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der5 McGugan HPriv51BWinder5 Merritt. TSergt1 cvIWinder5 McCall J HPriv34GWinder5 May T APriv48BWinder5 McClure WPriv3CWinder5 Morris JPriv2EWinder5 Morgan D SPriv20BWinder5 McAlpin M GPriv37GWinder5 Morris JPriv57GWinder5 Manes JPriv11EWinder5 Morrison C HPriv7AWinder5 Miller K PPriv6GWinder5 Manning M GPriv43GWinder5 Mallory S CPriv12DWinder5 McGinnis B WPriv15CWinder5 Miller LPriv34GWinder5 Miller A PPriv12EWinder5 Martin M CPriv38BWinder5 Michaels W DPriv35KWinder5 Mansfield SPriv45HWinder5 Means J BCorp'l7IWinder5 McClellandPriv4AWinder5 McCurry EPriv16CWinder5 McClellan W ASergt16CWinderNo6 Matthews J PPriv15GWinder6 McDaniel TPriv53FWinder6 Mather J VPriv38FWinder6 Martin R RSergt22HWinder6 Moore D WPriv28KWinder6 Moore JPriv42FWinder6 Minet TPriv5 cvHWinder6 McSerain M WSpriv23BWinder6 Manier S HSergt23CWinder6 Munroe W PPriv30IWinder6 McLaughlin SPriv4BWinder6 Matthews JPriv57CWinder6 Martin J TPriv42BWinder6 Morrison D CPriv7HWinder6 M
ny me,--as a man I am, at this "time, as much respected as the proudest peer "I now look down upon." Commenting upon a mode of invective somewhat too common in what are called deliberative bodies, the direct personal assault, it has been remarked by Emerson that it makes a great difference in the force of a sentence whether a man be behind it or no. It was his personal manhood which gave peculiar energy to the invective of Chatham, who was described in his youth as "that terrible cornet of "horse, whose scowl gave Sir Robert Walpole a pain in the back." It is sad to think that even Mansfield, so supreme in understanding, should have been cowed by a more ferocious physical organization. It is said that the younger Pitt inherited the fierceness and brute force of his father, and that even the accomplished Erskine quailed before him in the House of Commons. "The fact is, Erskine," said Sheridan once to him, "you are "afraid of Pitt, and that is the weak point of "your character."
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