[43]
warmth and earnestness.
Choate was purely a legal pleader, and outside of the court-room not very effective.
He thought Webster one of the greatest of orators, fully equal to Cicero; but they both lacked the poetical element.
Sumner's sentences were florid and his delivery rather mechanical, but he made a strong impression owing to the evident purity of his motives.
The general public, however, had become suspicious of oratory, so that it was no longer as serviceable as formerly.
“After all,” he would say, “the main point for a speaker is to have a good cause.
Then, if he is thoroughly in earnest, we enjoy hearing him.”
He once illustrated his subject by the story of a Union general who tried to rally the fugitives at Pittsburg Landing, and said, waving his sword in the air: “In the name of the Declaration of Independence, I command, I exhort you,” etc., while a private soldier leaning against a tree, with a quid of tobacco in his mouth, remarked, “That man can make a good speech,” but showed no intentions of moving.
This summary, however, gives no adequate idea of the brightness of Professor Child's conversation.
He was an animated talker, full of wit and originality.
When the classes at Harvard were smaller than at present, he would arrange them in University Hall for declamation, so as to cover as
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