When Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire had done with his mimicries of sorrow he entered the Senate,
and having first referred to the authority of the senators and the concurrence
of the soldiery, he then dwelt on the counsels and examples which he had
to guide him in the right administration of empire. "His boyhood," he said,
"had not had the taint of civil wars or domestic feuds, and he brought
with him no hatreds, no sense of wrong, no desire of vengeance." He then
sketched the plan of
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