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Massachusetts’ scholarly Edward Everett once concluded an elegant speech in the House with a long quotation in Latin from Tacitus and then took his seat.

No sooner was he seated than up sprang a burly Congressman from the West. Obviously irritated by Everett’s erudition, the Westerner, a former Indian agent, began pouring out a vehement harangue in Choctaw. After a while the Speaker called him to order. “I don’t see why my freedom of speech should be abridged,” protested the Westerner. “You let the gentleman from Massachusetts run on, and I didn’t understand the first word of his lingo any better than he does mine.”

Reporting the incident, one journal expressed the belief that “it struck the death-knell of further classical quotations in Congress.”


Source:

Boller, Paul F. “On the Floor.” Congressional Anecdotes. New York: Oxford UP, 1991. 192. Print.

Original Source Listed:

Clark, Quarter Century of Politics, II, 302.


Further Reading:

Edward Everett

Publius Cornelius Tacitus / Gaius Cornelius Tacitus

Chahta / Choctaw

>Massachusetts’ scholarly [Edward Everett](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/Edward_Everett_daguerreotype.png) once concluded an elegant speech in the House with a long quotation in Latin from [Tacitus](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d3/Wien-_Parlament-Tacitus.jpg) and then took his seat. >No sooner was he seated than up sprang a burly Congressman from the West. Obviously irritated by Everett’s erudition, the Westerner, a former Indian agent, began pouring out a vehement harangue in Choctaw. After a while the Speaker called him to order. “I don’t see why my freedom of speech should be abridged,” protested the Westerner. “You let the gentleman from Massachusetts run on, and I didn’t understand the first word of his lingo any better than he does mine.” >Reporting the incident, one journal expressed the belief that “it struck the death-knell of further classical quotations in Congress.” ___________________________ **Source:** Boller, Paul F. “On the Floor.” *Congressional Anecdotes*. New York: Oxford UP, 1991. 192. Print. **Original Source Listed:** Clark, *Quarter Century of Politics*, II, 302. __________________________ **Further Reading:** [Edward Everett](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Everett) [Publius Cornelius Tacitus / Gaius Cornelius Tacitus](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus) [Chahta / Choctaw](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choctaw)

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