![]() To the fifth party, which would be his last for a very long time, Senator Kent invited not only those colleagues and donors he counted among his friends but also one man who was obscure in the capital but famous in Rhode Island for the suitcase-manufacturing empire his family had built. The rule for the drinking was, *Drink! Among these men was one, Senator Alexander Kent of Rhode Island, who gave no fewer than five parties in one month, displaying his home, his wife, and his good taste in scotch. The wineglasses were nearly invisible, the low- balls weighty as a man’s fist. There were floor-to-ceiling drapes of heavy velvet, and there were couches of Italian leather on sheepskin rugs. It followed that a banquet of minor scandals, insults, and crimes was enjoyed in the town houses of powerful men. A veil of distraction fell over the capital’s swampy fortress and a lustiness took hold, an appetite for drink and women uncommon even among that time and people. In those days, in the fifth year of Nixon’s reign, when the scandal that would undo him was erupting in Washington and beyond, a great, unspoken license was given to any official who was not he. ![]() It happened in the days of Nixon-that Nixon who presided over fifty states, from the Florida Keys to the Aleutian Islands. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |