How prudently most men creep into nameless graves, while now and then one or two forget themselves into immortality.
You can always get the truth from an American statesman after he has turned seventy or given up all hope of the Presidency.
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You can always get the truth from an American statesman after he has turned seventy or given up all hope of the Presidency.
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[T]here cannot be a more certain symptom of the approaching ruin of a State than when a firm adherence to party is fixed upon as the only test of merit, and all the qualifications requisite to a right discharge of every employment, are reduced to that single standard.
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The author defines professionalism as exemplified by his subjects in their mutual unwillingness to take expected opposition personally. They would not allow grudges to get in the way of more important business.