[The Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln by Francis Fisher Browne]@TWC D-Link bookThe Every-day Life of Abraham Lincoln CHAPTER I 74/86
'Smoot,' said Lincoln, after a steady survey of his person, 'I am very much disappointed in you; I expected to see an old Probst of a fellow.' (Probst, it appears, was the most hideous specimen of humanity in all that country).
'Yes,' replied Smoot, 'and I am equally disappointed, for I expected to see a good-looking man when I saw you.' A few neat compliments like the foregoing laid the foundation of a lasting intimacy between the two men, and in his present distress Lincoln knew no one who would be more likely than Smoot to respond favorably to an application for money." After he was elected to the Legislature, says Mr.Smoot, "he came to my house one day in company with Hugh Armstrong.
Says he, 'Smoot, did you vote for me ?' I told him I did.
'Well,' says he, 'you must loan me money to buy suitable clothing, for I want to make a decent appearance in the Legislature.' I then loaned him two hundred dollars, which he returned to me according to promise." Lincoln's old friend W.G.Greene relates that while he was a student at the Illinois College at Jacksonville he became acquainted with Richard Yates, then also a student.
One summer while Yates was his guest during the vacation, Greene took him up to Salem and made him acquainted with Lincoln.
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