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Frances PerkinsFrances Perkins
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If you know anything about anthropology, the studies of the anthropologists, Sir James Frazer's Golden Bough, Arnold Toynbee's review of the behavior of primitive races, you will see that that's a deep-seated human instinct to have a physical contact of some sort with the ruler, with the great one. Of course we know the excesses to which that led in primitive times, and even in not so primitive times. It reminded me of the terrific enthusiasm, for instance, shown to Queen Mary in England, as a kind of a living representative of something that bestows special virtue on the British people. I've seen crowds rush forward to try to touch her in that same way that they did to Al Smith.

It was a very impressive thing. They did try to touch the hem of his garment. The enthusiasm was incredible and tearful. I began to think, “If people feel like this, then that shows he's won them.” That was in St. Louis. That scene, I'm told, though I didn't see any other public reception, except in New York, which would not have counted because it was natural, was repeated in a good many cities. This wasn't done in every city, but in a great many cities.

There were a good many Roman Catholics involved in it and a great many Roman Catholics had a deep sense of gratitude and almost feeling that it was a miracle that one





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