英语听力 学英语,练听力,上听力课堂! 注册 登录
> 在线听力 > 有声读物 > 世界名著 > 译林版·林肯传 >  第16篇

双语·林肯传 16

所属教程:译林版·林肯传

浏览:

2022年05月20日

手机版
扫描二维码方便学习和分享

16

Stephen A. Douglas did more than any one else to elevate Lincoln to the White House, for Douglas split the Democratic party and put three candidates in the field against Lincoln instead of one.

With the opposition hopelessly divided, Lincoln realized, early in the contest, that he would be victorious; but, nevertheless, he feared that he would not be able to carry his own precinct or his home town. A committee made a house-to-house canvass in advance, to find out how the people in Springfield were going to ballot. When Lincoln saw the result of this canvass, he was astonished: all except three of the twenty-three ministers and theological students in town were against him, and so were many of their stanchest followers. Lincoln commented bitterly: “They pretend to believe in the Bible and be God-fearing Christians; yet by their ballots they are demonstrating that they don't care whether slavery is voted up or down. But I know God cares and humanity cares, and if they don't, surely they have not read their Bibles aright.”

It is surprising to discover that all of Lincoln's relatives on his father's side, and all except one on his mother's side, voted against him. Why? Because they were Democrats.

Lincoln was elected by a minority of the votes of the nation. His opponents had approximately three votes to his two. It was a sectional triumph, for of his two million votes only twenty-four thousand came from the South. A change of only one vote in twenty would have given the Northwest to Douglas and thrown the election into the House of Representatives, where the South would have won.

In nine Southern States no one cast a Republican ballot. Think of it. In all Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas not one man voted for Abraham Lincoln. This was ominous.

To appreciate what happened immediately after Lincoln's election, we must review the story of a movement that had raged over the North like a hurricane. For thirty years a fanatical group, obsessed by a holy zeal for the destruction of slavery, had been preparing the country for war. During all that time an unbroken stream of vitriolic pamphlets and bitter books had flowed from their presses; and paid lecturers had visited every city, town, and hamlet in the North, exhibiting the tattered, filthy garments worn by slaves, displaying their chains and manacles, holding up bloodstained whips and spiked collars and other instruments of torture. Escaped slaves themselves were pressed into service and toured the country, giving inflammatory accounts of brutalities they had seen and atrocities they had endured.

In 1839 the American Anti-Slavery Society issued a booklet entitled “American Slavery As It Is—The Testimony of 1,000 Witnesses.” In this pamphlet, eye-witnesses related specific instances of cruelties they had observed: slaves had had their hands plunged into boiling water, they had been branded with red-hot irons, their teeth had been knocked out, they had been stabbed with knives, their flesh had been torn by bloodhounds, they had been whipped until they died, had been burned at the stake. Shrieking mothers had had their children torn from them forever and sold in the slave-pen and on the auction-block. Women were whipped because they did not bear more children, and strong white men with big bones and large muscles were offered twenty-five dollars for cohabiting with black women, since light-colored children sold for more money, especially if they were girls.

The favorite and most flaming indictment of the Abolitionist was miscegenation. Southern men were accused of cherishing negro slavery because of their love of “unbridled licentiousness.”

“The South,” cried Wendell Phillips, “is one great brothel where half a million women are flogged to prostitution.”

Tales of sensuality so revolting that they could not be reprinted now, were broadcast in Abolition pamphlets then. Slaveowners were accused of violating their own mulatto daughters and selling them to be the mistresses of other men.

Stephen S. Foster declared that the Methodist Church in the South had fifty thousand black female members who were forced with whips to lead immoral lives, and he declared that the sole reason why Methodist preachers of that region favored slavery was because they wanted concubines for themselves.

Lincoln himself, during his debates with Douglas, declared that in 1850 there were 405,751 mulattoes in the United States, and that nearly all had sprung from black slaves and white masters.

Because the Constitution protected the rights of slave-owners, the Abolitionists cursed it as “a covenant with death and an agreement with hell.”

As a climax to all Abolition literature, the wife of a povertystricken professor of theology sat down at her dining-room table and wrote a book which she called “Uncle Tom's Cabin.” Sobbing as she wrote, she told her story in a storm of feeling. Finally she said God was writing the story. It dramatized and made real the tragedies of slavery as nothing else had ever done. It stirred the emotions of millions of readers and achieved a greater sale and exerted a more profound influence than any other novel that has ever been written.

When Lincoln was introduced to Harriet Beecher Stowe, the author, he called her the little woman that started the big war.

And what was the result of this well-meant but fanatical campaign of overstatement waged by the Abolitionists of the North? Did it convince the Southerners that they were wrong? Far from it. The effect was such as might have been expected. The hatred stirred up by the Abolitionists did what hatred always does: it bred hatred in return. It made the South wish to part company with its insolent, meddlesome critics. Truth seldom flourishes in an atmosphere of politics or of emotion, and on both sides of the Mason and Dixon's Line tragic error had grown to its bloody blossom time.

When the “black Republicans” elected Lincoln in 1860, the Southerners were firmly convinced that slavery was doomed, and that they had to choose at once between abolition and secession. So why not secede? Didn't they have a right to?

That question had been hotly debated back and forth for half a century, and various States at one time or another had threatened to leave the Union. For example: during the War of 1812 the New England States talked very seriously of forming a separate nation; and the Connecticut Legislature passed a resolution declaring that “the state of Connecticut is a free, sovereign and independent state.”

Even Lincoln himself had once believed in the right of secession. He had said during a speech in Congress: “Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better. That is a most valuable, a most sacred right—a right which we hope and believe is to liberate the world. Nor is the right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to exercise it. Any portion of such people that can, may revolutionize and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit.”

He had said that in 1848. This, however, was 1860, and he no longer believed it. But the South did. Six weeks after Lincoln's election South Carolina passed an Ordinance of Secession. Charleston celebrated the new “Declaration of Independence” with martial music and bonfires and fireworks and dancing in the streets. Six other States followed in rapid succession; and two days before Lincoln left Springfield for Washington, Jefferson Davis was elected President of a new nation, founded upon what was called “the great truth... that slavery is the negro's natural and normal condition.”

The outgoing administration of Buchanan, honeycombed with disloyalty, did nothing whatever to prevent all this; so Lincoln was obliged to sit helplessly in Springfield for three months, and watch the Union dissolving and the republic tottering on the verge of ruin. He saw the Confederacy buying guns and building forts and drilling soldiers; and he realized that he would have to lead a people through a civil war—bitter and bloody.

He was so distressed that he couldn't sleep at night. He lost forty pounds in weight, from worry.

Lincoln, who was superstitious, believed that coming events cast their shadow through dreams and omens. The day after his election in 1860 he went home in the afternoon and threw himself down on a haircloth sofa. Opposite him was a bureau with a swinging mirror; and, as he looked into the mirror, he saw himself reflected with one body but with two faces—one very pale. He was startled, and he got up, but the illusion vanished. He lay down again, and there was the ghost, plainer than before. The thing worried and haunted him; and he told Mrs. Lincoln about it. She was sure it was a sign that he would be elected to a second term of office, but that the death pallor of one face meant he would not live through the second term.

Lincoln himself soon came to believe very strongly that he was going to Washington to die. He received scores of letters with sketches of gibbets and stilettoes; and almost every mail brought him threats of death.

After the election, Lincoln said to a friend:

“I am worrying to know what to do with my house. I don't want to sell myself out of a home, but if I rent it, it will be pretty well used up by the time I get back.”

But finally he found a man who he thought would take care of the place and keep it in repair; so Lincoln rented it to him for ninety dollars a year; and then inserted this notice in the “Springfield Journal:”

The furniture consisting of Parlor and Chamber Sets, Carpets, Sofas, Chairs, Wardrobes, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Stoves, China, Queensware, Glass, etc., at the residence on the corner of Eighth and Jackson Street is offered at private sale without reserve. For particulars apply at the premises at once.

The neighbors came and looked things over. One wanted a few chairs and a cook-stove, another asked the price of a bed.

“Take whatever you want,” Lincoln probably replied, “and pay me what you think it is worth.”

They paid him little enough.

Mr. L. L. Tilton, superintendent of the Great Western Railway, bought most of the furniture; and later took it with him to Chicago, where it was destroyed in the great fire of 1871.

A few pieces remained in Springfield; and years afterward a bookseller purchased as much of it as possible and took it to Washington and installed it in the rooming-house where Lincoln died. That house stands almost directly across the street from Ford's Theater, and is now the property of the United States Government—a national shrine and museum.

The second-hand chairs that Lincoln's neighbors could have bought for a dollar and a half piece, are to-day worth more than their weight in gold and platinum. Everything that Lincoln touched intimately has now taken on value and glory. The black walnut rocking-chair in which he sat when Booth shot him, sold in 1929 for two thousand five hundred dollars. And a letter that he wrote appointing Major-General Hooker Commander-in-Chief of the Army of the Potomac recently sold at public auction for ten thousand dollars, while a collection of four hundred and eighty-five telegrams that he sent during the war, now owned by Brown University, are valued at a quarter of a million dollars. An unsigned manuscript of one of his unimportant talks was recently purchased for eighteen thousand dollars, and a copy of the Gettysburg address in Lincoln's handwriting brought hundreds of thousands.

The people of Springfield in 1861 little realized what caliber of man Lincoln was, and what he was destined to become.

For years the future great President had been walking down their streets almost every morning with a market-basket over his arm, a shawl about his neck, going to the grocery store and butcher's shop and carrying home his provisions. For years he had been going out each evening to a pasture on the edge of town and cutting out his cow from the rest of the herd and driving her home and milking her, grooming his horse, cleaning the stable, and cutting the firewood and carrying it in for the kitchen stove.

Three weeks before he left for Washington, Lincoln began the preparation of his first inaugural address. Wanting solitude and seclusion, he locked himself in an upstairs room over a general store and set to work. He owned very few books himself; but his law partner had something of a library, and Lincoln asked Herndon to bring him a copy of the Constitution, Andrew Jackson's Proclamation against Nullification, Henry Clay's great speech of 1850, and Webster's Reply to Hayne. And so amidst a lot of plunder in dingy, dusty surroundings, Lincoln wrote the famous speech ending with this beautiful plea to the Southern States:

I am loath to close. We are not enemies but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot's grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will swell the chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angel of our nature.

Before leaving Illinois he traveled seventy miles to Charleston, in that State, to say farewell to his stepmother. He called her “Mamma,” as he had always done; and she clung to him, saying between her sobs: “I didn't want you to run for President, Abe, and I didn't want to see you elected. My heart tells me that something will happen to you, and that I'll never see you again till we meet in heaven.”

During those last days in Springfield, he thought often of the past and New Salem and Ann Rutledge, dreaming once again the dreams that had proved to be far beyond all earthly realities. A few days before he left for Washington he talked at length about Ann, to a New Salem pioneer who had come to Springfield to reminisce and say farewell. “I loved her deeply,” Lincoln confessed, “and I think of her now very, very often.”

The night before he left Springfield forever Lincoln visited his dingy law office for the last time and settled a few business details. Herndon tells us:

After these things were all disposed of, he crossed to the opposite side of the room and threw himself down on the old office sofa, which, after many years of service, had been moved against the wall for support. He lay for some moments, his face toward the ceiling, without either of us speaking. Presendy he inquired, “Billy, how long have we been together?”

“Over sixteen years,” I answered.

“We've never had a cross word during all that time, have we?” to which I returned a vehement, “No, indeed we have not.”

He then recalled some incidents of his early practice and took great pleasure in delineating the ludicrous features of many a lawsuit on the circuit.... He gathered a bundle of books and papers he wished to take with him and started to go; but before leaving he made the strange request that the sign-board which swung on its rusty hinges at the foot of the stairway should remain. “Let it hang there undisturbed,” he said, with a significant lowering of his voice. “Give our clients to understand that the election of a President makes no change in the firm of Lincoln and Herndon. If I live I'm coming back some time, and then we'll go right on practising law as if nothing had ever happened.”

He lingered for a moment as if to take a last look at the old quarters, and then passed through the door into the narrow hallway. I accompanied him downstairs. On the way he spoke of the unpleasant features surrounding the Presidential office. “I am sick of office-holding already,” he complained, “and I shudder when I think of the tasks that are still ahead.”

Lincoln probably was worth about ten thousand dollars at the time; but he was so short of cash then that he had to borrow money from his friends to pay for his trip to Washington.

The Lincolns spent their last week in Springfield at the Chenery House. The night before they left, their trunks and boxes were brought down to the hotel lobby and Lincoln himself roped them. Then he asked the clerk for some of the hotel cards, turned them over, and wrote on the back: “A. Lincoln, Executive Mansion, Washington, D.C.,” and tacked them on his baggage.

The next morning, at half-past seven, the dilapidated old bus backed up to the hotel, and Lincoln and his family got in and jolted away to the Wabash station, where a special train was waiting to take them to Washington.

It was dark and rainy, but the station platform was crowded with a thousand or fifteen hundred of his old neighbors. They formed a line and slowly filed by Lincoln, shaking his great bony hand. Finally the ringing of the engine bell warned him that it was time to go aboard. He entered his private car by the front steps and a minute later appeared on the rear platform.

He had not intended to make a speech. He had told the newspaper reporters that it would not be necessary for them to be at the station, as he would have nothing to say. However, as he looked for the last time into the faces of his old neighbors, he felt he must say something. The words he uttered that morning in the falling rain are not to be compared with those he spoke at Gettysburg, or placed beside the sublime spiritual masterpiece that he pronounced on the occasion of his second inauguration. But this farewell speech is as beautiful as one of the Psalms of David, and it contains perhaps more of personal emotion and pathos than any other of Lincoln's addresses.

There were only two times in his life that Lincoln wept when trying to speak. This morning was one of them:

“My friends: No one, not in my situation, can appreciate my feeling of sadness at this parting. To this place, and the kindness of these people, I owe everything. Here I have lived a quarter of a century, and have passed from a young to an old man. Here my children have been born, and one is buried. I now leave, not knowing when or whether ever I may return, with a task before me greater than that which rested upon Washington. Without the assistance of that Divine Being who ever attended him, I cannot succeed. With that assistance, I cannot fail. Trusting in Him, who can go with me, and remain with you, and be everywhere for good, let us confidently hope that all will yet be well. To His care commending you as I hope in your prayers you will commend me, I bid you an affectionate farewell.”

16

在林肯入主白宫的道路上,史蒂芬·道格拉斯做出了旁人无法比拟的贡献,因为他分裂了民主党,还让三个候选人参加竞选,一下子就分散了民主党的战斗力。

由于对方阵营存在严重分歧,林肯在选举初期就知道自己会获胜,但是他却担心也许拿不下自己的家乡。某个委员会在选举之前挨家挨户地做了一次民意调查,希望能了解春田市人的投票倾向。当林肯看到调查结果时,他震惊了:除二十三名牧师中的三个人和神学院的学生外,其他人都反对林肯,他们的众多追随者也都反对他。对此,林肯苦涩地说:“他们表面上信仰上帝,是敬畏上帝的基督教徒,可在投票的时候,他们显然并不在乎奴隶制的去留。但是我很清楚,上帝是在乎这件事的,人类也一样。所以如果他们不在乎,那只能说他们的《圣经》都白读了。”

令人吃惊的是,林肯父亲那边的亲戚也都没投票给林肯,母亲那边的亲戚只有一个人将选票给了林肯。为什么会这样?因为他们都是民主党人。

就得票数而言,林肯在全国得到的选票并不多,而他对手的得票数约是他的一倍多。林肯的胜利是一场区域性的胜利,因为他获得的两百万张选票中,只有两万四千张来自南方。也就是说,二十张选票里只要有一张发生变化,西北地区就会落入道格拉斯囊中,选举也会落入众议院之手,那样的话,南方就赢了。

在南方的九个州中,没有一张共和党的选票。想想看,亚拉巴马州、阿肯色州、佛罗里达州、佐治亚州、路易斯安那州、密西西比州、北卡罗来纳州、田纳西州和得克萨斯州,所有这些州中没有一个人投票给亚伯拉罕·林肯。这是一种多么坏的局面啊!

为了更好地理解林肯当选后发生的事,我们必须回顾一下那场如飓风般席卷了北方的运动。三十年来,一个执着于摧毁奴隶制的狂热组织一直在努力挑起战争。在这期间,他们的出版机构源源不断地印刷着各种言辞尖刻的宣传册和书籍;他们出钱请人在北方的每一座城市、乡镇和村庄里进行演讲,向听众展示给奴隶穿的肮脏破烂的衣服,捆绑奴隶的铁链和手铐以及各种折磨奴隶的工具,例如血迹斑斑的鞭子和竖着尖刺的项圈;他们劝说逃出来的黑奴跟着他们在国内巡游,鼓动黑奴煽动性地控诉自己的亲身经历或者亲眼所见的各种暴行。

一八三九年,美国反奴隶制协会出版了一本名为《美国奴隶制的现状——一千名目击者的真实述说》的小册子。在这本小册子中,目击者们叙述了他们亲眼所见的各种暴行:将黑奴的双手浸在沸水中;用烧红的铁块在黑奴身上刻下烙印;打落黑奴的牙齿;用刀捅黑奴;让猎犬咬下黑奴的肉;将黑奴鞭打至死;将黑奴绑在桩子上烤。痛苦的母亲们只能眼睁睁地看着自己的孩子被夺走,装进专门安置奴隶的围栏中,然后拿去拍卖。女奴若生不出更多的孩子,就要承受鞭刑。身强力壮的白人男子若和黑人妇女同居,就能得到二十五美金的补贴,因为黑白混血儿可以卖更好的价钱,尤其是女孩。

废奴主义者在谴责奴隶制时最喜欢用的一个词就是“种族混淆”。他们谴责南方人之所以保留奴隶制,只是为了满足自己“放荡的淫欲”。

“南方,”文德尔·菲利普斯(Wendell Phillips)控诉道,“就是一个大妓院,在皮鞭下,五十万妇女被迫卖淫。”

在废奴主义者的宣传册中,还记载了很多恶心得甚至不能在这里描述的淫乱故事。他们谴责南方佬和自己的混血女儿通奸,然后再把她们卖给其他男人做情妇。

史蒂芬·福斯特(Stephen S. Foster)声称南方的卫理公会中有五万黑人妇女在鞭子的淫威下过着不道德的生活。他还说,南方卫理公会的牧师们之所以支持奴隶制,唯一的原因便是他们也想有姘头。

而林肯也在与道格拉斯的辩论中说道,美国在一八五〇年有四十万五千七百五十一名黑白混血儿,他们几乎全是黑奴和其白人主人的孩子。

由于宪法保护奴隶主的权益,废奴主义者称宪法为“与死神签订的盟约,与地狱达成的协议”。

后来,某位穷困潦倒的神学教授的妻子在自家餐桌上写了一本名为“汤姆叔叔的小屋”的小说,致使废奴文学达到了顶峰。这位夫人饱含深情地描述着她的故事。她一边写,一边为人物悲惨的命运而哭泣。最后,她说是上帝写成了这个故事。这本小说首次将奴隶的悲惨生活真实地搬上了文学舞台,它打动了数百万读者的心,其销售量和影响力远超有史以来的任何一部小说。

当林肯见到这本书的作者哈里特·比彻·斯托(Harriet Beecher Stowe)时,他称她为引起了大战的小女人。

而这一场北方废奴主义者发动的虽出自善意但太过狂热的运动最终结果如何呢?他们让南方人认识到自己的错误了吗?恰恰相反。这场运动的效果也许你已经想到了——仇恨只会引起更多的仇恨。面对废奴主义者们的仇视,南方人打算和那些粗鄙又无礼的批评家划清界限。真理从来就是淹没在政治和充满情绪化的行为中的,因此在南北区域分界线的两边,涌现了很多血淋淋的悲剧。

当“黑人的共和党”在一八六〇年推选林肯竞选总统时,南方人深信奴隶制已到了穷途末路,而他们也到了必须在废奴和脱离联邦之间做出选择的时刻。为什么不脱离联邦呢?他们就没有独立的权利吗?

这个问题反反复复地辩论了近半个世纪,很多州都曾威胁说要脱离联邦。例如,一八一二年第二次独立战争时期,新英格兰州就曾严肃地表示要成立独立的国家。康涅狄格州州议会也通过了一项法律,声称“康涅狄格州是一个主权独立的自由国家”。

就连林肯本人也曾认为各州有脱离联邦的权利。他曾在国会的一次演讲中说:“任何地方的人民,只要他们愿意并且有能力,就有权利站起来脱离现有的政府,成立一个更适合他们的新政府。这是一项珍贵而神圣的权利,我们希望这项权利可以解放全世界。这项权利并不局限于我们现存政府的人民,所有人都可以行使这项权利,只要他们有能力,就能揭竿而起,占据属于自己的一块土地。”

这些话是林肯在一八四八年说的,现在已是一八六〇年,这时的林肯已不再认同这种观点。但是南方人对此仍是深信不疑,因此林肯当选六周后,南卡罗来纳州便颁布了一项“分离条例”。查尔斯顿城大肆地庆祝新的“独立宣言”,军乐高奏,人们点燃了篝火和烟花,在大街上欢快地跳舞。紧接着,又有六个州加入了分离的队伍。就在林肯离开春田市准备前往华盛顿的前两天,南方各州成立了一个新的国家,推举杰佛逊·戴维斯(Jefferson Davis)为总统。这个国家的建国理念基于一个“伟大的真理”——黑人生来就是要做奴隶的。

即将离职的布坎南政府人心涣散,面对这一局面没有采取任何措施去阻止。因此,林肯只能无助地被迫在春田市待了三个月,眼看着联邦四分五裂,眼看着共和国在毁灭的边缘步履蹒跚,眼看着南方联盟购买枪支,建造堡垒,训练士兵。这时林肯意识到,必须通过内战,一场痛苦血腥的内战,才能领导人民走向未来。

为此,林肯非常沮丧,夜不能寐。他因忧思过虑,体重掉了四十磅。

林肯是一个迷信的人,相信梦境和某些端倪能预示未来发生的事件。在一八六〇年当选后的第二天下午,林肯回到家,倒在毛纺沙发里。他的对面是一个带旋转镜的五斗橱。他看着镜子,只见里面映出了他的身影,但却有两张脸,其中一张脸色惨白。他吓了一跳,立刻站了起来,镜中的幻影便立刻消失了。他又躺了下来,那张如幽灵般的脸又出现了,比上一次更加苍白。这件事困扰着林肯,在他的脑海中挥之不去。他将这件事告诉给了自己的夫人。他的夫人确信这是一种征兆,预示着他将获得连任,但那张苍白的脸又预示着他活不到第二任任期结束。

很快,林肯便坚定地认为他去华盛顿是去送死。他收到了大量的恐吓信,里面画着绞架和匕首,威胁要取他性命。

当选后,林肯对朋友说:

“我在担心怎么处理房子。我不想卖了房子后连个落脚点都没有,但是如果租出去的话,等我回来的时候,肯定是一塌糊涂。”

最后,他找到了一个他觉得能好好照顾并且维修房子的人,以每年九十美金的价格租给了对方。然后他在《春田市日报》上刊登了这样一则广告:

第八大街和杰克逊大街拐角处的住宅,全面出售家具,包括客厅和卧室的全套设施,地毯、沙发、椅子、衣柜、书桌、床架、炉灶、瓷器、女王陶、玻璃杯等。欲购买者,速来面谈。

邻居们纷纷赶来,有人买了几张椅子和一个炉灶,有人问了床的价钱。

“想拿什么就拿什么,”林肯大概是这样说的,“觉得值多少钱就付多少钱。”

结果,邻居们的出价低得可怜。

大西北铁路公司的负责人蒂尔顿(L. L. Tilton)买下了林肯的大多数家具,随后带去了芝加哥,最后这些家具被毁于一八七一年的大火之中。

林肯的这些家具,有几件留在了春田市。数年后一位书商尽其所能地买下了这些家具,将它们送往华盛顿,安置在了林肯去世时的公寓里。那座公寓位于福特剧场对街,现属美国政府,是一座博物馆,也是人们纪念林肯的圣地。

而那些林肯的邻居以每把一点五元美金的价格买回来的二手椅子,现在的价值已远远超过同等重量黄金或者铂金的价格。林肯触碰过的每一样私人物件,都充满了荣耀和价值。林肯在遭布斯枪杀时坐的那张黑色胡桃木摇椅在一九二九年卖出了两千五百美金的价格。最近公开拍卖的一封林肯任命约瑟夫·胡克将军(Major-General Hooker)为波多马克军团总指挥官的亲笔信更是卖到了一万美金的价格。布朗大学收藏的林肯在战时发送的四百八十五封电报现估价为二十五万美金。最近,林肯的一份未签名的、某场不知名演讲的讲稿卖出了八千美金的价格。而林肯亲笔写的葛底斯堡演说的讲稿,其拷贝版也卖到了几十万美元。

而在一八六一年,春田市的人们并不知道林肯有多大的才干,也不知道他命中注定会成为怎样的存在。

多年来,未来那位伟大的总统每天早晨都会挎着篮子,围着领巾,走上街头,去杂货店和肉店购买日常所需,然后带着东西回家。多年来,林肯每天晚上都要去小镇边上的牧场,在牛群中找到他的奶牛,赶着牛回家,然后挤奶,喂马,清洗马厩,砍柴,将柴火放在厨房的炉灶里。

在动身去华盛顿的三个星期前,林肯开始准备自己的就职演说。他将自己锁在了一间杂货铺楼上的房间里,心无杂念地工作着。他自己没什么书,但他的律所合伙人却有着丰富的藏书。于是林肯让赫恩登给他拿了一些资料,包括宪法副本、安德鲁·杰克逊(Andrew Jackson)的《关于州对联邦法令废止的公告》(Proclamation against Nullification)、亨利·克莱(Henry Clay)在一八五〇年的伟大演说以及韦伯斯特的《答海恩书》。就是在这样昏暗肮脏的环境中,林肯写出了那篇著名的第一次就职演说词。在演说结尾,林肯向南方各州发出了令人动容的恳求:

我不愿结束这篇演说。我们是朋友,不是敌人。我们决不能成为敌人。尽管目前的形势有些紧张,但却不能使我们之间亲密的情感纽带断裂。记忆的神秘之弦,从每一个战场和爱国者之墓伸展开来,在这宽广的国土上与每一颗搏动的心房、温暖的壁炉联结起来,当我们本性中的更为美好的天使去再次触摸琴弦——这必会发生,我们仍将陶醉于联邦大合唱之中。

离开伊利诺伊州之前,林肯特意去了七十英里外的查尔斯顿城与继母告别。他像以前一样叫她“妈妈”,她紧紧握着他的手,一边抽泣一边说:“亚伯,我不希望你去竞选总统,我也不希望看到你当选。我总觉得你身上会发生不好的事,将我们生死相隔,直至在天堂重聚。”

在春田市的最后一段日子里,林肯总是想起以前在新塞勒姆村的日子以及安·拉特利奇。他再次梦到了那早已远去的如梦似幻的曾经。在动身前往华盛顿的前几天,一位新塞勒姆村的拓荒者赶来和他告别,他们说了很多关于安的事。“我深爱着她。”林肯说,“即便是现在,我也时常想起她。”

永久离开春田市的前一晚,林肯最后一次去了他那脏兮兮的办公室,处理了一些事务。对此,赫恩登是这样回忆的:

在处理完这些事情后,他走到了屋子的另一边,躺在了墙边的旧沙发上。这张沙发用了很多年,早已破旧不堪,只能靠着墙才能站稳。他躺了一会儿,面朝天花板,我们俩谁也没有说话。过了一会他问我:“比利,我们在一起多长时间了?”

“十六年了。”我说。

“这么多年来,我们从来没红过脸,是吧?”

我激动地回答道:“是的,确实没有。”

他又回忆了一些早年做律师时的一些事情,兴致勃勃地描绘着在巡回办案时遇到的那些稀奇古怪的案子……他收拾了一捆书,大概是想带着离开,然后便准备走了。离开前他提了一个奇怪的要求,让我别拆楼下用生锈的链子挂着的名牌。“别动它,就这样挂着吧,”他特意压低声音说道,“要让我们的客户明白,即便做了总统,林肯和赫恩登的律师事务所还在。如果我能活着回来,我们就继续开律师事务所,就好像什么事都没发生一样。”

他又逗留了一会儿,似乎想最后再看一眼这个旧住处,然后穿过门,走入狭窄的走廊。我陪着他下楼。一路上他说了总统办公室周围那些令人不悦的地方。“我已经厌倦公务了。”他抱怨道,“一想到之后会面对的事务,我就忍不住颤抖。”

林肯当时的身价可能值一万美金,但他没什么现金,因此不得不向朋友借钱前往华盛顿。

林肯一家在钱纳里旅馆度过了在春田市的最后一周。出发前一晚,行李被搬到了旅馆大堂。林肯亲自将行李捆好,问服务员拿了一张旅馆的卡片,在背面写上“华盛顿特区,白宫,亚伯拉罕·林肯收”,然后将卡片钉在了包裹上。

第二天早上七点半,一辆老旧的巴士开到了旅馆门口,林肯一家上了车,一路摇摇晃晃地前往沃巴什车站。去往华盛顿的专列早已在那里等候。

那天下着雨,天色昏暗,车站的月台上却挤着一千多位赶来送行的人。他们都是林肯的老邻居,排成了一列长队,慢慢地向林肯移动,一一握住林肯那干瘦的大手。最后,列车鸣笛,是时候要上车了。林肯踏上台阶,走进了自己的专属车厢,但一分钟后,他又出现在了车厢后的平台上。

林肯本不打算发表演说。他对记者们说,用不着来车站,因为他没什么要说的。然而,在分别关头,他看着那些老邻居的脸庞时,觉得自己必须要说些什么。那天早上他在雨中说的那些话,虽然不能和葛底斯堡宣言相比,也不如第二次就职宣言来得庄严又引领人心,但却像《大卫赞美诗》一样优美,其蕴含的情感和忧伤,比林肯的其他演说都要澎湃。

林肯一生中只有两次在演讲时忍不住哭了出来。那天早晨便是其中一次:

“我的朋友们:没有人能体会我现在心中对离别的感伤。对于这个地方,对于你们这些善良的人,我感激不尽。我在这里住了二十五年,从一个青年变成了一个老头子。我的孩子们在这里出生,其中一个更是葬在了这里。我现在离开,不知道何时才能回来,也不知道能否再回来。我要完成的任务,比当年华盛顿面临的还要艰难。若不能像华盛顿一样得到上帝的眷顾,我是无法成功的。有了上帝的眷顾,我便不会失败。相信主吧,他会在我身边,也会在你们身边。他无处不在,他让我们坚定信心,满怀希望。我将你们托付于他,也希望你们能在祷告中为我祝福。就此别过。”

用户搜索

疯狂英语 英语语法 新概念英语 走遍美国 四级听力 英语音标 英语入门 发音 美语 四级 新东方 七年级 赖世雄 zero是什么意思温州市国光大厦英语学习交流群

  • 频道推荐
  • |
  • 全站推荐
  • 推荐下载
  • 网站推荐