Wednesday, May 29, 2019

The Meansure of a Man (A Closer Look at Five Great Men) :: essays research papers

How does one determine the measure of a man? His accomplishments? His ancestry? His financial charge? Or do we look deep into the heart and soul of that man and determine the weight of his values, his dreams and what he has stood for in the grand scheme of things?We will respect the lives of six important figures in the shaping of our country. With this evaluation, we risk becoming critic and judge, but in an attempt to go beyond those things both tangible and measurable, maybe we will be forgiven.Thomas Jefferson called him, a wise, a good and a great man. Patrick Henry, when asked who he thought was the greatest man in Congress, replied, if you speak of firm information and sound judgment, Colonel Washington is the greatest man on that floor.Despite his height and noble bearing, Washington was a quiet man who pondered long to begin with decisions. Even with little schooling, he was an avid student of math and science. At a very early age, he was aware and respectful of decoru m and manners. At 13, he copied the one hundred and ten Rules of Civility and Decent Behavior in Company and Conversations, and lived by them. His mathematical and science skills coupled with attributes of respect, responsibility and long suit secured him a position as a surveyor in Virginia at only sixteen.These same qualities, planted as deeply into his soul as the trees on his forefathers farm, are what gave him the courage and perseverance to plunge headlong into a life filled with some of the greatest achievements in American history.At 20 years old, Washington was plodding through one thousand miles of snow, swimming ice-clogged rivers and dodging the bullets of angry Native Americans only to carry a admonishment message to an unwelcoming French commander in the Ohio River Valley. He was shot once, and walked one hundred miles when his horse got too weak to go on. But he ideal the task laid before him. In this first mission, courage and perseverance were metals he earned to wear on his heart.Two years later he commanded the British army in the French and Indian War. As Lieutenant Colonel of the Virginia forces, he captured twenty-one French and killed ten, loosing only one man in the process. In this, he added two metals, strength and wisdom. Military battles dominated Washingtons years, and the battles both won and lost created the warp and weft of the fabric of his life.

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