Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 113 pages of information about Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia).

Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 113 pages of information about Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia).

He has gone where all must soon follow.  The wealth of his example is an inspiration to the living to emulate his virtues, enjoy a conscience void of offense, and leave to surviving relatives the inheritance of an honored name.  Such an ambition is worthy of an American citizen, and the value to humanity of such a life as that of Gen. LEE can hardly be overestimated.

Why should death be regarded as a calamity?  It is the inevitable fate of all the living.  May it not be a part of life?  The hope of immortality is the greatest boon conferred upon the living.  On an occasion like this words will not soothe the grief of those who are near and dear to the deceased.  Their consolation must be in the hope of reunion beyond the grave.

ADDRESS OF MR. COLQUITT, OF GEORGIA.

Mr. PRESIDENT:  It is a difficult and delicate task to draw with justice and propriety the character of a public man.  Fulsome panegyrics have often been pronounced upon the character of the dead either out of flattery to the deceased or to gratify the ambitious desires of the living.

In paying a tribute to WILLIAM H.F.  LEE I am not influenced by any such questionable views.  To do honor to his memory I need only say what justice and truth dictate.  There is little danger, in speaking of him, of committing the offense of exaggerated eulogy.  There is more danger of doing the injustice of understatement in commemorating a character so rounded and symmetrical.

As a son, Gen. LEE’s filial piety was so marked as to make him an example worthy of all imitation by the youth of his country.  In every post of honor or trust to which he was called—­and they were many and exalted ones—­he met his engagements with such fidelity and courage as never to incur censure and seldom provoke criticism.

His bearing as a private citizen was of such dignity and benevolence as to secure the love, while it evoked the admiration, of all who knew him.

His character was made up of blended chivalry and courtesy and adorned with the mild luster of a religious faith.

He was frank and open, plain and sincere, speaking only what he thought without reserve, and promising only what he designed to perform.

As he was plain and sincere, so he was firm and steady in his purposes; courteous and affable, he was not influenced by servile compliance to his company, approving or condemning as might be most agreeable to them.  He was a man of courage and constancy, qualities which, after all, are the ornaments and defense of a man.

He had in the highest degree the air, manners, and address of a man of quality; politeness with ease, dignity without pride, and firmness without the least alloy of roughness.  He loved refined society, but he had great respect and sympathy for those who had been reared in simple habits and the toils of life.

He possessed an even and equal temper of mind.  Those who best knew him can testify of him what has often been asserted of his great father, that they never heard an acrimonious speech fall from his lips; that his whole temper was so controlled by justice and generosity that he was never known to disparage with an envious breath the fame of another or to withhold due praise of another’s worth.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Memorial Addresses on the Life and Character of William H. F. Lee (A Representative from Virginia) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.