Memorial Addresses On the Life And Character of William H Crain Late a Represe
Memorial Addresses On the Life And Character of William H Crain Late a Represe
1st Session 1899 1900 United States Congress 56th
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Grain was, in the true sense of the word, an orator. He possessed a vivid and towering imagination. His mind had been well trained in his early youth, and when I first knew him it had become richly laden with varied and valu- able information. He had drunk deep at the fountain of knowledge and was endowed with its rarest fruits. His ability to clothe the most commonplace thoughts in the choicest rhetoric was striking and remarkable. His long Address of Mr. McDcarmon of Tennessee. 41 experience ...as a member of this bod)- and his familiarity with public affairs, coupled with his general information, enabled him to bear a leading and honorable part in all of the great discussions which made the Fifty-third Congress memorable. He never failed to illumine any si:bject which he debated or to instruct and enlighten his hearers with his incisive and lucid arguments or to entrance them with his matchless eloqtience. While my social intercourse with him was imited, as I have stated, yet I recall several little incidents with which he was connected which gave me an insisfht into his character, which, together with what I have learned about him since his death, convinces me that he was a man of the most scrupulous integrity and chivalric honor, and that his lofty soul was incapable of a low thought or an ignoble act.
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