John Warwick Daniel
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Partner: | buecher.de |
Hersteller: | Forgotten Books (Thornton, William M.) |
Stand: | 2015-08-04 03:50:33 |
Produktbeschreibung
Excerpt from John Warwick Daniel: Address Delivered at the Unveiling of Ezekiel´s Statue of Senator Daniel, at Lynchburg, May 26, 1915 Successful from his youth in business, he was rich and generous without pretension or pride. Yet when the end of the Civil War prostrated his fortune and he became old and almost blind his easy dignity lost no feature of its serene composure, and out of his true heart came no complaint of man or fortune. As we view this portrait we seem to recognize the source of that peculiar charm which Daniel´s colleague, Senator Lodge, so beautifully characterized, "that grave courtesy, which never wavered; these manners, serious, gracious, elaborate, if you please, but full of kindness and thought for others, which can never really grow old or pass out of fashion," even in our hurried, hustling time. The winged years sweep swiftly past and soon a fresh picture greets our view. We see on the rostrum of the Lynchburg Military College a handsome youth of 16 years. His inborn tastes for debate and declamation have already declared themselves, and John Daniel has been selected to represent his class. The world was still thrilling with the blood-stained story of Balaklava when Daniel rose to his feet and with impassioned eloquence recited to his auditors a poem new to most of them - Tennyson´s immortal "Charge of the Light Brigade." "Forward the Light Brigade!" Was there a man dismayed? Not tho´ the soldier knew Some one had blundered - Their´s not to make reply; Their´s not to reason why; Their´s but to do and die; Into the Valley of Death Rode the six hundred. Already the souls of Virginians were stirred by somber premonitions. and it is easy to realize in fancy how these splendid stanzas, hot from the heart of this beautiful young orator, may have pealed into their ears vague prophecies of the coming storm - of Jackson and the Stonewall Brigade, of Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia. Two more years of peace were vouchsafed our country, and in these years Daniel gained new and priceless visions of life and letters. From 1825 to 1828 the great Latinist, George Long, had labored at the University of Virginia to found a school of the Classical Languages and Literatures. When he resigned his chair to return to England his mantle fell on the shoulders of a young Virginian, the most brilliant of his pupils. Gessner Harrison. Thirty years of service for his alma mater had left Gessner Harrison poor in purse but rich in scholarship, in experience, in the love of his old students, in the esteem of his colleagues, in the admiration of men of learning, in the confidence of Virginians and of the whole South. His extended knowledge of the educational situation in the Southern States assured him that a great work awaited the man who should establish a high-class preparatory academy for students desirous of adequate training for a course of university studies. In 1850 he resigned his professorship and organized such an academy, occupying for the first year rented quarters at Locust Grove, near Greenwood in Albemarle County, and then removing to a purchased estate called Belmont, in Nelson County. Daniel, with his high ambitions, was at once drawn to this man, the greatest classical master of his generation in America. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com
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