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[24]
to promise what I was not entirely sure that I could perform, and I was not prepared to say that I thought we were exactly able to “maintain” this.”
“But,” said he, “Seward insisted that we ought to take this ground; and the words finally went in!”
“It is a somewhat remarkable fact,” he subsequently remarked, “that there were just one hundred days between the dates of the two proclamations issued upon the 22d of September and the 1st of January.
I had not made the calculation at the time.”
Having concluded this interesting statement, the President then proceeded to show me the various positions occupied by himself and the different members of the Cabinet, on the occasion of the first meeting.
“As nearly as I remember,” said he, “I sat near the head of the table; the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of War were here, at my right hand; the others were grouped at the left.”
At this point, I exhibited to him a pencil sketch of the composition as I had conceived it, with no knowledge of the facts or details.
The leading idea of this I found, as I have stated on a previous page, to be entirely consistent with the account I had just heard.
I saw, however, that I should have to reverse the picture, placing the President at the other end of the table, to make it accord with his description.
I had resolved to discard all
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