Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 612 pages of information about Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader.

[Footnote 29:  A native of North Carolina; prominent as a physician and controversialist.]

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=_Thomas H. Benton, 1783-1858._= (Manual, p. 487.)

From the “Thirty Years’ View of the United States Senate.”

=_105._= THE CHARACTER OF MACON.[30]

He was above the pursuit of wealth, but also above dependence and idleness, and, like an old Roman of the elder Cato’s time, worked in the fields at the head of his slaves in the intervals of public duty, and did not cease this labor until advancing age rendered him unable to stand the hot sun of summer....  I think it was the summer of 1817,—­that was the last time (he told me) he tried it, and found the sun too hot for him,—­then sixty years of age, a senator, and the refuser of all office.  How often I think of him, when I see at Washington robustious men going through a scene of supplication, tribulation, and degradation, to obtain office, which the salvation of the soul does not impose upon the vilest sinner!  His fields, his flocks, and his herds, yielded an ample supply of domestic productions.  A small crop of tobacco—­three hogsheads when the season was good, two when bad—­purchased the exotics which comfort and necessity required, and which the farm did not produce.  He was not rich, but rich enough to dispense hospitality and charity, to receive all guests in his house, from the president to the day laborer—­no other title being necessary to enter his house but that of an honest man;... and above all, he was rich enough to pay as he went, and never to owe a dollar to any man.

...  He always wore the same dress,—­that is to say, a suit of the same material, cut, and color, superfine navy-blue,—­the whole suit from the same piece, and in the fashion of the time of the Revolution, and always replaced by a new one before it showed age.  He was neat in his person, always wore fine linen, a fine cambric stock, a fine fur hat with a brim to it, fair top-boots—­the boot outside of the pantaloons, on the principle that leather was stronger than cloth.

...  He was an habitual reader and student of the Bible, a pious and religious man, and of the “Baptist persuasion,” as he was accustomed to express it.

[Footnote 30:  Nathaniel Macon, United States Senator from North Carolina.]

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=_Alexander Slidell Mackenzie, 1803-1845._= (Manual, pp. 490, 505.)

From the Life of Commodore Decatur.

=_106._= RECAPTURE, AND BURNING OF THE FRIGATE “PHILADELPHIA,” AT TRIPOLI.

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Choice Specimens of American Literature, and Literary Reader from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.