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researches with public functions.
In 1849 he returned to this country — a Whig administration having been elected — and took up his residence in New York.
In February, 1866, he was selected by Congress to pronounce a eulogy on
President Lincoln, and in the following year he was appointed Minister to
Prussia, being afterwards successively accredited to the
North German Confederation and the
German Empire.
In these positions he succeeded in effecting some important treaty provisions in respect to the rights of naturalized German citizens residing in
Germany.
He was recalled at his own request in 1874, and thenceforward resided in
Washington in the winter, and at
Newport, Rhode Island, in summer.
Dividing his life between these two abodes, he passed his later years in a sort of existence more common in Europe than here,--the well-earned dignity of the scholar who has also been, in his day, a man of affairs, and who is yet too energetic to repose upon his laurels or waste much time upon merely enjoying the meed of fame he has won. In both his winter and summer abodes he had something of the flattering position of First Citizen; he was free of all sets, an honored member of all circles.
His manners were often mentioned as “courtly,” but they never quite rose to the level of either