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The Daily Dispatch: October 2, 1862., [Electronic resource], An English Analysis of American Photographs. (search)
a table, which does not conceal that fact which he is so often said by the papers " an old, quaint face, sagacious notwithstanding the receding brow; and kindly, despite the coarse, heavy-lipped mouth, but with such axillary arrangements that, in combination with the long-limbed, narrow body, and great extremities, there is a gorilla expression produced by the ensemble. Next is Hannibal Hamblin, Vice-President, who is chiefly interesting on account of what he might become. Turn over, and Mr. Stanton gives a sitting for his head alone, the lines of which do not stand comparison very well with the keen, clear outline of Mr. Seward's features, next to it. Why did not Mr. Brady give the full face of Mr. Seward, so that one could see his eye? In other respects the likeness, though it does not convey that air of "cunning and conceit" which Priace Napoleon's attache attributed in his to the Secretary of State, is characteristic and true. Pass over Mr. Batel, and we come to Mr. Chase