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ered, and he yet cherished the hope of becoming one day President of the United States. A remarkable man is George Francis Train; perhaps "one of the most remarkable men in the country." He will go further, I think, and fare worse. Yet he seems to have his clique here, his set, his coteries, his "crowd," and is a personage.--But the clerk at Willard's — and an American hotel clerk is about the most trustworthy critic of human character whom you can well consult — when he told me that Mr. Train was considered a "dreadfully smart man," significantly tapped his forehead as he spoke. Lunacy. Cela n'empes hepas. Lunacy in an American politician does not seem to count, and we may be approaching the dark millennium foreshadowed by the poet of the "roughs," Wait. Whitman; the time when there is to be nothing but "money, business, railroad, exports, imports, custom precedents, pallor, dyspepsia, smut, ignorance, and unbelief;" when judges and criminals shall be transposed and t