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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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a velvet cushion, and very handsome.

Stalin rose to his feet, and tears streamed down his face. He took the cushion with the sword on it, and bent forward and kissed it--you know, a gesture completely Oriental but appropriate for the occasion. I mean, what else would you do?

That made a great impression on Roosevelt--the fact that the fellow had manners, you know, of a deeply Oriental European kind. It wasn't all this roughneck Bolshevism that came out of him. It was something else, too. And it was on this occasion that Roosevelt, describing Stalin and this excellent gesture of elegance, had also described the way in which he greeted Sarah Churchill who went along with her father, when she came out and they were sitting around after lunch or something. It was an informal moment, and she came out onto the porch where they were sitting in the sun, and Churchill said to Stalin, “Marshal, may I introduce my daughter Sarah?”

Stalin had leaped to his feet at once, taken Sarah's hand, bent over and kissed it in the most elegant court manner style. As Roosevelt said to me, “Making all the rest of us look like country bumpkins, because we greeted her as ‘Hi, Sarah, hello Sarah.' Stalin alone had the manners to cope with that.”

“You see,” he said, “Stalin has something else in him besides this revolutionist, Bolshevist thing--there's something else in him, something else in the elements of his nature.”





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