登陆注册
5344900000062

第62章 AMBASSADORS AND MINISTERS(1)

The United States has always been admirably represented at the Court of St. James. I consider it as a rare privilege and a delightful memory that I have known well these distinguished ambassadors and ministers who served during my time. I was not in England while Charles Francis Adams was a minister, but his work during the Civil War created intense interest in America.

It is admitted that he prevented Great Britain from taking such action as would have prolonged the war and endangered the purpose which Mr. Lincoln was trying to accomplish, namely, the preservation of the Union. His curt answer to Lord John Russell, "This means war," changed the policy of the British Government.

James Russell Lowell met every requirement of the position, but, more than that, his works had been read and admired in England before his appointment. Literary England welcomed him with open arms, and official England soon became impressed with his diplomatic ability. He was one of the finest after-dinner speakers, and that brought him in contact with the best of English public life. He told me an amusing instance. As soon as he was appointed, everybody who expected to meet him sent to the book stores and purchased his works. Among them, of course, was the "Biglow Papers." One lady asked him if he had brought Mrs. Biglow with him.

The secretary of the embassy, William J. Hoppin, was a very accomplished gentleman. He had been president of the Union League Club, and I knew him very well. I called one day at the embassy with an American living in Europe to ask for a favor for this fellow countryman. The embassy was overwhelmed with Americans asking favors, so Hoppin, without looking at me or waiting for the request, at once brought out his formula for sliding his visitors on an inclined plane into the street. He said: "Every American--and there are thousands of them--who comes to London visits the embassy. They all want to be invited to Buckingham Palace or to have cards to the House of Lords or the House of Commons. Our privileges in that respect are very few, so few that we can satisfy hardly anybody. Why Americans, when there is so much to see in this old country from which our ancestry came, and with whose literature we are so familiar, should want to try to get into Buckingham Palace or the Houses of Parliament is incomprehensible.

There is a very admirable cattle show at Reading. I have a few tickets and will give them to you, gentlemen, gladly. You will find the show exceedingly interesting."I took the tickets, but if there is anything of which I am not a qualified judge, it is prize cattle. That night, at a large dinner given by a well-known English host, my friend Hoppin was present, and at once greeted me with warm cordiality. Of course, he had no recollections of the morning meeting. Our host, as usual when a new American is present, wanted to know if I had any fresh American stories, and I told with some exaggeration and embroidery the story of the Reading cattle show. Dear old Hoppin was considerably embarrassed at the chafing he received, but took it in good part, and thereafter the embassy was entirely at my service.

Mr. Edward J. Phelps was an extraordinary success. He was a great lawyer, and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States told me that there was no one who appeared before that Court whose arguments were more satisfactory and convincing than those of Mr. Phelps. He had the rare distinction of being a frequent guest at the Benchers' dinners in London. One of the English judges told me that at a Benchers' dinner the judges were discussing a novel point which had arisen in one of the cases recently before them. He said that in the discussion in which Mr. Phelps was asked to participate, the view which the United States minister presented was so forcible that the decision, which had been practically agreed upon, was changed to meet Mr. Phelps's view. I was at several of Mr. Phelps's dinners. They were remarkable gatherings of the best in almost every department of English life.

At one of his dinners I had a delightful talk with Browning, the poet. Browning told me that as a young man he was several times a guest at the famous breakfasts of the poet and banker, Samuel Rogers. Rogers, he said, was most arbitrary at these breakfasts with his guests, and rebuked him severely for venturing beyond the limits within which he thought a young poet should be confined.

Mr. Browning said that nothing gratified him so much as the popularity of his works in the United States. He was especially pleased and also embarrassed by our Browning societies, of which there seemed to be a great many over here. They sent him papers which were read by members of the societies, interpreting his poems.

These American friends discovered meanings which had never occurred to him, and were to him an entirely novel view of his own productions. He also mentioned that every one sent him presents and souvenirs, all of them as appreciations and some as suggestions and help. Among these were several cases of American wine. He appreciated the purpose of the gifts, but the fluid did not appeal to him.

He told me he was a guest at one time at the dinners given to the Shah of Persia. This monarch was a barbarian, but the British Foreign Office had asked and extended to him every possible courtesy, because of the struggle then going on as to whether Great Britain or France or Russia should have the better part of Persia. France and Russia had entertained him with lavish military displays and other governmental functions, which a democratic country like Great Britain could not duplicate. So the Foreign Office asked all who had great houses in London or in the country, and were lavish entertainers, to do everything they could for the Shah.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 经济知识全知道

    经济知识全知道

    在快节奏的社会里,人们追求快、新、奇的生活方式。多数人都不愿意花费大量的时间去学习一些晦涩的经济理论、经济术语,但是经济学的基本概念早已渗透到工作和生活的方方面面,经济现象也随处可见,经济学的力量对我们的日常生活产生了无法想象的影响力。《经济知识全知道》把那些实用的经济学常识用一种简洁、有趣的方式表达出来,让你在娱乐中尽情领略经济学的魅力。
  • 武王灭商

    武王灭商

    公元前1046年,周武王在进军到距朝歌七十里的牧野地方举行誓师大会,列数了商纣王的许多罪状,鼓动了军队要和商纣王决战。这时候商纣王才停止了歌舞宴乐,和那些贵族大臣们商议对策。这时,纣王的军队主力还在其他地区,一时也调不回来,只好将大批的奴隶和俘掳来的东南夷武装起来,凑了十七万人开向牧野。可是这些纣王的军队刚与周军相遇时,就掉转矛头引导周军杀向纣王。结果,纣王大败,连夜逃回朝歌,眼见大势已去,只好登上鹿台放火自焚。周武王完全占领商都以后,便宣告商朝的灭亡。《中国文化知识读本:武王灭商》以优美生动的文字、简明通俗的语言、图文并茂的形式,介绍了武王灭商的有关内容。
  • 木槿花开终不

    木槿花开终不

    据说,“唐世”集团太子爷的新婚妻子性格软又娇,婚后的唐太子爷直接成了宠妻狂魔。沐槿:“其实我从小的愿望就是能够成为一名钢琴师。”于是,唐太子爷直接把全华国最著名的钢琴大师请到了家里。沐槿:“‘唐世’对面那家餐厅里面的厨师做饭真得好好吃哦!我超级喜欢。”第二天,唐太子爷直接收购了那家餐厅并且将那家餐厅的厨师请到了家里。沐槿:“我喜欢唐墨深。”然后,唐太子爷连心带身的都给了沐槿。(QQ书友群:1061866775)
  • 太空武器科技知识(下)(青少年高度关注的前沿武器科技)

    太空武器科技知识(下)(青少年高度关注的前沿武器科技)

    随着现代高新技术的迅猛发展和广泛应用,正在引发世界范围的军事变革,不断产生着前沿武器。前沿武器是指与传统武器相比,在基本原理、杀伤破坏力和作战方式上都有本质区别,是处于研制或探索之中的新型武器。
  • 节度江山

    节度江山

    事无两样人心别。问渠侬:神州毕竟,几番离合?汗血盐车无人顾,千里空收骏骨。正目断关河路绝。我最怜君中宵舞,道“男儿到死心如铁”。看试手,补天裂。
  • 我能挂机修炼

    我能挂机修炼

    苏毅肝游戏猝死,醒来之后,成为东泉村一个十五岁少年。而这里,有江湖。而他安身立命的东西,就是随他而来的脑中的小镇。那小镇正是游戏世界的小镇。而同时,苏毅的游戏人物,成为他的分身,让他得以实现游戏最强功能挂机。“再让我挂机三十年,就是天都给你翻过来……”
  • 凰医帝临七神

    凰医帝临七神

    (原名《焚尽七神:狂傲女帝》)前世,她贵为巅峰女帝,一夕之间局势逆转,沦为废材之质。魂灵双修,医毒无双,血脉觉醒,一御万兽。天现异象,凰命之女,自此归来,天下乱之。这一次,所有欺她辱她之人必杀之!他自上界而来,怀有目的,却因她动摇内心深处坚定的道义。“你曾说,你向仰我,你想像我一样,步入光明,是我对不起你,又让你重新回到黑暗。”“你都不在了,你让我一个人,怎么像向仰你?!”爱与不爱,从来都是我们自己的事,与他人无关。带走了所有的光明与信仰。
  • 南风入我怀(全集)

    南风入我怀(全集)

    讲述了公关女神南风,处心积虑接近陆城遇,故作姿态的扮演拜金女算计陆城遇,之后被识破的浪漫的爱情故事。
  • 动作电影里的踢馆者

    动作电影里的踢馆者

    一个融合了各种动作电影的世界一个能够返老还童的老不死文无第一,武无第二方世玉、洪熙官、霍元甲、黄飞鸿、叶问……这些挡在我回家路上的绊脚石,终会倒在我的脚下一段打人与被人打的心酸踢馆之旅就此开始
  • 二世祖的妖孽人生

    二世祖的妖孽人生

    季凡,含着金钥匙出生,既是富三代又是官三代,本就不平凡又机缘巧合获得系统,从此踏上无敌之路。本书故事纯属虚构。