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OYSTER BAY; NEW YORK;



                                    August 5; 1902。 



MY DEAR AMBASSADOR WHITE:







It is with real regret that I accept your resignation; for I



speak what is merely a self…evident truth when I say that we



shall have to look with some apprehension to what your successor



does; whoever that successor may be; lest he fall short of the



standard you have set。







It is a very great thing for a man to be able to feel; as you



will feel when on your seventieth birthday you prepare to leave



the Embassy; that you have been able to serve your country as it



has been served by but a very limited number of people in your



generation。 You have done much for it in word and in deed。 You



have adhered to a lofty ideal and yet have been absolutely



practical and; therefore; efficient; so that you are a perpetual



example to young men how to avoid alike the Scylla of



indifference and the Charybdis of efficiency for the wrong。。。。







With regards and warm respect and admiration;                     



         Faithfully yours;



                     (Signed) THEODORE ROOSEVELT。 







HON。 ANDREW D。 WHITE;



      Ambassador to Germany;



           Berlin; Germany。











WHITE HOUSE;



WASHINGTON。 







OYSTER BAY; NEW YORK;                                        



September 15; 1902







MY DEAR MR。 AMBASSADOR:







Will you read the inclosed on your seventieth birthday? I have



sealed it so you can break the seal then。                         



Faithfully yours;                     



(Signed) THEODORE ROOSEVELT。







HON。 ANDREW D。 WHITE;



      U。 S。 Ambassador;



           Berlin; Germany。















WHITE HOUSE;



WASHINGTON。                                    







OYSTER BAY;                                         



September 15; 1902。







MY DEAR MR。 AMBASSADOR:







On the day you open this you will be seventy years old。 I cannot



forbear writing you a line to express the obligation which all



the American people are under to you。 As a diplomat you have come



in that class whose foremost exponents are Benjamin Franklin and



Charles Francis Adams; and which numbers also in its ranks men



like Morris; Livingston; and Pinckney。 As a politician; as a



publicist; and as a college president you have served your



country as only a limited number of men are able to serve it。 You



have taught by precept; and you have taught by practice。 We are



all of us better because you have lived and worked; and I send



you now not merely my warmest well…wishes and congratulations;



but thanks from all our people for all that you have done for us



in the past。                     Faithfully yours;                



         (Signed) THEODORE ROOSEVELT。 







HON。 ANDREW D。 WHITE;



      U。 S。 Ambassador;



           Berlin; Germany。















FROM THE SECRETARY OF STATE。                                      



NEWBURY; N。 H。;                                         







August 3; 1902。







DEAR MR。 WHITE:







I have received your very kind letter of the 21st July; which is



the first intimation I have had of your intention to resign your



post of ambassador to Germany。 I am sorry to hear the country is



to lose your services in the place you have filled with such



distinguished ability and dignity。 It is a great thing to sayas



it is simple truth to say itthat you have; during your



residence in Berlin; increased the respect felt for America not



only in Germany but in all Europe。 You have thus rendered a great



public service;independent of all the details of your valuable



work。 The man is indeed fortunate who can go through a long



career without blame; and how much more fortunate if he adds



great achievement to blamelessness。 You have the singular



felicity of having been always a fighting man; and having gone



through life without a wound。







I congratulate you most on your physical and mental ability to



enjoy the rest you have chosen and earned。。。。







My wife joins me in cordial regards to Mrs。 White; and I am



always;      



            



Faithfully yours;                               



(Signed) JOHN HAY。











DEPARTMENT OF STATE;



WASHINGTON;







November 7; 1902。







DEAR MR。 WHITE:







I cannot let the day pass without sending you a word of cordial



congratulation on the beginning of what I hope will be the most



delightful part of your life。 Browning long ago sang; 〃The best



is yet to be;〃 and; certainly; if world…wide fame troops of



friends; a consciousness of well…spent years; and a great career



filled with righteous achievement are constituents of happiness;



you have everything that the heart of man could wish。             



       Yours faithfully;                     



(Signed) JOHN HAY。  







His Excellency ANDREW D。 WHITE; etc。; etc。; etc。











FROM THE CHANCELLOR OF THE GERMAN EMPIRE。



                               Wilhelm Str。 77。







MY DEAR AMBASSADOR:







On the occasion of this memorable day; I beg to send you my best



wishes。 May God grant you perfect health and happiness。 Be



assured that I always shall remember the excellent relations



which have joined us during so many years; and accept the



assurance of the highest esteem and respect of your most



affectionate                                         



BULOW。 



7 Nov。 1902。















CHAPTER XLIV







MY RECOLLECTIONS OF WILLIAM II1879…1903







At various times since my leaving the Berlin Embassy various



friends have said to me; 〃Why not give us something definite



regarding the German Emperor?〃 And on my pleading sundry



difficulties and objections; some of my advisers have recalled



many excellent precedents; both American and foreign; and others



have cited the dictum; 〃The man I don't like is the man I don't



know。〃







The latter argument has some force with me。 Much ill feeling



between the United States and Germany has had its root in



misunderstandings; and; as one of the things nearest my heart



since my student days has been a closer moral and intellectual



relation between the two countries; there is; perhaps; a reason



for throwing into these misunderstandings some light from my own



experience。







My first recollections of the present Emperor date from the



beginning of my stay as minister at Berlin; in 1879。 The official



presentations to the Emperor and Empress of that period having



been made; there came in regular order those to the crown prince



and princess; and on my way to them there fell into my hands a



newspaper account of the unveiling of the monument to the eminent



painter Cornelius; at Dusseldorf; the main personage in the



ceremony being the young Prince William; then a student at Bonn。



His speech was given at some length; and it impressed me。 There



was a certain reality of conviction and aspiration in it which



seemed to me so radically different from the perfunctory



utterances usual on such occasions that; at the close of the



official interview with his father and mother; I alluded to it。



Their response touched me。 There came at once a kindly smile upon



the father's face; and a glad sparkle into the mother's eyes:



pleasing was it to hear her; while showing satisfaction and



pride; speak of her anxiety before the good news came; and of the



embarrassments in the way of her son a

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