Selected Letters of Theodore Roosevelt. Theodore Roosevelt
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Название: Selected Letters of Theodore Roosevelt

Автор: Theodore Roosevelt

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Документальная литература

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isbn: 9788027241750

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СКАЧАТЬ rel="nofollow" href="#uf436046b-2c73-5fba-b04d-c95c4d86314e">What the President Saw at Panama

       On the Way to Porto Rico

       What He Saw in Porto Rico

       Sickness of Archie

       At the Jamestown Exposition

       General Kuroki

       Temporary Absence of Skip

       Death of Skip

       Quentin's Snake Adventure

       Trials of a Travelling President

       Changes of Three Centuries

       Peculiarities of Mississippi Steamboats

       The Lone Cat of the Camp

       Shooting the Bear

       Quentin's "Exquisite Jest"

       Tom Pinch

       "Martin Chuzzlewit"

       Good Reading for Pacifists

       Quentin as a Ball-Player

       Four Sheepish Small Boys

       John Burroughs and the Flying Squirrels

       Beauty of White House Grounds

       Quentin and a Beehive

       Quentin and Turner

       Quentin and the Pig

       A Presidential Fall

       More About Quentin

       Tribute to Kermit

       Longing for Home

       The Last Hunt

       Quentin Grown-Up

      Introduction

       Table of Contents

      Most of the letters in this volume were written by Theodore Roosevelt to his children during a period of more than twenty years. A few others are included that he wrote to friends or relatives about the children. He began to write to them in their early childhood, and continued to do so regularly till they reached maturity. Whenever he was separated from them, in the Spanish War, or on a hunting trip, or because they were at school, he sent them these messages of constant thought and love, for they were never for a moment out of his mind and heart. Long before they were able to read he sent them what they called "picture letters," with crude drawings of his own in illustration of the written text, drawings precisely adapted to the childish imagination and intelligence. That the little recipients cherished these delightful missives is shown by the tender care with which they preserved them from destruction. They are in good condition after many years of loving usage. A few of them are reproduced in these pages—written at different periods as each new child appeared in the household.

      These early letters are marked by the same quality that distinguishes all his letters to his children. From the youngest to the eldest, he wrote to them always as his equals. As they advanced in life the mental level of intercourse was raised as they grew in intelligence and knowledge, but it was always as equals that he addressed them. He was always their playmate and boon companion, whether they were toddling infants taking their first faltering steps, or growing schoolboys, or youths standing at the threshold of life. Their games were his games, their joys those of his own heart. He was ready to romp with them in the old barn at Sagamore Hill, play "tickley" at bedtime, join in their pillow fights, or play hide-and-seek with them, either at Sagamore Hill or in the White House. He was the same chosen and joyous companion always and everywhere. Occasionally he was disturbed for a moment about possible injury to his Presidential dignity. Describing a romp in the old barn at Sagamore Hill in the summer of 1903, he said in one of his letters that under the insistence of the children he had joined in it because: "I had not the heart to refuse, but really it seems, to put it mildly, rather odd for a stout, elderly President to be bouncing over hayricks in a wild effort to get to goal before an active midget of a competitor, aged nine years. However, it was really great fun."

      It was because he at heart regarded it as "great fun" and was in complete accord with the children that they delighted in him as a playmate. In the same spirit, in January, 1905, he took a squad of nine boys, including three of his own, on what they called a "scramble" through Rock Creek Park, in Washington, which meant traversing the most difficult places in it. The boys had permission to make the trip alone, but they insisted upon his company. "I am really touched," he wrote afterward to the parents of two of the visiting boys, "at the way in which your children as well as my own treat me as a friend and playmate. It has its comic side. They were all bent upon having me take them; they obviously felt that my presence was needed to give zest to the entertainment. I do not think that one of them saw anything incongruous in the President's getting as bedaubed with mud as they got, or in my wiggling and clambering around jutting rocks, through cracks, and up what were really small cliff faces, just like the rest of them; and whenever any one of them beat me at any point, he felt and expressed simple and whole-hearted СКАЧАТЬ