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Theodore Roosevelt by Edmund Lester Pearson
page 60 of 124 (48%)
Croker thought that the people were not fit to rule; theirs was
much the same idea that King George the Third and the German
Kaiser had. The best and wisest men have had to admit the strength
of the Boss and try to deal with him as well as they could;
Abraham Lincoln even had to appoint one to his Cabinet. The Boss
creeps into power while the people are asleep.

Roosevelt pointed out that it is not hard for a man to be good if
he lives entirely by himself. Nor is it difficult for him to get
things done, if he is careless about right and wrong. The hard
thing, yet the one which must be demanded of the public man, is to
get useful things done, and to keep straight all the while. When
Roosevelt was elected Governor, John Hay, the Secretary of State,
wrote to him:

"You have already shown that a man may be absolutely honest and
yet practical; a reformer by instinct and a wise politician;
brave, bold and uncompromising, and yet not a wild ass of the
desert. The exhibition made by the professional independents in
voting against you for no reason on earth except that somebody
else was voting for you, is a lesson that is worth its cost."
[Footnote: "Autobiography," p. 296.]

The year 1900 was the year of a Presidential election. Mr.
McKinley was to run again on the Republican ticket, and later it
appeared that Mr. Bryan would oppose him again, as he had in 1896.
The Republican Vice-President, Mr. Hobart, had died in office, so
the Republicans had to find someone to go on the ticket with
President McKinley. Roosevelt was mentioned for the office, and
Platt warmly agreed, hoping to get him out of New York politics.
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