<SPAN name="XXXVI"></SPAN>
<h1 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Chapter XXXVI</h1>
<h2 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Selwyn’s Story, Continued</h2>
<p>Flushed though I was with victory, and with the flattery
of friends, time servers and sycophants in my ears,
I felt a deep sympathy for the boss. He was as a sinking
ship and as such deserted. Yesterday a thing for envy,
to-day an object of pity.</p>
<p>I wondered how long it would be before I, too, would
be stranded.</p>
<p>The interests, were, of course, among the first to
congratulate me and to assure me of their support.
During that session of the legislature, I did not
change the character of the legislation, or do anything
very different from the usual. I wanted to feel my
seat more firmly under me before attempting the many
things I had in mind.</p>
<p>I took over into my camp all those that I could reasonably
trust, and strengthened my forces everywhere as expeditiously
as possible. I weeded out the incompetents, of whom
there were many, and replaced them by big-hearted,
loyal and energetic men, who had easy consciences when
it came to dealing with the public affairs of either
municipalities, counties or the State.</p>
<p>Of necessity, I had to use some who were vicious and
dishonest, and who would betray me in a moment if
their interests led that way. But of these there were
few in my personal organization, though from experience,
I knew their kind permeated the municipal machines
to a large degree.</p>
<p>The lessons learned from Hardy were of value to me
now. I was liberal to my following at the expense
of myself, and I played the game fair as they knew
it.</p>
<p>I declined re-election to the next legislature, because
the office was not commensurate with the dignity of
the position I held as party leader, and again, because
the holding of state office was now a perilous undertaking.</p>
<p>In taking over the machine from the late boss, and
in molding it into an almost personal following I
found it not only loosely put together, but inefficient
for my more ambitious purposes.</p>
<p>After giving it four or five years of close attention,
I was satisfied with it, and I had no fear of dislodgment.</p>
<p>I had found that the interests were not paying anything
like a commensurate amount for the special privileges
they were getting, and I more than doubled the revenue
obtained by the deposed boss.</p>
<p>This, of course, delighted my henchmen, and bound
them more closely to me.</p>
<p>I also demanded and received information in advance
of any extensions of railroads, standard or interurban,
of contemplated improvements of whatsoever character,
and I doled out this information to those of my followers
in whose jurisdiction lay such territory.</p>
<p>My own fortune I augmented by advance information
regarding the appreciation of stocks. If an amalgamation
of two important institutions was to occur, or if
they were to be put upon a dividend basis, or if the
dividend rate was to be increased, I was told, not
only in advance of the public, but in advance of the
stockholders themselves.</p>
<p>All such information I held in confidence even from
my own followers, for it was given me with such understanding.</p>
<p>My next move was to get into national politics. I
became something of a factor at the national convention,
by swinging Pennsylvania’s vote at a critical
time; the result being the nomination of the now President,
consequently my relations with him were most cordial.</p>
<p>The term of the senior Senator from our State was
about to expire, and, although he was well advanced
in years, he desired re-election.</p>
<p>I decided to take his seat for myself, so I asked
the President to offer him an ambassadorship. He did
not wish to make the change, but when he understood
that it was that or nothing, he gracefully acquiesced
in order that he might be saved the humiliation of
defeat.</p>
<p>When he resigned, the Governor offered me the appointment
for the unexpired term. It had only three months to
run before the legislature met to elect his successor.</p>
<p>I told him that I could not accept until I had conferred
with my friends. I had no intention of refusing, but
I wanted to seem to defer to the judgment of my lieutenants.</p>
<p>I called them to the capital singly, and explained
that I could be of vastly more service to the organization
were I at Washington, and I arranged with them to
convert the rank and file to this view.</p>
<p>Each felt that the weight of my decision rested upon
himself, and their vanity was greatly pleased. I was
begged not to renounce the leadership, and after persuasion,
this I promised not to do.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, it was never my intention to
release my hold upon the State, thus placing myself
in another’s power.</p>
<p>So I accepted the tender of the Senatorship, and soon
after, when the legislature met, I was elected for
the full term.</p>
<p>I was in as close touch with my State at Washington
as I was before, for I spent a large part of my time
there.</p>
<p>I was not in Washington long before I found that the
Government was run by a few men; that outside of this
little circle no one was of much importance.</p>
<p>It was my intention to break into it if possible,
and my ambition now leaped so far as to want, not
only to be of it, but later, to be <i>it</i>.</p>
<p>I began my crusade by getting upon confidential terms
with the President.</p>
<p>One night, when we were alone in his private study,
I told him of the manner and completeness of my organization
in Pennsylvania. I could see he was deeply impressed.
He had been elected by an uncomfortably small vote,
and he was, I knew, looking for someone to manage the
next campaign, provided he again received the nomination.</p>
<p>The man who had done this work in the last election
was broken in health, and had gone to Europe for an
indefinite stay.</p>
<p>The President questioned me closely, and ended by
asking me to undertake the direction of his campaign
for re-nomination, and later to manage the campaign
for his election in the event he was again the party’s
candidate.</p>
<p>I was flattered by the proffer, and told him so, but
I was guarded in its acceptance. I wanted him to see
more of me, hear more of my methods and to become,
as it were, the suppliant.</p>
<p>This condition was soon brought about, and I entered
into my new relations with him under the most favorable
circumstances.</p>
<p>If I had readily acquiesced he would have assumed
the air of favoring me, as it was, the rule was reversed.</p>
<p>He was overwhelmingly nominated and re-elected, and
for the result he generously gave me full credit.</p>
<p>I was now well within the charmed circle, and within
easy reach of my further desire to have no rivals.
This came about naturally and without friction.</p>
<p>The interests, of course, were soon groveling at my
feet, and, heavy as my demands were, I sometimes wondered
like Clive at my own moderation.</p>
<p>The rest of my story is known to you. I had tightened
a nearly invisible coil around the people, which held
them fast, while the interests despoiled them. We
overdid it, and you came with the conscience of the
great majority of the American people back of you,
and swung the Nation again into the moorings intended
by the Fathers of the Republic.</p>
<p>When Selwyn had finished, the fire had burned low,
and it was only now and then that his face was lighted
by the flickering flames revealing a sadness that
few had ever seen there before.</p>
<p>Perhaps he saw in the dying embers something typical
of his life as it now was. Perhaps he longed to recall
his youth and with it the strength, the nervous force
and the tireless thought that he had used to make
himself what he was.</p>
<p>When life is so nearly spilled as his, things are
measured differently, and what looms large in the
beginning becomes but the merest shadow when the race
has been run.</p>
<p>As he contemplated the silent figure, Philip Dru felt
something of regret himself, for he now knew the groundwork
of the man, and he was sure that under other conditions,
a career could have been wrought more splendid than
that of any of his fellows.</p>
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