Dylan Matthews

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Now thirty-nine, Sumner had lost his father and four of his siblings, and again, he struggled to convey his grief (with Mary’s case being the one exception). He wrote of Horace’s death with a sense of detachment, almost as if his brother were a stranger: “All who knew him speak warmly of his gentle, loving, and utterly unselfish nature,” he observed in a stilted summary.
The Great Abolitionist: Charles Sumner and the Fight for a More Perfect Union
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