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1890, Henry James, chapter 47, in The Tragic Muse:
[H]e had a damnable suppleness and a gift of immediate response, a readiness to oblige, that made him seem to take up causes which he really left lying, enabled him to learn enough about them in an hour to have all the air of having converted them to his use. . . . He was at all events too clever by half, since this pernicious overflow had wrecked most of his attempts.
1914, E. W. Hornung, chapter 8, in The Crime Doctor:
The poor devil was too clever by half, and made a big mistake for each of his strokes of genius.
Historians generally agree that Roosevelt was too clever by half, and that he miscalculated badly in assuming that he had the political muscle to alter the size of the Court.