Capitolo 36
his/her character. He didn't have nothing but him of which to think. His
superiority was, indeed, true and incontestable; he was the
classical ornament of the party of anti-slavery; their pride in him
it was boundless, and their admiration clear.
The boy Henry adored him, and if he ever concerned some more old man
man as a personal friend, was the Mr. Sumner. The relationship of Mr.
Sumner in the family was nearer than some relationship far of
blood. None of his/her/their uncles it drew near to such intimacy. Sumner was
the ideal boy of the greatness; the tallest product of nature and
art. The only guilt of such model was its superiority that
challenged imitation. To the twelve year-old boy, his/her father, Dr.
Palfrey, the Mr. Dana both men, like more or less that that him him
it would become; but the Mr. Sumner was a different order--heroic.
As the boy started to be ten or twelve years old, his/her father
the gives a write-table in one of the alcoves in his/her Boston
library, and there, winter after winter, Henry worked on his
Latin grammar and he/she listened to these four gentlemen that discuss the
course of politics of anti-slavery. The discussions were always
serious; the Ground Party Free him rather seriously taken; and
they was usual because the Mr. Adams had undertaken to compile a
newspaper as the organ of these gentlemen that you/they came to discuss
his/her policy and expression. To the same duration the Mr. Adams was compiling
the "Jobs" of his/her grandfather John Adams, and it made the boy
reads texts for test-correction. In after years his/her father
he sometimes complained that, as a reader of Novanglus and
Massachusettensis, Henry had shown very small conscience of
punctuation; but the boy only concerned this part of the life of school
as a warning, if he ever started to write dull discussions in the
newspapers, to try to be dull in of the different way from that of
his/her great-grandfather. He/she anchors the discussions in the Liberal in Boston
you/he/she was brought above in very the same style like those of John Adams and