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Home  »  Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen  »  Page 111

Jacob A. Riis (1849–1914). Theodore Roosevelt, the Citizen. 1904.

Page 111

and ask him his foundation for such an assertion. Presumably, he never receives my letter, for he never answers it. I write him again, with no better results. I then publish a contradiction in the newspapers. Then some enterprising correspondent interviews him, and he states the question is true, but it is below his dignity to reply to Mr. Roosevelt. As a matter of fact, he either does know or ought to know that no such question has ever been asked.”
  I wonder now, does any one of the editors who loudly wail over the “weak surrender” of the President, these days, to malign forces of their imagination, really believe that of the man who single-handed bade defiance to the whole executive force of the Government, when the knowledge that he was right was his only weapon; or is it just buncombe like the Senator’s dignity?
  And yet, on the other hand, when he had to do with a different element, honest but not yet persuaded, note the change from blow to argument. I quote from a speech he made to a club of business men in the thick of the fight:
  “We hear much of the question whether the Government should take control of the