Part 26 (1/2)
It often happened to me in his absence to have very curious and critical decisions in my power. One of these is the ”reading in” or ”reading out”
of a man from his party. This is invariably done by a leading political newspaper. I remember, for instance, a man who had been very prominent in politics, and gone over to the Democrats, imploring me to readmit him to the fold; but, as I regarded him as a mere office-hunter, I refused to do it. _Excommunicatus sit_!
There was a _very_ distinguished and able man in a very high position. To him I had once addressed a letter begging a favour which would have been nothing at all to grant, but which was of great importance to me, and he had taken no notice of it. It came to pa.s.s that we had in our hands to publish certain very damaging charges against this great man. He found it out, and, humiliated, I may say agonised with shame and fear, he called with a friend, begging that the imputations might not be published. I believe from my soul that if I had not been so badly treated by him I should have refused his request, but, as it was, I agreed to withdraw the charges. It was the very best course, as I afterwards found. I am happy to say that, in after years, and in other lands, he showed himself very grateful to me. I am by nature as vindictive as an unconverted Indian, and as I am deeply convinced that it is vile and wicked, I fight vigorously against it. In my _Ill.u.s.trated News_ days in New York I used to keep an old German hymn pasted up before me in the sanctum to remind me not to be revengeful. Out of all such battling of opposing principles come good results. I feel this in another form in the warring within me of superst.i.tious _feelings_ and scientific convictions.
It became apparent that on Pennsylvania depended the election of President. The State had only been prevented from turning Copperhead- Democrat--which was the same as seceding--by the incredible exertions of the Union League, led by George H. Boker, and the untiring aid of Colonel Forney. But even now it was very uncertain, and in fact the election--on which the very existence of the Union virtually depended--was turned by only a few hundred votes; and, as Colonel Forney and George H. Boker admitted, it would have been lost but for what I am going to narrate.
There were many thousand Republican Clubs all through the State, but they had no one established official organ or newspaper. This is of vast importance, because such an organ is sent to doubtful voters in large numbers, and gives the keynote or clue for thousands of speeches and to men stumping or arguing. It occurred to me early to make the _Weekly Press_ this organ. I employed a young man to go to the League and copy all the names and addresses of all the thousands of Republican clubs in the State. Then I had the paper properly endorsed by the League, and sent a copy to every club at cost price or for nothing. This proved to be a _tremendous_ success. It cost us money, but Colonel Forney never cared for that, and he greatly admired the _coup_. I made the politics hot, to suit country customers. I found the gun and Colonel Forney the powder and ball, and between us we made a hit.
One day Frank Wells, of the _Bulletin_ (very active indeed in the Union League), met me and asked if I, since I had lived in New York, could tell them anything as to what kind of a man George Francis Train really was.
”He has come over all at once,” he said, ”from the Democratic party, and wishes to stump Pennsylvania, if we will pay him his expenses.” I replied--
”I know Train personally, and understand him better than most men. He is really a very able speaker for a popular American audience, and will be of immense service if rightly managed. But you must get some steady, sensible man to go with him and keep him in hand and regulate expenses, &c.”
It was done. After the election I conversed with the one who had been the bear-leader, and he said--
”It was an immense success. Train made thousands of votes, and was a most effective speaker. His mania for speaking was incredible. One day, after addressing two or three audiences at different towns, we stopped at another to dine. While waiting for the soup, I heard a voice as of a public speaker, and looking out, saw Train standing on a load of hay, addressing a thousand admiring auditors.”
There are always many men who claim to have carried every Presidential election--the late Mr. Guiteau was one of these geniuses--but it is also true that there are many who would by _not_ working have produced very great changes. Forney was a mighty wire-puller, if not exactly before the Lord, at least before the elections, and he opined that I had secured the success. There were _certainly_ other men--_e.g._, Peac.o.c.k, who influenced as many votes as the _Weekly Press_, and George Francis Train--without whose aid Pennsylvania and Grant's election would have been lost, but it is something to have been one of the few who did it.
When General Grant came in, he resolved to have nothing to do with ”corrupt old politicians,” even though they had done him the greatest service. So he took up with a lot of doubly corrupt young ones, who were only inferior to the veterans in ability. Colonel Forney was snubbed cruelly, in order to rob him. Whatever he had done wrongly, he had done his _work_ rightly, and if Grant intended to throw his politicians overboard, he should have informed them of it before availing himself of their services. His conduct was like that of the old lady who got a man to saw three cords of wood for her, and then refused to pay him because he had been divorced.
I had never in my life asked for an office from anybody. Mr. Charles A.
Dana once said that the work I did for the Republican party on _Vanity Fair_ alone was worth a foreign mission, and that was a mere trifle to what I did with the _Continental Magazine_, my pamphlet, &c. When Grant was President, I pet.i.tioned that a little consulate worth $1,000 (200 pounds) might be given to a poor Episcopal clergyman, but a man accustomed to consular work, who spoke French, and who had been secretary to two commodores. It was for a small French town. It was supported by Forney and George H. Boker; but it was _refused_ because I was ”in Forney's set,” and the consulate was given to a Western man who did not know French.
If John Forney, instead of using all his immense influence for Grant, had opposed him tooth and nail, he could not have been treated with more scornful neglect. The pretence for this was that Forney had defaulted $40,000! I know every detail of the story, and it is this:--While Forney was in Europe, an agent to whom he had confided his affairs did take money to that amount. As soon as Forney learned this, he promptly raised $40,000 by mortgage on his property, and repaid the deficit. Even his enemy Simon Cameron declared he did not believe the story, and the engine of _his_ revenge was always run by ”one hundred Injun power.”
I had ”met” Grant several times, when one day in London I was introduced to him again. He said that he was very happy to make my acquaintance. I replied, ”General Grant, I have had the pleasure of being introduced to you _six times_ already, and I hope for many happy renewals of it.” A week or two after, this appeared in _Punch_, adapted to a professor and a d.u.c.h.ess.
When the Sanitary Fair was held in Philadelphia in 1863, a lady in New York wrote to Garibaldi, begging him for some personal souvenir to be given to the charity. Garibaldi replied by actually sending the dagger which he had carried in every engagement, expressing in a letter a hope that it might pa.s.s to General Grant. But a warm partisan of McClellan so arranged it that there should be an election for the dagger between the partisans of Grant and McClellan, every one voting to pay a dollar to the Fair. For a long time the McClellanites were in a majority, but at the last hour Miss Anna M. Lea, now Mrs. Lea Merritt, very cleverly brought down a party of friends, who voted for Grant, secured the dagger for him, and so carried out the wish of Garibaldi. Long after an amusing incident occurred relative to this. In conversation in London with Mrs. Grant, I asked her if the dagger had been received. She replied, ”Oh, yes,” and then added naively, ”but wasn't it really _alt a humbug_?”
The death of my father and brother within a year, the sudden change in my fortunes, the Presidential campaign, and, above all, the working hard seven days in the week, had been too much for me. I began to find, little by little, that I could not execute half the work to which I was accustomed. Colonel Forney was very kind indeed, and never said a word.
But I began to apprehend that a break-down in my health was impending. I needed change of scene, and so resolved, finding, after due consideration, that I had enough to live on, to go abroad for a long rest. It proved to be a very wise resolve. So I rented my house, packed my trunks, and departed, to be gone ”for a year or two.”
I would say, in concluding this chapter, that Colonel John Forney was universally credited, with perfect justice, as having carried Grant's election. When Grant was about to deliver his inaugural speech, a stranger who stood by me, looking at the immense expectant crowd, remarked to a friend, ”This is a proud day for John Forney!” ”Yes,”
replied the other, ”the Dead Duck has elected Grant.” But Forney cheerfully and generously declared that it was the _Weekly Press_ which had carried Pennsylvania, and that I had managed it entirely alone. All these things were known to thousands at the time, but we lived in such excitement that we made but little account thereof. However, there are men of good repute still living who will amply confirm all that I have said of my work on the _Continental Magazine_; and that Abraham Lincoln himself did actually credit me with this is proved by the following incident. Because I had so earnestly advocated Emanc.i.p.ation as a war measure at a time when even the most fiery and advanced Abolition papers, such as the _Tribune_, were holding back and shouting _pas trop de zele_--and as it proved wisely, by advocating it publicly--_merely as a war measure_--the President, at the request of George H. Boker, actually signed for me fifty duplicate very handsome copies of the Proclamation of Emanc.i.p.ation on parchment paper, to every one of which Mr. Seward also added his signature. One of these is now hanging up in the British Museum as my gift. I perfectly understood and knew at the time, as did all concerned, that this was a recognition, and a very graceful and appropriate one, of what I had done for Emanc.i.p.ation--Harvard having A.M.'d me for the same. The copies I presented to the Sanitary Fair to be sold for its benefit, but there was not much demand for them; what were left over I divided with George Boker.
VII. EUROPE REVISITED. 1869-1870.
Voyage on the _Pereire_--General Washburne--I am offered a command in another French Revolution--Paris--J. Meredith Read and Prevost Paradol--My health--Spa--J. C. Hotten--Octave Delepierre--Heidelberg--Dresden--Julian Hawthorne and G. Lathrop--Verona--Venice--Rome--W. W.
Story--Florence--Lorimer Graham--”Breitmann” in the Royal Family--Tuscany.
We sailed on the famed _Pereire_ from New York to Brest in May, 1869. We had not left port before a droll incident occurred. On the table in the smoking-room lay a copy of the ”Ballads of Hans Breitmann.” A fellow- pa.s.senger asked me, ”Is that your book?” I innocently replied, ”Yes.”
”Excuse me, sir,” cried another, ”it is _mine_.” ”I beg your pardon,” I replied, ”but it is really mine.” ”Sir, I _bought_ it.” ”I don't care if you did,” I replied; ”it is mine--for I wrote it.” There was a roar of laughter, and we all became acquainted at once.
General Washburne was among the pa.s.sengers. He had been appointed Minister to France and was going to Paris, where he subsequently distinguished himself during the siege by literally taking the place of seven foreign Ministers who had left, and kindly caring for all their _proteges_. It never occurred to the old frontiersman to leave a place or his duties because fighting was going on. I had a fine twelve-feet blue Indian blanket, which I had bought somewhere beyond Leavenworth of a trader. When sitting on deck wrapped in it, the General would finger a fold lovingly, and say, ”Ah! the Indians always have good blankets!”
We arrived in Brest, and Mrs. Leland, who had never before been in Europe, was much pleased at her first sight, early in the morning, of a French city; the nuns, soldiers, peasants, and all, as seen from our window, were indeed very picturesque. We left that day by railway for Paris, and on the road a rather remarkable incident occurred. There was seated opposite to us a not very amiable-looking man of thirty, who might be of the superior cla.s.s of mechanics, and who evidently regarded us with an evil eye, either because we were suspected _Anglais_ or aristocrats. I resolved that he should become amicable. Ill-tempered though he might be, he was still polite, for at every stopping-place he got out to smoke, and extinguished his cigar ere he re-entered. I said to him, ”Madame begs that you will not inconvenience yourself so much--pray continue to smoke in here.” This melted him, as it would any Frenchman. Seeing that he was reading the _Rappel_, I conversed ”liberally.” I told him that I had been captain of barricades in Forty-eight, and described in full the taking of the Tuileries. His blood was fired, and he confided to me all the details of a grand plot for a Revolution which he was going up to Paris to attend to, and offered me a prominent place among the conspirators, a.s.suring me that I should have a glorious opportunity to fight again at the barricades! I was appalled at his want of discretion, but said nothing. Sure enough, there came the _emeute_ of the plebiscite, as he had predicted, but it was suppressed. George Boker wrote to me: ”When I heard of a revolution in Paris, I knew at once that you must have arrived and had got to work.” And when I told him that I knew of it in advance, and had had a situation offered me as leader, he dryly replied, ”Oh, I suppose so--as a matter of course.” It was certainly a strange coincidence that I left Paris in Forty-eight as a Revolutionary _suspect_, and re-entered it in 1870 in very nearly the same capacity.