[The President by Alfred Henry Lewis]@TWC D-Link book
The President

CHAPTER XIV
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Governor Obstinate was a formidable figure; he was popular with the people; and, although Governor Obstinate was a man who would prove most perilous if armed with those thunderbolts of veto and patronage wherewith the position of chief executive would clothe his hand, Senator Hanway was sorry to say there were many among the leading spirits of party who cared so little for the public welfare and so much for their own that they would push Governor Obstinate's fortunes as a method of making personal capital in their home regions with the ignorant herd.

Senator Hanway would not go into the details of what in his opinion might be accomplished by the President and General Attorney and the great railway system they controlled.

It would be wiser, and perhaps in better taste,--here Senator Hanway smiled with becoming modesty,--if others were permitted to do that.

If his good friends of the Anaconda who had come so far in his honor--a mark of regard which he, Senator Hanway, could never forget nor underestimate--gave him their company to the Capitol, he would be proud to make them acquainted with Senators Gruff and Loot and Toot and Drink and Dice and others of his friends, and those gentlemen would go more deeply into the affair.

The President and General Attorney, he was sure, could so exert the Anaconda influence that the delegations from those States through which it ran might be selected and controlled.
Senator Hanway and the President and General Attorney departed in high good feeling to meet with those statesmen named, while Richard sought Bess to hear word of his Dorothy and receive that letter which was already the particular ray of sunshine in days which were cloudy and dark.
It would do mankind no service to break in at this place with wideflung descriptions of Mr.Gwynn's dinner.


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