Thank you for all the links and the explanations about the paintings. That's one of the best thing about our discussions - we mention something, or have a question, and BEHOLD there is the picture, or the answer, or an addendum, on the web!
Going back over the chapters as a review - Willis saying he recognizes "the American face,.......The distinguishing feature, he decided, was the 'the independent, self-possessed bearing of a man unused to look up to anyone as his superior in rank, united to the inquisitive, sensitive, communicative expression which is the index to our national character."
Has the rest of the world caught up with that attitude, and therefore, the American less identifiable? Was the rest of the world so bowed down at the time that Americans less class- consciousness stands out? I think that's probably so.
Don't you love the use of words, the picture he "paints" with words, in Morse's toast to Lafayette? ".......he stands there now. The winds have swept by him, the waves dashed around him, the snows of winter have lighted upon him, but still he is there......." (Pg 95)
I am amazed at how many times we have been given the image, in paintings, or words, of people in the past who are reading and walking at the same time (pg 121) "Bowditch......walked mornings and evenings, often reading Virgil." Can any of you do that? Did the same mishaps occur as today with people "walking while texting"; bumping into people, falling into fountains, walking into something? I can't imagine trying to walk and read a book, but it is said often enough in historic accounts, that it must have happened frequently.