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Portrait of Charles Russell Lowell

Charles Russell Lowell

A highly educated and respected Union officer who died in battle.

From "Hero Tales from American History" by Lodge, Henry Cabot

Core Belief

"Lowell believes in service, selflessness, and the importance of fighting for what is right, even at great personal cost."

Worldview

Lowell sees the world as a place where individuals have a responsibility to use their talents and resources to make a positive impact. He values simplicity and honesty, and he is wary of wealth and ambition.

Personality

Lowell is depicted as a man of great intellect, courage, and a strong sense of duty. He is described as humble and unpretentious, more concerned with serving his country and helping others than with personal gain or recognition.

In Their Own Words

"I cannot say I take any great pleasure in the contemplation of the future. I fancy you feel much as I do about the profitableness of a soldier's life, and would not think of trying it, were it not for a muddled and twisted idea that somehow or other this fight was going to be one in which decent men ought to engage for the sake of humanity,--I use the word in its ordinary sense."
"Wars are bad, but there are many things far worse. Anything immediately comfortable in our affairs I don't see; but comfortable times are not the ones that make a nation great."
"Don't grow rich; if you once begin, you will find it much more difficult to be a useful citizen. Don't seek office, but don't 'disremember' that the 'useful citizen' always holds his time, his trouble, his money, and his life ready at the hint of his country."

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