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was not exceptional, and his political opinions may have proved an impediment to him in a city which was still devoted to Webster and Winthrop.
Moreover, his kindness of heart prompted him to undertake a large number of cases for which he received little or no remuneration.
As late as 1856 he was known as the poor man's lawyer rather than as a distinguished pleader.
One cannot help reflecting what might have been John A. Andrew's fortune if he had been born in Ohio or Illinois.
In the latter State he would have proved a most important political factor; for he was fully as able a speaker as Douglas, and he combined with this a large proportion of those estimable qualities which we all admire in Abraham Lincoln.
He had not the wit of Lincoln, nor his immense fund of anecdote, which helped so much to make him popular, but the cordial manners and manly frankness of Andrew were very captivating.
He would have told Douglas to his face that he was a demagogue, as Mirabeau did to Robespierre, and would have carried the audience with him. It certainly seems as if he would have risen to distinction there more rapidly than in old-fashioned, conventional Boston.
Governor Andrew was an inch shorter than the average height of man, and much resembled Professor Child in personal appearance.
He was a larger man than Professor Child, and
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