the imagination of the country; but not always favorably。 Those whom he elected into it; for instance; did not relish the notoriety。 Others thought that it betokened irritation in him; and that a man in his high position ought not to punish persons who were presumably trustworthy by branding them so conspicuously。 In fact; I suppose; he sometimes applied the brand too hastily; under the spur of sudden resentment。 The most…open of men himself; he had no hesitation in commenting on anybody or any topic with the greatest indiscretion。 For he took it for granted that even the strangers who heard him would hold his remarks as confidential。 When; therefore; one of his hearers went outside and reported in public what the President had said; Roosevelt disavowed it; and put the babbler in the Ananias class。 What a President wishes the public to know; he tells it himself。 What he utters in private should; in honor; be held as confidential。
  When I say that Roosevelt was astonishingly open; I do not mean that he blurted out everything; for he always knew the company with whom he talked; and if there were any among them with whom it would be imprudent to risk an indiscretion; he took care to talk 〃for safety。〃 With him; a secret was a secret; and he could be as silent as an unopened Egyptian tomb。 Certain diplomatic affairs he did not lisp; even to his Secretary of State。 So far as appears; John Hay knew nothing about the President's interviews with the German Ambassador Holleben; which forced William II to arbitrate。 And he sometimes prepared a bill for Congress with out consulting his Cabinet; for fear that the stock jobbers might get wind of it and bull or bear the market with the news。
  Before passing on; I must remark that some cases of apparent mendacity or inaccuracy on the part of a Presidentespecially if he were as voluble and busy as Rooseveltmust be attributed to forgetfulness or misunderstanding and not to wilful lying。 A person coming from an interview with him might construe as a promise the kindly remarks with which the President wished to soften a refusal。 The promise; which was no promise; not being kept; the suppliant accused the President of faithlessness or falsehood。 McKinley; it was said; could say no to three different seekers for the same office so balmily that each of them went away convinced that he was the successful applicant。 Yet McKinley escaped the charge of mendacity and Roosevelt; who deserved it far less; did not。
  In his writings and speeches; Roosevelt uttered his opinions so candidly that we need not fall back on breaches of confidence to explain why his opponents were maddened by them。 Plutocrats and monopolists might well wince at being called 〃malefactors of great wealth;〃 〃the wealthy criminal class。〃 Such expressions had the virtue; from the point of view of rhetoric; of being so descriptive that any body could visualize them。 They stung; they shed indefinable odium on a whole class; and; no doubt; this was just what Roosevelt intended。 To many critics they seemed cruel; because; instead of allowing for exceptions; they huddled all plutocrats together; the virtuous and the vicious alike。 And so with the victims of his phrase; 〃undesirable citizens。〃 I marvel rather; however; that Roosevelt; given his extraordinary talent of flashing epithets and the rush of his indignation when he was doing battle for a good cause; displayed as much moderation as he did。 Had he been a demagogue; he would have roused the masses against the capitalists and have goaded them to such a pitch of hatred that they would have looked to violence; bloodshed; and injustice; as the remedy they must apply。
  But Roosevelt was farthest removed from the Revolutionists of the vulgar; red…handed class。 He consecrated his life to prevent Revolution。 All his action in the conflict between Labor and Capital aimed at conciliation。 He told the plutocrats their defects with brutal frankness; and if he promoted laws to curb them; it was because he realized; as they did not; that; unless they mended their ways; they would bring down upon themselves a Socialist avalanche which they could not withstand。 What set the seal of consecration on his work was his treatment of Labor with equal justice。 Unlike the demagogue; he did not flatter the 〃horny…handed sons of toil〃 or obsequiously do the bidding of railroad brotherhoods; or pretend that the capitalist had no rights; and that all workingmen were good merely because they worked。 On the contrary; he told them that no class was above the law; he warned them that if Labor attempted to get its demands by violence; he would put it down。 He ridiculed the idea that honest citizenship depends on the more or less money a man has in his pocket。 〃A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country;〃 Roosevelt said in a Fourth…of…July speech at Springfield; Illinois; in 1903; 〃is good enough to be given a square deal afterward。 More than that no man is entitled to; and less than that no man shall have。〃
  That phrase; 〃a square deal;〃 stuck in the hearts of the American people。 It summed up what they regarded as Roosevelt's most characteristic trait。 He was the man of the square deal; who instinctively resented injustice done to those who could not protect themselves; the friend of the underdog; the companion of the self…reliant and the self…respecting。 It is under this aspect that Roosevelt seems most likely to live in popular history。
  So; from the time he became President; the public was divided into believing that there were two Roosevelts。 His enemies made almost a monster of him; denouncing and fearing him as violent; rash; pugnacious; egotistical; ogreish in his mad; hatred of Capital; and Capitalists condemned him as hypocritical; cruel; lying; and vindictive。 The other side; however; insisted on his courage; he was a fighter; but he always fought to defend the weak and to uphold the right; he was equally unmoved by Bosses and by demagogues; in his human relations he regarded only what a man was; not his class or condition; he had a great hearted; jovial simplicity; a far…seeing and steadfast patriotism; he preached the Square Deal and he practiced it; even more than Lincoln he was accessible to every one。
  CHAPTER XIV。 THE PRESIDENT AND THE KAISER
  During the first years of Roosevelt's Administration he had to encounter many conditions which existed rather from the momentum they had from the past than from any living vigor of their own。 It was a time of transition。 The group of politicians dating from the Civil War was nearly extinct; and the leaders who had come to the front after 1870 were also much thinned in number; and fast dropping off。 Washington itself was becoming one of the most beautiful cities in the world; with its broad avenues; seldom thronged; its circles and squares; whose frequenters seemed never busy; its spirit of leisure; its suggestion of opulence and amplitude; and of a not too zealous or disturbing hold on reality。 You still saw occasionally a tiny cottage inhabited by a colored family cuddled up against a new and imposing palace; just as you might pass a colored mammy on the same sidewalk with a millionaire Senator; for the residential section had not yet been socially standardized。
  Only a few years before; under President Cleveland; a single telephone sufficed for the White House; and as the telephone operator stopped work at six o'clock; the President himself or some member of his family had to answer calls during the evening。 A single secretary wrote in long hand most of the Presidential correspondence。 Examples of similar primitiveness might be found almost everywhere; and the older generation seemed to imagine that a certain slipshod and dozing quality belonged to the very idea of Democracy。 If you were neatly dressed and wide awake; you would inevitably be remarked among your fellows; such remark would imply superiority; and to be superior was supposedly to be undemocratic。
  Nevertheless this was a time of transition; and the vigor which emanated from the young President passed like electricity through all lines and hastened the change。 He caused the White House to be remodeled and fitted on the one hand for social purposes which required much more spacious accommodation; and on the other for offices in which he could conduct the largely increased Presidential business。 Instead of one telephone there were many working night and day; and instead of a single longhand secretary; there were a score of stenographers and typists。 Before he left Washington he saw a vast Union Station erected instead of the over…grown shanties at Sixth Street; and he had encouraged the laying…out of the waste places beyond the Capitol; thus adding to the city another and imposing section。 His interest did not stop at politics; nor at carrying through the reforms he had at heart。 He attended with equal keenness and solicitude to external improvements。
  Now at first; as I have suggested; his chief duty was to continue President McKinley's policies; which concerned mostly the establishment of our insu