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Linn Boyd's Sine die Address of April 11 1853

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Sine Die Address to the United States House of Representatives April 11 1853
by Linn Boyd
139196Sine Die Address to the United States House of Representatives April 11 1853Linn Boyd

GENTLEMEN OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:

I may be allowed this occasion to say that, in undertaking to discharge the duties of the Chair, I relied for success rather upon your forbearance and kindly aid than upon any poor abilities of my own. That reliance, I am happy to say, has not failed me. On the contrary, the untiring efforts I feel I have made to perform the task in a becoming manner, have been met and sustained with a degree of liberality seldom equalled in any deliberative body. A striking illustration of this is seen in the fact, that notwithstanding the multiplied questions of parliamentary law and usage which have arisen, and in despite of errors into which I may have fallen, each and all the decisions of the Chair, with a single exception, (and that upon a question of minor importance,) have been generously sustained by this body. And as a further mark of respect and kindness, you have been pleased to adopt a resolution approving of my general conduct as the Presiding Officer of this body. In all this, I feel that I have been peculiarly fortunate; and for it all I beg you will accept my most sincere thanks.

Allow me to congratulate you, gentlemen, upon the harmony and personal kindness which have so generally prevailed throughout this Hall. It must remain a source of unmixed pleasure to us all, that our conflicts of opinion here, however fierce they may occasionally have been, were not allowed materially to disturb our social relations ; and that now, having finished our work, we part in peace. This House stands adjourned sine die.

Linn Boyd Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Journal Of the house of Representatives the United States: Second Session of the Thirty-Second Congress

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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