Capitolo 14
Carrington.
"Perhaps it is Peony or Grassland; I cannot say me."
"He is the man whose so a lot of aspect struck me when us
was it in the Senate last week, is it not? A great, ponderous man,
on six feet stop, very senatorial and dignified, with a great head
and rather the good characteristics?" asked her/it Mrs. Lee.
"The same", answered Carrington. "From all the means feels that he speaks. Him
it is the stumbling-block of the new President that will be permitted
any peace unless he makes terms with Ratcliffe; and so every one
he/she thinks that the Giant in Grassland of Peony will have the choice of the
State or Treasury Department. If him or he/she picks him/it up it will be the
Treasury, for him it is a political and desperate manager, and he/she will want the
patronage for the next national convention."
Mrs. Lee was pleased for feeling the debate, and Carrington was
him pleased to sit through him from his/her side, and to exchange racing
you comment with her on the discourses and the oratories.
"Has you/he/she ever met the Senator?" asked her.
"I am involved as a lot of times suggestion his/her committees before. He is
an excellent president, always careful and generally civil."
"Where was it born?"
"The family is England a New, and I believe respectable. Him
come, I think, from of the place in the Valley of Connecticut, but
if Vermont, Hampshire Nuovo or Massachusetts that I don't do
knows."
"Is it a cultured man?"
"He found some kind of classical education to one of the universities of country
there.
I suspect him it has as a lot of education as it is good for him. But he went
West very soon after having left the university, and being young then and
fresh from that warm-bed of the abolition, he threw him in the
meter of movement of anti-slavery Illinois, and after a long struggle that he has color of rose
with the wave. He would not now make the same thing."
"Because not?"
"He is more old man, more expert, and not so wise. Besides, he has
anymore the time to wait. Can you/he/she see his/her eyes from here? I call
them Yankee eyes."