An American Politician
at John turned and looked into her face. The magic of moonlight softens the hardest features, makes interest look lik
g," John answered presentl
ttle regretfull
ay and less hopeful at some times than at others
ne is enjoying one's self to any extent. But I should not have
nce between people who live to work and
o you
e ideas and great movements, need to be more or less monotonous. The men who succeed a
amuse and be amused must hav
are their playthings, and so soon as they have spoiled one toy they must have another. T
d that sort of peo
n who amuses others may often be a worker himself. He raises a laugh or excites a momentary interest by getting r
a bad theory
re. We Americans, who are ill when we are idle, are content to surround ourselves with the paraphernalia of pleasure when office hours are over; but we make very little use of our opportunities for amusement, being tired out at the end of t
hard on us,"
versation and intercourse are to be considered. The majority of you, of polite European society, are not troubled with any very large ideas, but you have an imm
cally, growing intereste
ir own efforts. The result is, that European society is amusing and agreeable; whereas Americans of the same class are more interesting, less polished, better acquainted with the general laws that govern the development
hat, Mis
y talk better than En
mass of Europeans," John objected. "The Eng
think?" sug
less cold than we are;
Joe. "I like people to f
hey feel anything, or be cold when they do not?" "I think when you know some on
e glinting black surface. They were quite alone, only in the distance they could hear the long-drawn clang and ring of the other skaters, echoing all along the lake w
ughed a
deed, I am the most en
may be all comedy, you know. Orators always study their speeche
I make a speech like that of the other evening, but I often insert a great deal on t
y other time
do not feel other things
oe, "it is just as I said;
ince you will not allow the occasio
nd moved her skates slowly on t
y, so as to see what you can do with them. You only care for things on a tremendously big scale, so that you may try t
am not bored at pr
. Most men in your place would be talking
uld it please you? I dare say you have seen elephants stand upon their hind legs and their
us," said Joe, w
. You may teach me all sorts of tricks
you are," said Joe quietly. "But
question of
is it
ess," sa
happy, you only care to
ngs. Some of the people who listen to me would be
y. "Of course you must think of everything in a la
xtent of the results he could produce on any given occasion, but his enthusiastic belief in his ideas could see no limit to the multiplication of those results. His strong will and natural modesty about himself constantly repressed any desire he might have to speak over-confidently of ultimate success, so that the prediction of ultimate success by some one else was doubly sweet to him. We Americans have said of ourselves that we are the only nation who accomp
Thorn's speech, for he sa
he said, "for the sake o
by common consent skated slowly out
be happy if you think of noth
ell, one must think of not
e. "Look at Mr. Gladstone; he has an immense private correspondence about t
s pursuit. He must form no ties, he must have no interests, that do not conduce to his success. I think a man who enters on a political career must devote himself to it as exclusively as a missi
stood the mistake John made. "I cannot agree with you. You are mixing up political activity, whic
ed John, in s
man a man must be human, and the imaginary po
be that imaginary p
m quite sure people must be like other people–I mean in good ways–or other people will not believe in them, you know. You are not vexed, are yo
xed? But perhaps some day you
. "You will never persuade me that people are meant to shut the
ay that you thought I might attai
will change your mind about a
n ever. Slowly the pair glided over the polished black ice, now marked here and there with clean white cu