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First published January 1, 2002
By the time he entered Harvard he was sufficiently robust and full of a zest for life, with an income greater than the salary of Harvard’s president, Charles W. Eliot. However, college presidents were not then well compensated, and many of the gilded youth of Boston and new York enjoyed greater allowances than young Theodore. But he did well enough for himself; he had his own rooms off campus and a horse and buggy with which to visit the beautiful Alice Lee, a Brahmin from Chestnut Hill...and he eagerly cultivated students of his own social background; it would take him a couple of years to shed his inherited snobbishness, and we find him writing home that he stood nineteenth in his class, with only one “gentleman” ahead of him. But he was well enough liked, if considered a bit eccentric—his friend Robert Bacon would not visit his rooms because of the smell of his zoological specimens—and he was duly elected to the exclusive Porcellian Club.Although Auchincloss grants that Roosevelt can be made to look ridiculous by an unkind culling of his most extreme statements, since “it was his nature to be heartily emphatic, to make his point by gross overstatement,” believes also that he “was capable of the most profound political shrewdness, of a deep humanitarian concern, of a hatred of hypocrisy and deceit and a greatness of heart, and that he was “a political idealist” who believed in “astute and well considered compromise,” and for this reason “deserves his rank among our great presidents.”