The Cowboy President [excerpt]
This man who had fought
grizzly bears came rather as a surprise among the politicians in
silk hats who run the United States. He had all the gentry at his
back because he is the first man of unquestioned birth and breeding
who has entered the political bear-pit since the country squires
who followed George Washington. He had all the army at his back
because he had charged the heights at Santiago de Cuba with conspicuous
valor at the head of his own regiment of cowboys. He had the navy
at his back because as secretary for the navy he had successfully
governed the fleet. But he was no politician when he came forward
to claim the presidency of the United States. Seeing that he could
not be ignored the wire-puller set a trap for this innocent and
gave him the place of vice-president. The vice-president has little
to do, can only succeed to the throne in the event of the president’s
death, and is, after a brief term, barred [206][207]
for life from any further progress. “Teddy” walked into the trap
and sat down.
But when President McKinley was murdered
the politicians found that they had made a most surprising and gigantic
blunder. By their own act the cowboy bear fighter must succeed to
the vacant seat as chief magistrate of the republic. President Roosevelt
happened to be away at the time, hunting bears in the Adirondack
wilderness, and there began a frantic search of mountain peaks and
forest solitudes for the missing ruler of seventy million people.
When he was found, and had paid the last honors to his dead friend,
William McKinley, he was obliged to proceed to Washington, and there
take the oaths. His women folk had a terrible time before they could
persuade him to wear the silk hat and frock coat which there serve
in lieu of coronation robes, but he consented even to that for the
sake of the gorgeous time he was to have with the politicians afterward.
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