Showing posts with label eulogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eulogy. Show all posts

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Mark Twain's Eulogy of Hawley

1910

One Speech Humorist Was Known to Make Certainly a Gem in Its Way

It is said that Mark Twain has made only one public appearance as a political speaker, which was during a presidential campaign some years ago. While visiting in Elmira, N. Y., in the fall of that year, he made a short speech, introducing Gen. Hawley of Connecticut to a Republican meeting. Among other things he said:

"Gen. Hawley is a member of my church in Hartford, and the author of 'Beautiful Snow.' Maybe he will deny that; but I am here only to give him a character from his last place. As a pure citizen I respect him; as a personal friend of years, I have the warmest regard for him; as a neighbor whose vegetable garden intimately adjoins mine, why — why I watch him.

"As the author of 'Beautiful Snow,' he added a new pang to winter. He is a square, true man in honest politics — and I must say that he occupies a mighty lonesome position. So broad, so bountiful is his character, that he never turned a tramp empty handed from the door — but always gave him a letter of introduction to me.

"Pure, honest, incorruptible, that is Joe Hawley. Such a man in politics is like a bottle of perfumery in a glue factory; it may moderate the stench; but it can't eliminate it. "In conclusion let me say that I haven't said any more of him than I would of myself. Ladies and gentlemen, this is Gen. Hawley." — The Sunday Magazine.