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unfortunate portion of mankind where he was not either feared or respected — a man whose active principle was the conscientious performance of duty.
He was also noted for his fidelity to his friends.
He cared for the family of John Brown and watched over their interests as if they had been his own family; he made a home for the poet Channing in his old age, and was equally devoted to the Alcotts and others, who could not altogether help themselves.
He was himself a charitable institution.
Henry Wilson is also worth a passing notice, for the strange resemblance of his life to President Lincoln's, if for no other reason.
His name was originally Colbath, and he was reputed to have been born under a barbery-bush in one of the green lanes of New Hampshire.
The name is an exceptional one, and the family would seem to have been of the same roving Bedouin-like sort as that of Lincoln's ancestors.
He began life as a shoemaker, was wholly selfeducated, and changed his name to escape from his early associations.
He would seem to have absorbed all the virtue in his family for several generations.
No sooner had he entered into politics than he was recognized to have a master hand.
He rose rapidly to the highest position in the gift of his State, and finally to be VicePresident.
If his health had not given way in 1873 he might even have become President in the
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