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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Helen Nicolay
+ </title>
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+
+Project Gutenberg's The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Helen Nicolay
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln
+
+Author: Helen Nicolay
+
+Release Date: September 21, 2008 [EBook #1815]
+Last Updated: February 4, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOYS' LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE BOYS' LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Helen Nicolay
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Contents
+ </h3>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I. A PRESIDENT'S CHILDHOOD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> II. CAPTAIN LINCOLN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> III. LAWYER LINCOLN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV. CONGRESSMAN LINCOLN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> V. THE CHAMPION OF FREEDOM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI. THE NEW PRESIDENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII. LINCOLN AND THE WAR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII. UNSUCCESSFUL GENERALS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX. FREEDOM FOR THE SLAVES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> X. THE MAN WHO WAS PRESIDENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> XI. THE TURNING POINT OF THE WAR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XII. THE CONQUEROR OF A GREAT REBELLION
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XIII. THE FOURTEENTH OF APRIL </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ I. A PRESIDENT'S CHILDHOOD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Abraham Lincoln's forefathers were pioneers&mdash;men who left their homes
+ to open up the wilderness and make the way plain for others to follow
+ them. For one hundred and seventy years, ever since the first American
+ Lincoln came from England to Massachusetts in 1638, they had been moving
+ slowly westward as new settlements were made in the forest. They faced
+ solitude, privation, and all the dangers and hardships that beset men who
+ take up their homes where only beasts and wild men have had homes before;
+ but they continued to press steadily forward, though they lost fortune and
+ sometimes even life itself, in their westward progress. Back in
+ Pennsylvania and New Jersey some of the Lincolns had been men of wealth
+ and influence. In Kentucky, where the future President was born on
+ February 12, 1809, his parents lived in deep poverty Their home was a
+ small log cabin of the rudest kind, and nothing seemed more unlikely than
+ that their child, coming into the world in such humble surroundings, was
+ destined to be the greatest man of his time. True to his race, he also was
+ to be a pioneer&mdash;not indeed, like his ancestors, a leader into new
+ woods and unexplored fields, but a pioneer of a nobler and grander sort,
+ directing the thoughts of men ever toward the right, and leading the
+ American people, through difficulties and dangers and a mighty war, to
+ peace and freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of this wonderful man begins and ends with a tragedy, for his
+ grandfather, also named Abraham, was killed by a shot from an Indian's
+ rifle while peaceably at work with his three sons on the edge of their
+ frontier clearing. Eighty-one years later the President himself met death
+ by an assassin's bullet. The murderer of one was a savage of the forest;
+ the murderer of the other that far more cruel thing, a savage of
+ civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Indian's shot laid the pioneer farmer low, his second son,
+ Josiah, ran to a neighboring fort for help, and Mordecai, the eldest,
+ hurried to the cabin for his rifle. Thomas, a child of six years, was left
+ alone beside the dead body of his father; and as Mordecai snatched the gun
+ from its resting-place over the door of the cabin, he saw, to his horror,
+ an Indian in his war-paint, just stooping to seize the child. Taking quick
+ aim at a medal on the breast of the savage, he fired, and the Indian fell
+ dead. The little boy, thus released, ran to the house, where Mordecai,
+ firing through the loopholes, kept the Indians at bay until help arrived
+ from the fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this child Thomas who grew up to be the father of President Abraham
+ Lincoln. After the murder of his father the fortunes of the little family
+ grew rapidly worse, and doubtless because of poverty, as well as by reason
+ of the marriage of his older brothers and sisters, their home was broken
+ up, and Thomas found himself, long before he was grown, a wandering
+ laboring boy. He lived for a time with an uncle as his hired servant, and
+ later he learned the trade of carpenter. He grew to manhood entirely
+ without education, and when he was twenty-eight years old could neither
+ read nor write. At that time he married Nancy Hanks, a good-looking young
+ woman of twenty-three, as poor as himself, but so much better off as to
+ learning that she was able to teach her husband to sign his own name.
+ Neither of them had any money, but living cost little on the frontier in
+ those days, and they felt that his trade would suffice to earn all that
+ they should need. Thomas took his bride to a tiny house in Elizabethtown,
+ Kentucky, where they lived for about a year, and where a daughter was born
+ to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they moved to a small farm thirteen miles from Elizabethtown, which
+ they bought on credit, the country being yet so new that there were places
+ to be had for mere promises to pay. Farms obtained on such terms were
+ usually of very poor quality, and this one of Thomas Lincoln's was no
+ exception to the rule. A cabin ready to be occupied stood on it, however;
+ and not far away, hidden in a pretty clump of trees and bushes, was a fine
+ spring of water, because of which the place was known as Rock Spring Farm.
+ In the cabin on this farm the future President of the United States was
+ born on February 12, 1809, and here the first four years of his life were
+ spent. Then the Lincolns moved to a much bigger and better farm on Knob
+ Creek, six miles from Hodgensville, which Thomas Lincoln bought, again on
+ credit, selling the larger part of it soon afterward to another purchaser.
+ Here they remained until Abraham was seven years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this early part of his childhood almost nothing is known. He never
+ talked of these days, even to his most intimate friends. To the pioneer
+ child a farm offered much that a town lot could not give him&mdash;space;
+ woods to roam in; Knob Creek with its running water and its deep, quiet
+ pools for a playfellow; berries to be hunted for in summer and nuts in
+ autumn; while all the year round birds and small animals pattered across
+ his path to people the solitude in place of human companions. The boy had
+ few comrades. He wandered about playing his lonesome little games, and
+ when these were finished returned to the small and cheerless cabin. Once,
+ when asked what he remembered about the War of 1812 with Great Britain, he
+ replied: "Only this: I had been fishing one day and had caught a little
+ fish, which I was taking home. I met a soldier in the road, and having
+ always been told at home that we must be good to soldiers, I gave him my
+ fish." It is only a glimpse into his life, but it shows the solitary,
+ generous child and the patriotic household.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was while living on this farm that Abraham and his sister Sarah first
+ began going to A-B-C schools. Their earliest teacher was Zachariah Riney,
+ who taught near the Lincoln cabin; the next was Caleb Hazel, four miles
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the tragedy that darkened his childhood, Thomas Lincoln seems
+ to have been a cheery, indolent, good-natured man. By means of a little
+ farming and occasional jobs at his trade, he managed to supply his family
+ with the absolutely necessary food and shelter, but he never got on in the
+ world. He found it much easier to gossip with his friends, or to dream
+ about rich new lands in the West, than to make a thrifty living in the
+ place where he happened to be. The blood of the pioneer was in his veins
+ too&mdash;the desire to move westward; and hearing glowing accounts of the
+ new territory of Indiana, he resolved to go and see it for himself. His
+ skill as a carpenter made this not only possible but reasonably cheap, and
+ in the fall of 1816 he built himself a little flatboat, launched it half a
+ mile from his cabin, at the mouth of Knob Creek on the waters of the
+ Rolling Fork, and floated on it down that stream to Salt River, down Salt
+ River to the Ohio, and down the Ohio to a landing called Thompson's Ferry
+ on the Indiana shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixteen miles out from the river, near a small stream known as Pigeon
+ Creek, he found a spot in the forest that suited him; and as his boat
+ could not be made to float up-stream, he sold it, stored his goods with an
+ obliging settler, and trudged back to Kentucky, all the way on foot, to
+ fetch his wife and children&mdash;Sarah, who was now nine years old, and
+ Abraham, seven. This time the journey to Indiana was made with two horses,
+ used by the mother and children for riding, and to carry their little
+ camping outfit for the night. The distance from their old home was, in a
+ straight line, little more than fifty miles, but they had to go double
+ that distance because of the very few roads it was possible to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reaching the Ohio River and crossing to the Indiana shore, Thomas Lincoln
+ hired a wagon which carried his family and their belongings the remaining
+ sixteen miles through the forest to the spot he had chosen&mdash;a piece
+ of heavily wooded land, one and a half miles east of what has since become
+ the village of Gentryville in Spencer County. The lateness of the autumn
+ made it necessary to put up a shelter as quickly as possible, and he built
+ what was known on the frontier as a half-faced camp, about fourteen feet
+ square. This differed from a cabin in that it was closed on only three
+ sides, being quite open to the weather on the fourth. A fire was usually
+ made in front of the open side, and thus the necessity for having a
+ chimney was done away with. Thomas Lincoln doubtless intended this only
+ for a temporary shelter, and as such it would have done well enough in
+ pleasant summer weather; but it was a rude provision against the storms
+ and winds of an Indiana winter. It shows his want of energy that the
+ family remained housed in this poor camp for nearly a whole year; but,
+ after all, he must not be too hastily blamed. He was far from idle. A
+ cabin was doubtless begun, and there was the very heavy work of clearing
+ away the timber&mdash;cutting down large trees, chopping them into
+ suitable lengths, and rolling them together into great heaps to be burned,
+ or of splitting them into rails to fence the small field upon which he
+ managed to raise a patch of corn and other things during the following
+ summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though only seven years old, Abraham was unusually large and strong for
+ his age, and he helped his father in all this heavy labor of clearing the
+ farm. In after years, Mr. Lincoln said that an ax "was put into his hands
+ at once, and from that till within his twenty-third year he was almost
+ constantly handling that most useful instrument&mdash;less, of course, in
+ ploughing and harvesting seasons." At first the Lincolns and their seven
+ or eight neighbors lived in the unbroken forest. They had only the tools
+ and household goods they brought with them, or such things as they could
+ fashion with their own hands. There was no sawmill to saw lumber. The
+ village of Gentryville was not even begun. Breadstuff could be had only by
+ sending young Abraham seven miles on horseback with a bag of corn to be
+ ground in a hand grist-mill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About the time the new cabin was ready relatives and friends followed from
+ Kentucky, and some of these in turn occupied the half-faced camp. During
+ the autumn a severe and mysterious sickness broke out in their little
+ settlement, and a number of people died, among them the mother of young
+ Abraham. There was no help to be had beyond what the neighbors could give
+ each other. The nearest doctor lived fully thirty miles away. There was
+ not even a minister to conduct the funerals. Thomas Lincoln made the
+ coffins for the dead out of green lumber cut from the forest trees with a
+ whip-saw, and they were laid to rest in a clearing in the woods. Months
+ afterward, largely through the efforts of the sorrowing boy, a preacher
+ who chanced to come that way was induced to hold a service and preach a
+ sermon over the grave of Mrs. Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her death was indeed a serious blow to her husband and children. Abraham's
+ sister, Sarah, was only eleven years old, and the tasks and cares of the
+ little household were altogether too heavy for her years and experience.
+ Nevertheless they struggled bravely through the winter and following
+ summer; then in the autumn of 1819 Thomas Lincoln went back to Kentucky
+ and married Sarah Bush Johnston, whom he had known, and it is said
+ courted, when she was only Sally Bush. She had married about the time
+ Lincoln married Nancy Hanks, and her husband had died, leaving her with
+ three children. She came of a better station in life than Thomas, and was
+ a woman with an excellent mind as well as a warm and generous heart. The
+ household goods that she brought with her to the Lincoln home filled a
+ four-horse wagon, and not only were her own children well clothed and
+ cared for, but she was able at once to provide little Abraham and Sarah
+ with comforts to which they had been strangers during the whole of their
+ young lives. Under her wise management all jealousy was avoided between
+ the two sets of children; urged on by her stirring example, Thomas Lincoln
+ supplied the yet unfinished cabin with floor, door, and windows, and life
+ became more comfortable for all its inmates, contentment if not happiness
+ reigning in the little home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new stepmother quickly became very fond of Abraham, and encouraged him
+ in every way in her power to study and improve himself. The chances for
+ this were few enough. Mr. Lincoln has left us a vivid picture of the
+ situation. "It was," he once wrote, "a wild region, with many bears and
+ other wild animals still in the woods. There I grew up. There were some
+ schools, so-called, but no qualification was ever required of a teacher
+ beyond "readin', writin', and cipherin' to the Rule of Three. If a
+ straggler supposed to understand Latin happened to sojourn in the
+ neighborhood, he was looked upon as a wizard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The school-house was a low cabin of round logs, with split logs or
+ "puncheons" for a floor, split logs roughly leveled with an ax and set up
+ on legs for benches, and holes cut out in the logs and the space filled in
+ with squares of greased paper for window-panes. The main light came in
+ through the open door. Very often Webster's "Elementary Spelling-book" was
+ the only text-book. This was the kind of school most common in the middle
+ West during Mr. Lincoln's boyhood, though already in some places there
+ were schools of a more pretentious character. Indeed, back in Kentucky, at
+ the very time that Abraham, a child of six, was learning his letters from
+ Zachariah Riney, a boy only a year older was attending a Catholic seminary
+ in the very next county. It is doubtful if they ever met, but the
+ destinies of the two were strangely interwoven, for the older boy was
+ Jefferson Davis, who became head of the Confederate government shortly
+ after Lincoln was elected President of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Abraham had been only seven years old when he left Kentucky, the little
+ beginnings he learned in the schools kept by Riney and Hazel in that State
+ must have been very slight, probably only his alphabet, or at most only
+ three or four pages of Webster's "Elementary Spelling-book." The
+ multiplication-table was still a mystery to him, and he could read or
+ write only the words he spelled. His first two years in Indiana seem to
+ have passed without schooling of any sort, and the school he attended
+ shortly after coming under the care of his stepmother was of the simplest
+ kind, for the Pigeon Creek settlement numbered only eight or ten poor
+ families, and they lived deep in the forest, where, even if they had had
+ the money for such luxuries, it would have been impossible to buy books,
+ slates, pens, ink, or paper. It is worthy of note, however, that in our
+ western country, even under such difficulties, a school-house was one of
+ the first buildings to rise in every frontier settlement. Abraham's second
+ school in Indiana was held when he was fourteen years old, and the third
+ in his seventeenth year. By that time he had more books and better
+ teachers, but he had to walk four or five miles to reach them. We know
+ that he learned to write, and was provided with pen, ink, and a copy-book,
+ and a very small supply of writing-paper, for copies have been printed of
+ several scraps on which he carefully wrote down tables of long measure,
+ land measure, and dry measure, as well as examples in multiplication and
+ compound division, from his arithmetic. He was never able to go to school
+ again after this time, and though the instruction he received from his
+ five teachers&mdash;two in Kentucky and three in Indiana&mdash;extended
+ over a period of nine years, it must be remembered that it made up in all
+ less than one twelve-month; "that the aggregate of all his schooling did
+ not amount to one year." The fact that he received this instruction, as he
+ himself said, "by littles," was doubtless an advantage. A lazy or
+ indifferent boy would of course have forgotten what was taught him at one
+ time before he had opportunity at another; but Abraham was neither
+ indifferent nor lazy, and these widely separated fragments of instruction
+ were precious steps to self-help. He pursued his studies with very unusual
+ purpose and determination not only to understand them at the moment, but
+ to fix them firmly in his mind. His early companions all agree that he
+ employed every spare moment in keeping on with some one of his studies.
+ His stepmother tells us that "When he came across a passage that struck
+ him, he would write it down on boards if he had no paper, and keep it
+ there until he did get paper. Then he would rewrite it, look at it, repeat
+ it. He had a copy-book, a kind of scrap-book, in which he put down all
+ things, and thus preserved them." He spent long evenings doing sums on the
+ fire-shovel. Iron fire-shovels were a rarity among pioneers. Instead they
+ used a broad, thin clapboard with one end narrowed to a handle, arranging
+ with this the piles of coals upon the hearth, over which they set their
+ "skillet" and "oven" to do their cooking. It was on such a wooden shovel
+ that Abraham worked his sums by the flickering firelight, making his
+ figures with a piece of charcoal, and, when the shovel was all covered,
+ taking a drawing-knife and shaving it off clean again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hours that he was able to devote to his penmanship, his reading, and
+ his arithmetic were by no means many; for, save for the short time that he
+ was actually in school, he was, during all these years, laboring hard on
+ his father's farm, or hiring his youthful strength to neighbors who had
+ need of help in the work of field or forest. In pursuit of his knowledge
+ he was on an up-hill path; yet in spite of all obstacles he worked his way
+ to so much of an education as placed him far ahead of his schoolmates and
+ quickly abreast of his various teachers. He borrowed every book in the
+ neighborhood. The list is a short one: "Robinson Crusoe," "Aesop's
+ Fables," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," Weems's "Life of Washington," and
+ a "History of the United States." When everything else had been read, he
+ resolutely began on the "Revised Statutes of Indiana," which Dave Turnham,
+ the constable, had in daily use, but permitted him to come to his house
+ and read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though so fond of his books; it must not be supposed that he cared only
+ for work and serious study. He was a social, sunny-tempered lad, as fond
+ of jokes and fun as he was kindly and industrious. His stepmother said of
+ him: "I can say, what scarcely one mother in a thousand can say, Abe never
+ gave me a cross word or look, and never refused... to do anything I asked
+ him.... I must say.. that Abe was the best boy I ever saw or expect to
+ see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He and John Johnston, his stepmother's son, and John Hanks, a relative of
+ his own mother's, worked barefoot together in the fields, grubbing,
+ plowing, hoeing, gathering and shucking corn, and taking part, when
+ occasion offered, in the practical jokes and athletic exercises that
+ enlivened the hard work of the pioneers. For both work and play Abraham
+ had one great advantage. He was not only a tall, strong country boy: he
+ soon grew to be a tall, strong, sinewy man. He early reached the unusual
+ height of six feet four inches, and his long arms gave him a degree of
+ power as an axman that few were able to rival. He therefore usually led
+ his fellows in efforts of muscle as well as of mind. That he could outrun,
+ outlift, outwrestle his boyish companions, that he could chop faster,
+ split more rails in a day, carry a heavier log at a "raising," or excel
+ the neighborhood champion in any feat of frontier athletics, was doubtless
+ a matter of pride with him; but stronger than all else was his eager
+ craving for knowledge. He felt instinctively that the power of using the
+ mind rather than the muscles was the key to success. He wished not only to
+ wrestle with the best of them, but to be able to talk like the preacher,
+ spell and cipher like the school-master, argue like the lawyer, and write
+ like the editor. Yet he was as far as possible from being a prig. He was
+ helpful, sympathetic, cheerful. In all the neighborhood gatherings, when
+ settlers of various ages came together at corn-huskings or house-raisings,
+ or when mere chance brought half a dozen of them at the same time to the
+ post-office or the country store, he was able, according to his years, to
+ add his full share to the gaiety of the company. By reason of his reading
+ and his excellent memory, he soon became the best story-teller among his
+ companions; and even the slight training gained from his studies greatly
+ broadened and strengthened the strong reasoning faculty with which he had
+ been gifted by nature. His wit might be mischievous, but it was never
+ malicious, and his nonsense was never intended to wound or to hurt the
+ feelings. It is told of him that he added to his fund of jokes and stories
+ humorous imitations of the sermons of eccentric preachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very likely too much is made of all these boyish pranks. He grew up very
+ like his fellows. In only one particular did he differ greatly from the
+ frontier boys around him. He never took any pleasure in hunting. Almost
+ every youth of the backwoods early became an excellent shot and a
+ confirmed sportsman. The woods still swarmed with game, and every cabin
+ depended largely upon this for its supply of food. But to his strength was
+ added a gentleness which made him shrink from killing or inflicting pain,
+ and the time the other boys gave to lying in ambush, he preferred to spend
+ in reading or in efforts at improving his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only twice during his life in Indiana was the routine of his employment
+ changed. When he was about sixteen years old he worked for a time for a
+ man who lived at the mouth of Anderson's Creek, and here part of his duty
+ was to manage a ferry-boat which carried passengers across the Ohio River.
+ It was very likely this experience which, three years later, brought him
+ another. Mr. Gentry, the chief man of the village of Gentryville that had
+ grown up a mile or so from his father's cabin, loaded a flatboat on the
+ Ohio River with the produce his store had collected&mdash;corn, flour,
+ pork, bacon, and other miscellaneous provisions&mdash;and putting it in
+ charge of his son Allen Gentry and of Abraham Lincoln, sent them with it
+ down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, to sell its cargo at the plantations
+ of the lower Mississippi, where sugar and cotton were the principal crops,
+ and where other food supplies were needed to feed the slaves. No better
+ proof is needed of the reputation for strength, skill, honesty, and
+ intelligence that this tall country boy had already won for himself, than
+ that he was chosen to navigate the flatboat a thousand miles to the
+ "sugar-coast" of the Mississippi River, sell its load, and bring back the
+ money. Allen Gentry was supposed to be in command, but from the record of
+ his after life we may be sure that Abraham did his full share both of work
+ and management. The elder Gentry paid Lincoln eight dollars a month and
+ his passage home on a steamboat for this service. The voyage was made
+ successfully, although not without adventure; for one night, after the
+ boat was tied up to the shore, the boys were attacked by seven negroes,
+ who came aboard intending to kill and rob them. There was a lively
+ scrimmage, in which, though slightly hurt, they managed to beat off their
+ assailants, and then, hastily cutting their boat adrift, swung out on the
+ stream. The marauding band little dreamed that they were attacking the man
+ who in after years was to give their race its freedom; and though the
+ future was equally hidden from Abraham, it is hard to estimate the vistas
+ of hope and ambition that this long journey opened to him. It was his
+ first look into the wide, wide world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. CAPTAIN LINCOLN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By this time the Lincoln homestead was no longer on the frontier. During
+ the years that passed while Abraham was growing from a child, scarcely
+ able to wield the ax placed in his hands, into a tall, capable youth, the
+ line of frontier settlements had been gradually but steadily pushing on
+ beyond Gentryville toward the Mississippi River. Every summer
+ canvas-covered moving wagons wound their slow way over new roads into
+ still newer country; while the older settlers, left behind, watched their
+ progress with longing eyes. It was almost as if a spell had been cast over
+ these toil-worn pioneers, making them forget, at sight of such new
+ ventures, all the hardships they had themselves endured in subduing the
+ wilderness. At last, on March 1, 1830, when Abraham was just twenty-one
+ years old, the Lincolns, yielding to this overmastering frontier impulse
+ to "move" westward, left the old farm in Indiana to make a new home in
+ Illinois. "Their mode of conveyance was wagons drawn by ox-teams," Mr.
+ Lincoln wrote in 1860; "and Abraham drove one of the teams." They settled
+ in Macon County on the north side of the Sangamon River, about ten miles
+ west of Decatur, where they built a cabin, made enough rails to fence ten
+ acres of ground, fenced and cultivated the ground, and raised a crop of
+ corn upon it that first season. It was the same heavy labor over again
+ that they had endured when they went from Kentucky to Indiana; but this
+ time the strength and energy of young Abraham were at hand to inspire and
+ aid his father, and there was no miserable shivering year of waiting in a
+ half-faced camp before the family could be suitably housed. They were not
+ to escape hardship, however. They fell victims to fever and ague, which
+ they had not known in Indiana, and became greatly discouraged; and the
+ winter after their arrival proved one of intense cold and suffering for
+ the pioneers, being known in the history of the State as "the winter of
+ the deep snow." The severe weather began in the Christmas holidays with a
+ storm of such fatal suddenness that people who were out of doors had
+ difficulty in reaching their homes, and not a few perished, their fate
+ remaining unknown until the melting snows of early spring showed where
+ they had fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March, 1831, at the end of this terrible winter, Abraham Lincoln left
+ his father's cabin to seek his own fortune in the world. It was the
+ frontier custom for young men to do this when they reached the age of
+ twenty-one. Abraham was now twenty-two, but had willingly remained with
+ his people an extra year to give them the benefit of his labor and
+ strength in making the new home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had become acquainted with a man named Offut, a trader and speculator,
+ who pretended to great business shrewdness, but whose chief talent lay in
+ boasting of the magnificent things he meant to do. Offut engaged Abraham,
+ with his stepmother's son, John D. Johnston, and John Hanks, to take a
+ flatboat from Beardstown, on the Illinois River, to New Orleans; and all
+ four arranged to meet at Springfield as soon as the snow should melt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March, when the snow finally melted, the country was flooded and
+ traveling by land was utterly out of the question. The boys, therefore,
+ bought a large canoe, and in it floated down the Sangamon River to keep
+ their appointment with Offut. It was in this somewhat unusual way that
+ Lincoln made his first entry into the town whose name was afterward to be
+ linked with his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Offut was waiting for them, with the discouraging news that he had been
+ unable to get a flatboat at Beardstown. The young men promptly offered to
+ make the flatboat, since one was not to be bought; and they set to work,
+ felling the trees for it on the banks of the stream. Abraham's father had
+ been a carpenter, so the use of tools was no mystery to him; and during
+ his trip to New Orleans with Allen Gentry he had learned enough about
+ flatboats to give him confidence in this task of shipbuilding. Neither
+ Johnston nor Hanks was gifted with skill or industry, and it is clear that
+ Lincoln was, from the start, leader of the party, master of construction,
+ and captain of the craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The floods went down rapidly while the boat was building, and when they
+ tried to sail their new craft it stuck midway across the dam of Rutledge's
+ mill at New Salem, a village of fifteen or twenty houses not many miles
+ from their starting-point. With its bow high in air, and its stern under
+ water, it looked like some ungainly fish trying to fly, or some bird
+ making an unsuccessful attempt to swim. The voyagers appeared to have
+ suffered irreparable shipwreck at the very outset of their venture, and
+ men and women came down from their houses to offer advice or to make fun
+ of the young boatmen as they waded about in the water, with trousers
+ rolled very high, seeking a way out of their difficulty. Lincoln's
+ self-control and good humor proved equal to their banter, while his
+ engineering skill speedily won their admiration. The amusement of the
+ onlookers changed to gaping wonder when they saw him deliberately bore a
+ hole in the bottom of the boat near the bow, after which, fixing up some
+ kind of derrick, he tipped the boat so that the water she had taken in at
+ the stern ran out in front, and she floated safely over the dam. This
+ novel method of bailing a boat by boring a hole in her bottom fully
+ established his fame at New Salem, and so delighted the enthusiastic Offut
+ that, on the spot, he engaged its inventor to come back after the voyage
+ to New Orleans and act as clerk for him in a store.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hole plugged up again, and the boat's cargo reloaded, they made the
+ remainder of the journey in safety. Lincoln returned by steamer from New
+ Orleans to St. Louis, and from there made his way to New Salem on foot. He
+ expected to find Offut already established in the new store, but neither
+ he nor his goods had arrived. While "loafing about," as the citizens of
+ New Salem expressed it, waiting for him, the newcomer had a chance to
+ exhibit another of his accomplishments. An election was to be held, but
+ one of the clerks, being taken suddenly ill, could not be present. Penmen
+ were not plenty in the little town, and Mentor Graham, the other election
+ clerk, looking around in perplexity for some one to fill the vacant place,
+ asked young Lincoln if he knew how to write. Lincoln answered, in the lazy
+ speech of the country, that he "could make a few rabbit tracks," and that
+ being deemed quite sufficient, was immediately sworn in, and set about
+ discharging the duties of his first office. The way he performed these not
+ only gave general satisfaction, but greatly interested Mentor Graham, who
+ was the village schoolmaster, and from that time on proved a most helpful
+ friend to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Offut finally arrived with a miscellaneous lot of goods, which Lincoln
+ opened and put in order, and the storekeeping began. Trade does not seem
+ to have been brisk, for Offut soon increased his venture by renting the
+ Rutledge and Cameron mill, on whose historic dam the flatboat had come to
+ grief. For a while the care of this mill was added to Lincoln's other
+ duties. He made himself generally useful besides, his old implement, the
+ ax, not being entirely discarded. We are told that he cut down trees and
+ split rails enough to make a large hogpen adjoining the mill, a
+ performance not at all surprising when it is remembered that up to this
+ time the greater part of his life had been spent in the open air, and that
+ his still growing muscles must have eagerly welcomed tasks like this,
+ which gave him once more the exercise that measuring calico and weighing
+ out groceries failed to supply. Young Lincoln's bodily vigor stood him in
+ good stead in many ways. In frontier life strength and athletic skill
+ served as well for popular amusement as for prosaic toil, and at times,
+ indeed, they were needed for personal defence. Every community had its
+ champion wrestler, a man of considerable local importance, in whose
+ success the neighbors took a becoming interest. There was, not far from
+ New Salem, a settlement called Clary's Grove, where lived a set of
+ restless, rollicking young backwoodsmen with a strong liking for frontier
+ athletics and rough practical jokes. Jack Armstrong was the leader of
+ these, and until Lincoln's arrival had been the champion wrestler of both
+ Clary's Grove and New Salem. He and his friends had not the slightest
+ personal grudge against Lincoln; but hearing the neighborhood talk about
+ the newcomer, and especially Offut's extravagant praise of his clerk, who,
+ according to Offut's statement, knew more than any one else in the United
+ States, and could beat the whole county at running, jumping or
+ "wrastling," they decided that the time had come to assert themselves, and
+ strove to bring about a trial of strength between Armstrong and Lincoln.
+ Lincoln, who disapproved of all this "woolling and pulling," as he called
+ it, and had no desire to come to blows with his neighbors, put off the
+ encounter as long as possible. At length even his good temper was
+ powerless to avert it, and the wrestling-match took place. Jack Armstrong
+ soon found that he had tackled a man as strong and skilful as himself; and
+ his friends, seeing him likely to get the worst of it, swarmed to his
+ assistance, almost succeeding, by tripping and kicking, in getting Lincoln
+ down. At the unfairness of this Lincoln became suddenly and furiously
+ angry, put forth his entire strength, lifted the pride of Clary's Grove in
+ his arms like a child, and holding him high in the air, almost choked the
+ life out of him. It seemed for a moment as though a general fight must
+ follow; but even while Lincoln's fierce rage compelled their respect, his
+ quickly returning self-control won their admiration, and the crisis was
+ safely passed. Instead of becoming enemies and leaders in a neighborhood
+ feud, as might have been expected, the two grew to be warm friends, the
+ affection thus strangely begun lasting through life. They proved useful to
+ each other in various ways, and years afterward Lincoln made ample amends
+ for his rough treatment of the other's throat by saving the neck of Jack
+ Armstrong's son from the halter in a memorable trial for murder. The
+ Clary's Grove "boys" voted Lincoln "the cleverest fellow that had ever
+ broke into the settlement," and thereafter took as much pride in his
+ peaceableness and book-learning as they did in the rougher and more
+ questionable accomplishments of their discomfited leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln himself was not so easily satisfied. His mind as well as his
+ muscles hungered for work, and he confided to Mentor Graham, possibly with
+ some diffidence, his "notion to study English grammar." Instead of
+ laughing at him, Graham heartily encouraged the idea, saying it was the
+ very best thing he could do. With quickened zeal Lincoln announced that if
+ he had a grammar he would begin at once at this the schoolmaster was
+ obliged to confess that he knew of no such book in New Salem. He thought,
+ however, that there might be one at Vaner's, six miles away. Promptly
+ after breakfast the next morning Lincoln set out in search of it. He
+ brought the precious volume home in triumph, and with Graham's occasional
+ help found no difficulty in mastering its contents. Indeed, it is very
+ likely that he was astonished, and even a bit disappointed, to find so
+ little mystery in it. He is reported to have said that if this was a
+ "science," he thought he would like to begin on another one. In the eyes
+ of the townspeople, however, it was no small achievement, and added
+ greatly to his reputation as a scholar. There is no record of any other
+ study commenced at this time, but it is certain that he profited much by
+ helpful talks with Mentor Graham, and that he borrowed every book the
+ schoolmaster's scanty library was able to furnish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though outwardly uneventful, this period of his life was both happy and
+ profitable. He was busy at useful labor, was picking up scraps of
+ schooling, was making friends and learning to prize them at their true
+ worth; was, in short, developing rapidly from a youth into a young man.
+ Already he began to feel stirrings of ambition which prompted him to look
+ beyond his own daily needs toward the larger interests of his county and
+ his State. An election for members of the Illinois legislature was to take
+ place in August, 1832. Sangamon County was entitled to four
+ representatives. Residents of the county over twenty-one years of age were
+ eligible to election, and audacious as it might appear, Lincoln determined
+ to be a candidate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of New Salem, like those of all other Western towns, took a
+ keen interest in politics; "politics" meaning, in that time and place, not
+ only who was to be President or governor, but concerning itself with
+ questions which came much closer home to dwellers on the frontier.
+ "Internal improvements," as they were called&mdash;the building of roads
+ and clearing out of streams so that men and women who lived in remote
+ places might be able to travel back and forth and carry on trade with the
+ rest of the world&mdash;became a burning question in Illinois. There was
+ great need of such improvements; and in this need young Lincoln saw his
+ opportunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was by way of the Sangamon River that he entered politics. That
+ uncertain watercourse had already twice befriended him. He had floated on
+ it in flood-time from his father's cabin into Springfield. A few weeks
+ later its rapidly falling waters landed him on the dam at Rutledge's mill,
+ introducing him effectively if unceremoniously to the inhabitants of New
+ Salem. Now it was again to play a part in his life, starting him on a
+ political career that ended only in the White House. Surely no
+ insignificant stream has had a greater influence on the history of a
+ famous man. It was a winding and sluggish creek, encumbered with driftwood
+ and choked by sand-bars; but it flowed through a country already filled
+ with ambitious settlers, where the roads were atrociously bad, becoming in
+ rainy seasons wide seas of pasty black mud, and remaining almost
+ impassable for weeks at a time. After a devious course the Sangamon found
+ its way into the Illinois River, and that in turn flowed into the
+ Mississippi. Most of the settlers were too new to the region to know what
+ a shallow, unprofitable stream the Sangamon really was, for the deep snows
+ of 183031 and of the following winter had supplied it with an unusual
+ volume of water. It was natural, therefore, that they should regard it as
+ the heaven-sent solution of their problem of travel and traffic with the
+ outside world. If it could only be freed from driftwood, and its channel
+ straightened a little, they felt sure it might be used for small
+ steamboats during a large part of the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The candidates for the legislature that summer staked their chances of
+ success on the zeal they showed for "internal improvements." Lincoln was
+ only twenty-three. He had been in the county barely nine months. Sangamon
+ County was then considerably larger than the whole State of Rhode Island,
+ and he was of course familiar with only a small part of it or its people;
+ but he felt that he did know the river. He had sailed on it and been
+ shipwrecked by it; he had, moreover, been one of a party of men and boys,
+ armed with long-handled axes, who went out to chop away obstructions and
+ meet a small steamer that, a few weeks earlier, had actually forced its
+ way up from the Illinois River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Following the usual custom, he announced his candidacy in the local
+ newspaper in a letter dated March 9, addressed "To the People of Sangamon
+ County." It was a straightforward, manly statement of his views on
+ questions of the day, written in as good English as that used by the
+ average college-bred man of his years. The larger part of it was devoted
+ to arguments for the improvement of the Sangamon River. Its main interest
+ for us lies in the frank avowal of his personal ambition that is contained
+ in the closing paragraph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition," he wrote. "Whether it
+ be true or not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as that
+ of being truly esteemed of my fellowmen by rendering myself worthy of
+ their esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this ambition is yet
+ to be developed. I am young, and unknown to many of you. I was born, and
+ have ever remained, in the most humble walks of life. I have no wealthy or
+ popular relations or friends to recommend me. My case is thrown
+ exclusively upon the independent voters of the county; and if elected,
+ they will have conferred a favor upon me for which I shall be unremitting
+ in my labors to compensate. But if the good people in their wisdom shall
+ see fit to keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with
+ disappointments to be very much chagrined."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He soon had an opportunity of being useful to his fellow-men, though in a
+ way very different from the one he was seeking. About four weeks after he
+ had published his letter "To the People of Sangamon County," news came
+ that Black Hawk, the veteran war-chief of the Sac Indians, was heading an
+ expedition to cross the Mississippi River and occupy once more the lands
+ that had been the home of his people. There was great excitement among the
+ settlers in Northern Illinois, and the governor called for six hundred
+ volunteers to take part in a campaign against the Indians. He met a quick
+ response; and Lincoln, unmindful of what might become of his campaign for
+ the legislature if he went away, was among the first to enlist. When his
+ company met on the village green to choose their officers, three-quarters
+ of the men, to Lincoln's intense surprise and pleasure, marched over to
+ the spot where he was standing and grouped themselves around him,
+ signifying in this way their wish to make him captain. We have his own
+ word for it that no success of his after life gave him nearly as much
+ satisfaction. On April 21, two days after the call for volunteers had been
+ printed, the company was organized. A week later it was mustered into
+ service, becoming part of the Fourth Illinois Mounted Volunteers, and
+ started at once for the hostile frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's soldiering lasted about three months. He was in no battle, but
+ there was plenty of "roughing it," and occasionally real hardship, as when
+ the men were obliged to go for three days without food. The volunteers had
+ not enlisted for any definite length of time, and seeing no prospect of
+ fighting, they soon became clamorous to return home. Accordingly his and
+ other companies were mustered out of service on May 27, at the mouth of
+ Fox River. At the same time the governor, not wishing to weaken his forces
+ before the arrival of other soldiers to take their places, called for
+ volunteers to remain twenty days longer. Lincoln had gone to the frontier
+ to do real service, not for the glory of being captain. Accordingly, on
+ the day on which he was mustered out as an officer he re-enlisted,
+ becoming Private Lincoln in Captain Iles's company of mounted volunteers,
+ sometimes known as the Independent Spy Battalion. This organization
+ appears to have been very independent indeed, not under the control of any
+ regiment or brigade, but receiving orders directly from the
+ commander-in-chief, and having many unusual privileges, such as freedom
+ from all camp duties, and permission to draw rations as much and as often
+ as they pleased. After laying down his official dignity and joining this
+ band of privileged warriors, the campaign became much more of a holiday
+ for the tall volunteer from New Salem. He entered with enthusiasm into all
+ the games and athletic sports with which the soldiers beguiled the tedium
+ of camp, and grew in popularity from beginning to end of his service.
+ When, at length, the Independent Spy Battalion was mustered out on June
+ 16, 1832, he started on the journey home with a merry group of his
+ companions. He and his messmate, George M. Harrison, had the misfortune to
+ have their horses stolen the very day before, but Harrison's record says:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I laughed at our fate, and he joked at it, and we all started of merrily.
+ The generous men of our company walked and rode by turns with us, and we
+ fared about equal with the rest. But for this generosity, our legs would
+ have had to do the better work, for in that day this dreary route
+ furnished no horses to buy or to steal, and whether on horse or afoot, we
+ always had company, for many of the horses' backs were too sore for
+ riding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln reached New Salem about the first of August, only ten days before
+ the election. He had lost nothing in popular esteem by his prompt
+ enlistment to defend the frontier, and his friends had been doing manful
+ service for him; but there were by this time thirteen candidates in the
+ field, with a consequent division of interest. When the votes were
+ counted, Lincoln was found to be eighth on the list&mdash;an excellent
+ showing when we remember that he was a newcomer in the county, and that he
+ ran as a Whig, which was the unpopular party. In his own home town of New
+ Salem only three votes had been cast against him. Flattering as all this
+ was, the fact remained that he was defeated, and the result of the
+ election brought him face to face with a very serious question. He was
+ without means and without employment. Offut had failed and had gone away.
+ What was he to do next? He thought of putting his strong muscles to
+ account by learning the blacksmith trade; thought also of trying to become
+ a lawyer, but feared he could not succeed at that without a better
+ education. It was the same problem that has confronted millions of young
+ Americans before and since. In his case there was no question which he
+ would rather be&mdash;the only question was what success he might
+ reasonably hope for if he tried to study law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his mind was fully made up, chance served to postpone, and in the
+ end greatly to increase his difficulty. Offut's successors in business,
+ two brothers named Herndon, had become discouraged, and they offered to
+ sell out to Lincoln and an acquaintance of his named William F. Berry, on
+ credit, taking their promissory notes in payment. Lincoln and Berry could
+ not foresee that the town of New Salem had already lived through its best
+ days, and was destined to dwindle and grow smaller until it almost
+ disappeared from the face of the earth. Unduly hopeful, they accepted the
+ offer, and also bought out, on credit, two other merchants who were
+ anxious to sell. It is clear that the flattering vote Lincoln had received
+ at the recent election, and the confidence New Salem felt in his personal
+ character, alone made these transactions possible, since not a dollar of
+ actual money changed hands during all this shifting of ownership. In the
+ long run the people's faith in him was fully justified; but meantime he
+ suffered years of worry and harassing debt. Berry proved a worthless
+ partner; the business a sorry failure. Seeing this, Lincoln and Berry sold
+ out, again on credit, to the Trent brothers, who soon broke up the store
+ and ran away. Berry also departed and died; and in the end all the notes
+ came back upon Lincoln for payment. Of course he had not the money to meet
+ these obligations. He did the next best thing: he promised to pay as soon
+ as he could, and remaining where he was, worked hard at whatever he found
+ to do. Most of his creditors, knowing him to be a man of his word,
+ patiently bided their time, until, in the course of long years, he paid,
+ with interest, every cent of what he used to call, in rueful satire upon
+ his own folly, his "National Debt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. LAWYER LINCOLN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Unlucky as Lincoln's attempt at storekeeping had been, it served one good
+ purpose. Indeed, in a way it may be said to have determined his whole
+ future career. He had had a hard struggle to decide between becoming a
+ blacksmith or a lawyer; and when chance seemed to offer a middle course,
+ and he tried to be a merchant, the wish to study law had certainly not
+ faded from his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a story that while cleaning up the store, he came upon a barrel
+ which contained, among a lot of forgotten rubbish, some stray volumes of
+ Blackstone's "Commentaries," and that this lucky find still further
+ quickened his interest in the law. Whether this tale be true or not it
+ seems certain that during the time the store was running its downward
+ course from bad to worse, he devoted a large part of his too abundant
+ leisure to reading and study of various kinds. People who knew him then
+ have told how he would lie for hours under a great oak-tree that grew just
+ outside the store door, poring over his book, and "grinding around with
+ the shade" as it shifted from north to east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's habit of reading was still further encouraged by his being
+ appointed postmaster of New Salem on May 7, 1833, an office he held for
+ about three years&mdash;until New Salem grew too small to have a
+ post-office of its own, and the mail was sent to a neighboring town. The
+ office was so insignificant that according to popular fable it had no
+ fixed abiding-place, Lincoln being supposed to carry it about with him in
+ his hat! It was, however, large enough to bring him a certain amount of
+ consideration, and, what pleased him still better, plenty of newspapers to
+ read&mdash;newspapers that just then were full of the exciting debates of
+ Clay and Webster, and other great men in Congress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rate of postage on letters was still twenty-five cents, and small as
+ the earnings of the office undoubtedly were, a little change found its way
+ now and then into his hands. In the scarcity of money on the frontier,
+ this had an importance hard for us to realize. A portion of this money, of
+ course, belonged to the government. That he used only what was rightfully
+ his own we could be very sure, even if a sequel to this post office
+ experience were not known which shows his scrupulous honesty where
+ government funds were concerned. Years later, after he had become a
+ practising lawyer in Springfield, an agent of the Post-office Department
+ called upon him in his office one day to collect a balance due from the
+ New Salem post-office, amounting to about seventeen dollars. A shade of
+ perplexity passed over his face, and a friend, sitting by, offered to lend
+ him the money if he did not at the moment have it with him. Without
+ answering, Lincoln rose, and going to a little trunk that stood by the
+ wall, opened it and took out the exact sum, carefully done up in a small
+ package. "I never use any man's money but my own," he quietly remarked,
+ after the agent had gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after he was raised to the dignity of postmaster another piece of
+ good fortune came in his way. Sangamon County covered a territory some
+ forty miles long by fifty wide, and almost every citizen in it seemed
+ intent on buying or selling land, laying out new roads, or locating some
+ future city. John Calhoun, the county surveyor, therefore, found himself
+ with far more work than he could personally attend to, and had to appoint
+ deputies to assist him. Learning the high esteem in which Lincoln was held
+ by the people of New Salem, he wisely concluded to make him a deputy,
+ although they differed in politics. It was a flattering offer, and Lincoln
+ accepted gladly. Of course he knew almost nothing about surveying, but he
+ got a compass and chain, and, as he tells us, "studied Flint and Gibson a
+ little, and went at it." The surveyor, who was a man of talent and
+ education, not only gave Lincoln the appointment, but, it is said, lent
+ him the book in which to study the art. Lincoln carried the book to his
+ friend Mentor Graham, and "went at it" to such purpose that in six weeks
+ he was ready to begin the practice of his new profession. Like Washington,
+ who, it will be remembered, followed the same calling in his youth, he
+ became an excellent surveyor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's store had by this time "winked out," to use his own quaint
+ phrase; and although the surveying and his post-office supplied his daily
+ needs, they left absolutely nothing toward paying his "National Debt."
+ Some of his creditors began to get uneasy, and in the latter part of 1834
+ a man named Van Bergen, who held one of the Lincoln-Berry notes, refusing
+ to trust him any longer, had his horse, saddle, and surveying instruments
+ seized by the sheriff and sold at public auction, thus sweeping away the
+ means by which, as he said, he "procured bread and kept soul and body
+ together." Even in this strait his known honesty proved his salvation. Out
+ of pure friendliness, James Short bought in the property and gave it back
+ to the young surveyor, allowing him time to repay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took Lincoln seventeen years to get rid of his troublesome "National
+ Debt," the last instalment not being paid until after his return from his
+ term of service in Congress at Washington; but it was these seventeen
+ years of industry, rigid economy, and unflinching fidelity to his promises
+ that earned for him the title of "Honest Old Abe," which proved of such
+ inestimable value to himself and his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all this time of trial and disappointment he never lost his
+ courage, his steady, persevering industry, or his determination to
+ succeed. He was not too proud to accept any honest employment that offered
+ itself. He would go into the harvest-field and work there when other tasks
+ were not pressing, or use his clerkly hand to straighten up a neglected
+ ledger; and his lively humor, as well as his industry, made him a welcome
+ guest at any farm-house in the county. Whatever he might be doing, he was
+ never too busy to help a neighbor. His strong arm was always at the
+ service of the poor and needy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years after his defeat for the legislature there was another election.
+ His friends and acquaintances in the county had increased, and, since he
+ had received such a flattering vote the first time, it was but natural
+ that he should wish to try again. He began his campaign in April, giving
+ himself full three months for electioneering. It was customary in those
+ days for candidates to attend all manner of neighborhood gatherings&mdash;"raisings"
+ of new cabins, horseraces, shooting-matches, auctions&mdash;anything that
+ served to call the settlers together; and it was social popularity, quite
+ as much as ability to discuss political questions, that carried weight
+ with such assemblies. Lincoln, it is needless to say, was in his element.
+ He might be called upon to act as judge in a horse-race, or to make a
+ speech upon the Constitution! He could do both. As a laughing peacemaker
+ between two quarrelsome patriots he had no equal; and as contestant in an
+ impromptu match at quoit-throwing, or lifting heavy weights, his native
+ tact and strong arm served him equally well. Candidates also visited farms
+ and outlying settlements, where they were sometimes unexpectedly called
+ upon to show their mettle and muscle in more useful labor. One farmer has
+ recorded how Lincoln "came to my house near Island Grove during harvest.
+ There were some thirty men in the field. He got his dinner, and went out
+ in the field where the men were at work. I gave him an introduction, and
+ the boys said that they could not vote for a man unless he could make a
+ hand. 'Well, boys,' said he, 'if that is all, I am sure of your votes.' He
+ took hold of the cradle and led the way all the round with perfect ease.
+ The boys were satisfied, and I don't think he lost a vote in the crowd."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes two or more candidates would meet at such places, and short
+ speeches would be called for and given, the harvesters throwing down their
+ scythes meanwhile to listen, and enlivening the occasion with keen
+ criticisms of the method and logic of the rival orators. Altogether the
+ campaign was more spirited than that of two years before. Again there were
+ thirteen candidates for the four places; but this time, when the election
+ was over, it was found that only one man in the long list had received
+ more votes than Abraham Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's election to the legislature of Illinois in August, 1834, marks
+ the end of the pioneer period of his life. He was done now with the wild
+ carelessness of the woods, with the rough jollity of Clary's Grove, with
+ odd jobs for his daily bread&mdash;with all the details of frontier
+ poverty. He continued for years to be a very poor man, harassed by debts
+ he was constantly laboring to pay, and sometimes absolutely without money:
+ but from this time on he met and worked with men of wider knowledge and
+ better-trained minds than those he had known in Gentryville and New Salem,
+ while the simple social life of Vandalia, where he went to attend the
+ sessions of the legislature, was more elegant than anything he had yet
+ seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be frankly admitted that his success at this election was a most
+ important event in his life. Another failure might have discouraged even
+ his hopeful spirit, and sent him to the blacksmith-shop to make
+ wagon-tires and shoe horses for the balance of his days. With this
+ flattering vote to his credit, however, he could be very sure that he had
+ made a wise choice between the forge and the lawyer's desk. At first he
+ did not come into special notice in the legislature. He wore, according to
+ the custom of the time, a decent suit of blue jeans, and was known simply
+ as a rather quiet young man, good-natured and sensible. Soon people began
+ to realize that he was a man to be reckoned with in the politics of the
+ county and State. He was reelected in 1836, 1838, and 1840, and thus for
+ eight years had a full share in shaping the public laws of Illinois. The
+ Illinois legislature may indeed be called the school wherein he learned
+ that extraordinary skill and wisdom in statesmanship which he exhibited in
+ later years. In 1838 and 1840 all the Whig members of the Illinois House
+ of Representatives gave him their vote for Speaker, but, the Democrats
+ being in a majority, could not elect him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His campaign expenses were small enough to suit the most exacting. It is
+ recorded that at one time some of the leading Whigs made up a purse of two
+ hundred dollars to pay his personal expenses. After the election he
+ returned the sum of $199.25, with the request that it be given back to the
+ subscribers. "I did not need the money," he explained. "I made the canvass
+ on my own horse; my entertainment, being at the houses of friends, cost me
+ nothing; and my only outlay was seventy-five cents for a barrel of cider,
+ which some farm-hands insisted I should treat them to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One act of his while a member of the legislature requires special mention
+ because of the great events of his after-life. Even at that early date,
+ nearly a quarter of a century before the beginning of the Civil War,
+ slavery was proving a cause of much trouble and ill-will. The
+ "abolitionists," as the people were called who wished the slaves to be
+ free, and the "pro-slavery" men, who approved of keeping them in bondage,
+ had already come to wordy war. Illinois was a free State, but many of its
+ people preferred slavery, and took every opportunity of making their
+ wishes known. In 1837 the legislature passed a set of resolutions "highly
+ disapproving abolition societies." Lincoln and five others voted against
+ it; but, not content with this, Lincoln also drew up a paper protesting
+ against the passage of such a resolution and stating his views on slavery.
+ They were not extreme views. Though declaring slavery to be an evil, he
+ did not insist that the black people ought to be set free. But so strong
+ was the popular feeling against anything approaching "abolitionism" that
+ only one man out of the five who voted against the resolution had the
+ courage to sign this protest with him. Lincoln was young, poor, and in
+ need of all the good-will at his command. Nobody could have blamed him for
+ leaving it unwritten; yet he felt the wrong of slavery so keenly that he
+ could not keep silent merely because the views he held happened to be
+ unpopular; and this protest, signed by him and Dan Stone, has come down to
+ us, the first notable public act in the great career that made his name
+ immortal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the eight years that he was in the legislature he had been working
+ away at the law. Even before his first election his friend John T. Stuart,
+ who had been major of volunteers in the Black Hawk War while Lincoln was
+ captain, and who, like Lincoln, had reenlisted in the Independent Spy
+ Battalion, had given him hearty encouragement. Stuart was now practising
+ law in. Springfield. After the campaign was over, Lincoln borrowed the
+ necessary books of Stuart, and entered upon the study in good earnest.
+ According to his own statement, "he studied with nobody. ... In the autumn
+ of 1836 he obtained a law license, and on April 15, 1837, removed to
+ Springfield and commenced the practice, his old friend Stuart taking him
+ into partnership."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln had already endeared himself to the people of Springfield by
+ championing a project they had much at heart&mdash;the removal of the
+ State capital from Vandalia to their own town. This was accomplished,
+ largely through his efforts, about the time he went to Springfield to
+ live. This change from New Salem, a village of fifteen or twenty houses,
+ to a "city" of two thousand inhabitants, placed him once more in striking
+ new relations as to dress, manners, and society. Yet, as in the case of
+ his removal from his father's cabin to New Salem six years earlier, the
+ change was not so startling as would at first appear. In spite of its
+ larger population and its ambition as the new State capital, Springfield
+ was at that time in many ways no great improvement upon New Salem. It had
+ no public buildings, its streets and sidewalks were still unpaved, and
+ business of all kinds was laboring under the burden of hard times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for himself, although he now owned a license to practise law, it was
+ still a question how well he would succeed&mdash;whether his rugged mind
+ and firm purpose could win him the livelihood he desired, or whether,
+ after all, he would be forced to turn his strong muscles to account in
+ earning his daily bread. Usually so hopeful, there were times when he was
+ greatly depressed. His friend William Butler relates how, as they were
+ riding together on horseback from Vandalia to Springfield at the close of
+ a session of the legislature, Lincoln, in one of these gloomy moods, told
+ him of the almost hopeless prospect that lay immediately before him. The
+ session was over, his salary was all drawn, the money all spent; he had no
+ work, and did not know where to turn to earn even a week's board. Butler
+ bade him be of good cheer, and, kind practical friend that he was, took
+ him and his belongings to his own home, keeping him there for a time as
+ his guest. His most intimate friend of those days, Joshua F. Speed, tells
+ us that soon after riding into the new capital on a borrowed horse, with
+ all his earthly possessions packed in a pair of saddle-bags, Lincoln
+ entered the store owned by Speed, the saddle-bags over his arm, to ask the
+ price of a single bed with its necessary coverings and pillows. His
+ question being answered, he remarked that very likely that was cheap
+ enough, but, small as the price was, he was unable to pay it; adding that
+ if Speed was willing to credit him until Christmas, and his experiment as
+ a lawyer proved a success, he would pay then. "If I fail in this," he said
+ sadly, "I do not know that I can ever pay you." Speed thought he had never
+ seen such a sorrowful face. He suggested that instead of going into debt,
+ Lincoln might share his own roomy quarters over the store, assuring him
+ that if he chose to accept the offer, he would be very welcome. "Where is
+ your room?" Lincoln asked quickly. "Upstairs," and the young merchant
+ pointed to a flight of winding steps leading from the store to the room
+ overhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln picked up the saddle-bags, went upstairs, set them down on the
+ floor, and reappeared a moment later, beaming with pleasure. "Well,
+ Speed," he exclaimed, "I am moved!" It is seldom that heartier, truer
+ friendships come to a man than came to Lincoln in the course of his life.
+ On the other hand, no one ever deserved better of his fellow-men than he
+ did; and it is pleasant to know that such brotherly aid as Butler and
+ Speed were able to give him, offered in all sincerity and accepted in a
+ spirit that left no sense of galling obligation on either side, helped the
+ young lawyer over present difficulties and made it possible for him to
+ keep on in the career he had marked out for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lawyer who works his way up from a five-dollar fee in a suit before a
+ justice of the peace, to a five-thousand-dollar fee before the Supreme
+ Court of his State, has a long and hard path to climb. Lincoln climbed
+ this path for twenty-five years, with industry, perseverance, patience&mdash;above
+ all, with that self-control and keen sense of right and wrong which always
+ clearly traced the dividing line between his duty to his client and his
+ duty to society and truth. His perfect frankness of statement assured him
+ the confidence of judge and jury in every argument. His habit of fully
+ admitting the weak points in his case gained him their close attention to
+ his strong ones, and when clients brought him questionable cases his
+ advice was always not to bring suit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he once said to a man who offered him such a case; "there is no
+ reasonable doubt but that I can gain your case for you. I can set a whole
+ neighborhood at loggerheads; I can distress a widowed mother and her six
+ fatherless children, and thereby gain for you six hundred dollars, which
+ rightfully belongs, it appears to me, as much to them as it does to you. I
+ shall not take your case, but I will give you a little advice for nothing.
+ You seem a sprightly, energetic man. I would advise you to try your hand
+ at making six hundred dollars in some other way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would have nothing to do with the "tricks" of the profession, though he
+ met these readily enough when practised by others. He never knowingly
+ undertook a case in which justice was on the side of his opponent. That
+ same inconvenient honesty which prompted him, in his store-keeping days,
+ to close the shop and go in search of a woman he had innocently defrauded
+ of a few ounces of tea while weighing out her groceries, made it
+ impossible for him to do his best with a poor case. "Swett," he once
+ exclaimed, turning suddenly to his associate, "the man is guilty; you
+ defend him&mdash;I can't," and gave up his share of a large fee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After his death some notes were found, written in his own hand, that had
+ evidently been intended for a little lecture or talk to law students. They
+ set forth forcibly, in a few words, his idea of what a lawyer ought to be
+ and to do. He earnestly commends diligence in study, and, after diligence,
+ promptness in keeping up the work. "As a general rule, never take your
+ whole fee in advance," he says, "nor any more than a small retainer. When
+ fully paid beforehand you are more than a common mortal if you can feel
+ the same interest in the case as if something were still in prospect for
+ you as well as for your client." Speech-making should be practised and
+ cultivated. "It is the lawyer's avenue to the public. However able and
+ faithful he may be in other respects, people are slow to bring him
+ business if he cannot make a speech. And yet, there is not a more fatal
+ error to young lawyers than relying too much on speech-making. If any one,
+ upon his rare powers of speaking, shall claim an exemption from the
+ drudgery of the law, his case is a failure in advance." Discourage going
+ to law. "Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever you can. Point out
+ to them how the nominal winner is often a real loser&mdash;in fees,
+ expenses, and waste of time. As a peacemaker the lawyer has a superior
+ opportunity of being a good man. There will still be business enough."
+ "There is a vague popular belief that lawyers are necessarily dishonest.
+ Let no young man choosing the law for a calling for a moment yield to the
+ popular belief. Resolve to be honest at all events; and if, in your own
+ judgment, you cannot be an honest lawyer, resolve to be honest without
+ being a lawyer. Choose some other occupation rather than one in the
+ choosing of which you do, in advance, consent to be a knave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While becoming a lawyer, Lincoln still remained a politician. In those
+ early days in the West, the two occupations went hand in hand, almost of
+ necessity. Laws had to be newly made to fit the needs of the new
+ settlements, and therefore a large proportion of lawyers was sent to the
+ State legislature. In the summer these same lawyers went about the State,
+ practising before the circuit courts, Illinois being divided into what
+ were called judicial circuits, each taking in several counties, and
+ sometimes covering territory more than a hundred miles square. Springfield
+ and the neighboring towns were in the eighth judicial circuit. Twice a
+ year the circuit judge traveled from one county-seat to another, the
+ lawyers who had business before the court following also. As newspapers
+ were neither plentiful nor widely read, members of the legislature were
+ often called upon, while on these journeys, to explain the laws they had
+ helped to make during the previous winter, and thus became the political
+ teachers of the people. They had to be well informed and watchful. When,
+ like Mr. Lincoln, they were witty, and had a fund of interesting stories
+ besides, they were sure of a welcome and a hearing in the courtroom, or in
+ the social gatherings that roused the various little towns during
+ "court-week" into a liveliness quite put of the common. The tavern would
+ be crowded to its utmost&mdash;the judge having the best room, and the
+ lawyers being put in what was left, late comers being lucky to find even a
+ sleeping-place on the floor. When not occupied in court, or preparing
+ cases for the morrow, they would sit in the public room, or carry their
+ chairs out on the sidewalk in front, exchanging stories and anecdotes, or
+ pieces of political wisdom, while men from the town and surrounding farms,
+ dropping in on one pretext or another, found excuse to linger and join in
+ the talk. At meal-times the judge presided at the head of the long hotel
+ table, on which the food was abundant if not always wholesome, and around
+ which lawyers, jurors, witnesses, prisoners out on bail, and the men who
+ drove the teams, gathered in friendly equality. Stories of what Mr.
+ Lincoln did and said on the eighth judicial circuit are still quoted
+ almost with the force of law; for in this close companionship men came to
+ know each other thoroughly, and were judged at their true value
+ professionally, as well as for their power to entertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only in worldly wealth that Lincoln was poor. He could hold his own
+ with the best on the eighth judicial circuit, or anywhere else in the
+ State. He made friends wherever he went. In politics, in daily
+ conversation, in his work as a lawyer, his life was gradually broadening.
+ Slowly but surely, too, his gifts as an attractive public speaker were
+ becoming known. In 1837 he wrote and delivered an able address before the
+ Young Men's Lyceum of Springfield. In December, 1839, Stephen A. Douglas,
+ the most brilliant of the young Democrats then in Springfield, challenged
+ the young Whigs of the town to a tournament of political speech-making, in
+ which Lincoln bore a full and successful share.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man who could not pay a week's board bill was again elected to the
+ legislature, was invited to public banquets and toasted by name, became a
+ popular speaker, moved in the best society of the new capital, and made,
+ as his friends and neighbors declared, a brilliant marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. CONGRESSMAN LINCOLN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Hopeful and cheerful as he ordinarily seemed, there was in Mr. Lincoln's
+ disposition a strain of deep melancholy. This was not peculiar to him
+ alone, for the pioneers as a race were somber rather than gay. Their lives
+ had been passed for generations under the most trying physical conditions,
+ near malaria-infested streams, and where they breathed the poison of
+ decaying vegetation. Insufficient shelter, storms, the cold of winter,
+ savage enemies, and the cruel labor that killed off all but the hardiest
+ of them, had at the same time killed the happy-go-lucky gaiety of an
+ easier form of life. They were thoughtful, watchful, wary; capable indeed
+ of wild merriment: but it has been said that although a pioneer might
+ laugh, he could not easily be made to smile. Lincoln's mind was unusually
+ sound and sane and normal. He had a cheerful, wholesome, sunny nature, yet
+ he had inherited the strongest traits of the pioneers, and there was in
+ him, moreover, much of the poet, with a poet's great capacity for joy and
+ pain. It is not strange that as he developed into manhood, especially when
+ his deeper nature began to feel the stirrings of ambition and of love,
+ these seasons of depression and gloom came upon him with overwhelming
+ force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his childhood he had known few women, save his mother, and that
+ kind, God-fearing woman his stepmother, who did so much to make his
+ childhood hopeful and happy. No man ever honored women more truly than did
+ Abraham Lincoln; while all the qualities that caused men to like him&mdash;his
+ strength, his ambition, his kindliness&mdash;served equally to make him a
+ favorite with them. In the years of his young manhood three women greatly
+ occupied his thoughts. The first was the slender, fair-haired Ann
+ Rutledge, whom he very likely saw for the first time as she stood with the
+ group of mocking people on the river-bank, near her father's mill, the day
+ Lincoln's flatboat stuck on the dam at New Salem. It was her death, two
+ years before he went to live at Springfield, that brought on the first
+ attack of melancholy of which we know, causing him such deep grief that
+ for a time his friends feared his sorrow might drive him insane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another friend was Mary Owens, a Kentucky girl, very different from the
+ gentle, blue-eyed Ann Rutledge, but worthy in every way of a man's
+ affections. She had visited her sister in New Salem several years before,
+ and Lincoln remembered her as a tall, handsome, well-educated young woman,
+ who could be serious as well as gay, and who was considered wealthy. In
+ the autumn of 1836, her sister, Mrs. Able, then about to start on a visit
+ to Kentucky, jokingly offered to bring Mary back if Lincoln would promise
+ to marry her. He, also in jest, agreed to do so. Much to his astonishment,
+ he learned, a few months later, that she had actually returned with Mrs.
+ Able, and his sensitive conscience made him feel that the jest had turned
+ into real earnest, and that he was in duty bound to keep his promise if
+ she wished him to do so. They had both changed since they last met;
+ neither proved quite pleasing to the other, yet an odd sort of courtship
+ was kept up, until, some time after Lincoln went to live in Springfield,
+ Miss Owens put an end to the affair by refusing him courteously but
+ firmly. Meantime he lived through much unhappiness and uncertainty of
+ spirit, and made up his mind "never again to think of marrying": a
+ resolution which he kept&mdash;until another Kentucky girl drove it from
+ his thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Springfield had by this time become very lively and enterprising. There
+ was a deal of "flourishing around in carriages," as Lincoln wrote Miss
+ Owens, and business and politics and society all played an active part in
+ the life of the little town. The meetings of the legislature brought to
+ the new capital a group of young men of unusual talent and ability. There
+ was friendly rivalry between them, and party disputes ran high, but social
+ good-humor prevailed, and the presence of these brilliant young people,
+ later to become famous as Presidential candidates, cabinet ministers,
+ senators, congressmen, orators, and battle heroes, lent to the social
+ gatherings of Springfield a zest rarely found in larger places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into the midst of this gaiety came Mary Todd of Kentucky, twenty-one years
+ old, handsome, accomplished and witty&mdash;a dashing and fascinating
+ figure in dress and conversation. She was the sister of Mrs. Ninian W.
+ Edwards, whose husband was a prominent Whig member of the legislature&mdash;one
+ of the "Long Nine," as these men were known. Their added height was said
+ to be fifty-five feet, and they easily made up in influence what they
+ lacked in numbers. Lincoln was the "tallest" of them all in body and in
+ mind, and although as poor as a church mouse, was quite as welcome
+ anywhere as the men who wore ruffled shirts and could carry gold watches.
+ Miss Todd soon singled out and held the admiration of such of the
+ Springfield beaux as pleased her somewhat wilful fancy, and Lincoln, being
+ much at the Edwards house, found himself, almost before he knew it,
+ entangled in a new love-affair. In the course of a twelvemonth he was
+ engaged to marry her, but something, nobody knows what or how, happened to
+ break the engagement, and to plunge him again in a very sea of
+ wretchedness. Nor is it necessary that we should know about it further
+ than that a great trouble came upon him, which he bore nobly, after his
+ kind. Few men have had his stern sense of duty, his tenderness of heart,
+ his conscience, so easy toward others, so merciless toward himself. The
+ trouble preyed upon his mind until he could think of nothing else. He
+ became unable to attend to business, or to take any part in the life
+ around him. Fearing for his reason as well as for his health if this
+ continued, his good friend Joshua F. Speed carried him off, whether he
+ wished or no, for a visit to his own home in Kentucky. Here they stayed
+ for some time, and Lincoln grew much better, returning to Springfield
+ about midsummer, almost his old self, though far from happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An affair that helped to bring the lovers together again is so out of
+ keeping with the rest of his life, that it would deserve mention for that
+ reason, if for no other. This is nothing less than Lincoln's first and
+ only duel. It happened that James Shields, afterward a general in two wars
+ and a senator from two States, was at that time auditor of the State of
+ Illinois, with his office at Springfield. He was a Democrat, and an
+ Irishman by birth, with an Irishman's quick temper and readiness to take
+ offense. He had given orders about collecting certain taxes which
+ displeased the Whigs, and shortly after Lincoln came back from Kentucky a
+ series of humorous letters ridiculing the auditor and his order appeared
+ in the Springfield paper, to the great amusement of the townspeople and
+ the fury of Shields. These letters were dated from the "Lost Townships,"
+ and were supposed to be written by a farmer's widow signing herself "Aunt
+ Rebecca." The real writers were Miss Todd and a clever friend, who
+ undertook them more for the purpose of poking fun at Shields than for
+ party effect. In framing the political part of their attack, they had
+ found it necessary to consult Lincoln, and he obligingly set them a
+ pattern by writing the first letter himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shields sent to the editor of the paper to find out the name of the real
+ "Rebecca." The editor, as in duty bound, consulted Lincoln, and was told
+ to give Lincoln's name, but not to mention the ladies. Shields then sent
+ Lincoln an angry challenge; and Lincoln, who considered the whole affair
+ ridiculous, and would willingly have explained his part in it if Shields
+ had made a gentlemanly inquiry, chose as weapons "broadswords of the
+ largest size," and named as conditions of the duel that a plank ten feet
+ long be firmly fixed on edge in the ground, as a line over which neither
+ combatant was to pass his foot upon forfeit of his life. Next, lines were
+ to be drawn upon the ground on each side of the plank, parallel with it,
+ at the distance of the whole length of the sword and three feet
+ additional. The passing of his own line by either man was to be deemed a
+ surrender of the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is easy to see from these conditions that Lincoln refused to consider
+ the matter seriously, and determined to treat it as absurdly as it
+ deserved. He and Shields, and their respective seconds, with the
+ broadswords, hurried away to an island in the Mississippi River, opposite
+ Alton; but long before the plank was set up, or swords were drawn, mutual
+ friends took the matter out of the hands of the seconds, and declared a
+ settlement of the difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The affair created much talk and merriment in Springfield, but Lincoln
+ found in it more than comedy. By means of it he and Miss Todd were again
+ brought together in friendly interviews, and on November 4, they were
+ married at the house of Mr. Edwards. Four children were born of this
+ marriage: Robert Todd Lincoln, August 1, 1843; Edward Baker Lincoln, March
+ 10, 1846; William Wallace Lincoln, December 21, 1850; and Thomas Lincoln,
+ April 4, 1853. Edward died while a baby; William, in the White House,
+ February 20, 1862; Thomas in Chicago, July 15, 1871; and the mother, Mary
+ Lincoln, in Springfield, July 16, 1882. Robert Lincoln was graduated from
+ Harvard during the Civil War, serving afterward on the staff of General
+ Grant. He has since been Secretary of War and Minister to England, and has
+ held many other important positions of trust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His wedding over, Lincoln took up again the practical routine of daily
+ life. He and his bride were so poor that they could not make the visit to
+ Kentucky that both would so much have enjoyed. They could not even set up
+ a little home of their own. "We are not keeping house," he wrote to a
+ friend, "but boarding at the Globe Tavern," where, he added, their room
+ and board only cost them four dollars a week. His "National Debt" of the
+ old New Salem days was not yet all paid off, and patiently and resolutely
+ he went on practising the economy he had learned in the hard school of
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's law partnership with John T. Stuart had lasted four years. Then
+ Stuart was elected to Congress, and another one was formed with Judge
+ Stephen T. Logan. It was a well-timed and important change. Stuart had
+ always cared more for politics than for law. With Logan law was the main
+ object, and under his guidance and encouragement Lincoln entered upon the
+ study and practical work of his profession in a more serious spirit than
+ ever before. His interest in politics continued, however, and in truth his
+ practice at that time was so small as to leave ample time for both. Stuart
+ had been twice elected to Congress, and very naturally Lincoln, who served
+ his party quite as faithfully, and was fully as well known, hoped for a
+ similar honor. He had profited greatly by the companionship and friendly
+ rivalry of the talented young men of Springfield, but their talent made
+ the prize he wished the harder to gain. Twice he was disappointed, the
+ nomination going to other men; but in May, 1846, he was nominated, and in
+ August of the same year elected, to the Thirtieth Congress. He had the
+ distinction of being the only Whig member from his State, the other
+ Illinois congressmen at that time all being Democrats; but he proved no
+ exception to the general rule that a man rarely comes into notice during
+ his first term in the National House of Representatives. A new member has
+ much to learn, even when, like Lincoln, long service in a State
+ legislature has taught him how the business of making laws is carried on.
+ He must find out what has been done and is likely to be done on a
+ multitude of subjects new to him, must make the acquaintance of his
+ fellow-members, must visit the departments of government almost daily to
+ look after the interests of people from his State and congressional
+ district. Legally he is elected for a term of two years. Practically a
+ session of five or six months during the first year, and of three months
+ during the second, further reduce his opportunities more than one-half.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln did not attempt to shine forth in debate, either by a stinging
+ retort, or burst of inspired eloquence. He went about his task quietly and
+ earnestly, performing his share of duty with industry and a hearty
+ admiration for the ability of better-known members. "I just take my pen,"
+ he wrote enthusiastically to a friend after listening to a speech which
+ pleased him much, "to say that Mr. Stephens, of Georgia, is a little slim,
+ pale-faced consumptive man, with a voice like Logan's, has just concluded
+ the very best speech of an hour's length I ever heard. My old withered,
+ dry eyes are full of tears yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first session of his term Lincoln made three long speeches,
+ carefully prepared and written out beforehand. He was neither elated nor
+ dismayed at the result. "As to speech-making," he wrote William H.
+ Herndon, who had now become his law partner, "I find speaking here and
+ elsewhere about the same thing. I was about as badly scared, and no worse,
+ as I am when I speak in court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next year he made no set speeches, but in addition to the usual work
+ of a congressman occupied himself with a bill that had for its object the
+ purchase and freeing of all slaves in the District of Columbia. Slavery
+ was not only lawful at the national capital at that time: there was, to
+ quote Mr. Lincoln's own graphic words, "in view from the windows of the
+ Capitol a sort of negro livery-stable, where droves of negroes were
+ collected, temporarily kept, and finally taken to Southern markets,
+ precisely like droves of horses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Lincoln and to other people who disapproved of slavery, the idea of
+ human beings held in bondage under the very shadow of the dome of the
+ Capitol seemed indeed a bitter mockery. As has already been stated, he did
+ not then believe Congress had the right to interfere with slavery in
+ States that chose to have it; but in the District of Columbia the power of
+ Congress was supreme, and the matter was entirely different. His bill
+ provided that the Federal Government should pay full value to the
+ slave-holders of the District for all slaves in their possession, and
+ should at once free the older ones. The younger ones were to be
+ apprenticed for a term of years, in order to make them self-supporting,
+ after which they also were to receive their freedom. The bill was very
+ carefully thought out, and had the approval of residents of the District
+ who held the most varied views upon slavery; but good as it was, the
+ measure was never allowed to come to a vote, and Lincoln went back to
+ Springfield, at the end of his term, feeling doubtless that his efforts in
+ behalf of the slaves had been all in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While in Washington he lived very simply and quietly, taking little part
+ in the social life of the city, though cordially liked by all who made his
+ acquaintance. An inmate of the modest boarding-house where he had rooms
+ has told of the cheery atmosphere he seemed to bring with him into the
+ common dining-room, where political arguments were apt to run high. He
+ never appeared anxious to insist upon his own views; and when others, less
+ considerate, forced matters until the talk threatened to become too
+ furious, he would interrupt with an anecdote or a story that cleared the
+ air and ended the discussion in a general laugh. Sometimes for exercise he
+ would go into a bowling-alley close by, entering into the game with great
+ zest, and accepting defeat and victory with equal good-nature. By the time
+ he had finished a little circle would be gathered around him, enjoying his
+ enjoyment, and laughing at his quaint expressions and sallies of wit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His gift for jest and story-telling has become traditional. Indeed, almost
+ every good story that has been invented within a hundred years has been
+ laid at his door. As a matter of fact, though he was fond of telling them,
+ and told them well, he told comparatively few of the number that have been
+ credited to him. He had a wonderful memory, and a fine power of making his
+ hearers see the scene he wished to depict; but the final charm of his
+ stories lay in their aptness, and in the kindly humor that left no sting
+ behind it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his term in Congress the Presidential campaign of 1848 came on.
+ Lincoln took an active part in the nomination and election of General
+ Zachary Taylor&mdash;"Old Rough and Ready," as he was called&mdash;making
+ speeches in Maryland and Massachusetts, as well as in his own home
+ district of Illinois. Two letters that he wrote during this campaign have
+ special interest for young readers, for they show the sympathetic
+ encouragement he gave to young men anxious to make a place and a name for
+ themselves in American politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now as to the young men," he wrote. "You must not wait to be brought
+ forward by the older men. For instance, do you suppose that I should ever
+ have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by
+ older men? You young men get together and form a 'Rough and Ready' club,
+ and have regular meetings and speeches.... Let every one play the part he
+ can play best&mdash;some speak, some sing, and all 'holler.' Your meetings
+ will be of evenings; the older men, and the women, will go to hear you; so
+ that it will not only contribute to the election of 'Old Zach,' but will
+ be an interesting pastime, and improving to the intellectual faculties of
+ all engaged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another letter, answering a young friend who complained of being
+ neglected, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing could afford me more satisfaction than to learn that you and
+ others of my young friends at home are doing battle in the contest and
+ taking a stand far above any I have ever been able to reach.... I cannot
+ conceive that other old men feel differently. Of course I cannot
+ demonstrate what I say; but I was young once, and I am sure I was never
+ ungenerously thrust back. I hardly know what to say. The way for a young
+ man to rise is to improve himself every way he can, never suspecting that
+ anybody wishes to hinder him. Allow me to assure you that suspicion and
+ jealousy never did help any man in any situation. There may sometimes be
+ ungenerous attempts to keep a young man down; and they will succeed, too,
+ if he allows his mind to be diverted from its true channel to brood over
+ the attempted injury. Cast about and see if this feeling has not injured
+ every person you have ever known to fall into it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was about forty years old when he wrote this letter. By some people
+ that is not considered a very great age; but he doubtless felt himself
+ immensely older, as he was infinitely wiser, than his petulant young
+ correspondent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Taylor was triumphantly elected, and it then became Lincoln's
+ duty, as Whig member of Congress from Illinois, to recommend certain
+ persons to fill government offices in that State. He did this after he
+ returned to Springfield, for his term in Congress ended on March 4, 1849,
+ the day that General Taylor became President. The letters that he sent to
+ Washington when forwarding the papers and applications of people who
+ wished appointment were both characteristic and amusing; for in his desire
+ not to mislead or to do injustice to any man, they were very apt to say
+ more in favor of the men he did not wish to see appointed than in
+ recommendation of his own particular candidates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This absolute and impartial fairness to friend and foe alike was one of
+ his strongest traits, governing every action of his life. If it had not
+ been for this, he might possibly have enjoyed another term in Congress,
+ for there had been talk of reelecting him. In spite of his confession to
+ Speed that "being elected to Congress, though I am very grateful to our
+ friends for having done it, has not pleased me as much as I expected,"
+ this must have been flattering. But there were many able young men in
+ Springfield who coveted the honor, and they had entered into an agreement
+ among themselves that each would be content with a single term. Lincoln of
+ course remained faithful to this promise. His strict keeping of promises
+ caused him also to lose an appointment from President Taylor as
+ Commissioner of the General Land Office, which might easily have been his,
+ but for which he had agreed to recommend some other Illinois man. A few
+ weeks later the President offered to make him governor of the new
+ Territory of Oregon. This attracted him much more than the other office
+ had done, but he declined because his wife was unwilling to live in a
+ place so far away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His career in Congress, while adding little to his fame at the time,
+ proved of great advantage to him in after life, for it gave him a close
+ knowledge of the workings of the Federal Government, and brought him into
+ contact with political leaders from all parts of the Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE CHAMPION OF FREEDOM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For four or five years after his return from Congress, Lincoln remained in
+ Springfield, working industriously at his profession. He was offered a law
+ partnership in Chicago, but declined on the ground that his health would
+ not stand the confinement of a great city. His business increased in
+ volume and importance as the months went by; and it was during this time
+ that he engaged in what is perhaps the most dramatic as well as the best
+ known of all his law cases&mdash;his defense of Jack Armstrong's son on a
+ charge of murder. A knot of young men had quarreled one night on the
+ outskirts of a camp-meeting, one was killed, and suspicion pointed
+ strongly toward young Armstrong as the murderer. Lincoln, for old
+ friendship's sake, offered to defend him&mdash;an offer most gratefully
+ accepted by his family. The principal witness swore that he had seen young
+ Armstrong strike the fatal blow&mdash;had seen him distinctly by the light
+ of a bright moon. Lincoln made him repeat the statement until it seemed as
+ if he were sealing the death-warrant of the prisoner. Then Lincoln began
+ his address to the jury. He was not there as a hired attorney, he told
+ them, but because of friendship. He told of his old relations with Jack
+ Armstrong, of the kindness the prisoner's mother had shown him in New
+ Salem, how he had himself rocked the prisoner to sleep when the latter was
+ a little child. Then he reviewed the testimony, pointing out how
+ completely everything depended on the statements of this one witness; and
+ ended by proving beyond question that his testimony was false, since,
+ according to the almanac, which he produced in court and showed to judge
+ and jury, THERE WAS NO MOON IN THE SKY THAT NIGHT at the hour the murder
+ was committed. The jury brought in a verdict of "Not guilty," and the
+ prisoner was discharged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln was always strong with a jury. He knew how to handle men, and he
+ had a direct way of going to the heart of things. He had, moreover,
+ unusual powers of mental discipline. It was after his return from
+ Congress, when he had long been acknowledged one of the foremost lawyers
+ of the State, that he made up his mind he lacked the power of close and
+ sustained reasoning, and set himself like a schoolboy to study works of
+ logic and mathematics to remedy the defect. At this time he committed to
+ memory six books of the propositions of Euclid; and, as always, he was an
+ eager reader on many subjects, striving in this way to make up for the
+ lack of education he had had as a boy. He was always interested in
+ mechanical principles and their workings, and in May, 1849, patented a
+ device for lifting vessels over shoals, which had evidently been dormant
+ in his mind since the days of his early Mississippi River experiences. The
+ little model of a boat, whittled out with his own hand, that he sent to
+ the Patent Office when he filed his application, is still shown to
+ visitors, though the invention itself failed to bring about any change in
+ steamboat architecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In work and study time slipped away. He was the same cheery companion as
+ of old, much sought after by his friends, but now more often to be found
+ in his office surrounded by law-books and papers than had been the case
+ before his term in Congress. His interest in politics seemed almost to
+ have ceased when, in 1854, something happened to rouse that and his sense
+ of right and justice as they had never been roused before. This was the
+ repeal of the "Missouri Compromise," a law passed by Congress in the year
+ 1820, allowing Missouri to enter the Union as a slave State, but
+ positively forbidding slavery in all other territory of the United States
+ lying north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes, which was the southern
+ boundary-line of Missouri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to that time the Southern States, where slavery was lawful, had been as
+ wealthy and quite as powerful in politics as the Northern or free States.
+ The great unoccupied territory lying to the west, which, in years to come,
+ was sure to be filled with people and made into new States, lay, however,
+ mostly north of 36 degrees 30 minutes; and it was easy to see that as new
+ free States came one after the other into the Union the importance of the
+ South must grow less and less, because there was little or no territory
+ left out of which slave States could be made to offset them. The South
+ therefore had been anxious to have the Missouri Compromise repealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of the North, on the other hand, were not all wise or
+ disinterested in their way of attacking slavery. As always happens,
+ self-interest and moral purpose mingled on both sides; but, as a whole, it
+ may be said that they wished to get rid of slavery because they felt it to
+ be wrong, and totally out of place in a country devoted to freedom and
+ liberty. The quarrel between them was as old as the nation, and it had
+ been gaining steadily in intensity. At first only a few persons in each
+ section had been really interested. By the year 1850 it had come to be a
+ question of much greater moment, and during the ten years that followed
+ was to increase in bitterness until it absorbed the thoughts of the entire
+ people, and plunged the country into a terrible civil war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham Lincoln had grown to manhood while the question was gaining in
+ importance. As a youth, during his flatboat voyages to New Orleans he had
+ seen negroes chained and beaten, and the injustice of slavery had been
+ stamped upon his soul. The uprightness of his mind abhorred a system that
+ kept men in bondage merely because they happened to be black. The
+ intensity of his feeling on the subject had made him a Whig when, as a
+ friendless boy, he lived in a town where Whig ideas were much in disfavor.
+ The same feeling, growing stronger as he grew older, had inspired the
+ Lincoln-Stone protest and the bill to free the slaves in the District of
+ Columbia, and had caused him to vote at least forty times against slavery
+ in one form or another during his short term in Congress. The repeal of
+ the Missouri Compromise, throwing open once more to slavery a vast amount
+ of territory from which it had been shut out, could not fail to move him
+ deeply. His sense of justice and his strong powers of reasoning were
+ equally stirred, and from that time until slavery came to its end through
+ his own act, he gave his time and all his energies to the cause of
+ freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two points served to make the repeal of the Missouri Compromise of special
+ interest to Lincoln. The first was personal, in that the man who
+ championed the measure, and whose influence in Congress alone made it
+ possible, was Senator Stephen A. Douglas, who had been his neighbor in
+ Illinois for many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second was deeper. He realized that the struggle meant much more than
+ the freedom or bondage of a few million black men: that it was in reality
+ a struggle for the central idea of our American republic&mdash;the
+ statement in our Declaration of Independence that "all men are created
+ equal." He made no public speeches until autumn, but in the meantime
+ studied the question with great care, both as to its past history and
+ present state. When he did speak it was with a force and power that
+ startled Douglas and, it is said, brought him privately to Lincoln with
+ the proposition that neither of them should address a public meeting again
+ until after the next election.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Douglas was a man of great ambition as well as of unusual political skill.
+ Until recently he had been heartily in favor of keeping slavery out of the
+ Northwest Territory; but he had set his heart upon being President of the
+ United States, and he thought that he saw a chance of this if he helped
+ the South to repeal the Missouri Compromise, and thus gained its gratitude
+ and its votes. Without hesitation he plunged into the work and labored
+ successfully to overthrow this law of more than thirty years' standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's speech against the repeal had made a deep impression in
+ Illinois, where he was at once recognized as the people's spokesman in the
+ cause of freedom. His statements were so clear, his language so eloquent,
+ the stand he took so just, that all had to acknowledge his power. He did
+ not then, nor for many years afterward, say that the slaves ought to be
+ immediately set free. What he did insist upon was that slavery was wrong,
+ and that it must not be allowed to spread into territory already free; but
+ that, gradually, in ways lawful and just to masters and slaves alike, the
+ country should strive to get rid of it in places where it already existed.
+ He never let his hearers lose sight of the great underlying moral fact.
+ "Slavery," he said, "is founded in the selfishness of man's nature;
+ opposition to it in his love of justice." Even Senator Douglas was not
+ prepared to admit that slavery was right. He knew that if he said that he
+ could never be President, for the whole North would rise against him. He
+ wished to please both sides, so he argued that it was not a question for
+ him or for the Federal Government to decide, but one which each State and
+ Territory must settle for itself. In answer to this plea of his that it
+ was not a matter of morals, but of "State rights"&mdash;a mere matter of
+ local self-government&mdash;Mr. Lincoln replied, "When the white man
+ governs himself that is self-government; but when he governs himself and
+ also governs another man, that is more than self-government&mdash;that is
+ despotism."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on these opposing grounds that the two men took their stand for the
+ battle of argument and principle that was to continue for years, to
+ outgrow the bounds of the State, to focus the attention of the whole
+ country upon them, and, in the end, to have far-reaching consequences of
+ which neither at that time dreamed. At first the field appeared much
+ narrower, though even then the reward was a large one. Lincoln had entered
+ the contest with no thought of political gain; but it happened that a new
+ United States senator from Illinois had to be chosen about that time.
+ Senators are not voted for by the people, but by the legislatures of their
+ respective States and as a first result of all this discussion about the
+ right or wrong of slavery it was found that the Illinois legislature,
+ instead of having its usual large Democratic majority, was almost evenly
+ divided. Lincoln seemed the most likely candidate; and he would have
+ undoubtedly been chosen senator, had not five men, whose votes were
+ absolutely necessary, stoutly refused to vote for a Whig, no matter what
+ his views upon slavery might be. Keeping stubbornly aloof, they cast their
+ ballots time after time for Lyman Trumbull, who was a Democrat, although
+ as strongly opposed to slavery as Lincoln himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A term of six years in the United States Senate must have seemed a large
+ prize to Lincoln just then&mdash;possibly the largest he might ever hope
+ to gain; and it must have been a hard trial to feel it so near and then
+ see it slipping away from him. He did what few men would have had the
+ courage or the unselfishness to do. Putting aside all personal
+ considerations, and intent only on making sure of an added vote against
+ slavery in the Senate, he begged his friends to cease voting for him and
+ to unite with those five Democrats to elect Trumbull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I regret my defeat moderately," he wrote to a sympathizing friend, "but I
+ am not nervous about it." Yet it must have been particularly trying to
+ know that with forty-five votes in his favor, and only five men standing
+ between him and success, he had been forced to give up his own chances and
+ help elect the very man who had defeated him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voters of Illinois were quick to realize the sacrifice he had made.
+ The five stubborn men became his most devoted personal followers; and his
+ action at this time did much to bring about a great political change in
+ the State. All over the country old party lines were beginning to break up
+ and re-form themselves on this one question of slavery. Keeping its old
+ name, the Democratic party became the party in favor of slavery, while the
+ Northern Whigs and all those Democrats who objected to slavery joined in
+ what became known as the Republican party. It was at a great mass
+ convention held in Bloomington in May, 1856, that the Republican party of
+ Illinois took final shape; and it was here that Lincoln made the wonderful
+ address which has become famous in party history as his "lost speech."
+ There had been much enthusiasm. Favorite speakers had already made
+ stirring addresses that had been listened to with eagerness and heartily
+ applauded; but hardly a man moved from his seat until Lincoln should be
+ heard. It was he who had given up the chance of being senator to help on
+ the cause of freedom. He alone had successfully answered Douglas. Every
+ one felt the fitness of his making the closing speech&mdash;and right
+ nobly did he honor the demand. The spell of the hour was visibly upon him.
+ Standing upon the platform before the members of the convention, his tall
+ figure drawn up to its full height, his head thrown back, and his voice
+ ringing with earnestness, he denounced the evil they had to fight in a
+ speech whose force and power carried his hearers by storm, ending with a
+ brilliant appeal to all who loved liberty and justice to
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Come as the winds come when forests are rended;
+ Come as the waves come when navies are stranded;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and unite with the Republican party against this great wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The audience rose and answered him with cheer upon cheer. Then, after the
+ excitement had died down, it was found that neither a full report nor even
+ trustworthy notes of his speech had been taken. The sweep and magnetism of
+ his oratory had carried everything before it&mdash;even the reporters had
+ forgotten their duty, and their pencils had fallen idle. So it happened
+ that the speech as a whole was lost. Mr. Lincoln himself could never
+ recall what he had said; but the hundreds who heard him never forgot the
+ scene or the lifting inspiration of his words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks later the first national convention of the Republican party
+ was held. John C. Fremont was nominated for President, and Lincoln
+ received over a hundred votes for Vice-President, but fortunately, as it
+ proved, was not selected, the honor falling to William L. Dayton of New
+ Jersey. The Democratic candidate for President that year was James
+ Buchanan, "a Northern man with Southern principles," very strongly in
+ favor of slavery. Lincoln took an active part in the campaign against him,
+ making more than fifty speeches in Illinois and the adjoining States. The
+ Democrats triumphed, and Buchanan was elected President; but Lincoln was
+ not discouraged, for the new Republican party had shown unexpected
+ strength throughout the North. Indeed, Lincoln was seldom discouraged. He
+ had an abiding faith that the people would in the long run vote wisely;
+ and the cheerful hope he was able to inspire in his followers was always a
+ strong point in his leadership.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1858, two years after this, another election took place in Illinois, on
+ which the choice of a United States senator depended. This time it was the
+ term of Stephen A. Douglas that was drawing to a close. He greatly desired
+ reelection. There was but one man in the State who could hope to rival
+ him, and with a single voice the Republicans of Illinois called upon
+ Lincoln to oppose him. Douglas was indeed an opponent not to be despised.
+ His friends and followers called him the "Little Giant." He was plausible,
+ popular, quick-witted, had winning manners, was most skilful in the use of
+ words, both to convince his hearers and, at times, to hide his real
+ meaning. He and Lincoln were old antagonists. They had first met in the
+ far-away Vandalia days of the Illinois legislature. In Springfield,
+ Douglas had been the leader of the young Democrats, while Lincoln had been
+ leader of the younger Whigs. Their rivalry had not always been confined to
+ politics, for gossip asserted that Douglas had been one of Miss Todd's
+ more favored suitors. Douglas in those days had no great opinion of the
+ tall young lawyer; while Lincoln is said to have described Douglas as "the
+ least man I ever saw"&mdash;although that referred to his rival's small
+ stature and boyish figure, not to his mental qualities. Douglas was not
+ only ambitious to be President: he had staked everything on the repeal of
+ the Missouri Compromise and his statement that this question of slavery
+ was one that every State and Territory must settle for itself, but with
+ which the Federal Government had nothing to do. Unfortunately, his own
+ party no longer agreed with him. Since Buchanan had become President the
+ Democrats had advanced their ground. They now claimed that while a State
+ might properly say whether or not it would tolerate slavery, slavery ought
+ to be lawful in all the Territories, no matter whether their people liked
+ it or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A famous law case, called the Dred Scott case, lately decided by the
+ Supreme Court of the United States, went far toward making this really the
+ law of the land. In its decision the court positively stated that neither
+ Congress nor a territorial legislature had power to keep slavery out of
+ any United States Territory. This decision placed Senator Douglas in a
+ most curious position. It justified him in repealing the Missouri
+ Compromise, but at the same time it absolutely denied his statement that
+ the people of a Territory had a right to settle the slavery question to
+ suit themselves. Being a clever juggler with words, he explained away the
+ difference by saying that a master might have a perfect right to his slave
+ in a Territory, and yet that right could do him no good unless it were
+ protected by laws in force where his slave happened to be. Such laws
+ depended entirely on the will of the people living in the Territory, and
+ so, after all, they had the deciding voice. This reasoning brought upon
+ him the displeasure of President Buchanan and all the Democrats who
+ believed as he did, and Douglas found himself forced either to deny what
+ he had already told the voters of Illinois, or to begin a quarrel with the
+ President. He chose the latter, well knowing that to lose his reelection
+ to the Senate at this time would end his political career. His fame as
+ well as his quarrel with the President served to draw immense crowds to
+ his meetings when he returned to Illinois and began speech-making, and his
+ followers so inspired these meetings with their enthusiasm that for a time
+ it seemed as though all real discussion would be swallowed up in noise and
+ shouting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln, acting on the advice of his leading friends, sent Douglas a
+ challenge to joint debate. Douglas accepted, though not very willingly;
+ and it was agreed that they should address the same meetings at seven
+ towns in the State, on dates extending through August, September, and
+ October. The terms were that one should speak an hour in opening, the
+ other an hour and a half in reply, and the first again have half an hour
+ to close. Douglas was to open the meeting at one place, Lincoln at the
+ next.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was indeed a memorable contest. Douglas, the most skilled and plausible
+ speaker in the Democratic party, was battling for his political life. He
+ used every art, every resource, at his command. Opposed to him was a
+ veritable giant in stature&mdash;a man whose qualities of mind and of body
+ were as different from those of the "Little Giant"&mdash;as could well be
+ imagined. Lincoln was direct, forceful, logical, and filled with a purpose
+ as lofty as his sense of right and justice was strong. He cared much for
+ the senatorship, but he cared far more to right the wrong of slavery, and
+ to warn people of the peril that menaced the land. Already in June he had
+ made a speech that greatly impressed his hearers. "A house divided against
+ itself cannot stand," he told them. "I believe this government cannot
+ endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to
+ be dissolved, I do not expect the house to fall&mdash;but I do expect it
+ will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other";
+ and he went on to say that there was grave danger it might become all
+ slave. He showed how, little by little, slavery had been gaining ground,
+ until all it lacked now was another Supreme Court decision to make it
+ alike lawful in all the States, North as well as South. The warning came
+ home to the people of the North with startling force, and thereafter all
+ eyes were fixed upon the senatorial campaign in Illinois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle continued for nearly three months. Besides the seven great
+ joint debates, each man spoke daily, sometimes two or three times a day,
+ at meetings of his own. Once before their audiences, Douglas's dignity as
+ a senator afforded him no advantage, Lincoln's popularity gave him little
+ help. Face to face with the followers of each, gathered in immense numbers
+ and alert with jealous watchfulness, there was no escaping the rigid test
+ of skill in argument and truth in principle. The processions and banners,
+ the music and fireworks, of both parties were stilled and forgotten while
+ the people listened to the three hours' battle of mind against mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Northern Illinois had been peopled largely from the free States, and
+ southern Illinois from the slave States; thus the feeling about slavery in
+ the two parts was very different. To take advantage of this, Douglas, in
+ the very first debate, which took place at Ottawa, in northern Illinois,
+ asked Lincoln seven questions, hoping to make him answer in a way that
+ would be unpopular farther south. In the second debate Lincoln replied to
+ these very frankly, and in his turn asked Douglas four questions, the
+ second of which was whether, in Douglas's opinion, the people of any
+ Territory could, in any lawful way, against the wish of any citizen of the
+ United States, bar out slavery before that Territory became a State. Mr.
+ Lincoln had long and carefully studied the meaning and effect of this
+ question. If Douglas said, "No," he would please Buchanan and the
+ administration Democrats, but at the cost of denying his own words. If he
+ said, "Yes," he would make enemies of every Democrat in the South.
+ Lincoln's friends all advised against asking the question. They felt sure
+ that Douglas would answer, "Yes," and that this would win him his
+ election. "If you ask it, you can never be senator," they told Lincoln.
+ "Gentlemen," he replied, "I am killing larger game. If Douglas answers he
+ can never be President, and the battle of 1860 is worth a hundred of
+ this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both prophecies were fulfilled. Douglas answered as was expected; and
+ though, in actual numbers, the Republicans of Illinois cast more votes
+ than the Democrats, a legislature was chosen that rejected him to the
+ Senate. Two years later, Lincoln, who in 1858 had not the remotest dream
+ of such a thing, found himself the successful candidate of the Republican
+ party for President of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To see how little Lincoln expected such an outcome it is only necessary to
+ glance at the letters he wrote to friends at the end of his campaign
+ against Douglas. Referring to the election to be held two years later, he
+ said, "In that day I shall fight in the ranks, but I shall be in no one's
+ way for any of the places." To another correspondent he expressed himself
+ even more frankly: "Of course I wished, but I did not much expect, a
+ better result... . I am glad I made the late race. It gave me a hearing on
+ the great and durable question of the age, which I could have had in no
+ other way; and though I now sink out of view and shall be forgotten, I
+ believe I have made some marks which will tell for the cause of civil
+ liberty long after I am gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was not to "sink out of view and be forgotten." Douglas himself
+ contributed not a little toward keeping his name before the public; for
+ shortly after their contest was ended the reelected senator started on a
+ trip through the South to set himself right again with the Southern
+ voters, and in every speech that he made he referred to Lincoln as the
+ champion of "abolitionism." In this way the people were not allowed to
+ forget the stand Lincoln had taken, and during the year 1859 they came to
+ look upon him as the one man who could be relied on at all times to answer
+ Douglas and Douglas's arguments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the autumn of that year Lincoln was asked to speak in Ohio, where
+ Douglas was again referring to him by name. In December he was invited to
+ address meetings in various towns in Kansas, and early in 1860 he made a
+ speech in New York that raised him suddenly and unquestionably to the
+ position of a national leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was delivered in the hall of Cooper Institute, on the evening of
+ February 27, 1860, before an audience of men and women remarkable for
+ their culture, wealth and influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln's name and words had filled so large a space in the Eastern
+ newspapers of late, that his listeners were very eager to see and hear
+ this rising Western politician. The West, even at that late day, was very
+ imperfectly understood by the East. It was looked upon as a land of
+ bowie-knives and pistols, of steamboat explosions, of mobs, of wild
+ speculation and wilder adventure. What, then, would be the type, the
+ character, the language of this speaker? How would he impress the great
+ editor Horace Greeley, who sat among the invited guests; David Dudley
+ Field, the great lawyer, who escorted him to the platform; William Cullen
+ Bryant, the great poet, who presided over the meeting?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The audience quickly forgot these questioning doubts. They had but time to
+ note Mr. Lincoln's unusual height, his rugged, strongly marked features,
+ the clear ring of his high-pitched voice, the commanding earnestness of
+ his manner. Then they became completely absorbed in what he was saying. He
+ began quietly, soberly, almost as if he were arguing a case before a
+ court. In his entire address he uttered neither an anecdote nor a jest. If
+ any of his hearers came expecting the style or manner of the Western
+ stump-speaker, they met novelty of an unlooked-for kind; for such was the
+ apt choice of words, the simple strength of his reasoning, the fairness of
+ every point he made, the force of every conclusion he drew, that his
+ listeners followed him, spellbound. He spoke on the subject that he had so
+ thoroughly mastered and that was now uppermost in men's minds&mdash;the
+ right or wrong of slavery. He laid bare the complaints and demands of the
+ Southern leaders, pointed out the injustice of their threat to break up
+ the Union if their claims were not granted, stated forcibly the stand
+ taken by the Republican party, and brought his speech to a close with the
+ short and telling appeal:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us, to
+ the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attention with which it was followed, the applause that greeted its
+ telling points, and the enthusiasm of the Republican journals next morning
+ showed that Lincoln's Cooper Institute speech had taken New York by storm.
+ It was printed in full in four of the leading daily papers of the city,
+ and immediately reprinted in pamphlet form. From New York Mr. Lincoln made
+ a tour of speech-making through several of the New England States, where
+ he was given a hearty welcome, and listened to with an eagerness that
+ showed a marked result at the spring elections. The interest of the
+ working-men who heard these addresses was equaled, perhaps excelled, by
+ the pleased surprise of college professors and men of letters when they
+ found that the style and method of this self-taught popular Western orator
+ would stand the test of their most searching professional criticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One other audience he had during this trip, if we may trust report, which,
+ while neither as learned as the college professors, nor perhaps as
+ critical as the factory-men, was quite as hard to please, and the winning
+ of whose approval shows another side of this great and many-sided man. A
+ teacher in a Sunday-school in the Five Points district of New York, at
+ that time one of the worst parts of the city, has told how, one morning, a
+ tall, thin, unusual-looking man entered and sat quietly listening to the
+ exercises. His face showed such genuine interest that he was asked if he
+ would like to speak to the children. Accepting the invitation with evident
+ pleasure, he stepped forward and began a simple address that quickly
+ charmed the roomful of youngsters into silence. His language was
+ singularly beautiful, his voice musical with deep feeling. The faces of
+ his little listeners drooped into sad earnestness at his words of warning,
+ and brightened again when he spoke of cheerful promises. "Go on! Oh, do go
+ on!" they begged when at last he tried to stop. As he left the room
+ somebody asked his name. "Abraham Lincoln, from Illinois," was the
+ courteous reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. THE NEW PRESIDENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln's great skill and wisdom in his debate with Douglas turned the
+ eyes of the whole country upon him; and the force and logic of his Cooper
+ Institute speech convinced every one that in him they had discovered a new
+ national leader. He began to be mentioned as a possible candidate for
+ President in the election which was to take place that fall to choose a
+ successor to President Buchanan. Indeed, quite a year earlier, an editor
+ in Illinois had written to him asking permission to announce him as a
+ candidate in his newspaper. At that time Lincoln had refused, thanking him
+ for the compliment, but adding modestly: "I must in candor say that I do
+ not think myself fit for the Presidency." About Christmas time, 1859,
+ however, a number of his stanchest Illinois friends urged him to let them
+ use his name, and he consented, not so much in the hope of being chosen,
+ as of perhaps receiving the nomination for Vice-President, or at least of
+ making a show of strength that would aid him at some future time to become
+ senator. The man most talked about as the probable Republican candidate
+ for President was William H. Seward, who was United States senator from
+ New York, and had also been governor of that State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political unrest continued. Slavery was still the most absorbing
+ topic, and it was upon their stand for or against slavery that all the
+ Presidential candidates were chosen. The pretensions and demands of the
+ Southern leaders had by this time passed into threats. They declared
+ roundly that they would take their States out of the Union if slavery were
+ not quickly made lawful all over the country, or in case a "Black
+ Republican" President should be elected. The Democrats, unable to agree
+ among themselves, split into two sections, the Northerners nominating
+ Stephen A. Douglas for President, while delegates who had come to their
+ National Convention from what were called the Cotton States chose John C.
+ Breckinridge. A few men who had belonged to the old Whig party, but felt
+ themselves unable to join the Republicans or either faction of the
+ Democrats, met elsewhere and nominated John Bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This breaking up of their political enemies into three distinct camps
+ greatly cheered the Republicans, and when their National Convention came
+ together in Chicago on May 16, 1860, its members were filled with the most
+ eager enthusiasm. Its meetings were held in a huge temporary wooden
+ building called the Wigwam, so large that 10,000 people could easily
+ assemble in it to watch the proceedings. Few conventions have shown such
+ depth of feeling. Not only the delegates on the central platform, but even
+ the spectators seemed impressed with the fact that they were taking part
+ in a great historical event. The first two days were taken up in seating
+ delegates, adopting a "platform" or statement of party principles, and in
+ other necessary routine matters. On the third day, however, it was certain
+ that balloting would begin, and crowds hurried to the Wigwam in a fever of
+ curiosity. The New York men, sure that Seward would be the choice of the
+ convention, marched there in a body, with music and banners. The friends
+ of Lincoln arrived before them, and while not making so much noise or
+ show, were doing good work for their favorite. The long nominating
+ speeches of later years had not then come into fashion. "I take the
+ liberty," simply said Mr. Evarts of New York, "to name as a candidate to
+ be nominated by this convention for the office of President of the United
+ States, William H. Seward," and at Mr. Seward's name a burst of applause
+ broke forth, so long and loud that it seemed fairly to shake the great
+ building. Mr. Judd, of Illinois, performed the same office of friendship
+ for Mr. Lincoln, and the tremendous cheering that rose from the throats of
+ his friends echoed and dashed itself against the sides of the Wigwam, died
+ down, and began anew, until the noise that had been made by Seward's
+ admirers dwindled to comparative feebleness. Again and again these
+ contests of lungs and enthusiasm were repeated as other names were
+ presented to the convention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the voting began. Two names stood out beyond all the rest on the
+ very first ballot&mdash;Seward's and Lincoln's. The second ballot showed
+ that Seward had lost votes while Lincoln had gained them. The third ballot
+ was begun in almost painful suspense, delegates and spectators keeping
+ count upon their tally-sheets with nervous fingers. It was found that
+ Lincoln had gained still more, and now only needed one and a half votes to
+ receive the nomination. Suddenly the Wigwam became as still as a church.
+ Everybody leaned forward to see who would break the spell. A man sprang
+ upon a chair and reported a change of four votes to Lincoln. Then a teller
+ shouted a name toward the skylight, and the boom of a cannon from the roof
+ announced the nomination and started the cheering down the long Chicago
+ streets; while inside delegation after delegation changed its votes to the
+ victor in a whirlwind of hurrahs. That same afternoon the convention
+ finished its labors by nominating Hannibal Hamlin of Maine for
+ Vice-President, and adjourned&mdash;the delegates, speeding homeward on
+ the night trains, realizing by the bonfires and cheering crowds at every
+ little station that a memorable Presidential campaign was already begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this campaign there were, then, four Presidential candidates in the
+ field. In the order of strength shown at the election they were:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. The Republican party, whose "platform," or statement of party
+ principles, declared that slavery was wrong, and that its further spread
+ should be prevented. Its candidates were Abraham Lincoln of Illinois for
+ President, and Hannibal Hamlin of Maine for Vice-President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. The Douglas wing of the Democratic party, which declared that it did
+ not pretend to decide whether slavery was right or wrong, and proposed to
+ allow the people of each State and Territory to choose for themselves
+ whether they would or would not have it. Its candidates were Stephen A.
+ Douglas of Illinois for President, and Herschel V. Johnson of Georgia for
+ Vice-President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. The Buchanan wing of the Democratic party, which declared that slavery
+ was right, and whose policy was to extend it, and to make new slave
+ States. Its candidates were John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky for
+ President, and Joseph Lane of Oregon for Vice-President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. The Constitutional Union party, which ignored slavery in its platform,
+ declaring that it recognized no political principles other than "the
+ Constitution of the country, the Union of the States, and the enforcement
+ of the laws." Its candidates were John Bell of Tennessee for President,
+ and Edward Everett of Massachusetts for Vice-President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In enthusiasm the Republicans quickly took the lead. "Wide Awake" clubs of
+ young men, wearing caps and capes of glazed oilcloth to protect their
+ clothing from the dripping oil of their torches, gathered in torchlight
+ processions miles in length. Fence rails, supposed to have been made by
+ Lincoln in his youth, were set up in party headquarters and trimmed with
+ flowers and lighted tapers. Lincoln was called the "Rail-splitter
+ Candidate," and this telling name, added to the equally telling "Honest
+ Old Abe," by which he had long been known in Illinois, furnished country
+ and city campaign orators with a powerful appeal to the sympathy and trust
+ of the working-people of the United States. Men and women read in
+ newspaper and pamphlet biographies the story of his humble beginnings: how
+ he had risen by simple, earnest work and native genius, first to fame and
+ leadership in his own State, and then to fame and leadership in the
+ nation; and these titles quickly grew to be much more than mere party
+ nicknames&mdash;to stand for a faith and trust destined to play no small
+ part in the history of the next few years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the nominations were made Douglas went on a tour of speech-making
+ through the South. Lincoln, on the contrary, stayed quietly at home in
+ Springfield. His personal habits and surroundings varied little during the
+ whole of this campaign summer. Naturally he gave up active law practice,
+ leaving his office in charge of his partner, William H. Herndon. He spent
+ the time during the usual business hours of each day in the governor's
+ room of the State-house at Springfield, attended only by his private
+ secretary, Mr. Nicolay. Friends and strangers alike were able to visit him
+ freely and without ceremony, and few went away without being impressed by
+ the sincere frankness of his manner and conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All sorts of people came to see him: those from far-away States, East and
+ West, as well as those from nearer home. Politicians came to ask him for
+ future favors, and many whose only motives were friendliness or curiosity
+ called to express their good wishes and take the Republican candidate by
+ the hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote no public letters, and he made no speeches beyond a few words of
+ thanks and greeting to passing street parades. Even the strictly private
+ letters in which he gave his advice on points in the campaign were not
+ more than a dozen in number; but all through the long summer, while
+ welcoming his throngs of visitors, listening to the tales of old settlers,
+ making friends of strangers, and binding old friends closer by his ready
+ sympathy, Mr. Lincoln watched political developments very closely, not
+ merely to note the progress of his own chances, but with an anxious view
+ to the future in case he should be elected. Beyond the ever-changing
+ circle of friendly faces near him he saw the growing unrest and anger of
+ the South, and doubtless felt the uncertainty of many good people in the
+ North, who questioned the power of this untried Western man to guide the
+ country through the coming perils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never over-confident of his own powers, his mind must at times have been
+ full of misgivings; but it was only on the night of the election, November
+ 6, 1860, when, sitting alone with the operators in the little
+ telegraph-office at Springfield, he read the messages of Republican
+ victory that fell from the wires until convinced of his election, that the
+ overwhelming, almost crushing weight of his coming duties and
+ responsibilities fell upon him. In that hour, grappling resolutely and
+ alone with the problem before him, he completed what was really the first
+ act of his Presidency&mdash;the choice of his cabinet, of the men who were
+ to aid him. People who doubted the will or the wisdom of their
+ Rail-splitter Candidate need have had no fear. A weak man would have
+ chosen this little band of counselors&mdash;the Secretary of State, the
+ Secretary of the Treasury, and the half-dozen others who were to stand
+ closest to him and to be at the head of the great departments of the
+ government&mdash;from among his personal friends. A man uncertain of his
+ own power would have taken care that no other man of strong nature with a
+ great following of his own should be there to dispute his authority.
+ Lincoln did the very opposite. He had a sincere belief in public opinion,
+ and a deep respect for the popular will. In this case he felt that no men
+ represented that popular will so truly as those whose names had been
+ considered by the Republican National Convention in its choice of a
+ candidate for President. So, instead of gathering about him his friends,
+ he selected his most powerful rivals in the Republican party. William H.
+ Seward, of New York, was to be his Secretary of State; Salmon P. Chase, of
+ Ohio, his Secretary of the Treasury; Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, his
+ Secretary of War; Edward Bates, of Missouri, his Attorney-General. The
+ names of all of these men had been before the Convention. Each one had
+ hoped to be President in his stead. For the other three members of his
+ Cabinet he had to look elsewhere. Gideon Welles, of Connecticut, for
+ Secretary of the Navy; Montgomery Blair, of Maryland, for
+ Postmaster-General; and Caleb B. Smith, of Indiana, for Secretary of the
+ Interior, were finally chosen. When people complained, as they sometimes
+ did, that by this arrangement the cabinet consisted of four men who had
+ been Democrats in the old days, and only three who had been Whigs, Lincoln
+ smiled his wise, humorous smile and answered that he himself had been a
+ Whig, and would always be there to make matters even. It is not likely
+ that this exact list was in his mind on the night of the November
+ election; but the principal names in it most certainly were. To some of
+ these gentlemen he offered their appointments by letter. Others he asked
+ to visit him in Springfield to talk the matter over. Much delay and some
+ misunderstanding occurred before the list was finally completed: but when
+ he sent it to the Senate, on the day after his inauguration, it was
+ practically the one he had in his mind from the beginning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A President is elected by popular vote early in November, but he is not
+ inaugurated until the following fourth of March. Until the day of his
+ inauguration, when he takes the oath of office and begins to discharge his
+ duties, he is not only not President&mdash;he has no more power in the
+ affairs of the Government than the humblest private citizen. It is easy to
+ imagine the anxieties and misgivings that beset Mr. Lincoln during the
+ four long months that lay between his election and his inauguration. True
+ to their threats never to endure the rule of a "Black Republican"
+ President, the Cotton States one after the other withdrew their senators
+ and representatives from Congress, passed what they called "Ordinances of
+ Secession," and declared themselves to be no longer a part of the United
+ States. One after another, too, army and navy officers stationed in the
+ Southern States gave up to the Southern leaders in this movement the
+ forts, navy-yards, arsenals, mints, ships, and other government property
+ under their charge. President Buchanan, in whose hands alone rested the
+ power to punish these traitors and avenge their insults to the government
+ he had sworn to protect and defend, showed no disposition to do so; and
+ Lincoln, looking on with a heavy heart, was unable to interfere in any
+ way. No matter how anxiously he might watch the developments at Washington
+ or in the Cotton States, no matter what appeals might be made to him, no
+ action of any kind was possible on his part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only bit of cheer that came to him and other Union men during this
+ anxious season of waiting, was in the conduct of Major Robert Anderson at
+ Charleston Harbor, who, instead of following the example of other officers
+ who were proving unfaithful, boldly defied the Southern "secessionists,"
+ and moving his little handful of soldiers into the harbor fort best fitted
+ for defense, prepared to hold out against them until help could reach him
+ from Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February the leaders of the Southern people met at Montgomery, Alabama,
+ adopted a Constitution, and set up a government which they called the
+ Confederate States of America, electing Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi,
+ President, and Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, Vice-President. Stephens
+ was the "little, slim pale-faced consumptive man" whose speech in Congress
+ had won Lincoln's admiration years before. Davis had been the child who
+ began his schooling so near to Lincoln in Kentucky. He had had a far
+ different career. Good fortune had carried him to West Point, into the
+ Mexican War, into the cabinet of President Franklin Pierce, and twice into
+ the Senate. He had had money, high office, the best education his country
+ could give him&mdash;everything, it seemed, that had been denied to
+ Lincoln. Now the two men were the chosen heads of two great opposing
+ factions, one bent on destroying the government that had treated him so
+ kindly; the other, for whom it had done so little, willing to lay down his
+ life in its defense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be supposed that Lincoln remained idle during these four
+ months of waiting. Besides completing his cabinet, and receiving his many
+ visitors, he devoted himself to writing his inaugural address, withdrawing
+ himself for some hours each day to a quiet room over the store of his
+ brother-in-law, where he could think and write undisturbed. The newspaper
+ correspondents who had gathered at Springfield, though alert for every
+ item of news, and especially anxious for a sight of his inaugural address,
+ seeing him every day as usual, got not the slightest hint of what he was
+ doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln started on his journey to Washington on February 11, 1861 two
+ days after Jefferson Davis had been elected President of the Confederate
+ States of America. He went on a special train, accompanied by Mrs. Lincoln
+ and their three children, his two private secretaries, and about a dozen
+ personal friends. Mr. Seward had suggested that because of the unsettled
+ condition of public affairs it would be better for the President-elect to
+ come a week earlier; but Mr. Lincoln allowed himself only time comfortably
+ to fill the engagements he had made to visit the State capitals and
+ principal cities that lay on his way, to which he had been invited by
+ State and town officials, regardless of party. The morning on which he
+ left Springfield was dismal and stormy, but fully a thousand of his
+ friends and neighbors assembled to bid him farewell. The weather seemed to
+ add to the gloom and depression of their spirits, and the leave-taking was
+ one of subdued anxiety, almost of solemnity. Mr. Lincoln took his stand in
+ the waiting-room while his friends filed past him, often merely pressing
+ his hand in silent emotion. The arrival of the rushing train broke in upon
+ this ceremony, and the crowd closed about the car into which the
+ President-elect and his party made their way. Just as they were starting,
+ when the conductor had his hand upon the bell-rope, Mr. Lincoln stepped
+ out upon the front platform and made the following brief and pathetic
+ address. It was the last time his voice was to be heard in the city which
+ had so long been his home:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Friends: No one not in my situation can appreciate my feeling of
+ sadness at this parting. To this place and the kindness of these people I
+ owe everything. Here I have lived a quarter of a century, and have passed
+ from a young to an old man. Here my children have been born, and one is
+ buried. I now leave, not knowing when or whether ever I may return, with a
+ task before me greater than that which rested upon Washington. Without the
+ assistance of that Divine Being who ever attended him, I cannot succeed.
+ With that assistance I cannot fail. Trusting in Him who can go with me,
+ and remain with you, and be everywhere for good, let us confidently hope
+ that all will yet be well. To His care commending you, as I hope in your
+ prayers you will commend me, I bid you an affectionate farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conductor gave the signal, the train rolled slowly out of the station,
+ and the journey to Washington was begun. It was a remarkable progress. At
+ almost every station, even the smallest, crowds had gathered to catch a
+ glimpse of the face of the President-elect, or at least to see the flying
+ train. At the larger stopping-places these crowds swelled to thousands,
+ and in the great cities to almost unmanageable throngs. Everywhere there
+ were calls for Mr. Lincoln, and if he showed himself; for a speech.
+ Whenever there was time, he would go to the rear platform of the car and
+ bow as the train moved away, or utter a few words of thanks and greeting.
+ At the capitals of Indiana, Ohio, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania,
+ and in the cities of Cincinnati, Cleveland, Buffalo, New York, and
+ Philadelphia, halts of one or two days were made, the time being filled
+ with formal visits and addresses to each house of the legislature, street
+ processions, large evening receptions, and other ceremonies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Party foes as well as party friends made up these expectant crowds. Every
+ eye was eager, every ear strained, to get some hint of the thoughts and
+ purposes of the man who was to be the guide and head of the nation in the
+ crisis that every one now knew to be upon the country, but the course and
+ end of which the wisest could not foresee. In spite of all the cheers and
+ the enthusiasm, there was also an under-current of anxiety for his
+ personal safety, for the South had openly boasted that Lincoln would never
+ live to be inaugurated President. He himself paid no heed to such
+ warnings; but the railroad officials, and others who were responsible for
+ his journey, had detectives on watch at different points to report any
+ suspicious happenings. Nothing occurred to change the program already
+ agreed upon until the party reached Philadelphia; but there Mr. Lincoln
+ was met by Frederick W. Seward, the son of his future Secretary of State,
+ with an important message from his father. A plot had been discovered to
+ do violence to, and perhaps kill, the President-elect as he passed through
+ the city of Baltimore. Mr. Seward and General Scott, the venerable hero of
+ the Mexican War, who was now at the head of the army, begged him to run no
+ risk, but to alter his plans so that a portion of his party might pass
+ through Baltimore by a night train without previous notice. The
+ seriousness of the warning was doubled by the fact that Mr. Lincoln had
+ just been told of a similar, if not exactly the same, danger, by a Chicago
+ detective employed in Baltimore by one of the great railroad companies.
+ Two such warnings, coming from entirely different sources, could not be
+ disregarded; for however much Mr. Lincoln might dislike to change his
+ plans for so shadowy a danger, his duty to the people who had elected him
+ forbade his running any unnecessary risk. Accordingly, after fulfilling
+ all his engagements in Philadelphia and Harrisburg on February 22, he and
+ a single companion took a night train, passed quietly through Baltimore,
+ and arrived in Washington about daylight on the morning of February 23.
+ This action called forth much talk, ranging from the highest praise to
+ ridicule and blame. A reckless newspaper reporter telegraphed all over the
+ country the absurd story that he had traveled disguised in a Scotch cap
+ and a long military cloak. There was, of course, not a word of truth in
+ the absurd tale. The rest of the party followed Mr. Lincoln at the time
+ originally planned. They saw great crowds in the streets of Baltimore, but
+ there was now no occasion for violence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the week that passed between his arrival and the day of his
+ inauguration Mr. Lincoln exchanged the customary visits of ceremony with
+ President Buchanan, his cabinet, the Supreme Court, the two houses of
+ Congress, and other dignitaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Careful preparations for the inauguration had been made under the personal
+ direction of General Scott, who held the small military force in the city
+ ready instantly to suppress any attempt to disturb the peace and quiet of
+ the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of the fourth of March President Buchanan and Citizen
+ Lincoln, the outgoing and incoming heads of the government, rode side by
+ side in a carriage from the Executive Mansion, or White House, as it is
+ more commonly called, to the Capitol, escorted by an imposing procession;
+ and at noon a great throng of people heard Mr. Lincoln read his inaugural
+ address as he stood on the east portico of the Capitol, surrounded by all
+ the high officials of the government. Senator Douglas, his unsuccessful
+ rival, standing not an arm's length away from him, courteously held his
+ hat during the ceremony. A cheer greeted him as he finished his address.
+ Then the Chief Justice arose, the clerk opened his Bible, and Mr. Lincoln,
+ laying his hand upon the book, pronounced the oath:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I, Abraham Lincoln, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the
+ office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of my
+ ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United
+ States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the thundering of cannon and the applause of all the spectators,
+ President Lincoln and Citizen Buchanan again entered their carriage and
+ drove back from the Capitol to the Executive Mansion, on the threshold of
+ which Mr. Buchanan, warmly shaking the hand of his successor, expressed
+ his wishes for the personal happiness of the new President, and for the
+ national peace and prosperity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII. LINCOLN AND THE WAR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is one thing to be elected President of the United States,&mdash;that
+ means triumph, honor, power: it is quite another thing to perform the
+ duties of President,&mdash;for that means labor, disappointment,
+ difficulty, even danger. Many a man envied Abraham Lincoln when, in the
+ stately pomp of inauguration and with the plaudits of the spectators
+ ringing about him, he took the oath of office which for four years
+ transforms an American citizen into the ruler of these United States. Such
+ envy would have been changed to deepest sympathy if they could have known
+ what lay before him. After the music and cannon were dumb, after the flags
+ were all furled and the cheering crowds had vanished, the shadows of war
+ fell about the Executive Mansion, and its new occupant remained face to
+ face with his heavy task&mdash;a task which, as he had truly said in his
+ speech at Springfield, was greater than that which rested upon Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, as never before, he must have realized the peril of the nation, with
+ its credit gone, its laws defied, its flag insulted. The South had carried
+ out its threat, and seven million Americans were in revolt against the
+ idea that "all men are created equal," while twenty million other
+ Americans were bent upon defending that idea. For the moment both sides
+ had paused to see how the new President would treat this attempt at
+ secession. It must be constantly borne in mind that the rebellion in the
+ Southern States with which Mr. Lincoln had to deal was not a sudden
+ revolution, but a conspiracy of slow growth and long planning. As one of
+ its actors frankly admitted, it was "not an event of a day. It is not
+ anything produced by Mr. Lincoln's election.... It is a matter which has
+ been gathering head for thirty years." Its main object, it must also be
+ remembered, was the spread of slavery. Alexander H. Stephens, in a speech
+ made shortly after he became the Confederate Vice-President, openly
+ proclaimed slavery to be the "corner-stone" of the new government. For
+ years it had been the dream of southern leaders to make the Ohio River the
+ northern boundary of a great slave empire, with everything lying to the
+ south of that, even the countries of South and Central America, as parts
+ of their system. Though this dream was never to be realized, the
+ Confederacy finally came to number eleven States (Alabama, Mississippi,
+ Louisiana, South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida, Texas, Arkansas,
+ Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia), and to cover a territory of more than
+ 750,000 square miles&mdash;larger than England, Scotland, Ireland, France,
+ Spain, Germany and Switzerland put together, with a coast line 3,500 miles
+ long, and a land frontier of over 7,000 miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Buchanan's timidity and want of spirit had alone made this great
+ rebellion possible, for although it had been "gathering head for thirty
+ years" it was only within the last few months that it had come to acts of
+ open treason and rebellion. President Buchanan had opportunity and ample
+ power to crush it when the conspirators first began to show their hands.
+ Instead he wavered, and delayed, while they grew bold under his lack of
+ decision, imagining that they would have a bloodless victory, and even
+ boasting that they would take Washington for their capital; or, if the new
+ President should thwart them and make them fight, that they would capture
+ Philadelphia and dictate the peace they wanted from Independence Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time Mr. Lincoln came into office the conspiracy had grown beyond
+ control by any means then in the hands of a President, though men on both
+ sides still vainly hoped that the troubles of the country might be settled
+ without fighting. Mr. Lincoln especially wished to make very sure that if
+ it ever came to a matter of war, the fault should not lie with the North.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his inaugural address he had told the South that he would use the power
+ confided to him to hold and occupy the places belonging to the Government,
+ and to collect the taxes; but beyond what might be necessary for these
+ objects, he would not use force among the people anywhere. His peaceful
+ policy was already harder to follow than he realized. Before he had been
+ President twenty-four hours word came from Major Anderson, still defying
+ the conspirators from Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, that his little
+ garrison was short of food, and must speedily surrender unless help
+ reached them. The rebels had for weeks been building batteries to attack
+ the fort, and with Anderson's report came the written opinions of his
+ officers that it would require an army of 20,000 men to relieve it. They
+ might as well have asked for twenty thousand archangels, for at that time
+ the entire army of the United States numbered but 17,113 men, and these
+ were doing duty, not only in the Southern and Eastern States, but were
+ protecting settlers from Indians on the great western frontier, and
+ guarding the long Canadian and Mexican boundaries as well. Yet Anderson
+ and his men could not be left to their fate without even an attempt to
+ help them, though some of the high military and naval officers hastily
+ called into council by the new President advised this course. It was
+ finally decided to notify the Confederates that a ship carrying food, but
+ no soldiers, would be sent to his relief. If they chose to fire upon that
+ it would be plainly the South, and not the North, that began the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days went on, and by the middle of April the Confederate government found
+ itself forced to a fatal choice. Either it must begin war, or allow the
+ rebellion to collapse. All its claims to independence were denied; the
+ commissioner it sent to Washington on the pretense that they were agents
+ of a foreign country were politely refused a hearing, yet not one angry
+ word, or provoking threat, or a single harmful act had come from the
+ "Black Republican" President. In his inaugural he had promised the people
+ of the South peace and protection, and offered them the benefit of the
+ mails. Even now, all he proposed to do was to send bread to Anderson and
+ his hungry soldiers. His prudent policy placed them where, as he had told
+ them, they could have no war unless they themselves chose to begin it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did choose to begin it. The rebellion was the work of ambitious men,
+ who had no mind to stop at that late day and see their labor go for
+ nothing. The officer in charge of their batteries was ordered to open fire
+ on Fort Sumter if Anderson refused to surrender; and in the dim light of
+ dawn on April 12, 1861, just as the outline of Fort Sumter began to show
+ itself against a brightening sky, the shot that opened the Civil War rose
+ from a rebel battery and made its slow and graceful curve upon Sumter.
+ Soon all the batteries were in action, and the fort was replying with a
+ will. Anderson held out for a day and a half, until his cartridges were
+ all used up, his flagstaff had been shot away, and the wooden buildings
+ inside the fort were on fire. Then, as the ships with supplies had not yet
+ arrived, and he had neither food nor ammunition, he was forced to
+ surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of the firing upon Fort Sumter changed the mood of the country as
+ if by magic. By deliberate act of the Confederate government its attempt
+ at peaceable secession had been changed to active war. The Confederates
+ gained Fort Sumter, but in doing so they roused the patriotism of the
+ North to a firm resolve that this insult to the flag should be redressed,
+ and that the unrighteous experiment of a rival government founded upon
+ slavery as its "cornerstone," should never succeed. In one of his speeches
+ on the journey to Washington Mr. Lincoln had said that devoted as he was
+ to peace, it might become necessary to "put the foot down firmly." That
+ time had now come. On April 15, the day after the fall of Fort Sumter, all
+ the newspapers of the country printed the President's call to arms,
+ ordering out 75,000 militia for three months, and directing Congress to
+ meet in special session on July 4, 1861. The North rallied instantly to
+ the support of the Government, and offered him twice the number of
+ soldiers he asked for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing more clearly shows the difference between President Lincoln and
+ President Buchanan than the way in which the two men met the acts of the
+ Southern Rebellion. President Buchanan temporized and delayed when he had
+ plenty of power. President Lincoln, without a moment's hesitation accepted
+ the great and unusual responsibility thrust upon him, and at once issued
+ orders for buying ships, moving troops, advancing money to Committees of
+ Safety, and for other military and naval measures for which at the moment
+ he had no express authority from Congress. As soon as Congress came
+ together on July 4, he sent a message explaining his action, saying: "It
+ became necessary for me to choose whether, using only the existing
+ means.... which Congress had provided, I should let the Government fall at
+ once into ruin, or whether availing myself of the broader powers conferred
+ by the Constitution in cases of insurrection, I would make an effort to
+ save it with all its blessings for the present age and for posterity."
+ Congress, it is needless to say, not only approved all that he had done,
+ but gave him practically unlimited powers for dealing with the rebellion
+ in future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It soon became evident that no matter how ready and willing to fight for
+ their country the 75,000 volunteers might be, they could not hope to put
+ down the rebellion, because the time for which they had enlisted would be
+ almost over before they could receive the training necessary to change
+ them from valiant citizens into good soldiers. Another call was therefore
+ issued, this time for men to serve three years or during the war, and also
+ for a large number of sailors to man the new ships that the Government was
+ straining every nerve to buy, build and otherwise make ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More important, however, than soldiers trained or untrained, was the
+ united will of the people of the North; and most important of all the
+ steadfast and courageous soul of the man called to direct the struggle.
+ Abraham Lincoln, the poor frontier boy, the struggling young lawyer, the
+ Illinois politician, whom many, even among the Republicans who voted to
+ elect him President, thought scarcely fit to hold a much smaller office,
+ proved beyond question the man for the task gifted above all his
+ associates with wisdom and strength to meet the great emergencies as they
+ arose during the four years' war that had already begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since this is the story of Mr. Lincoln's life, and not of the Civil War,
+ we cannot attempt to follow the history of the long contest as it unfolded
+ itself day by day and month by month, or even to stop to recount a list of
+ the great battles that drenched the land in blood. It was a mighty
+ struggle, fought by men of the same race and kindred, often by brother
+ against brother. Each fought for what he felt to be right; and their
+ common inheritance of courage and iron will, of endurance and splendid
+ bravery and stubborn pluck, made this battle of brothers the more bitter
+ as it was the more prolonged. It ranged over an immense extent of country;
+ but because Washington was the capital of the Union, and Richmond,
+ Virginia, the capital of the Confederacy, and the desire of each side was
+ to capture the chief city of the other, the principal fighting ground,
+ during the whole war, lay between these two towns, with the Alleghany
+ Mountains on the west, and Chesapeake Bay on the east. Between the
+ Alleghanies and the Mississippi River another field of warfare developed
+ itself, on which some of the hardest battles were fought, and the greatest
+ victories won. Beyond the Mississippi again stretched another great field,
+ bounded only by the Rocky Mountains and the Rio Grande. But the principal
+ fighting in this field was near or even on the Mississippi, in the efforts
+ made by both Unionists and Confederates to keep and hold the great highway
+ of the river, so necessary for trade in time of peace, and for moving
+ armies in time of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this immense battle-ground was fought one of the most costly wars of
+ modern times, with soldiers numbering a million men on each side; in
+ which, counting battles and skirmishes small and great, an average of two
+ engagements a day were fought for four long years, two millions of money
+ were used up every twenty-four hours, and during which the unholy prize of
+ slavery, for which the Confederate States did battle, was completely swept
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the tide of battle ebbed and flowed, defeat and victory may be said
+ to have been nearly evenly divided. Generally speaking, success was more
+ often on the side of the South during the first half of the war; with the
+ North, during the latter half. The armies were equally brave; the North
+ had the greater territory from which to draw supplies; and the end came,
+ not when one side had beaten the other, man for man, but when the South
+ had been drained of fighting men and food and guns, and slavery had
+ perished in the stress of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately for all, nobody at the beginning dreamed of the length of the
+ struggle. Even Lincoln's stout heart would have been dismayed if he could
+ have foreseen all that lay before him. The task that he could see was hard
+ and perplexing enough. Everything in Washington was in confusion. No
+ President ever had such an increase of official work as Lincoln during the
+ early months of his administration. The halls and ante-rooms of the
+ Executive Mansion were literally crowded with people seeking appointment
+ to office; and the new appointments that were absolutely necessary were
+ not half finished when the firing on Fort Sumter began active war. This
+ added to the difficulty of sifting the loyal from the disloyal, and the
+ yet more pressing labor of organizing an immense new army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hundreds of clerks employed in the Government Departments left their desks
+ and hurried South, crippling the service just at the time when the sudden
+ increase of work made their presence doubly needed. A large proportion of
+ the officers of the Army and Navy, perhaps as many as one-third, gave
+ their skill and services to the Confederacy, feeling that their allegiance
+ was due to their State or section rather than to the general government.
+ Prominent among these was Robert E. Lee, who had been made a colonel by
+ Lincoln, and whom General Scott had recommended as the most promising
+ officer to command the new force of 75,000 men called out by the
+ President's proclamation. He chose instead to resign and cast his fortunes
+ with the South, where he became the head of all the Confederate armies.
+ The loss to the Union and gain to the Confederate cause by his action is
+ hard to measure, since in him the Southern armies found a commander whose
+ surpassing courage and skill inspired its soldiers long after all hope of
+ success was gone. Cases such as this gave the President more anxiety than
+ all else. It seemed impossible to know whom to trust. An officer might
+ come to him in the morning protesting devotion to the Union, and by night
+ be gone to the South. Mr. Lincoln used to say at this time that he felt
+ like a man letting rooms at one end of his house while the other end was
+ on fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation grew steadily worse. Maryland refused to allow United States
+ soldiers to cross her territory, and the first attempt to bring troops
+ through Baltimore from the North ended in a bloody riot, and the burning
+ of railroad bridges to prevent help from reaching Washington. For three
+ days Washington was entirely cut off from the North, either by telegraph
+ or mail. General Scott hastily prepared the city for a siege, taking
+ possession of all the large supplies of flour and provisions in town, and
+ causing the Capitol and other public buildings to be barricaded. Though
+ President Lincoln did not doubt the final arrival of help, he, like
+ everyone else, was very anxious, and found it hard to understand the long
+ delay. He knew that troops had started from the North. Why did they not
+ arrive? They might not be able to go through Baltimore, but they could
+ certainly go around it. The distance was not great. What if twenty miles
+ of railroad had been destroyed, were the soldiers unable to march? Always
+ calm and self-controlled, he gave no sign in the presence of others of the
+ anxiety that weighed so heavily upon him. Very likely the visitors who saw
+ him during those days thought that he hardly realized the plight of the
+ city; yet an inmate of the White House, passing through the President's
+ office when the day's work was done and he imagined himself alone, saw him
+ pause in his absorbed walk up and down the floor, and gaze long out of the
+ window in the direction from which the troops were expected to appear.
+ Then, unconscious of any hearer, and as if the words were wrung from him
+ by anguish, he exclaimed, "Why don't they come, why don't they come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The New York Seventh Regiment was the first to "come." By a roundabout
+ route it reached Washington on the morning of April 25, and, weary and
+ travel-worn, but with banners flying and music playing, marched up
+ Pennsylvania Avenue to the big white Executive Mansion, bringing cheer to
+ the President and renewed courage to those timid citizens whose fright
+ during this time had almost paralyzed the life of the town. Taking renewed
+ courage they once more opened their houses and the shops that had been
+ closed since the beginning of the blockade, and business began anew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greater part of the three months' regiments had been ordered to
+ Washington, and the outskirts of the capital soon became a busy military
+ camp. The great Departments of the Government, especially of War and Navy,
+ could not immediately handle the details of all this sudden increase of
+ work. Men were volunteering rapidly enough, but there was sore need of
+ rations to feed them, money to pay them, tents to shelter them, uniforms
+ to clothe them, rifles to arm them, officers to drill them, and of
+ transportation to carry them to the camps of instruction where they must
+ receive their training and await further orders. In this carnival of
+ patriotism and hurly-burly of organization the weaknesses as well as the
+ virtues of human nature quickly showed themselves; and, as if the new
+ President had not already enough to distress and harass his mind, almost
+ every case of confusion and delay was brought to him for complaint and
+ correction. On him also fell the delicate and serious task of deciding
+ hundreds of novel questions as to what he and his cabinet ministers had
+ and had not the right to do under the Constitution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The month of May slipped away in all these preparatory vexations; but the
+ great machine of war, once started, moved on as it always does, from
+ arming to massing of troops, and from that to skirmish and battle. In June
+ small fights began to occur between the Union and Confederate armies. The
+ first large battle of the war took place at Bull Run, about thirty-two
+ miles southwest of Washington, on July 21, 1861. It ended in a victory for
+ the Confederates, though their army was so badly crippled by. its losses
+ that it made no further forward movement during the whole of the next
+ autumn and winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shock of this defeat was deep and painful to the people of the North,
+ not yet schooled to patience, or to the uncertainties of war. For weeks
+ the newspapers, confident of success, had been clamoring for action, and
+ the cry, "Forward to Richmond," had been heard on every hand. At first the
+ people would not believe the story of a defeat; but it was only too true.
+ By night the beaten Union troops were pouring into the fortifications
+ around Washington, and the next day a horde of stragglers found their way
+ across the bridges of the Potomac into the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Lincoln received the news quietly, as was his habit, without any
+ visible sign of distress or alarm, but he remained awake and in his office
+ all that Sunday night, listening to the excited tales of congressmen and
+ senators who, with undue curiosity, had followed the army and witnessed
+ some of the sights and sounds of battle; and by dawn on Monday he had
+ practically made up his mind as to the probable result and what he must do
+ in consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of the battle of Bull Run was a bitter disappointment to him. He
+ saw that the North was not to have the easy victory it anticipated; and to
+ him personally it brought a great and added care that never left him
+ during the war. Up to that time the North had stood by him as one man in
+ its eager resolve to put down the rebellion. From this time on, though
+ quite as determined, there was division and disagreement among the people
+ as to how this could best be done. Parties formed themselves for or
+ against this or that general, or in favor of this or that method and no
+ other of carrying on the war. In other words, the President and his
+ "administration"&mdash;the cabinet and other officers under him&mdash;became,
+ from this time on, the target of criticism for all the failures of the
+ Union armies, and for all the accidents and mistakes and unforeseen delays
+ of war. The self-control that Mr. Lincoln had learned in the hard school
+ of his boyhood, and practised during all the long struggle of his young
+ manhood, had been severe and bitter training, but nothing else could have
+ prepared him for the great disappointments and trials of the crowning
+ years of his life. He had learned to endure patiently, to reason calmly,
+ never to be unduly sure of his own opinion; but, having taken counsel of
+ the best advice at his command, to continue in the path that he felt to be
+ right, regardless of criticism or unjust abuse. He had daily and hourly to
+ do all this. He was strong and courageous, with a steadfast belief that
+ the right would triumph in the end; but his nature was at the same time
+ sensitive and tender, and the sorrows and pain of others hurt him more
+ than did his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII. UNSUCCESSFUL GENERALS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So far Mr. Lincoln's new duties as President had not placed him at any
+ disadvantage with the members of his cabinet. On the old question of
+ slavery he was as well informed and had clearer ideas than they. On the
+ new military questions that had come up since the inauguration, they, like
+ himself, had to rely on the advice of experienced officers of the army and
+ navy; and since these differed greatly, Mr. Lincoln's powerful mind was as
+ able to reach true conclusions as were men who had been governors and
+ senators. Yet the idea lingered that because he had never before held high
+ office, and because a large part of his life had been passed in the rude
+ surroundings of the frontier, he must of necessity be lacking in power to
+ govern&mdash;be weaker in will, without tact or culture&mdash;must in
+ every way be less fitted to cope with the difficult problems so rapidly
+ coming upon the administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the beginning even Secretary Seward shared this view. Mr. Lincoln must
+ have been surprised indeed, when, on the first day of April, exactly four
+ weeks after his inauguration, his Secretary of State, the man he justly
+ looked upon as the chief member of his cabinet, handed him a paper on
+ which were written "Some Thoughts for the President's Consideration." It
+ was most grave and dignified in language, but in substance bluntly told
+ Mr. Lincoln that after a month's trial the Administration was without a
+ policy, domestic or foreign, and that this must be remedied at once. It
+ advised shifting the issue at home from slavery to the question of Union
+ or disunion; and counseled the adoption of an attitude toward Europe which
+ could not have failed to rouse the anger of the principal foreign nations.
+ It added that the President or some member of his cabinet must make it his
+ constant duty to pursue and direct whatever policy should be adopted, and
+ hinted very plainly that although he, Mr. Seward, did not seek such
+ responsibility, he was willing to assume it. The interest of this
+ remarkable paper for us lies in the way Mr. Lincoln treated it, and the
+ measure that treatment gives us of his generosity and self-control. An
+ envious or a resentful man could not have wished a better opportunity to
+ put a rival under his feet; but though Mr. Lincoln doubtless thought the
+ incident very strange, it did not for a moment disturb his serenity or his
+ kindly judgment. He answered in a few quiet sentences that showed no trace
+ of passion or even of excitement; and on the central suggestion that some
+ one person must direct the affairs of the government, replied with dignity
+ "if this must be done, I must do it," adding that on affairs of importance
+ he desired and supposed he had a right to have the advice of all the
+ members of his cabinet. This reply ended the matter, and as far as is
+ known, neither of them ever mentioned the subject again. Mr. Lincoln put
+ the papers away in an envelope, and no word of the affair came to the
+ public until years after both men were dead. In one mind at least there
+ was no longer a doubt that the cabinet had a master. Mr. Seward recognized
+ the President's kindly forbearance, and repaid it by devotion and personal
+ friendship until the day of his tragic death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, after this experience, the Secretary of State needed any further proof
+ of Mr. Lincoln's ability to rule, it soon came to him, for during the
+ first months of the war matters abroad claimed the attention of the
+ cabinet, and with these also the untried western man showed himself better
+ fitted to deal than his more experienced advisers. Many of the countries
+ of Europe, especially France and England, wished the South to succeed.
+ France because of plans that Emperor Napoleon III had for founding French
+ colonies on American soil, and England because such success would give her
+ free cotton for her mills and factories. England became so friendly toward
+ the rebels that Mr. Seward, much irritated, wrote a despatch on May 21,
+ 1861, to Charles Francis Adams, the American Minister at London, which, if
+ it had been sent as he wrote it, would almost certainly have brought on
+ war between the two countries. It set forth justly and with courage what
+ the United States government would and would not endure from foreign
+ powers during the war with the South, but it had been penned in a heat of
+ indignation, and was so blunt and exasperating as to suggest intentional
+ disrespect. When Mr. Seward read it to the President the latter at once
+ saw this, and taking it from his Secretary of State kept it by him for
+ further consideration. A second reading showed him that his first
+ impression was correct. Thereupon the frontier lawyer, taking his pen,
+ went carefully over the whole dispatch, and by his corrections so changed
+ the work of the trained and experienced statesman as entirely to remove
+ its offensive tone, without in the least altering its force or courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again during 1861 the country was in serious danger of war with
+ England, and the action of President Lincoln at this time proved not only
+ that he had the will to be just, even when his own people were against
+ him, but had the skill to gain real advantage from what seemed very like
+ defeat. One of the earliest and most serious tasks of the Government had
+ been to blockade the southern ports, in order to prevent supplies from
+ foreign countries reaching the southern people, especially the southern
+ armies. Considering the great length of coast to be patrolled, and the
+ small size of the navy at the commencement of the struggle, this was done
+ with wonderful quickness, and proved in the main effective, though
+ occasionally a rebel boat managed to slip in or out without being
+ discovered and fired upon by the ships on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In November Captain Charles Wilkes learned that Ex-Senators J. M. Mason
+ and John Slidell, two prominent Confederates bound on an important mission
+ to Europe, had succeeded in reaching Cuba, and from there had taken
+ passage for England on the British mail steamer Trent. He stopped the
+ Trent and took Mason and Slidell prisoners, afterward allowing the steamer
+ to proceed on her way. The affair caused intense excitement both in
+ England and in the United States, and England began instant preparations
+ for war. Lord Lyons, the British Minister at Washington, was instructed to
+ demand the release of the prisoners and a suitable apology within one
+ week, and if this were refused, to close his legation and come home. It
+ was fortunate that Lord Lyons and Mr. Seward were close personal friends,
+ and could, in spite of the excitement of both countries, discuss the
+ matter calmly and without anger. Their conferences were brought to an end
+ by Mr. Lincoln's decision to give up the prisoners. In the North their
+ capture had been greeted with extravagant joy. Newspapers rang with
+ praises of Captain Wilkes; his act was officially approved by the
+ Secretary of the Navy, and the House of Representatives passed a
+ resolution thanking him for his "brave, adroit, and patriotic conduct." In
+ the face of all this it must have been hard indeed for Mr. Lincoln to
+ order that Mason and Slidell be given up; but though he shared the first
+ impulse of rejoicing, he soon became convinced that this must be done. War
+ with England must certainly be avoided; and Captain Wilkes, by allowing
+ the Trent to proceed on her voyage, instead of bringing her into port with
+ the prisoners, had put it out of the power of his Government to prove,
+ under international law, that the capture was justified. Besides all else,
+ the President's quick mind saw, what others failed to note, that by giving
+ up the prisoners as England demanded, the United States would really gain
+ an important diplomatic victory. For many years England had claimed the
+ right to stop and search vessels at sea when she had reason to believe
+ they carried men or goods hostile to her interests. The United States
+ denied the right, and yet this was exactly what Captain Wilkes had done in
+ stopping the Trent. By giving up the prisoners the United States would
+ thus force England to admit that her own claim had been unjust, and bind
+ her in future to respect the rights of other ships at sea. Excited
+ American feeling was grievously disappointed, and harsh criticism of the
+ Administration for thus yielding to a foreign country was not wanting; but
+ American good sense soon saw the justice of the point taken and the wisdom
+ of Mr. Lincoln's course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He that is slow to anger," says the proverb, "is better than the mighty,
+ and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city." Great as was
+ his self-control in other matters, nowhere did Mr. Lincoln's slowness to
+ anger and nobility of spirit show itself more than in his dealings with
+ the generals of the Civil War. He had been elected President. Congress had
+ given him power far exceeding that which any President had ever exercised
+ before. As President he was also Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy
+ of the United States. By proclamation he could call forth great armies and
+ he could order those armies to go wherever he chose to send them; but even
+ he had no power to make generals with the genius and the training
+ necessary to lead them instantly to success. He had to work with the
+ materials at hand, and one by one he tried the men who seemed best fitted
+ for the task, giving each his fullest trust and every aid in his power.
+ They were as eager for victory and as earnest of purpose as himself, but
+ in every case some misfortune or some fault marred the result, until the
+ country grew weary with waiting; discouragement overshadowed hope, and
+ misgiving almost engulfed his own strong soul. Then, at last, the right
+ men were found, the battles were all fought, and the war was at an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His kindness and patience in dealing with the generals who did not succeed
+ is the wonder of all who study the history of the Civil War. The letters
+ he wrote to them show better than whole volumes of description could do
+ the helpful and forbearing spirit in which he sought to aid them. First
+ among these unsuccessful generals was George B. McClellan, who had been
+ called to Washington after the battle of Bull Run and placed in charge of
+ the great new army of three years' volunteers that was pouring so rapidly
+ into the city. McClellan proved a wonderful organizer. Under his skilful
+ direction the raw recruits went to their camps of instruction, fell
+ without confusion or delay into brigades and divisions, were supplied with
+ equipments, horses and batteries, and put through a routine of drill,
+ tactics and reviews that soon made this Army of the Potomac, as it was
+ called, one of the best prepared armies the world has ever seen&mdash;a
+ perfect fighting machine of over 150,000 men and more than 200 guns.
+ General McClellan excelled in getting soldiers ready to fight, but he did
+ not succeed in leading them to fruitful victory. At first the
+ administration had great hopes of him as a commander. He was young,
+ enthusiastic, winning, and on arriving in Washington seemed amazed and
+ deeply touched by the confidence reposed in him. "I find myself," he wrote
+ to his wife, "in a new and strange position here, President, cabinet,
+ General Scott, and all, deferring to me. By some strange operation of
+ magic I seem to have become the power of the land." His rise in military
+ rank had equaled the inventions of fairy tales. He had been only a captain
+ during the Mexican war. Then he resigned. Two months after volunteering
+ for the Civil War he found himself a Major General in the Regular Army.
+ For a short time his zeal and activity seemed to justify this amazing good
+ fortune. In a fortnight however he began to look upon himself as the
+ principal savior of his country. He entered upon a quarrel with General
+ Scott which soon drove that old hero into retirement and out of his
+ pathway. He looked upon the cabinet as a set of "geese," and seeing that
+ the President was kind and unassuming in discussing military affairs, he
+ formed the habit of expressing contempt for him in letters to confidential
+ friends. This feeling grew until it soon reached a mark of open
+ disrespect, but the President's conduct toward him did not change. Mr.
+ Lincoln's nature was too forgiving, and the responsibility that lay upon
+ him was too heavy for personal resentment. For fifteen months he strove to
+ make McClellan succeed even in spite of himself. He gave him help,
+ encouragement, the most timely suggestions. He answered his
+ ever-increasing complaints with unfailing self-control. It was not that he
+ did not see McClellan's faults. He saw them, and felt them keenly. "If
+ Gen. McClellan does not want to use the army, I would like to borrow it,"
+ he said one day, stung by the General's inactivity into a sarcasm he
+ seldom allowed himself to use. But his patience was not exhausted.
+ McClellan had always more soldiers than the enemy, at Antietam nearly
+ double his numbers, yet his constant cry was for re-enforcements.
+ Regiments were sent him that could ill be spared from other points. Even
+ when his fault-finding reached the height of telegraphing to the Secretary
+ of War, "If I save this army now I tell you plainly that I owe no thanks
+ to you or to any other persons in Washington. You have done your best to
+ sacrifice this army," the President answered him kindly and gently,
+ without a sign of resentment, anxious only to do everything in his power
+ to help on the cause of the war. It was of no avail. Even the great luck
+ of finding a copy of General Lee's orders and knowing exactly what his
+ enemy meant to do, at a time when the Confederate general had only about
+ half as many troops as he had, and these were divided besides, did not
+ help him to success. All he could do even then was to fight the drawn
+ battle of Antietam, and allow Lee to get away safely across the Potomac
+ River into Virginia. After this the President's long-suffering patience
+ was at an end, but he did not remove McClellan until he had visited the
+ Army of the Potomac in person. What he saw on that visit assured him that
+ it could never succeed under such a general. "Do you know what that is?"
+ he asked a friend, waving his arm towards the white tents of the great
+ army. "It is the Army of the Potomac, I suppose," was the wondering
+ answer. "So it is called," replied the President, in a tone of suppressed
+ indignation. "But that is a mistake. It is only McClellan's bodyguard." On
+ November 5, 1862, McClellan was relieved from command, and this ended his
+ military career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were others almost equally trying. There was General Fremont, who
+ had been the Republican candidate for President in 1856. At the beginning
+ of the war he was given a command at St. Louis and charged with the
+ important duty of organizing the military strength of the northwest,
+ holding the State of Missouri true to the Union, and leading an expedition
+ down the Mississippi River. Instead of accomplishing all that had been
+ hoped for, his pride of opinion and unwillingness to accept help or take
+ advice from those about him, caused serious embarrassment and made
+ unending trouble. The President's kindness and gentleness in dealing with
+ his faults were as marked as they were useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was the long line of commanders who one after the other tried and
+ failed in the tasks allotted to them, while the country waited and lost
+ courage, and even Mr. Lincoln's heart sank. His care and wisdom and sorrow
+ dominated the whole long persistent struggle. That first sleepless night
+ of his after the battle of Bull Run was but the beginning of many nights
+ and days through which he kept unceasing watch. From the time in June,
+ 1861, when he had been called upon to preside over the council of war that
+ decided upon the Bull Run campaign, he devoted every spare moment to the
+ study of such books upon the art of war as would aid him in solving the
+ questions that he must face as Commander-in-Chief of the armies. With his
+ quick mind and unusual power of logic he made rapid progress in learning
+ the fixed and accepted rules on which all military writers agree. His
+ mastery of the difficult science became so thorough, and his understanding
+ of military situations so clear, that he has been called, by persons well
+ fitted to judge, "the ablest strategist of the war." Yet he never thrust
+ his knowledge upon his generals. He recognized that it was their duty, not
+ his, to fight the battles, and since this was so, they ought to be allowed
+ to fight them in their own way. He followed their movements with keenest
+ interest and with a most astonishing amount of knowledge, giving a hint
+ here, and a suggestion there, when he felt that he properly could, but he
+ rarely gave a positive order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is not space to quote the many letters in which he showed his
+ military wisdom, or his kindly interest in the welfare and success of the
+ different generals. One of the most remarkable must however be quoted. It
+ is the letter he wrote to General Joseph Hooker on placing him in command
+ of the Army of the Potomac in January, 1863, after McClellan's many
+ failures had been followed by the crushing defeat of the army under
+ General McClellan's successor, General Burnside, at the battle of
+ Fredericksburg, on December 13, 1862.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have placed you," he wrote on giving General Hooker the command, "at
+ the head of the Army of the Potomac. Of course I have done this upon what
+ appear to me to be sufficient reasons, and yet I think it best for you to
+ know that there are some things in regard to which I am not quite
+ satisfied with you. I believe you to be a brave and skilful soldier,
+ which, of course, I like. I also believe you do not mix politics with your
+ profession, in which you are right. You have confidence in yourself, which
+ is a valuable, if not an indispensable quality. You are ambitious, which,
+ within reasonable bounds, does good rather than harm; but I think that
+ during General Burnside's command of the army you have taken council of
+ your ambition and thwarted him as much as you could, in which you did a
+ great wrong to the country, and to a most meritorious and honorable
+ brother officer. I have heard, in such a way as to believe it, of your
+ recently saying that both the army and the Government needed a dictator.
+ Of course it was not for this, but in spite of it, that I have given you
+ the command. Only those generals who gain successes can set up dictators.
+ What I now ask of you is military success, and I will risk the
+ dictatorship. The government will support you to the utmost of its
+ ability, which is neither more nor less than it has done and will do for
+ all commanders. I much fear that the spirit which you have aided to infuse
+ into the army, of criticising their commander and withholding confidence
+ from him, will now turn upon you. I shall assist you as far as I can, to
+ put it down. Neither you nor Napoleon, if he were alive again, could get
+ any good out of an army while such a spirit prevails in it. And now,
+ beware of rashness. Beware of rashness, but with energy and sleepless
+ vigilance go forward and give us victories."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps no other piece of his writing shows as this does how completely
+ the genius of the President rose to the full height of his duties and
+ responsibilities. From beginning to end it speaks the language and
+ breathes the spirit of the great ruler, secure in popular confidence and
+ in official authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though so many of the great battles during the first half of the war were
+ won by the Confederates, military successes came to the North of course
+ from time to time. With such fine armies and such earnest generals the
+ tide of battle could not be all one way; and even when the generals made
+ mistakes, the heroic fighting and endurance of the soldiers and
+ under-officers gathered honor out of defeat, and shed the luster of renown
+ over results of barren failure. But it was a weary time, and the outlook
+ was very dark. The President never despaired. On the most dismal day of
+ the whole dismal summer of 1862 he sent Secretary Seward to New York with
+ a confidential letter full of courage, to be shown such of the governors
+ of free States as could be hastily summoned to meet him there. In it he
+ said: "I expect to maintain this contest until successful, or till I die,
+ or am conquered, or my term expires, or Congress or the country forsake
+ me," and he asked for 100,000 fresh volunteers with which to carry on the
+ war. His confidence was not misplaced. The governors of eighteen free
+ States offered him three times the number, and still other calls for
+ troops followed. Soon a popular song, "We are coming, Father Abraham,
+ three hundred thousand strong," showed the faith and trust of the people
+ in the man at the head of the Government, and how cheerfully they met the
+ great calls upon their patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, week after week and month after month, he faced the future, never
+ betraying a fear that the Union would not triumph in the end, but grieving
+ sorely at the long delay. Many who were not so sure came to him with their
+ troubles. He was beset by night and by day by people who had advice to
+ give or complaints to make. They besought him to dismiss this or that
+ General, to order such and such a military movement; to do a hundred
+ things that he, in his great wisdom, felt were not right, or for which the
+ time had not yet come. Above all, he was implored to take some decided and
+ far-reaching action upon slavery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. FREEDOM FOR THE SLAVES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ By no means the least of the evils of slavery was a dread which had
+ haunted every southern household from the beginning of the government that
+ the slaves might one day rise in revolt and take sudden vengeance upon
+ their masters. This vague terror was greatly increased by the outbreak of
+ the Civil War. It stands to the lasting credit of the negro race that the
+ wrongs of their long bondage provoked them to no such crime, and that the
+ war seems not to have suggested, much less started any such attempt.
+ Indeed, even when urged to violence by white leaders, as the slaves of
+ Maryland had been in 1859 during John Brown's raid at Harper's Ferry, they
+ had refused to respond. Nevertheless it was plain from the first that
+ slavery was to play an important part in the Civil War. Not only were the
+ people of the South battling for the principle of slavery; their slaves
+ were a great source of military strength. They were used by the
+ Confederates in building forts, hauling supplies, and in a hundred ways
+ that added to the effectiveness of their armies in the field. On the other
+ hand the very first result of the war was to give adventurous or
+ discontented slaves a chance to escape into Union camps, where, even
+ against orders to the contrary, they found protection for the sake of the
+ help they could give as cooks, servants, or teamsters, the information
+ they brought about the movements of the enemy, or the great service they
+ were able to render as guides. Practically therefore, at the very start,
+ the war created a bond of mutual sympathy between the southern negro and
+ the Union volunteer; and as fast as Union troops advanced and secession
+ masters fled, a certain number found freedom in Union camps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At some points this became a positive embarrassment to Union commanders. A
+ few days after General Butler took command of the Union troops at Fortress
+ Monroe in May, 1861, the agent of a rebel master came to insist on the
+ return of three slaves, demanding them under the fugitive-slave law.
+ Butler replied that since their master claimed Virginia to be a foreign
+ country and no longer a part of the United States, he could not at the
+ same time claim that the fugitive slave law was in force, and that his
+ slaves would not be given up unless he returned and took the oath of
+ allegiance to the United States. In reporting this, a newspaper pointed
+ out that as the breastworks and batteries which had risen so rapidly for
+ Confederate defense were built by slave labor, negroes were undoubtedly
+ "contraband of war," like powder and shot, and other military supplies,
+ and should no more be given back to the rebels than so many cannon or
+ guns. The idea was so pertinent, and the justice of it so plain that the
+ name "contraband" sprang at once into use. But while this happy
+ explanation had more convincing effect on popular thought than a volume of
+ discussion, it did not solve the whole question. By the end of July
+ General Butler had on his hands 900 "contrabands," men, women and children
+ of all ages, and he wrote to inquire what was their real condition. Were
+ they slaves or free? Could they be considered fugitive slaves when their
+ masters had run away and left them? How should they be disposed of? It was
+ a knotty problem, and upon its solution might depend the loyalty or
+ secession of the border slave States of Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky
+ and Missouri, which, up to that time, had not decided whether to remain in
+ the Union or to cast their fortunes with the South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In dealing with this perplexing subject. Mr. Lincoln kept in mind one of
+ his favorite stories: the one on the Methodist Presiding Elder who was
+ riding about his circuit during the spring freshets. A young and anxious
+ companion asked how they should ever be able to cross the swollen waters
+ of Fox River, which they were approaching, and the elder quieted him by
+ saying that he made it the rule of his life never to cross Fox River until
+ he came to it. The President, following this rule, did not immediately
+ decide the question, but left it to be treated at the discretion of each
+ commander. Under this theory some commanders admitted black people to
+ their camps, while others refused to receive them. The curt formula of
+ General Orders: "We are neither negro stealers nor negro catchers," was
+ easily read to justify either course. Congress greatly advanced the
+ problem, shortly after the battle of Bull Run, by passing a law which took
+ away a master's right to his slave, when, with his consent, such slave was
+ employed in service or labor hostile to the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the general question of slavery, the President's mind was fully made
+ up. He felt that he had no right to interfere with slavery where slavery
+ was lawful, just because he himself did not happen to like it; for he had
+ sworn to do all in his power to "preserve, protect and defend" the
+ government and its laws, and slavery was lawful in the southern States.
+ When freeing the slaves should become necessary in order to preserve the
+ Government, then it would be his duty to free them; until that time came,
+ it was equally his duty to let them alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice during the early part of the war military commanders issued orders
+ freeing slaves in the districts over which they had control, and twice he
+ refused to allow these orders to stand. "No commanding general should do
+ such a thing upon his responsibility, without consulting him," he said;
+ and he added that whether he, as Commander-in-Chief, had the power to free
+ slaves, and whether at any time the use of such power should become
+ necessary, were questions which he reserved to himself. He did not feel
+ justified in leaving such decisions to commanders in the field. He even
+ refused at that time to allow Secretary Cameron to make a public
+ announcement that the government might find it necessary to arm slaves and
+ employ them as soldiers. He would not cross Fox River until he came to it.
+ He would not take any measure until he felt it to be absolutely necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a few months later he issued his first proclamation of emancipation;
+ but he did not do so until convinced that he must do this in order to put
+ down the rebellion. Long ago he had considered and in his own mind adopted
+ a plan of dealing with the slavery question&mdash;the simple, easy plan
+ which, while a member of Congress, he had proposed for the District of
+ Columbia&mdash;that on condition of the slave-owners voluntarily giving up
+ their slaves, they should be paid a fair price for them by the Federal
+ government. Delaware was a slave State, and seemed an excellent place in
+ which to try this experiment of "compensated emancipation," as it was
+ called; for there were, all told, only 1798 slaves left in the State.
+ Without any public announcement of his purpose he offered to the citizens
+ of Delaware, through their representative in Congress, four hundred
+ dollars for each of these slaves, the payment to be made, not all at once,
+ but yearly, during a period of thirty-one years. He believed that if
+ Delaware could be induced to accept this offer, Maryland might follow her
+ example, and that afterward other States would allow themselves to be led
+ along the same easy way. The Delaware House of Representatives voted in
+ favor of the proposition, but five of the nine members of the Delaware
+ senate scornfully repelled the "abolition bribe," as they chose to call
+ it, and the project withered in the bud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln did not stop at this failure, but, on March 6, 1862, sent a
+ special message to the Senate and House of Representatives recommending
+ that Congress adopt a joint resolution favoring and practically offering
+ gradual compensated emancipation to any State that saw fit to accept it;
+ pointing out at the same time that the Federal government claimed no right
+ to interfere with slavery within the States, and that if the offer were
+ accepted it must be done as a matter of free choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Republican journals of the North devoted considerable space to
+ discussing the President's plan, which, in the main, was favorably
+ received; but it was thought that it must fail on the score of expense.
+ The President answered this objection in a private letter to a Senator,
+ proving that less than one-half day's cost of war would pay for all the
+ slaves in Delaware at four hundred dollars each, and less than
+ eighty-seven days' cost of war would pay for all in Delaware, Maryland,
+ the District of Columbia, Kentucky and Missouri. "Do you doubt," he asked,
+ that taking such a step "on the part of those States and this District
+ would shorten the war more than eighty-seven days, and thus be an actual
+ saving of expense?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both houses of Congress favored the resolution, and also passed a bill
+ immediately freeing the slaves in the District of Columbia on the payment
+ to their loyal owners of three hundred dollars for each slave. This last
+ bill was signed by the President and became a law on April 16, 1862. So,
+ although he had been unable to bring it about when a member of Congress
+ thirteen years before, it was he, after all, who finally swept away that
+ scandal of the "negro livery-stable" in the shadow of the dome of the
+ Capitol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Congress as well as the President was thus pledged to compensated
+ emancipation, and if any of the border slave States had shown a
+ willingness to accept the generosity of the government, their people might
+ have been spared the loss that overtook all slave-owners on the first of
+ January, 1863. The President twice called the representatives and senators
+ of these States to the White House, and urged his plan most eloquently,
+ but nothing came of it. Meantime, the military situation continued most
+ discouraging. The advance of the Army of the Potomac upon Richmond became
+ a retreat; the commanders in the West could not get control of the
+ Mississippi River; and worst of all, in spite of their cheering assurance
+ that "We are coming, Father Abraham, three hundred thousand strong," the
+ people of the country were saddened and filled with the most gloomy
+ forebodings because of the President's call for so many new troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It had got to be midsummer, 1862," Mr. Lincoln said, in telling an artist
+ friend the history of his most famous official act. "Things had gone on
+ from bad to worse, until I felt that we had reached the end of our rope on
+ the plan of operations we had been pursuing; that we had about played our
+ last card, and must change our tactics or lose the game. I now determined
+ upon the adoption of the emancipation policy, and without consultation
+ with, or the knowledge of the cabinet, I prepared the original draft of
+ the proclamation, and after much anxious thought, called a cabinet meeting
+ upon the subject.... I said to the cabinet that I had resolved upon this
+ step, and had not called them together to ask their advice, but to lay the
+ subject-matter of a proclamation before them, suggestions as to which
+ would be in order after they had heard it read."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on July 22 that the President read to his cabinet the draft of this
+ first emancipation proclamation, which, after announcing that at the next
+ meeting of Congress he would again offer compensated emancipation to such
+ States as chose to accept it, went on to order as Commander-in-Chief of
+ the Army and Navy of the United States, that the slaves in all States
+ which should be in rebellion against the government on January 1, 1863,
+ should "then, thenceforward and forever be free."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln had given a hint of this intended step to Mr. Seward and Mr.
+ Welles, but to all the other members of the cabinet it came as a complete
+ surprise. One thought it would cost the Republicans the fall elections.
+ Another preferred that emancipation should be proclaimed by military
+ commanders in their several military districts. Secretary Seward, while
+ approving the measure, suggested that it would better be postponed until
+ it could be given to the country after a victory, instead of issuing it,
+ as would be the case then, upon the greatest disasters of the war. "The
+ wisdom of the view of the Secretary of State struck me with very great
+ force," Mr. Lincoln's recital continues. "It was an aspect of the case
+ that, in all my thought upon the subject, I had entirely overlooked. The
+ result was that I put the draft of the proclamation aside, as you do your
+ sketch for a picture, waiting for a victory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secrets of the administration were well kept, and no hint came to the
+ public that the President had proposed such a measure to his cabinet. As
+ there was at the moment little in the way of war news to attract
+ attention, newspapers and private individuals turned a sharp fire of
+ criticism upon Mr. Lincoln. For this they seized upon the ever-useful text
+ of the slavery question. Some of them protested indignantly that the
+ President was going too fast; others clamored as loudly that he had been
+ altogether too slow. His decision, as we know, was unalterably taken,
+ although he was not yet ready to announce it. Therefore, while waiting for
+ a victory he had to perform the difficult task of restraining the
+ impatience of both sides. This he did in very positive language. To a man
+ in Louisiana, who complained that Union feeling was being crushed out by
+ the army in that State, he wrote:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a patient man, always willing to forgive on the Christian terms of
+ repentance, and also to give ample time for repentance. Still, I must save
+ this government if possible. What I cannot do, of course I will not do;
+ but it may as well be understood, once for all, that I shall not surrender
+ this game leaving any available card unplayed." Two days later he answered
+ another Louisiana critic. "What would you do in my position? Would you
+ drop the war where it is? Or would you prosecute it in future with
+ elder-stalk squirts charged with rosewater? Would you deal lighter blows
+ rather than heavier ones? Would you give up the contest leaving any
+ available means unapplied? I am in no boastful mood. I shall not do more
+ than I can, and I shall do all I can, to save the government, which is my
+ sworn duty, as well as my personal inclination. I shall do nothing in
+ malice. What I deal with is too vast for malicious dealing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President could afford to overlook the abuse of hostile newspapers,
+ but he also had to meet the criticisms of over-zealous Republicans. The
+ prominent Republican editor, Horace Greeley, printed in his paper, the
+ "New York Tribune," a long "Open Letter," ostentatiously addressed to Mr.
+ Lincoln, full of unjust accusations, his general charge being that the
+ President and many army officers were neglecting their duty through a
+ kindly feeling for slavery. The open letter which Mr. Lincoln wrote in
+ reply is remarkable not alone for the skill with which he answered this
+ attack, but also for its great dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to the policy I 'seem to be pursuing,' as you say, I have not meant to
+ leave anyone in doubt.... My paramount object in this struggle is to save
+ the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could
+ save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could
+ save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by
+ freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do
+ about slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to
+ save the Union, and what I forbear I forbear because I do not believe it
+ would help to save the Union. I shall do less whenever I shall believe
+ what I am doing hurts the cause, and I shall do more whenever I shall
+ believe doing more will help the cause. I shall try to correct errors when
+ shown to be errors, and I shall adopt new views so fast as they shall
+ appear to be true views. I have here stated my purpose according to my
+ view of official duty, and I intend no modification of my oft-expressed
+ personal wish that all men everywhere could be free."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was waiting for victory, but victory was slow to come. Instead the
+ Union army suffered another defeat at the second battle of Bull Run on
+ August 30, 1862. After this the pressure upon him to take some action upon
+ slavery became stronger than ever. On September 13 he was visited by a
+ company of ministers from the churches of Chicago, who came expressly to
+ urge him to free the slaves at once. In the actual condition of things he
+ could of course neither safely satisfy them nor deny them, and his reply,
+ while perfectly courteous, had in it a tone of rebuke that showed the
+ state of irritation and high sensitiveness under which he was living:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am approached with the most opposite opinions and advice, and that by
+ religious men, who are equally certain that they represent the Divine
+ will.... I hope it will not be irreverent for me to say that if it is
+ probable that God would reveal his will to others on a point so connected
+ with my duty, it might be supposed he would reveal it directly to me....
+ What good would a proclamation of emancipation from me do, especially as
+ we are now situated? I do not want to issue a document that the whole
+ world will see must necessarily be inoperative, like the Pope's bull
+ against the comet." "Do not misunderstand me.... I have not decided
+ against a proclamation of liberty to the slaves; but hold the matter under
+ advisement. And I can assure you that the subject is on my mind by day and
+ night more than any other. Whatever shall appear to be God's will, I will
+ do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four days after this interview the battle of Antietam was fought, and
+ when, after a few days of uncertainty it was found that it could be
+ reasonably claimed as a Union victory, the President resolved to carry out
+ his long-matured purpose. Secretary Chase in his diary recorded very fully
+ what occurred on that ever-memorable September 22, 1862. After some
+ playful talk upon other matters, Mr. Lincoln, taking a graver tone, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gentlemen: I have, as you are aware, thought a great deal about the
+ relation of this war to slavery, and you all remember that several weeks
+ ago I read to you an order I had prepared on this subject, which, on
+ account of objections made by some of you, was not issued. Ever since then
+ my mind has been much occupied with this subject, and I have thought, all
+ along, that the time for acting on it might probably come. I think the
+ time has come now. I wish it was a better time. I wish that we were in a
+ better condition. The action of the army against the rebels has not been
+ quite what I should have best liked. But they have been driven out of
+ Maryland, and Pennsylvania is no longer in danger of invasion. When the
+ rebel army was at Frederick I determined, as soon as it should be driven
+ out of Maryland, to issue a proclamation of emancipation, such as I
+ thought most likely to be useful. I said nothing to anyone, but I made the
+ promise to myself, and&mdash;[hesitating a little]&mdash;to my Maker. The
+ rebel army is now driven out, and I am going to fulfil that promise. I
+ have got you together to hear what I have written down. I do not wish your
+ advice about the main matter, for that I have determined for myself. This
+ I say, without intending anything but respect for any one of you. But I
+ already know the views of each on this question.... I have considered them
+ as thoroughly and carefully as I can. What I have written is that which my
+ reflections have determined me to say. If there is anything in the
+ expressions I use, or in any minor matter which any one of you thinks had
+ best be changed, I shall be glad to receive the suggestions. One other
+ observation I will make. I know very well that many others might, in this
+ matter as in others, do better than I can; and if I was satisfied that the
+ public confidence was more fully possessed by any one of them than by me,
+ and knew of any constitutional way in which he could be put in my place,
+ he should have it. I would gladly yield it to him. But, though I believe
+ that I have not so much of the confidence of the people as I had some time
+ since, I do not know that, all things considered, any other person has
+ more; and however this may be, there is no way in which I can have any
+ other man put where I am. I am here; I must do the best I can, and bear
+ the responsibility of taking the course which I feel I ought to take."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this humble spirit, and with this firm sense of duty that the
+ great proclamation was given to the world. One hundred days later he
+ completed the act by issuing the final proclamation of emancipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been a long-established custom in Washington for the officials of
+ the government to go on the first day of January to the Executive Mansion
+ to pay their respects to the President and his wife. The judges of the
+ courts go at one hour, the foreign diplomats at another, members of
+ Congress and senators and officers of the Army and Navy at still another.
+ One by one these various official bodies pass in rapid succession before
+ the head of the nation, wishing him success and prosperity in the New
+ Year. The occasion is made gay with music and flowers and bright uniforms,
+ and has a social as well as an official character. Even in war times such
+ customs were kept up, and in spite of his load of care, the President was
+ expected to find time and heart for the greetings and questions and
+ hand-shakings of this and other state ceremonies. Ordinarily it was not
+ hard for him. He liked to meet people, and such occasions were a positive
+ relief from the mental strain of his official work. It is to be
+ questioned, however, whether, on this day, his mind did not leave the
+ passing stream of people before him, to dwell on the proclamation he was
+ so soon to sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about three o'clock in the afternoon, after full three hours of such
+ greetings and handshakings, when his own hand was so weary it could
+ scarcely hold a pen, the President and perhaps a dozen friends, went up to
+ the Executive Office, and there, without any pre-arranged ceremony, he
+ signed his name to the greatest state paper of the century, which banished
+ the curse of slavery from our land, and set almost four million people
+ free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. THE MAN WHO WAS PRESIDENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The way Mr. Lincoln signed this most important state paper was thoroughly
+ in keeping with his nature. He hated all shams and show and pretense, and
+ being absolutely without affectation of any kind, it would never have
+ occurred to him to pose for effect while signing the Emancipation
+ Proclamation or any other paper. He never thought of himself as a
+ President to be set up before a multitude and admired, but always as a
+ President charged with duties which he owed to every citizen. In
+ fulfilling these he did not stand upon ceremony, but took the most direct
+ way to the end he had in view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not often that a President pleads a cause before Congress. Mr.
+ Lincoln did not find it beneath his dignity at one time to go in person to
+ the Capitol, and calling a number of the leading senators and
+ representatives around him, explain to them, with the aid of a map, his
+ reasons for believing that the final stand of the Confederates would be
+ made in that part of the South where the seven States of Virginia, North
+ Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia
+ come together; and strive in this way to interest them in the sad plight
+ of the loyal people of Tennessee who were being persecuted by the
+ Confederate government, but whose mountainous region might, with a little
+ help, be made a citadel of Union strength in the very heart of this
+ stronghold of rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his private life he was entirely simple and unaffected. Yet he had a
+ deep sense of what was due his office, and took part with becoming dignity
+ in all official or public ceremonies. He received the diplomats sent to
+ Washington from the courts of Europe with a formal and quiet reserve which
+ made them realize at once that although this son of the people had been
+ born in a log cabin, he was ruler of a great nation, and more than that,
+ was a prince by right of his own fine instincts and good breeding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was ever gentle and courteous, but with a few quiet words he could
+ silence a bore who had come meaning to talk to him for hours. For his
+ friends he had always a ready smile and a quaintly turned phrase. His
+ sense of humor was his salvation. Without it he must have died of the
+ strain and anxiety of the Civil War. There was something almost pathetic
+ in the way he would snatch a moment from his pressing duties and gravest
+ cares to listen to a good story or indulge in a hearty laugh. Some people
+ could not understand this. To one member of his cabinet, at least, it
+ seemed strange and unfitting that he should read aloud to them a chapter
+ from a humorous book by Artemus Ward before taking up the weighty matter
+ of the Emancipation Proclamation. From their point of view it showed lack
+ of feeling and frivolity of character, when, in truth, it was the very
+ depth of his feeling, and the intensity of his distress at the suffering
+ of the war, that led him to seek relief in laughter, to gather from the
+ comedy of life strength to go on and meet its sternest tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a social man. He could not fully enjoy even a jest alone. He wanted
+ somebody to share the pleasure with him. Often when care kept him awake
+ late at night he would wander through the halls of the Executive Mansion,
+ and coming to the room where his secretaries were still at work, would
+ stop to read to them some poem, or a passage from Shakspere, or a bit from
+ one of the humorous books in which he found relief. No one knew better
+ than he what could be cured, and what must be patiently endured. To every
+ difficulty that he could remove he gave cheerful and uncomplaining thought
+ and labor. The burdens he could not shake off he bore with silent courage,
+ lightening them whenever possible with the laughter that he once described
+ as the "universal joyous evergreen of life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a mistake to suppose that he cared only for humorous reading.
+ Occasionally he read a scientific book with great interest, but his duties
+ left him little time for such indulgences. Few men knew the Bible more
+ thoroughly than he did, and his speeches are full of scriptural
+ quotations. The poem beginning "Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be
+ proud?" was one of his favorites, and Dr. Holmes's "Last Leaf" was
+ another. Shakespere was his constant delight. A copy of Shakespere's works
+ was even to be found in the busy Executive Office, from which most books
+ were banished. The President not only liked to read the great poet's
+ plays, but to see them acted; and when the gifted actor Hackett came to
+ Washington, he was invited to the White House, where the two discussed the
+ character of Falstaff, and the proper reading of many scenes and passages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was President, Mr. Lincoln did not attempt to read the
+ newspapers. His days were long, beginning early and ending late, but they
+ were not long enough for that. One of his secretaries brought him a daily
+ memorandum of the important news they contained. His mail was so enormous
+ that he personally read only about one in every hundred of the letters
+ sent him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His time was principally taken up with interviews with people on matters
+ of importance, with cabinet meetings, conferences with his generals, and
+ other affairs requiring his close and immediate attention. If he had
+ leisure he would take a drive in the late afternoon, or perhaps steal away
+ into the grounds south of the Executive Mansion to test some new kind of
+ gun, if its inventor had been fortunate enough to bring it to his notice.
+ He was very quick to understand mechanical contrivances, and would often
+ suggest improvements that had not occurred to the inventor himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years it has been the fashion to call Mr. Lincoln homely. He was
+ very tall, and very thin. His eyes were deep-sunken, his skin of a sallow
+ pallor, his hair coarse, black, and unruly. Yet he was neither ungraceful,
+ nor awkward, nor ugly. His large features fitted his large frame, and his
+ large hands and feet were but right on a body that measured six feet four
+ inches. His was a sad and thoughtful face, and from boyhood he had carried
+ a load of care. It was small wonder that when alone, or absorbed in
+ thought, the face should take on deep lines, the eyes appear as if seeing
+ something beyond the vision of other men, and the shoulders stoop, as
+ though they too were bearing a weight. But in a moment all would be
+ changed. The deep eyes could flash, or twinkle merrily with humor, or look
+ out from under overhanging brows as they did upon the Five Points children
+ in kindliest gentleness. In public speaking, his tall body rose to its
+ full height, his head was thrown back, his face seemed transfigured with
+ the fire and earnestness of his thought, and his voice took on a high
+ clear tenor tone that carried his words and ideas far out over the
+ listening crowds. At such moments, when answering Douglas in the heat of
+ their joint-debate, or later, during the years of war, when he pronounced
+ with noble gravity the words of his famous addresses, not one in the
+ throngs that heard him could say with truth that he was other than a
+ handsome man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been the fashion, too, to say that he was slovenly, and careless in
+ his dress. This also is a mistake. His clothes could not fit smoothly on
+ his gaunt and bony frame. He was no tailor's figure of a man; but from the
+ first he clothed himself as well as his means allowed, and in the fashion
+ of the time and place. In reading the grotesque stories of his boyhood, of
+ the tall stripling whose trousers left exposed a length of shin, it must
+ be remembered not only how poor he was, but that he lived on the frontier,
+ where other boys, less poor, were scarcely better clad. In Vandalia, the
+ blue jeans he wore was the dress of his companions as well, and later,
+ from Springfield days on, clear through his presidency, his costume was
+ the usual suit of black broadcloth, carefully made, and scrupulously neat.
+ He cared nothing for style. It did not matter to him whether the man with
+ whom he talked wore a coat of the latest cut, or owned no coat at all. It
+ was the man inside the coat that interested him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same way he cared little for the pleasures of the table. He ate
+ most sparingly. He was thankful that food was good and wholesome and
+ enough for daily needs, but he could no more enter into the mood of the
+ epicure for whose palate it is a matter of importance whether he eats
+ roast goose or golden pheasant, than he could have counted the grains of
+ sand under the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the summers, while he was President, he spent the nights at a cottage
+ at the Soldiers' Home, a short distance north of Washington, riding or
+ driving out through the gathering dusk, and returning to the White House
+ after a frugal breakfast in the early morning. Ten o'clock was the hour at
+ which he was supposed to begin receiving visitors, but it was often
+ necessary to see them unpleasantly early. Occasionally they forced their
+ way to his bedroom before he had quite finished dressing. Throngs of
+ people daily filled his office, the ante-rooms, and even the corridors of
+ the public part of the Executive Mansion. He saw them all, those he had
+ summoned on important business, men of high official position who came to
+ demand as their right offices and favors that he had no right to give;
+ others who wished to offer tiresome if well-meant advice; and the
+ hundreds, both men and women, who pressed forward to ask all sorts of
+ help. His friends besought him to save himself the weariness of seeing the
+ people at these public receptions, but he refused. "They do not want much,
+ and they get very little," he answered. "Each one considers his business
+ of great importance, and I must gratify them. I know how I would feel if I
+ were in their place." And at noon on all days except Tuesday and Friday,
+ when the time was occupied by meetings of the cabinet, the doors were
+ thrown open, and all who wished might enter. That remark of his, "I know
+ how I would feel if I were in their place," explained it all. His early
+ experience of life had drilled him well for these ordeals. He had read
+ deeply in the book of human nature, and could see the hidden signs of
+ falsehood and deceit and trickery from which the faces of some of his
+ visitors were not free; but he knew, too, the hard, practical side of
+ life, the hunger, cold, storms, sickness and misfortune that the average
+ man must meet in his struggle with the world. More than all, he knew and
+ sympathized with that hope deferred which makes the heart sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a few men and women came, sad-faced and broken-hearted, to plead for
+ soldier sons or husbands in prison, or under sentence of death by
+ court-martial. An inmate of the White House has recorded the eagerness
+ with which the President caught at any fact that would justify him in
+ saving the life of a condemned soldier. He was only merciless when
+ meanness or cruelty were clearly proved. Cases of cowardice he disliked
+ especially to punish with death. "It would frighten the poor devils too
+ terribly to shoot them," he said. On the papers in the case of one soldier
+ who had deserted and then enlisted again, he wrote: "Let him fight,
+ instead of shooting him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He used to call these cases of desertion his "leg cases," and sometimes
+ when considering them, would tell the story of the Irish soldier,
+ upbraided by his captain, who replied: "Captain, I have a heart in me
+ breast as brave as Julius Caesar, but when I go into battle, Sor, these
+ cowardly legs of mine will run away with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the war went on, Mr. Lincoln objected more and more to approving
+ sentences of death by court-martial, and either pardoned them outright, or
+ delayed the execution "until further orders," which orders were never
+ given by the great-hearted, merciful man. Secretary Stanton and certain
+ generals complained bitterly that if the President went on pardoning
+ soldiers he would ruin the discipline of the army; but Secretary Stanton
+ had a warm heart, and it is doubtful if he ever willingly enforced the
+ justice that he criticized the President for tempering with so much mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Mr. Lincoln could be sternly just when necessary. A law declaring the
+ slave trade to be piracy had stood on the statute books of the United
+ States for half a century. Lincoln's administration was the first to
+ convict a man under it, and Lincoln himself decreed that the well-deserved
+ sentence be carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln sympathized keenly with the hardships and trials of the
+ soldier boys, and found time, amid all his labors and cares, to visit the
+ hospitals in and around Washington where they lay ill. His afternoon drive
+ was usually to some camp in the neighborhood of the city; and when he
+ visited one at a greater distance, the cheers that greeted him as he rode
+ along the line with the commanding general showed what a warm place he
+ held in their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not forget the unfortunate on these visits. A story is told of his
+ interview with William Scott, a boy from a Vermont farm, who, after
+ marching forty-eight hours without sleep, volunteered to stand guard for a
+ sick comrade. Weariness overcame him, and he was found asleep at his post,
+ within gunshot of the enemy. He was tried, and sentenced to be shot. Mr.
+ Lincoln heard of the case, and went himself to the tent where young Scott
+ was kept under guard. He talked to him kindly, asking about his home, his
+ schoolmates, and particularly about his mother. The lad took her picture
+ from his pocket, and showed it to him without speaking. Mr. Lincoln was
+ much affected. As he rose to leave he laid his hand on the prisoner s
+ shoulder. "My boy," he said, "you are not going to be shot to-morrow. I
+ believe you when you tell me that you could not keep awake. I am going to
+ trust you, and send you back to your regiment. Now, I want to know what
+ you intend to pay for all this?" The lad, overcome with gratitude, could
+ hardly say a word, but crowding down his emotions, managed to answer that
+ he did not know. He and his people were poor, they would do what they
+ could. There was his pay, and a little in the savings bank. They could
+ borrow something by a mortgage on the farm. Perhaps his comrades would
+ help. If Mr. Lincoln would wait until pay day possibly they might get
+ together five or six hundred dollars. Would that be enough? The kindly
+ President shook his head. "My bill is a great deal more than that," he
+ said. "It is a very large one. Your friends cannot pay it, nor your
+ family, nor your farm. There is only one man in the world who can pay it,
+ and his name is William Scott. If from this day he does his duty so that
+ when he comes to die he can truly say 'I have kept the promise I gave the
+ President. I have done my duty as a soldier,' then the debt will be paid."
+ Young Scott went back to his regiment, and the debt was fully paid a few
+ months later, for he fell in battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln's own son became a soldier after leaving college. The letter
+ his father wrote to General Grant in his behalf shows how careful he was
+ that neither his official position nor his desire to give his boy the
+ experience he wanted, should work the least injustice to others:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Executive Mansion,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Washington, January 19th, 1865.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lieutenant-General Grant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Please read and answer this letter as though I was not President, but only
+ a friend. My son, now in his twenty-second year, having graduated at
+ Harvard, wishes to see something of the war before it ends. I do not wish
+ to put him in the ranks, nor yet to give him a commission, to which those
+ who have already served long are better entitled, and better qualified to
+ hold. Could he, without embarrassment to you, or detriment to the service,
+ go into your military family with some nominal rank, I and not the public
+ furnishing the necessary means? If no, say so without the least
+ hesitation, because I am as anxious and as deeply interested that you
+ shall not be encumbered as you can be yourself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours truly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His interest did not cease with the life of a young soldier. Among his
+ most beautiful letters are those he wrote to sorrowing parents who had
+ lost their sons in battle; and when his personal friend, young Ellsworth,
+ one of the first and most gallant to fall, was killed at Alexandria, the
+ President directed that his body be brought to the White House, where his
+ funeral was held in the great East Room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though a member of no church, Mr. Lincoln was most sincerely religious and
+ devout. Not only was his daily life filled with acts of forbearance and
+ charity; every great state paper that he wrote breathes his faith and
+ reliance on a just and merciful God. He rarely talked, even with intimate
+ friends, about matters of belief, but it is to be doubted whether any
+ among the many people who came to give him advice and sometimes to pray
+ with him, had a better right to be called a Christian. He always received
+ such visitors courteously, with a reverence for their good intention, no
+ matter how strangely it sometimes manifested itself. A little address that
+ he made to some Quakers who came to see him in September, 1862, shows both
+ his courtesy to them personally, and his humble attitude toward God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad of this interview, and glad to know that I have your sympathy
+ and prayers. We are indeed going through a great trial, a fiery trial. In
+ the very responsible position in which I happen to be placed, being a
+ humble instrument in the hands of our Heavenly Father as I am, and as we
+ all are, to work out His great purposes, I have desired that all my works
+ and acts may be according to His will, and that it might be so I have
+ sought His aid; but if, after endeavoring to do my best in the light which
+ he affords me, I find my efforts fail, I must believe that for some
+ purpose unknown to me, He wills it otherwise. If I had had my way, this
+ war would never have been commenced. If I had been allowed my way, this
+ war would have been ended before this; but we find it still continues, and
+ we must believe that He permits it for some wise purpose of His own,
+ mysterious and unknown to us; and though with our limited understandings
+ we may not be able to comprehend it, yet we cannot but believe that He who
+ made the world still governs it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Children held a warm place in the President's affections. He was not only
+ a devoted father; his heart went out to all little folk. He had been kind
+ to babies in his boyish days, when, book in hand, and the desire for study
+ upon him, he would sit with one foot on the rocker of a rude frontier
+ cradle, not too selfishly busy to keep its small occupant lulled and
+ content, while its mother went about her household tasks. After he became
+ President many a sad-eyed woman carrying a child in her arms went to see
+ him, and the baby always had its share in gaining her a speedy hearing,
+ and if possible a favorable answer to her petition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When children came to him at the White House of their own accord, as they
+ sometimes did, the favors they asked were not refused because of their
+ youth. One day a small boy, watching his chance, slipped into the
+ Executive Office between a governor and a senator, when the door was
+ opened to admit them. They were as much astonished at seeing him there as
+ the President was, and could not explain his presence; but he spoke for
+ himself. He had come, he said, from a little country town, hoping to get a
+ place as page in the House of Representatives. The President began to tell
+ him that he must go to Captain Goodnow, the doorkeeper of the House, for
+ he himself had nothing to do with such appointments. Even this did not
+ discourage the little fellow. Very earnestly he pulled his papers of
+ recommendation out of his pocket, and Mr. Lincoln, unable to resist his
+ wistful face, read them, and sent him away happy with a hurried line
+ written on the back of them, saying: "If Captain Goodnow can give this
+ good little boy a place, he will oblige A. Lincoln."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a child who persuaded Mr. Lincoln to wear a beard. Up to the time
+ he was nominated for President he had always been smooth-shaven. A little
+ girl living in Chautauqua County, New York, who greatly admired him, made
+ up her mind that he would look better if he wore whiskers, and with
+ youthful directness wrote and told him so. He answered her by return mail:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Springfield, ILL., Oct. 19, 1860.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Grace Bedelt,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My dear little Miss: Your very agreeable letter of the fifteenth is
+ received. I regret the necessity of saying I have no daughter. I have
+ three sons, one seventeen, one nine, and one seven years of age. They,
+ with their mother, constitute my whole family. As to the whiskers, never
+ having worn any, do you not think people would call it a piece of silly
+ affectation if I were to begin now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your very sincere well-wisher,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A. Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently on second thoughts he decided to follow her advice. On his way
+ to Washington his train stopped at the town where she lived. He asked if
+ she were in the crowd gathered at the station to meet him. Of course she
+ was, and willing hands forced a way for her through the mass of people.
+ When she reached the car Mr. Lincoln stepped from the train, kissed her,
+ and showed her that he had taken her advice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Secretary who wrote about the President's desire to save the lives of
+ condemned soldiers tells us that "during the first year of the
+ administration the house was made lively by the games and pranks of Mr.
+ Lincoln's two younger children, William and Thomas. Robert the eldest was
+ away at Harvard, only coming home for short vacations. The two little
+ boys, aged eight and ten, with their western independence and enterprise,
+ kept the house in an uproar. They drove their tutor wild with their
+ good-natured disobedience. They organized a minstrel show in the attic;
+ they made acquaintance with the office-seekers and became the hot
+ champions of the distressed. William was, with all his boyish frolic, a
+ child of great promise, capable of close application and study. He had a
+ fancy for drawing up railway time-tables, and would conduct an imaginary
+ train from Chicago to New York with perfect precision. He wrote childish
+ verses, which sometimes attained the unmerited honors of print. But this
+ bright, gentle and studious child sickened and died in February, 1862. His
+ father was profoundly moved by his death, though he gave no outward sign
+ of his trouble, but kept about his work, the same as ever. His bereaved
+ heart seemed afterwards to pour out its fulness on his youngest child.
+ 'Tad' was a merry, warm-blooded, kindly little boy, perfectly lawless, and
+ full of odd fancies and inventions, the 'chartered libertine' of the
+ Executive Mansion." He ran constantly in and out of his father's office,
+ interrupting his gravest labors. Mr. Lincoln was never too busy to hear
+ him, or to answer his bright, rapid, imperfect speech, for he was not able
+ to speak plainly until he was nearly grown. "He would perch upon his
+ father's knee, and sometimes even on his shoulder, while the most weighty
+ conferences were going on. Sometimes, escaping from the domestic
+ authorities, he would take refuge in that sanctuary for the whole evening,
+ dropping to sleep at last on the floor, when the President would pick him
+ up, and carry him tenderly to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letters and even the telegrams Mr. Lincoln sent his wife had always a
+ message for or about Tad. One of them shows that his pets, like their
+ young master, were allowed great liberty. It was written when the family
+ was living at the Soldiers' Home, and Mrs. Lincoln and Tad had gone away
+ for a visit. "Tell dear Tad," he wrote, "that poor Nanny Goat is lost, and
+ Mrs. Cuthbert and I are in distress about it. The day you left, Nanny was
+ found resting herself and chewing her little cud on the middle of Tad's
+ bed; but now she's gone! The gardener kept complaining that she destroyed
+ the flowers, till it was concluded to bring her down to the White House.
+ This was done, and the second day she had disappeared and has not been
+ heard of since. This is the last we know of poor Nanny."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tad was evidently consoled by, not one, but a whole family of new goats,
+ for about a year later Mr. Lincoln ended a business telegram to his wife
+ in New York with the words: "Tell Tad the goats and Father are very well."
+ Then, as the weight of care rolled back upon this greathearted, patient
+ man, he added, with humorous weariness, "especially the goats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln was so forgetful of self as to be absolutely without personal
+ fear. He not only paid no attention to the threats which were constantly
+ made against his life, but when, on July 11, 1864, the Confederate General
+ Early appeared suddenly and unexpectedly before the city with a force of
+ 17,000 men, and Washington was for two days actually in danger of assault
+ and capture, his unconcern gave his friends great uneasiness. On the tenth
+ he rode out, as was his custom, to spend the night at the Soldiers' Home,
+ but Secretary Stanton, learning that Early was advancing, sent after him,
+ to compel his return. Twice afterward, intent upon watching the fighting
+ which took place near Fort Stevens, north of the city, he exposed his tall
+ form to the gaze and bullets of the enemy, utterly heedless of his own
+ peril; and it was not until an officer had fallen mortally wounded within
+ a few feet of him, that he could be persuaded to seek a place of greater
+ safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. THE TURNING POINT OF THE WAR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the summer of 1863 the Confederate armies reached their greatest
+ strength. It was then that, flushed with military ardor, and made bold by
+ what seemed to the southern leaders an unbroken series of victories on the
+ Virginia battlefields, General Lee again crossed the Potomac River, and
+ led his army into the North. He went as far as Gettysburg in Pennsylvania;
+ but there, on the third of July, 1863, suffered a disastrous defeat, which
+ shattered forever the Confederate dream of taking Philadelphia and
+ dictating peace from Independence Hall. This battle of Gettysburg should
+ have ended the war, for General Lee, on retreating southward, found the
+ Potomac River so swollen by heavy rains that he was obliged to wait
+ several days for the floods to go down. In that time it would have been
+ quite possible for General Meade, the Union commander, to follow him and
+ utterly destroy his army. He proved too slow, however, and Lee and his
+ beaten Confederate soldiers escaped. President Lincoln was inexpressibly
+ grieved at this, and in the first bitterness of his disappointment sat
+ down and wrote General Meade a letter. Lee "was within your easy grasp,"
+ he told him, "and to have closed upon him would, in connection with our
+ other late successes, have ended the war. As it is, the war will be
+ prolonged indefinitely. ... Your golden opportunity is gone and I am
+ distressed immeasurably because of it." But Meade never received this
+ letter. Deeply as the President felt Meade's fault, his spirit of
+ forgiveness was so quick, and his thankfulness for the measure of success
+ that had been gained, so great, that he put it in his desk, and it was
+ never signed or sent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle of Gettysburg was indeed a notable victory, and coupled with
+ the fall of Vicksburg, which surrendered to General Grant on that same
+ third of July, proved the real turning-point of the war. It seems
+ singularly appropriate, then, that Gettysburg should have been the place
+ where President Lincoln made his most beautiful and famous address. After
+ the battle the dead and wounded of both the Union and Confederate armies
+ had received tender attention there. Later it was decided to set aside a
+ portion of the battlefield for a great national military cemetery in which
+ the dead found orderly burial. It was dedicated to its sacred use on
+ November 19, 1863. At the end of the stately ceremonies President Lincoln
+ rose and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent
+ a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that
+ all men are created equal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or
+ any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on
+ a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of
+ that field as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives
+ that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we
+ should do this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate&mdash;we cannot consecrate&mdash;we
+ cannot hallow&mdash;this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who
+ struggled here have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or
+ detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here,
+ but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living,
+ rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought
+ here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here
+ dedicated to the great task remaining before us&mdash;that from these
+ honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave
+ the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these
+ dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have
+ a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people,
+ for the people, shall not perish from the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these words, so brief, so simple, so full of reverent feeling, he set
+ aside the place of strife to be the resting place of heroes, and then went
+ back to his own great task&mdash;for which he, too, was to give "the last
+ full measure of devotion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to within a very short time little had been heard about Ulysses S.
+ Grant, the man destined to become the most successful general of the war.
+ Like General McClellan, he was a graduate of West Point; and also like
+ McClellan, he had resigned from the army after serving gallantly in the
+ Mexican war. There the resemblance ceased, for he had not an atom of
+ McClellan's vanity, and his persistent will to do the best he could with
+ the means the government could give him was far removed from the younger
+ general's faultfinding and complaint. He was about four years older than
+ McClellan, having been born on April 27, 1822. On offering his services to
+ the War Department in 1861 he had modestly written: "I feel myself
+ competent to command a regiment if the President in his judgment should
+ see fit to intrust one to me." For some reason this letter remained
+ unanswered, although the Department, then and later, had need of trained
+ and experienced officers. Afterward the Governor of Illinois made him a
+ colonel of one of the three years' volunteer regiments; and from that time
+ on he rose in rank, not as McClellan had done, by leaps and bounds, but
+ slowly, earning every promotion. All of his service had been in the West,
+ and he first came into general notice by his persistent and repeated
+ efforts to capture Vicksburg, on whose fall the opening of the Mississippi
+ River depended. Five different plans he tried before he finally succeeded,
+ the last one appearing utterly foolhardy, and seeming to go against every
+ known rule of military science. In spite of this it was successful, the
+ Union army and navy thereby gaining control of the Mississippi River and
+ cutting off forever from the Confederacy a great extent of rich country,
+ from which, up to that time, it had been drawing men and supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The North was greatly cheered by these victories, and all eyes were turned
+ upon the successful commander. No one was more thankful than Mr. Lincoln.
+ He gave Grant quick promotion, and crowned the official act with a most
+ generous letter. "I do not remember that you and I ever met personally,"
+ he wrote. "I write this now as a grateful acknowledgement for the almost
+ inestimable service you have done the country. I wish to say a word
+ further." Then, summing up the plans that the General had tried,
+ especially the last one, he added: "I feared it was a mistake. I now wish
+ to make the personal acknowledgement that you were right and I was wrong."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other important battles won by Grant that same fall added to his growing
+ fame, and by the beginning of 1864 he was singled out as the greatest
+ Union commander. As a suitable reward for his victories it was determined
+ to make him Lieutenant-General. This army rank had, before the Civil War,
+ been bestowed on only two American soldiers&mdash;on General Washington,
+ and on Scott, for his conquest of Mexico. In 1864 Congress passed and the
+ President signed an act to revive the grade, and Grant was called to
+ Washington to receive his commission. He and Mr. Lincoln met for the first
+ time at a large public reception held at the Executive Mansion on the
+ evening of March 8. A movement and rumor in the crowd heralded his
+ approach, and when at last the short, stocky, determined soldier and the
+ tall, care-worn, deep-eyed President stood face to face the crowd, moved
+ by a sudden impulse of delicacy, drew back, and left them almost alone to
+ exchange a few words. Later, when Grant appeared in the great East Room,
+ the enthusiasm called forth by his presence could no longer be restrained,
+ and cheer after cheer went up, while his admirers pressed about him so
+ closely that, hot and blushing with embarrassment, he was forced at last
+ to mount a sofa, and from there shake hands with the eager people who
+ thronged up to him from all sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day at one o'clock the President, in the presence of the cabinet
+ and a few other officials, made a little speech, and gave him his
+ commission. Grant replied with a few words, as modest as they were brief,
+ and in conversation afterward asked what special duty was required of him.
+ The President answered that the people wanted him to take Richmond, and
+ asked if he could do it. Grant said that he could if he had the soldiers,
+ and the President promised that these would be furnished him. Grant did
+ not stay in Washington to enjoy the new honors of his high rank, but at
+ once set about preparations for his task. It proved a hard one. More than
+ a year passed before it was ended, and all the losses in battle of the
+ three years that had gone before seemed small in comparison with the
+ terrible numbers of killed and wounded that fell during these last months
+ of the war. At first Grant had a fear that the President might wish to
+ control his plans, but this was soon quieted; and his last lingering doubt
+ on the subject vanished when, as he was about to start on his final
+ campaign, Mr. Lincoln sent him a letter stating his satisfaction with all
+ he had done, and assuring him that in the coming campaign he neither knew,
+ for desired to know, the details of his plans. In his reply Grant
+ confessed the groundlessness of his fears, and added, "Should my success
+ be less than I desire and expect, the least I can say is, the fault is not
+ with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made no complicated plan for the problem before him, but proposed to
+ solve it by plain, hard, persistent fighting. "Lee's army will be your
+ objective point," he instructed General Meade. "Where Lee goes there you
+ will go also." Nearly three years earlier the opposing armies had fought
+ their first battle of Bull Run only a short distance north of where they
+ now confronted each other. Campaign and battle between them had swayed to
+ the north and the south, but neither could claim any great gain of ground
+ or of advantage. The final struggle was before them. Grant had two to one
+ in numbers; Lee the advantage in position, for he knew by heart every
+ road, hill and forest in Virginia, had for his friendly scout every white
+ inhabitant, and could retire into prepared fortifications. Perhaps the
+ greatest element of his strength lay in the conscious pride of his army
+ that for three years it had steadily barred the way to Richmond. To offset
+ this there now menaced it what had always been absent before&mdash;the
+ grim, unflinching will of the new Union commander, who had rightly won for
+ himself the name of "Unconditional Surrender" Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of May 4, 1864, his army entered upon the campaign which,
+ after many months, was to end the war. It divided itself into two parts.
+ For the first six weeks there was almost constant swift marching and hard
+ fighting, a nearly equally matched contest of strategy and battle between
+ the two armies, the difference being that Grant was always advancing, and
+ Lee always retiring. Grant had hoped to defeat Lee outside of his
+ fortifications, and early in the campaign had expressed his resolution "to
+ fight it out on this line if it takes all summer"; but the losses were so
+ appalling, 60,000 of his best troops melting away in killed and wounded
+ during the six weeks, that this was seen to be impossible. Lee's army was
+ therefore driven into its fortifications around the Confederate capital
+ and then came the siege of Richmond, lasting more than nine months, but
+ pushed forward all that time with relentless energy, in spite of Grant's
+ heavy losses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the West, meanwhile, General William T. Sherman, Grant's closest friend
+ and brother officer, pursued a task of almost equal importance, taking
+ Atlanta, Georgia, which the Confederates had turned into a city of
+ foundries and workshops for the manufacture and repair of guns; then,
+ starting from Atlanta, marching with his best troops three hundred miles
+ to the sea, laying the country waste as they went; after which, turning
+ northward, he led them through South and North Carolina to bring his army
+ in touch with Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against this background of fighting the life of the country went on. The
+ end of the war was approaching, surely, but so slowly that the people,
+ hoping for it, and watching day by day, could scarcely see it. They
+ schooled themselves to a dogged endurance, but there was no more
+ enthusiasm. Many lost courage. Volunteering almost ceased, and the
+ government was obliged to begin drafting men to make up the numbers of
+ soldiers needed by Grant in his campaign against Richmond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President had many things to dishearten him at this time, many
+ troublesome questions to settle. For instance, there were new loyal State
+ governments to provide in those parts of the South which had again come
+ under control of the Union armies&mdash;no easy matter, where every man,
+ woman and child harbored angry feelings against the North, and no matter
+ how just and forbearing he might be, his plans were sure to be thwarted
+ and bitterly opposed at every step.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were serious questions, too, to be decided about negro soldiers, for
+ the South had raised a mighty outcry against the Emancipation
+ Proclamation, especially against the use of the freed slaves as soldiers,
+ vowing that white officers of negro troops would be shown small mercy, if
+ ever they were taken prisoners. No act of such vengeance occurred, but in
+ 1864 a fort manned by colored soldiers was captured by the Confederates,
+ and almost the entire garrison was put to death. Must the order that the
+ War Department had issued some time earlier, to offset the Confederate
+ threats, now be put in force? The order said that for every negro prisoner
+ killed by the Confederates a Confederate prisoner in the hands of the
+ Union armies would be taken out and shot. It fell upon Mr. Lincoln to
+ decide. The idea seemed unbearable to him, yet, on the other hand, could
+ he afford to let the massacre go unavenged and thus encourage the South in
+ the belief that it could commit such barbarous acts and escape unharmed?
+ Two reasons finally decided him against putting the order in force. One
+ was that General Grant was about to start on his campaign against
+ Richmond, and that it would be most unwise to begin this by the tragic
+ spectacle of a military punishment, however merited. The other was his
+ tender-hearted humanity. He could not, he said, take men out and kill them
+ in cold blood for crimes committed by other men. If he could get hold of
+ the persons who were guilty of killing the colored prisoners in cold
+ blood, the case would be different; but he could not kill the innocent for
+ the guilty. Fortunately the offense was not repeated, and no one had cause
+ to criticize his clemency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Numbers of good and influential men, dismayed at the amount of blood and
+ treasure that the war had already cost, and disheartened by the calls for
+ still more soldiers that Grant's campaign made necessary, began to clamor
+ for peace&mdash;were ready to grant almost anything that the Confederates
+ chose to ask. Rebel agents were in Canada professing to be able to
+ conclude a peace. Mr. Lincoln, wishing to convince these northern "Peace
+ men" of the groundlessness of their claim, and of the injustice of their
+ charges that the government was continuing the war unnecessarily, sent
+ Horace Greeley, the foremost among them, to Canada, to talk with the
+ self-styled ambassadors of Jefferson Davis. Nothing came of it, of course,
+ except abuse of Mr. Lincoln for sending such a messenger, and a lively
+ quarrel between Greeley and the rebel agents as to who was responsible for
+ the misunderstandings that arose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The summer and autumn of 1864 were likewise filled with the bitterness and
+ high excitement of a presidential campaign; for, according to law, Mr.
+ Lincoln's successor had to be elected on the "Tuesday after the first
+ Monday" of November in that year. The great mass of Republicans wished Mr.
+ Lincoln to be reelected. The Democrats had long ago fixed upon General
+ McClellan, with his grievances against the President, as their future
+ candidate. It is not unusual for Presidents to discover would-be rivals in
+ their own cabinets. Considering the strong men who formed Mr. Lincoln's
+ cabinet, and the fact that four years earlier more than one of them had
+ active hopes of being chosen in his stead, it is remarkable that there was
+ so little of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one who developed the most serious desire to succeed him was Salmon P.
+ Chase, his Secretary of the Treasury. Devoted with all his powers to the
+ cause of the Union, Mr. Chase was yet strangely at fault in his judgment
+ of men. He regarded himself as the friend of Mr. Lincoln, but nevertheless
+ held so poor an opinion of the President's mind and character, compared
+ with his own, that he could not believe people blind enough to prefer the
+ President to himself. He imagined that he did not want the office, and was
+ anxious only for the public good; yet he listened eagerly to the critics
+ of the President who flattered his hopes, and found time in spite of his
+ great labors to write letters to all parts of the country, which, although
+ protesting that he did not want the honor, showed his entire willingness
+ to accept it. Mr. Lincoln was well aware of this. Indeed, it was
+ impossible not to know about it, though he refused to hear the matter
+ discussed or to read any letters concerning it. He had his own opinion of
+ the taste displayed by Mr. Chase, but chose to take no notice of his
+ actions. "I have determined," he said, "to shut my eyes, so far as
+ possible, to everything of the sort. Mr. Chase makes a good Secretary, and
+ I shall keep him where he is. If he becomes President, all right. I hope
+ we may never have a worse man," and he not only kept him where he was, but
+ went on appointing Chase's friends to office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was also some talk of making General Grant the Republican candidate
+ for President, and an attempt was even made to trap Mr. Lincoln into
+ taking part in a meeting where this was to be done. Mr. Lincoln refused to
+ attend, and instead wrote a letter of such hearty and generous approval of
+ Grant and his army that the meeting naturally fell into the hands of Mr.
+ Lincoln's friends. General Grant, never at that time or any other, gave
+ the least encouragement to the efforts which were made to array him
+ against the President. Mr. Lincoln, on his part, received all warnings to
+ beware of Grant in the most serene manner, saying tranquilly, "If he takes
+ Richmond, let him have it." It was not so with General Fremont. At a
+ poorly attended meeting held in Cleveland he was actually nominated by a
+ handful of people calling themselves the "Radical Democracy," and taking
+ the matter seriously, accepted, although, three months later, having found
+ no response from the public, he withdrew from the contest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, these various attempts to discredit the name of Abraham Lincoln
+ caused hardly a ripple on the great current of public opinion, and death
+ alone could have prevented his choice by the Republican national
+ convention. He took no measures to help on his own candidacy. With
+ strangers he would not talk about the probability of his reelection; but
+ with friends he made no secret of his readiness to continue the work he
+ was engaged in if such should be the general wish. "A second term would be
+ a great honor and a great labor; which together, perhaps, I would not
+ decline," he wrote to one of them. He discouraged officeholders, either
+ civil or military, who showed any special zeal in his behalf. To General
+ Schurz, who wrote asking permission to take an active part in the campaign
+ for his reelection, he answered: "I perceive no objection to your making a
+ political speech when you are where one is to be made; but quite surely,
+ speaking in the North and fighting in the South at the same time are not
+ possible, nor could I be justified to detail any officer to the political
+ campaign... and then return him to the army."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He himself made no long speeches during the summer, and in his short
+ addresses, at Sanitary Fairs, in answer to visiting delegations, and on
+ similar occasions where custom and courtesy obliged him to say a few
+ words, he kept his quiet ease and self-command, speaking heartily and to
+ the point, yet avoiding all the pitfalls that beset the candidate who
+ talks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Republican national convention came together in Baltimore on June
+ 7, 1864, it had very little to do, for its delegates were bound by rigid
+ instructions to vote for Abraham Lincoln.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was chosen on the first ballot, every State voting for him except
+ Missouri, whose representatives had been instructed to vote for Grant.
+ Missouri at once changed its vote, and the secretary of the convention
+ read the grand total of 506 for Lincoln, his announcement being greeted by
+ a storm of cheers that lasted several minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not so easy to choose a Vice-President. Mr. Lincoln had been
+ besieged by many people to make known his wishes in the matter, but had
+ persistently refused. He rightly felt that it would be presumptuous in him
+ to dictate who should be his companion on the ticket, and, in case of his
+ death, his successor in office. This was for the delegates to the
+ convention to decide, for they represented the voters of the country. He
+ had no more right to dictate who should be selected than the Emperor of
+ China would have had. It is probable that Vice-President Hamlin would have
+ been renominated, if it had not been for the general feeling both in and
+ out of the convention that, under all the circumstances, it would be wiser
+ to select some man who had been a Democrat, and had yet upheld the war.
+ The choice fell upon Andrew Johnson of Tennessee, who was not only a
+ Democrat, but had been appointed by Mr. Lincoln military governor of
+ Tennessee in 1862.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Democrats at first meant to have the national convention of their
+ party meet on the fourth of July; but after Fremont had been nominated at
+ Cleveland and Lincoln at Baltimore, they postponed it to a later date,
+ hoping that something in the chapter of accidents might happen to their
+ advantage. At first it appeared as if this might be the case. The outlook
+ for the Republicans was far from satisfactory. The terrible fighting and
+ great losses of Grant's army in Virginia had profoundly shocked and
+ depressed the country. The campaign of General Sherman, who was then in
+ Georgia, showed as yet no promise of the brilliant results it afterward
+ attained. General Early's sudden raid into Maryland, when he appeared so
+ unexpectedly before Washington and threatened the city, had been the cause
+ of much exasperation; and Mr. Chase, made bitter by his failure to receive
+ the coveted nomination for President, had resigned from the cabinet. This
+ seemed, to certain leading Republicans, to point to a breaking up of the
+ government. The "Peace" men were clamoring loudly for an end of the war;
+ and the Democrats, not having yet formally chosen a candidate, were free
+ to devote all their leisure to attacks upon the administration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln realized fully the tremendous issues at stake. He looked worn
+ and weary. To a friend who urged him to go away for a fortnight's rest, he
+ replied, "I cannot fly from my thoughts. My solicitude for this great
+ country follows me wherever I go. I do not think it is personal vanity or
+ ambition, though I am not free from these infirmities, but I cannot but
+ feel that the weal or woe of this great nation will be decided in
+ November. There is no program offered by any wing of the Democratic party
+ but that must result in the permanent destruction of the Union."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political situation grew still darker. Toward the end of August the
+ general gloom enveloped even the President himself. Then what he did was
+ most original and characteristic. Feeling that the campaign was going
+ against him, he made up his mind deliberately the course he ought to
+ pursue, and laid down for himself the action demanded by his strong sense
+ of duty. He wrote on August 23 the following memorandum: "This morning, as
+ for some days past, it seems exceedingly probable that this administration
+ will not be reelected. Then it will be my duty to so cooperate with the
+ President-elect as to save the Union between the election and the
+ inauguration, as he will have secured his election on such ground that he
+ cannot possibly save it afterward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He folded and pasted the sheet of paper in such a way that its contents
+ could not be seen, and as the cabinet came together handed it to each
+ member successively, asking him to write his name across the back of it.
+ In this peculiar fashion he pledged himself and his administration to
+ accept loyally the verdict of the people if it should be against them, and
+ to do their utmost to save the Union in the brief remainder of his term of
+ office. He gave no hint to any member of his cabinet of the nature of the
+ paper thus signed until after his reelection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Democratic convention finally came together in Chicago on August 29.
+ It declared the war a failure, and that efforts ought to be made at once
+ to bring it to a close, and nominated General McClellan for President
+ McClellan's only chance of success lay in his war record. His position as
+ a candidate on a platform of dishonorable peace would have been no less
+ desperate than ridiculous. In his letter accepting the nomination,
+ therefore, he calmly ignored the platform, and renewed his assurances of
+ devotion to the Union, the Constitution, and the flag of his country. But
+ the stars in their courses fought against him. Even before the Democratic
+ convention met, the tide of battle had turned. The darkest hour of the war
+ had passed, and dawn was at hand, and amid the thanksgivings of a grateful
+ people, and the joyful salute of great guns, the real presidential
+ campaign began. The country awoke to the true meaning of the Democratic
+ platform; General Sherman's successes in the South excited the enthusiasm
+ of the people; and when at last the Unionists, rousing from their
+ midsummer languor, began to show their faith in the Republican candidate,
+ the hopelessness of all efforts to undermine him became evident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. THE CONQUEROR OF A GREAT REBELLION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The presidential election of 1864 took place on November 8. The diary of
+ one of the President's secretaries contains a curious record of the way
+ the day passed at the Executive Mansion. "The house has been still and
+ almost deserted. Everybody in Washington and not at home voting seems
+ ashamed of it, and stays away from the President. While I was talking with
+ him to-day he said: 'It is a little singular that I, who am not a
+ vindictive man, should always have been before the people for election in
+ canvasses marked for their bitterness. Always but once. When I came to
+ Congress it was a quiet time; but always besides that the contests in
+ which I have been prominent have been marked with great rancor.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the evening the President made his way through rain and darkness
+ to the War Department to receive the returns. The telegrams came, thick
+ and fast, all pointing joyously to his reelection. He sent the important
+ ones over to Mrs. Lincoln at the White House, remarking, "She is more
+ anxious that I am." The satisfaction of one member of the little group
+ about him was coupled with the wish that the critics of the administration
+ might feel properly rebuked by this strong expression of the popular will.
+ Mr. Lincoln looked at him in kindly surprise. "You have more of that
+ feeling of personal resentment than I," he said. "Perhaps I have too
+ little of it, but I never thought it paid. A man has not time to spend
+ half his life in quarrels. If any man ceases to attack me, I never
+ remember the past against him." This state of mind might well have been
+ called by a higher name than "lack of personal resentment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln and Johnson received a popular majority of 411,281, and 212 out of
+ 233 electoral votes&mdash;only those of New Jersey, Delaware and Kentucky,
+ twenty-one in all, being cast for McClellan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Mr. Lincoln this was one of the most solemn days of his life. Assured
+ of his personal success, and made devoutly confident by the military
+ victories of the last few weeks that the end of the war was at hand, he
+ felt no sense of triumph over his opponents. The thoughts that filled his
+ mind found expression in the closing sentences of the little speech that
+ he made to some serenaders who greeted him in the early morning hours of
+ November 9, as he left the War Department to return to the White House:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am thankful to God for this approval of the people; but while deeply
+ grateful for this mark of their confidence in me, if I know my heart, my
+ gratitude is free from any taint of personal triumph.... It is no pleasure
+ to me to triumph over anyone, but I give thanks to the Almighty for this
+ evidence of the people's resolution to stand by free government and the
+ rights of humanity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lincoln's inauguration for his second term as President took place at
+ the time appointed, on March 4, 1865. There is little variation in the
+ simple but impressive pageantry with which the ceremony is celebrated. The
+ principal novelty commented on by the newspapers was the share which the
+ people who had up to that time been slaves, had for the first time in this
+ public and political drama. Associations of negro citizens joined in the
+ procession, and a battalion of negro soldiers formed part of the military
+ escort. The central act of the occasion was President Lincoln's second
+ inaugural address, which enriched the political literature of the nation
+ with another masterpiece. He said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fellow-countrymen: At this second appearing to take the oath of the
+ presidential office, there is less occasion for an extended address than
+ there was at the first. Then a statement, somewhat in detail, of a course
+ to be pursued, seemed fitting and proper. Now, at the expiration of four
+ years, during which public declarations have been constantly called forth
+ on every point and phase of the great contest which still absorbs the
+ attention and engrosses the energies of the nation, little that is new
+ could be presented. The progress of our arms, upon which all else chiefly
+ depends, is as well known to the public as to myself; and it is, I trust,
+ reasonably satisfactory and encouraging to all. With high hope for the
+ future, no prediction in regard to it is ventured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the occasion corresponding to this four years ago, all thoughts were
+ anxiously directed to an impending civil war. All dreaded it&mdash;all
+ sought to avert it. While the inaugural address was being delivered from
+ this place, devoted altogether to saving the Union without war, insurgent
+ agents were in the city seeking to destroy it without war&mdash;seeking to
+ dissolve the Union and divide effects, by negotiation. Both parties
+ deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation
+ survive; and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. And the
+ war came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One-eighth of the whole population were colored slaves, not distributed
+ generally over the Union, but localized in the southern part of it. These
+ slaves constituted a peculiar and powerful interest. All knew that this
+ interest was, somehow, the cause of the war. To strengthen, perpetuate and
+ extend this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend
+ the Union, even by war; while the government claimed no right to do more
+ than to restrict the territorial enlargement of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neither party expected for the war the magnitude or the duration which it
+ has already attained. Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict
+ might cease with, or even before, the conflict itself should cease. Each
+ looked for an easier triumph, and a result less fundamental and
+ astounding. Both read the same Bible, and pray to the same God; and each
+ invokes his aid against the other. It may seem strange that any men should
+ dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat
+ of other men's faces; but let us judge not, that we be not judged. The
+ prayers of both could not be answered&mdash;that of neither has been
+ answered fully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Almighty has his own purposes. 'Woe unto the world because of
+ offenses! For it must needs be that offenses come; but woe to that man by
+ whom the offense cometh.' If we shall suppose that American slavery is one
+ of those offenses which, in the providence of God, must needs come, but
+ which, having continued through his appointed time, he now wills to
+ remove, and that he gives to both North and South this terrible war, as
+ the woe due to those by whom the offense came, shall we discern therein
+ any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in a living
+ God always ascribe to him? Fondly do we hope&mdash;fervently do we pray&mdash;that
+ this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet; if God wills that
+ it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondman's two hundred and
+ fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of
+ blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword,
+ as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, 'The
+ judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the
+ right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the
+ work we are in; to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall
+ have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan&mdash;to do all
+ which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves,
+ and with all nations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The address ended, the Chief Justice arose, and the listeners who, for the
+ second time, heard Abraham Lincoln repeat the solemn words of his oath of
+ office, went from the impressive scene to their several homes in
+ thankfulness and confidence that the destiny of the nation was in safe
+ keeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing would have amazed Mr. Lincoln more than to hear himself called a
+ man of letters; and yet it would be hard to find in all literature
+ anything to excel the brevity and beauty of his address at Gettysburg or
+ the lofty grandeur of this Second Inaugural. In Europe his style has been
+ called a model for the study and imitation of princes, while in our own
+ country many of his phrases have already passed into the daily speech of
+ mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His gift of putting things simply and clearly was partly the habit of his
+ own clear mind, and partly the result of the training he gave himself in
+ days of boyish poverty, when paper and ink were luxuries almost beyond his
+ reach, and the words he wished to set down must be the best words, and the
+ clearest and shortest to express the ideas he had in view. This training
+ of thought before expression, of knowing exactly what he wished to say
+ before saying it, stood him in good stead all his life; but only the mind
+ of a great man, with a lofty soul and a poet's vision; one who had
+ suffered deeply and felt keenly; who carried the burden of a nation on his
+ heart, whose sympathies were as broad and whose kindness was as great as
+ his moral purpose was strong and firm, could have written the deep,
+ forceful, convincing words that fell from his pen in the later years of
+ his life. It was the life he lived, the noble aim that upheld him, as well
+ as the genius with which he was born, that made him one of the greatest
+ writers of our time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the date of his second inauguration only two members of Mr. Lincoln's
+ original cabinet remained in office; but the changes had all come about
+ gradually and naturally, never as the result of quarrels, and with the
+ single exception of Secretary Chase, not one of them left the cabinet
+ harboring feelings of resentment or bitterness toward his late chief. Even
+ when, in one case, it became necessary for the good of the service, for
+ Mr. Lincoln to ask a cabinet minister to resign, that gentleman not only
+ unquestioningly obeyed, but entered into the presidential campaign
+ immediately afterward, working heartily and effectively for his
+ reelection. As for Secretary Chase, the President was so little disturbed
+ by his attitude that, on the death of Roger B. Taney, the Chief Justice of
+ the United States Supreme Court, he made him his successor, giving him the
+ highest judicial office in the land, and paying him the added compliment
+ of writing out his nomination with his own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The keynote of the President's young life had been persevering industry.
+ That of his mature years was self-control and generous forgiveness. And
+ surely his remark on the night of his second election for President, that
+ he did not think resentment "paid," and that no man had time to spend half
+ his life in quarrels, was well borne out by the fruit of his actions. It
+ was this spirit alone which made possible much that he was able to
+ accomplish. His rule of conduct toward all men is summed up in a letter of
+ reprimand that it became his duty, while he was President, to send to one
+ young officer accused of quarreling with another. It deserves to be
+ written in letters of gold on the walls of every school and college
+ throughout the land:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The advice of a father to his son, 'beware of entrance to a quarrel, but,
+ being in, bear it that the opposed may beware of thee,' is good, but not
+ the best. Quarrel not at all. No man resolved to make the most of himself
+ can spare time for personal contention. Still less can he afford to take
+ all the consequences, including the vitiating of his temper and the loss
+ of self-control. Yield larger things to which you can show no more than
+ equal right; and yield lesser ones though clearly your own. Better give
+ your path to a dog than be bitten by him in contesting for the right. Even
+ killing the dog would not cure the bite."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this willingness of his to give up the "lesser things," and even
+ the things to which he could claim an equal right, which kept peace in his
+ cabinet, made up of men of strong wills and conflicting natures. Their
+ devotion to the Union, great as it was, would not have sufficed in such a
+ strangely assorted official family; but his unfailing kindness and good
+ sense led him to overlook many things that another man might have regarded
+ as deliberate insults; while his great tact and knowledge of human nature
+ enabled him to bring out the best in people about him, and at times to
+ turn their very weaknesses into sources of strength. It made it possible
+ for him to keep the regard of every one of them. Before he had been in
+ office a month it had transformed Secretary Seward from his rival into his
+ lasting friend. It made a warm friend out of the blunt, positive,
+ hot-tempered Edwin M. Stanton, who became Secretary of War in place of Mr.
+ Cameron. He was a man of strong will and great endurance, and gave his
+ Department a record for hard and effective work that it would be difficult
+ to equal. Many stories are told of the disrespect he showed the President,
+ and the cross-purposes at which they labored. The truth is, that they
+ understood each other perfectly on all important matters, and worked
+ together through three busy trying years with ever-increasing affection
+ and regard. The President's kindly humor forgave his Secretary many blunt
+ speeches. "Stanton says I am a fool?" he is reported to have asked a
+ busy-body who came fleet-footed to tell him of the Secretary's hasty
+ comment on an order of little moment. "Stanton says I am a fool? Well"&mdash;with
+ a whimsical glance at his informant&mdash;"then I suppose I must be.
+ Stanton is nearly always right." Knowing that Stanton was "nearly always
+ right" it made little difference to his chief what he might say in the
+ heat of momentary annoyance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet in spite of his forbearance he never gave up the "larger things" that
+ he felt were of real importance; and when he learned at one time that an
+ effort was being made to force a member of the cabinet to resign, he
+ called them together, and read them the following impressive little
+ lecture:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must myself be the judge how long to retain in, and when to remove any
+ of you from his position. It would greatly pain me to discover any of you
+ endeavoring to procure another's removal, or in any way to prejudice him
+ before the public. Such endeavor would be a wrong to me, and much worse, a
+ wrong to the country. My wish is that on this subject no remark be made,
+ nor question asked by any of you, here, or elsewhere, now, or hereafter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is one of the most remarkable speeches ever made by a President.
+ Washington was never more dignified; Jackson was never more peremptory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President's spirit of forgiveness was broad enough to take in the
+ entire South. The cause of the Confederacy had been doomed from the hour
+ of his reelection. The cheering of the troops which greeted the news had
+ been heard within the lines at Richmond, and the besieged town lost hope,
+ though it continued the struggle bravely if desperately. Although Horace
+ Greeley's peace mission to Canada had come to nothing, and other volunteer
+ efforts in the same direction served only to call forth a declaration from
+ Jefferson Davis that he would fight for the independence of the South to
+ the bitter end, Mr. Lincoln watched longingly for the time when the first
+ move could be made toward peace. Early in January, 1865, as the country
+ was about to enter upon the fifth year of actual war, he learned from Hon.
+ Francis P. Blair, Sr., who had been in Richmond, how strong the feeling of
+ discouragement at the Confederate capital had become. Mr. Blair was the
+ father of Lincoln's first Postmaster-General, a man of large acquaintance
+ in the South, who knew perhaps better than anyone in Washington the
+ character and temper of the southern leaders. He had gone to Richmond
+ hoping to do something toward bringing the war to a close, but without
+ explaining his plans to anyone, and with no authority from the government,
+ beyond permission to pass through the military lines and return. His
+ scheme was utterly impracticable, and Mr. Lincoln was interested in the
+ report of his visit only because it showed that the rebellion was nearing
+ its end. This was so marked that he sent Mr. Blair back again to Richmond
+ with a note intended for the eye of Jefferson Davis, saying that the
+ government had constantly been, was then, and would continue to be ready
+ to receive any agent Mr. Davis might send, "with a view of securing peace
+ to the people of our one common country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hopeless as their cause had by this time become, the Confederates had no
+ mind to treat for peace on any terms except independence of the southern
+ States; yet, on the other hand, they were in such straits that they could
+ not afford to leave Mr. Lincoln's offer untested. Mr. Davis therefore sent
+ north his Vice-President, Alexander H. Stephens, with two other high
+ officials of the Confederate government, armed with instructions which
+ aimed to be liberal enough to gain them admittance to the Union lines, and
+ yet distinctly announced that they came "for the purpose of securing peace
+ to the two countries." This difference in the wording of course doomed
+ their mission in advance, for the government at Washington had never
+ admitted that there were "two countries," and to receive the messengers of
+ Jefferson Davis on any such terms would be to concede practically all that
+ the South asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the Union lines the officer who met them informed them
+ that they could go no farther unless they accepted the President's
+ conditions. They finally changed the form of their request, and were taken
+ to Fortress Monroe. Meantime Mr. Lincoln had sent Secretary Seward to
+ Fortress Monroe with instructions to hear all they might have to say, but
+ not to definitely conclude anything. On learning the true nature of their
+ errand he was about to recall him, when he received a telegram from
+ General Grant, regretting that Mr. Lincoln himself could not see the
+ commissioners, because, to Grant's mind, they seemed sincere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anxious to do everything he could in the interest of peace, Mr. Lincoln,
+ instead of recalling Secretary Seward, telegraphed that he would himself
+ come to Fortress Monroe, and started that same night. The next morning,
+ February 3, 1865, he and the Secretary of State received the rebel
+ commissioners on board the President's steamer, the River Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conference between the two highest officials of the United States
+ government, and three messengers from the Confederacy, bound, as the
+ President well knew beforehand, by instructions which made any practical
+ outcome impossible, brings out, in strongest relief, Mr. Lincoln's kindly
+ patience, even toward the rebellion. He was determined to leave no means
+ untried that might, however remotely, lead to peace. For four hours he
+ patiently answered the many questions they asked him, as to what would
+ probably be done on various subjects if the South submitted; pointing out
+ always the difference between the things that he had the power to decide,
+ and those that must be submitted to Congress; and bringing the discussion
+ back, time and again, to the three points absolutely necessary to secure
+ peace&mdash;Union, freedom for the slaves, and complete disbandment of the
+ Confederate armies. He had gone to offer them, honestly and frankly, the
+ best terms in his power, but not to give up one atom of official dignity
+ or duty. Their main thought, on the contrary, had been to postpone or to
+ escape the express conditions on which they were admitted to the
+ conference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned to Richmond and reported the failure of their efforts to
+ Jefferson Davis, whose disappointment equalled their own, for all had
+ caught eagerly at the hope that this interview would somehow prove a means
+ of escape from the dangers of their situation. President Lincoln, full of
+ kindly thoughts, on the other hand, went back to Washington, intent on
+ making yet one more generous offer to hasten the day of peace. He had told
+ the commissioners that personally he would be in favor of the government
+ paying a liberal amount for the loss of slave property, on condition that
+ the southern States agree of their own accord to the freedom of the
+ slaves. (*) This was indeed going to the extreme of liberality, but Mr.
+ Lincoln remembered that notwithstanding all their offenses the rebels were
+ American citizens, members of the same nation and brothers of the same
+ blood. He remembered, too, that the object of the war, equally with peace
+ and freedom, was to preserve friendship and to continue the Union. Filled
+ with such thoughts and purposes he spent the day after his return in
+ drawing up a new proposal designed as a peace offering to the States in
+ rebellion. On the evening of February 5 he read this to his cabinet. It
+ offered the southern States $400,000,000 or a sum equal to the cost of war
+ for two hundred days, on condition that all fighting cease by the first of
+ April, 1865. He proved more liberal than any of his advisers; and with the
+ words, "You are all against me," sadly uttered, the President folded up
+ the paper, and ended the discussion.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mr. Lincoln had freed the slaves two years before as a
+ military necessity, and as such it had been accepted by all.
+ Yet a question might arise, when the war ended, as to
+ whether this act of his had been lawful. He was therefore
+ very anxious to have freedom find a place in the
+ Constitution of the United States. This could only be done
+ by an amendment to the Constitution, proposed by Congress,
+ and adopted by the legislatures of three-fourths of the
+ States of the Union. Congress voted in favor of such an
+ amendment on January 31, 1865. Illinois, the President's own
+ State, adopted it on the very next day, and though Mr.
+ Lincoln did not live to see it a part of the Constitution,
+ Secretary Seward, on December 18, 1865, only a few months
+ after Mr. Lincoln's death, was able to make official
+ announcement that 29 States, constituting a majority of
+ three-fourths of the 36 States of the Union, had adopted it,
+ and that therefore it was the law of the land.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Jefferson Davis had issued a last appeal to "fire the southern heart," but
+ the situation at Richmond was becoming desperate Flour cost a thousand
+ dollars a barrel in Confederate money, and neither the flour nor the money
+ were sufficient for their needs. Squads of guards were sent into the
+ streets with directions to arrest every able-bodied man they met, and
+ force him to work in defense of the town. It is said that the medical
+ boards were ordered to excuse no one from military service who was well
+ enough to bear arms for even ten days. Human nature will not endure a
+ strain like this, and desertion grew too common to punish. Nevertheless
+ the city kept up its defense until April 3. Even then, although hopelessly
+ beaten, the Confederacy was not willing to give in, and much needless and
+ severe fighting took place before the final end came. The rebel government
+ hurried away toward the South, and Lee bent all his energies to saving his
+ army and taking it to join General Johnston, who still held out against
+ Sherman. Grant pursued him with such energy that he did not even allow
+ himself the pleasure of entering the captured rebel capital. The chase
+ continued six days. On the evening of April 8 the Union army succeeded in
+ planting itself squarely across Lee's line of retreat; and the marching
+ and fighting of his army were over for ever. On the next morning the two
+ generals met in a house on the edge of the village of Appomattox,
+ Virginia, Lee resplendent in a new uniform and handsome sword, Grant in
+ the travel-stained garments in which he had made the campaign&mdash;the
+ blouse of a private soldier, with the shoulder-straps of a
+ Lieutenant-General. Here the surrender took place. Grant, as courteous in
+ victory as he was energetic in war, offered Lee terms that were liberal in
+ the extreme; and on learning that the Confederate soldiers were actually
+ suffering with hunger, ordered that rations be issued to them at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fire and destruction attended the flight of the Confederates from
+ Richmond. Jefferson Davis and his cabinet, carrying with them their more
+ important state papers, left the doomed city on one of the crowded and
+ overloaded railroad trains on the night of April 2, beginning a southward
+ flight that ended only with Mr. Davis's capture about a month later. The
+ legislature of Virginia and the governor of the State departed hurriedly
+ on a canal-boat in the direction of Lynchburg, while every possible
+ carriage or vehicle was pressed into service by the inhabitants, all
+ frantic to get away before their city was "desecrated" by the presence of
+ the Yankees. By the time the military left, early on the morning of April
+ 3, the town was on fire. The Confederate Congress had ordered all
+ government tobacco and other public property to be burned. The rebel
+ General Ewell, who was in charge of the city, asserts that he took the
+ responsibility of disobeying, and that the fires were not started by his
+ orders. Be that as it may, they broke out in various places, while a mob,
+ crazed with excitement, and wild with the alcohol that had run freely in
+ the gutters the night before, rushed from store to store, breaking in the
+ doors, and indulging in all the wantonness of pillage and greed. Public
+ spirit seemed paralyzed; no real effort was made to put out the flames,
+ and as a final horror, the convicts from the penitentiary, overpowering
+ their guards, appeared upon the streets, a maddened, shouting, leaping
+ crowd, drunk with liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite possible that the very size and suddenness of the disaster
+ served in a measure to lessen its evil effects; for the burning of seven
+ hundred buildings, the entire business portion of Richmond, all in the
+ brief space of a day, was a visitation so sudden, so stupefying and
+ unexpected as to overawe and terrorize even evildoers. Before a new danger
+ could arise help was at hand. Gen. Weitzel, to whom the city surrendered,
+ took up his headquarters in the house lately occupied by Jefferson Davis,
+ and promptly set about the work of relief; fighting the fire, issuing
+ rations to the poor, and restoring order and authority. That a regiment of
+ black soldiers assisted in this work of mercy must have seemed to the
+ white inhabitants of Richmond the final drop in their cup of misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into the rebel capital, thus stricken and laid waste, came President
+ Lincoln on the morning of April 4. Never in the history of the world has
+ the head of a mighty nation and the conqueror of a great rebellion entered
+ the captured chief city of the insurgents in such humbleness and
+ simplicity. He had gone two weeks before to City Point for a visit to
+ General Grant, and to his son, Captain Robert Lincoln, who was serving on
+ Grant's staff. Making his home on the steamer that brought him, and
+ enjoying what was probably the most restful and satisfactory holiday in
+ which he had been able to indulge during his whole presidential service,
+ he had visited the various camps of the great army, in company with the
+ General, cheered everywhere by the loving greetings of the soldiers. He
+ had met Sherman when that commander hurried up fresh from his victorious
+ march from Atlanta; and after Grant had started on his final pursuit of
+ Lee the President still lingered. It was at City Point that the news came
+ to him of the fall of Richmond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the receipt of this news and the following forenoon, before any
+ information of the great fire had reached them, a visit to the rebel
+ capital was arranged for the President and Rear Admiral Porter. Ample
+ precautions for their safety were taken at the start. The President went
+ in his own steamer, the River Queen, with her escort, the Bat, and a tug
+ used at City Point in landing from the steamer. Admiral Porter went in his
+ flagship; while a transport carried a small cavalry escort, as well as
+ ambulances for the party. Barriers in the river soon made it impossible to
+ proceed in this fashion, and one unforeseen accident after another
+ rendered it necessary to leave behind the larger and even the smaller
+ boats; until finally the party went on in the Admiral's barge rowed by
+ twelve sailors, without escort of any kind. In this manner the President
+ made his entry into Richmond, landing near Libby Prison. As the party
+ stepped ashore they found a guide among the contrabands who quickly
+ crowded the streets, for the possible coming of the President had already
+ been noised through the city. Ten of the sailors armed with carbines were
+ formed as a guard, six in front, and four in rear, and between them the
+ President and Admiral Porter, with the three officers who accompanied
+ them, walked the long distance, perhaps a mile and a half, to the centre
+ of the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Imagination can easily fill in the picture of a gradually increasing
+ crowd, principally of negroes, following the little group of marines and
+ officers with the tall form of the President in its centre; and, when they
+ learned that it was indeed "Massa Lincum," expressing their joy and
+ gratitude in fervent blessings and in the deep emotional cries of the
+ colored race. It is easy also to imagine the sharp anxiety of those who
+ had the President's safety in their charge during this tiresome and even
+ foolhardy march through a town still in flames, whose white inhabitants
+ were sullenly resentful at best, and whose grief and anger might at any
+ moment break out against the man they looked upon as the chief author of
+ their misfortunes. No accident befell him. He reached General Weitzel's
+ headquarters in safety, rested in the house Jefferson Davis had occupied
+ while President of the Confederacy; and after a day of sightseeing
+ returned to his steamer and to Washington, there to be stricken down by an
+ assassin's bullet, literally "in the house of his friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. THE FOURTEENTH OF APRIL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Refreshed in body by his visit to City Point and greatly cheered by the
+ fall of Richmond, and unmistakable signs that the war was over, Mr.
+ Lincoln went back to Washington intent on the new task opening before him&mdash;that
+ of restoring the Union, and of bringing about peace and good will again
+ between the North and the South. His whole heart was bent on the work of
+ "binding up the nation's wounds" and doing all which lay in his power to
+ "achieve a just and lasting peace." Especially did he desire to avoid the
+ shedding of blood, or anything like acts of deliberate punishment. He
+ talked to his cabinet in this strain on the morning of April 14, the last
+ day of his life. "No one need expect that he would take any part in
+ hanging or killing these men, even the worst of them," he exclaimed.
+ Enough lives had been sacrificed already. Anger must be put aside. The
+ great need now was to begin to act in the interest of peace. With these
+ words of clemency and kindness in their ears they left him, never again to
+ come together under his wise chairmanship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though it was invariably held in check by his vigorous common-sense, there
+ was in Mr. Lincoln's nature a strong vein of poetry and mysticism. That
+ morning he told his cabinet a strange story of a dream that he had had the
+ night before&mdash;a dream which he said came to him before great events.
+ He had dreamed it before the battles of Antietam, Murfreesboro, Gettysburg
+ and Vicksburg. This time it must foretell a victory by Sherman over
+ Johnston's army, news of which was hourly expected, for he knew of no
+ other important event likely to occur. The members of the cabinet were
+ deeply impressed; but General Grant, who had come to Washington that
+ morning and was present, remarked with matter-of-fact exactness that
+ Murfreesboro was no victory and had no important results. Not the wildest
+ imagination of skeptic or mystic could have pictured the events under
+ which the day was to close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Good Friday, a day observed by a portion of the people with fasting
+ and prayer, but even among the most devout the great news of the week just
+ ended changed this time of traditional mourning into a season of general
+ thanksgiving. For Mr. Lincoln it was a day of unusual and quiet happiness.
+ His son Robert had returned from the field with General Grant, and the
+ President spent an hour with the young captain in delighted conversation
+ over the campaign. He denied himself generally to visitors, admitting only
+ a few friends. In the afternoon he went for a long drive with Mrs.
+ Lincoln. His mood, as it had been all day, was singularly happy and
+ tender. He talked much of the past and future. After four years of trouble
+ and tumult he looked forward to four years of quiet and normal work; after
+ that he expected to go back again to Illinois and practice law. He was
+ never more simple or more gentle than on this day of triumph. His heart
+ overflowed with sentiments of gratitude to Heaven, which took the shape,
+ usual to generous natures, of love and kindness to all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the very beginning there had been threats to kill him. He was
+ constantly receiving letters of warning from zealous or nervous friends.
+ The War Department inquired into these when there seemed to be ground for
+ doing so, but always without result. Warnings that appeared most definite
+ proved on examination too vague and confused for further attention. The
+ President knew that he was in some danger. Madmen frequently made their
+ way to the very door of the Executive Office; sometimes into Mr. Lincoln's
+ presence; but he himself had so sane a mind, and a heart so kindly even to
+ his enemies, that it was hard for him to believe in political hatred
+ deadly enough to lead to murder. He summed up the matter by saying that
+ since he must receive both friends and strangers every day, his life was
+ of course within the reach of any one, sane or mad, who was ready to
+ murder and be hanged for it, and that he could not possibly guard against
+ all danger unless he shut himself up in an iron box, where he could
+ scarcely perform the duties of a President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He therefore went in and out before the people, always unarmed, generally
+ unattended. He received hundreds of visitors in a day, his breast bare to
+ pistol or knife. He walked at midnight, with a single Secretary or alone,
+ from the Executive Mansion to the War Department and back. In summer he
+ rode through lonely roads from the White House to the Soldiers' Home in
+ the dusk of the evening, and returned to his work in the morning before
+ the town was astir. He was greatly annoyed when it was decided that there
+ must be a guard at the Executive Mansion, and that a squad of cavalry must
+ accompany him on his daily drive; but he was always reasonable, and
+ yielded to the best judgment of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four years of threats and boastings that were unfounded, and of plots that
+ came to nothing passed away, until precisely at the time when the triumph
+ of the nation seemed assured, and a feeling of peace and security settled
+ over the country, one of the conspiracies, seemingly no more important
+ than the others, ripened in a sudden heat of hatred and despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little band of desperate secessionists, of which John Wilkes Booth, an
+ actor of a family of famous players, was the head, had their usual
+ meeting-place at the house of Mrs. Mary E. Surratt, the mother of one of
+ the number. Booth was a young man of twenty-six, strikingly handsome, with
+ an ease and grace of manner which came to him of right from his theatrical
+ ancestors. He was a fanatical southerner, with a furious hatred against
+ Lincoln and the Union. After Lincoln's reelection he went to Canada, and
+ associated with the Confederate agents there; and whether or not with
+ their advice, made a plan to capture the President and take him to
+ Richmond. He passed a great part of the autumn and winter pursuing this
+ fantastic scheme, but the winter wore away, and nothing was done. On March
+ 4 he was at the Capitol, and created a disturbance by trying to force his
+ way through the line of policemen who guarded the passage through which
+ the President walked to the East front of the building to read his Second
+ Inaugural. His intentions at this time are not known. He afterwards said
+ he lost an excellent chance of killing the President that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the surrender of Lee, in a rage akin to madness, he called his
+ fellow-conspirators together and allotted to each his part in the new
+ crime which had risen in his mind. It was as simple as it was horrible.
+ One man was to kill Secretary Seward, another to make way with Andrew
+ Johnson, at the same time that he murdered the President. The final
+ preparations were made with feverish haste. It was only about noon of the
+ fourteenth that Booth learned that Mr. Lincoln meant to go to Ford's
+ Theatre that night to see the play "Our American Cousin." The President
+ enjoyed the theatre. It was one of his few means of recreation, and as the
+ town was then thronged with soldiers and officers all eager to see him, he
+ could, by appearing in public, gratify many whom he could not personally
+ meet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Lincoln asked General and Mrs. Grant to accompany her. They accepted,
+ and the announcement that they would be present was made in the evening
+ papers, but they changed their plans and went north by an afternoon train.
+ Mrs. Lincoln then invited in their stead Miss Harris and Major Rathbone,
+ daughter and stepson of Senator Ira Harris. Being detained by visitors,
+ the play had made some progress when the President appeared.. The band
+ struck up "Hail to the Chief," the actors ceased playing, the audience
+ rose and cheered, the President bowed in acknowledgment, and the play went
+ on again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the moment he learned of the President's intention Booth's actions
+ were alert and energetic. He and his confederates were seen in every part
+ of the city. Booth was perfectly at home in Ford's Theatre. He counted
+ upon audacity to reach the small passage behind the President's box. Once
+ there, he guarded against interference by arranging a wooden bar, to be
+ fastened by a simple mortice in the angle of the wall and the door by
+ which he entered, so that once shut, the door could not be opened from the
+ outside. He even provided for the chance of not gaining entrance to the
+ box by boring a hole in the door, through which he might either observe
+ the occupants, or take aim and shoot. He hired at a livery stable a small
+ fleet horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few moments before ten o'clock, leaving his horse at the rear of the
+ theatre, in charge of a call-boy, he entered the building, passing rapidly
+ to the little hallway leading to the President's box. Showing a card to
+ the servant in attendance, he was allowed to enter, closed the door
+ noiselessly, and secured it with the wooden bar he had made ready, without
+ disturbing any of the occupants of the box, between whom and himself yet
+ remained the partition and the door through which he had bored the hole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one, not even the actor who uttered them, could ever remember the last
+ words of the piece that were spoken that night&mdash;the last that Abraham
+ Lincoln heard upon earth; for the tragedy in the box turned play and
+ players alike to the most unsubstantial of phantoms. For weeks hate and
+ brandy had kept Booth's brain in a morbid state. He seemed to himself to
+ be taking part in a great play. Holding a pistol in one hand and a knife
+ in the other, he opened the box door, put the pistol to the President's
+ head, and fired. Major Rathbone sprang to grapple with him, and received a
+ savage knife wound in the arm. Then, rushing forward, Booth placed his
+ hand on the railing of the box and vaulted to the stage. It was a high
+ leap, but nothing to such a trained athlete. He would have got safely
+ away, had not his spur caught in the flag that draped the front of the
+ box. He fell, the torn flag trailing on his spur; but though the fall had
+ broken his leg, he rose instantly brandishing his knife and shouting, "Sic
+ Semper Tyrannis!" fled rapidly across the stage and out of sight. Major
+ Rathbone shouted, "Stop him!" The cry, "He has shot the President!" rang
+ through the theatre, and from the audience, stupid at first with surprise,
+ and wild afterward with excitement and horror, men jumped upon the stage
+ in pursuit of the assassin. But he ran through the familiar passages,
+ leaped upon his horse, rewarding with a kick and a curse the boy who held
+ him, and escaped into the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President scarcely moved. His head drooped forward slightly, his eyes
+ closed. Major Rathbone, not regarding his own grievous hurt, rushed to the
+ door to summon aid. He found it barred, and someone on the outside beating
+ and clamoring to get in. It was at once seen that the President's wound
+ was mortal. He was carried across the street to a house opposite, and laid
+ upon a bed. Mrs. Lincoln followed, tenderly cared for by Miss Harris.
+ Rathbone, exhausted by loss of blood, fainted, and was taken home.
+ Messengers were sent for the cabinet, for the Surgeon-General, for Dr.
+ Stone the President's family physician, and for others whose official or
+ private relations with Mr. Lincoln gave them the right to be there. A
+ crowd of people rushed instinctively to the White House, and bursting
+ through the doors shouted the dreadful news to Robert Lincoln and Major
+ Hay who sat together in an upper room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The President had been shot a few minutes after ten o'clock. The wound
+ would have brought instant death to most men. He was unconscious from the
+ first moment, but he breathed throughout the night, his gaunt face
+ scarcely paler than those of the sorrowing men around him. At twenty-two
+ minutes past seven in the morning he died. Secretary Stanton broke the
+ silence by saying, "Now he belongs to the ages."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Booth had done his work thoroughly. His principal accomplice had acted
+ with equal audacity and cruelty, but with less fatal result. Under pretext
+ of having a package of medicine to deliver, he forced his way to the room
+ of the Secretary of State, who lay ill, and attacked him, inflicting three
+ terrible knife wounds on his neck and cheek, wounding also the Secretary's
+ two sons, a servant, and a soldier nurse who tried to overpower him.
+ Finally breaking away, he ran downstairs, reached the door unhurt, and
+ springing upon his horse rode off. It was feared that neither the
+ Secretary nor his eldest son would live, but both in time recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although Booth had been recognized by dozens of people as he stood before
+ the footlights brandishing his dagger, his swift horse soon carried him
+ beyond any hap-hazard pursuit. He crossed the Navy Yard bridge and rode
+ into Maryland, being joined by one of his fellow-conspirators. A surgeon
+ named Mudd set Booth's leg and sent him on his desolate way. For ten days
+ the two men lived the lives of hunted animals. On the night of April 25
+ they were surrounded as they lay sleeping in a barn in Caroline County,
+ Virginia. Booth refused to surrender. The barn was fired, and while it was
+ burning he was shot by Boston Corbett, a sergeant of cavalry. He lingered
+ for about three hours in great pain, and died at seven in the morning. The
+ remaining conspirators were tried by military commission. Four were
+ hanged, including the assailant of Secretary Seward, and the others were
+ sentenced to imprisonment for various lengths of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the hearts of a people glowing with the joy of victory the news of
+ the President's death fell as a great shock. In the unspeakable calamity
+ the country lost sight of the great national successes of the past week;
+ and thus it came to pass that there was never any organized celebration in
+ the North over the downfall of the rebellion. It was unquestionably best
+ that it should be so. Lincoln himself would not have had it otherwise, for
+ he hated the arrogance of triumph. As it was, the South could take no
+ offense at a grief so genuine; and the people of that section even shared,
+ to a certain extent, in the mourning for one who, in their inmost hearts,
+ they knew to have wished them well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within an hour after Mr. Lincoln's body was taken to the White House the
+ town was shrouded in black. Not only the public buildings, the shops, and
+ the better class of dwellings were draped in funeral decorations; still
+ more touching proof of affection was shown in the poorest class of homes,
+ where laboring men of both colors found means in their poverty to afford
+ some scanty bit of mourning. The interest and veneration of the people
+ still centered at the White House, where, under a tall catafalque in the
+ East Room the late chief lay in the majesty of death, rather than in the
+ modest tavern on Pennsylvania Avenue, where the new President had his
+ lodgings, and where the Chief Justice administered the oath of office to
+ him at eleven o'clock on the morning of April 15.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was determined that the funeral ceremonies in Washington should be held
+ on Wednesday, April 19, and all the churches throughout the country were
+ invited to join at the same time in appropriate observances. The
+ ceremonies in the East Room were simple and brief, while all the pomp and
+ circumstance that the government could command were employed to give a
+ fitting escort from the Executive Mansion to the Capitol, where the body
+ of the President lay in state. The procession moved to the booming of
+ minute guns, and the tolling of all the bells in Washington, Georgetown
+ and Alexandria; while, to associate the pomp of the day with the greatest
+ work of Lincoln's life, a detachment of colored troops marched at the head
+ of the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was announced that he was to be buried at Springfield every town
+ and city on the way begged that the train might halt within its limits, to
+ give its people opportunity of showing their grief and reverence. It was
+ finally arranged that the funeral cortege should follow substantially the
+ same route over which Lincoln had come in 1861 to take possession of the
+ office to which he added a new dignity and value for all time. On April
+ 21, accompanied by a guard of honor, and in a train decked with somber
+ trappings, the journey was begun. At Baltimore, through which, four years
+ before, it was a question whether the President-elect could pass with
+ safety to his life, the coffin was taken with reverent care to the great
+ dome of the Exchange, where, surrounded with evergreens and lilies, it lay
+ for several hours, the people passing by in mournful throngs. The same
+ demonstration was repeated, gaining constantly in depth of feeling and
+ solemn splendor of display in every city through which the procession
+ passed. In New York came General Scott, pale and feeble, but resolute, to
+ pay his tribute of respect to his departed friend and commander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Springfield was reached on the morning of May 3. The body lay in state in
+ the Capitol, which was richly draped from roof to basement in black velvet
+ and silver fringe, while within it was a bower of bloom and fragrance. For
+ twenty-four hours an unbroken stream of people passed through, bidding
+ their friend and neighbor welcome home and farewell. At ten o'clock on the
+ morning of May 4 the coffin lid was closed, and vast procession moved out
+ to Oak Ridge, where the town had set apart a lovely spot for his grave.
+ Here the dead President was committed to the soil of the State which had
+ so loved and honored him. The ceremonies at the grave were simple and
+ touching. Bishop Simpson delivered a pathetic oration, prayers were
+ offered, and hymns were sung, but the weightiest and most eloquent words
+ uttered anywhere that day were those of the Second Inaugural, which the
+ Committee had wisely ordained to be read over his grave, as centuries
+ before, the friends of the painter Raphael chose the incomparable canvas
+ of "The Transfiguration" to be the chief ornament of his funeral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though President Lincoln lived to see the real end of the war, various
+ bodies of Confederate troops continued to hold out for some time longer.
+ General Johnston faced Sherman's army in the Carolinas until April 26,
+ while General E. Kirby Smith, west of the Mississippi River, did not
+ surrender until May 26.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As rapidly as possible Union volunteer regiments were disbanded, and soon
+ the mighty host of 1,000,000 men was reduced to a peace footing of only
+ 25,000. Before the great army melted away into the greater body of
+ citizens its soldiers enjoyed one final triumph&mdash;a march through the
+ capital of the nation, undisturbed by death or danger, under the eyes of
+ their highest commanders and the representatives of the people whose
+ country they had saved. Those who witnessed the solemn yet joyous pageant
+ will never forget it; and pray that their children may never see its like.
+ For two days this formidable host marched the long stretch of Pennsylvania
+ Avenue, starting from the shadow of the Capitol and filling the wide
+ street as far as Georgetown, its serried ranks moving with the easy yet
+ rapid pace of veterans in cadence step. As a mere spectacle this march of
+ the mightiest host the continent has ever seen was grand and imposing, but
+ it was not as a spectacle alone that it affected the beholder. It was no
+ holiday parade. It was an army of citizens on their way home after a long
+ and terrible war. Their clothes were worn, and pierced with bullets, their
+ banners had been torn with shot and shell, and lashed in the winds of many
+ battles. The very drums and fifes had called out the troops to night
+ alarms, and sounded the onset on historic fields. The whole country
+ claimed these heroes as part of themselves. They were not soldiers by
+ profession or from love of fighting; they had become soldiers only to save
+ their country's life. Now, done with war, they were going joyously and
+ peaceably back to their homes to take up the tasks they had willingly laid
+ down in the hour of their country's need.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friends loaded them with flowers as they swung down the Avenue&mdash;both
+ men and officers, until some were fairly hidden under their fragrant
+ burden. Grotesque figures were not absent, as Sherman's legions passed
+ with their "bummers" and their regimental pets. But with all the shouting
+ and the joy there was, in the minds of all who saw it, one sad and
+ ever-recurring thought&mdash;the memory of the men who were absent, and
+ who had, nevertheless, so richly earned the right to be there. The
+ soldiers in their shrunken companies thought of the brave comrades who had
+ fallen by the way; and through the whole vast army there was passionate
+ unavailing regret for their wise, gentle and powerful friend Abraham
+ Lincoln, gone forever from the big white house by the Avenue&mdash;who had
+ called the great host into being, directed the course of the nation during
+ the four years that they had been battling for its life, and to whom, more
+ than to any other, this crowning peaceful pageant would have been full of
+ deep and happy meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why was this man so loved that his death caused a whole nation to forget
+ its triumph, and turned its gladness into mourning? Why has his fame grown
+ with the passing years until now scarcely a speech is made or a newspaper
+ printed that does not have within it somewhere a mention of his name or
+ some phrase or sentence that fell from his lips? Let us see if we can,
+ what it was that made Abraham Lincoln the man that he became.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A child born to an inheritance of want; a boy growing into a narrow world
+ of ignorance; a youth taking up the burden of coarse and heavy labor; a
+ man entering on the doubtful struggle of a local backwoods career&mdash;these
+ were the beginnings of Abraham Lincoln if we look at them only in the hard
+ practical spirit which takes for its motto that "Nothing succeeds but
+ success." If we adopt a more generous as well as a truer view, then we see
+ that it was the brave hopeful spirit, the strong active mind, and the
+ great law of moral growth that accepts the good and rejects the bad, which
+ Nature gave this obscure child, that carried him to the service of mankind
+ and the admiration of the centuries as certainly as the acorn grows to be
+ the oak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even his privations helped the end. Self-reliance, the strongest trait of
+ the pioneer was his by blood and birth and training, and was developed by
+ the hardships of his lot to the mighty power needed to guide our country
+ through the struggle of the Civil War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sense of equality was his also, for he grew from childhood to manhood
+ in a state of society where there were neither rich to envy nor poor to
+ despise, and where the gifts and hardships of the forest were distributed
+ without favor to each and all alike. In the forest he learned charity,
+ sympathy, helpfulness&mdash;in a word neighborliness&mdash;for in that
+ far-off frontier life all the wealth of India, had a man possessed it,
+ could not have bought relief from danger or help in time of need, and
+ neighborliness became of prime importance. Constant opportunity was found
+ there to practice the virtue which Christ declared to be next to the love
+ of God&mdash;to love one's neighbor as oneself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such settlements, far removed from courts and jails, men were brought
+ face to face with questions of natural right. The pioneers not only
+ understood the American doctrine of self-government&mdash;they lived it.
+ It was this understanding, this feeling, which taught Lincoln to write:
+ "When the white man governs himself, that is self-government; but when he
+ governs himself and also governs another man, that is more than
+ self-government that is despotism;" and also to give utterance to its twin
+ truth: "He who would be no slave must consent to have no slave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln was born in the slave State of Kentucky. He lived there only a
+ short time, and we have reason to believe that wherever he might have
+ grown up, his very nature would have spurned the doctrine and practice of
+ human slavery. Yet, though he hated slavery, he never hated the
+ slave-holder. His feeling of pardon and sympathy for Kentucky and the
+ South played no unimportant part in his dealings with grave problems of
+ statesmanship. It is true that he struck slavery its death blow with the
+ hand of war, but at the same time he offered the slaveowner golden payment
+ with the hand of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abraham Lincoln was not an ordinary man. He was, in truth, in the language
+ of the poet Lowell, a "new birth of our new soil." His greatness did not
+ consist in growing up on the frontier. An ordinary man would have found on
+ the frontier exactly what he would have found elsewhere&mdash;a
+ commonplace life, varying only with the changing ideas and customs of time
+ and place. But for the man with extraordinary powers of mind and body&mdash;for
+ one gifted by Nature as Abraham Lincoln was gifted, the pioneer life with
+ its severe training in self-denial, patience and industry, developed his
+ character, and fitted him for the great duties of his after life as no
+ other training could have done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His advancement in the astonishing career that carried him from obscurity
+ to world-wide fame&mdash;from postmaster of New Salem village to President
+ of the United States, from captain of a backwoods volunteer company to
+ Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, was neither sudden nor
+ accidental, nor easy. He was both ambitious and successful, but his
+ ambition was moderate, and his success was slow. And, because his success
+ was slow, it never outgrew either his judgment or his powers. Between the
+ day when he left his father's cabin and launched his canoe on the
+ headwaters of the Sangamon River to begin life on his own account, and the
+ day of his first inauguration, lay full thirty years of toil, self-denial,
+ patience; often of effort baffled, of hope deferred; sometimes of bitter
+ disappointment. Even with the natural gift of great genius it required an
+ average lifetime and faithful unrelaxing effort, to transform the raw
+ country stripling into a fit ruler for this great nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost every success was balanced&mdash;sometimes overbalanced, by a
+ seeming failure. He went into the Black Hawk war a captain, and through no
+ fault of his own, came out a private. He rode to the hostile frontier on
+ horseback, and trudged home on foot. His store "winked out." His
+ surveyor's compass and chain, with which he was earning a scanty living,
+ were sold for debt. He was defeated in his first attempts to be nominated
+ for the legislature and for Congress; defeated in his application to be
+ appointed Commissioner of the General Land Office; defeated for the Senate
+ when he had forty-five votes to begin with by a man who had only five
+ votes to begin with; defeated again after his joint debates with Douglas;
+ defeated in the nomination for Vice-President, when a favorable nod from
+ half a dozen politicians would have brought him success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Failures? Not so. Every seeming defeat was a slow success. His was the
+ growth of the oak, and not of Jonah's gourd. He could not become a master
+ workman until he had served a tedious apprenticeship. It was the quarter
+ of a century of reading, thinking, speech-making and lawmaking which
+ fitted him to be the chosen champion of freedom in the great
+ Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858. It was the great moral victory won in
+ those debates (although the senatorship went to Douglas) added to the
+ title "Honest Old Abe," won by truth and manhood among his neighbors
+ during a whole lifetime, that led the people of the United States to trust
+ him with the duties and powers of President.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when, at last, after thirty years of endeavor, success had beaten down
+ defeat, when Lincoln had been nominated, elected and inaugurated, came the
+ crowning trial of his faith and constancy. When the people, by free and
+ lawful choice, had placed honor and power in his hands, when his name
+ could convene Congress, approve laws, cause ships to sail and armies to
+ move, there suddenly came upon the government and the nation a fatal
+ paralysis. Honor seemed to dwindle and power to vanish. Was he then after
+ all not to be President? Was patriotism dead? Was the Constitution only a
+ bit of waste paper? Was the Union gone?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outlook was indeed grave. There was treason in Congress, treason in
+ the Supreme Court, treason in the army and navy. Confusion and discord
+ were everywhere. To use Mr. Lincoln's forcible figure of speech, sinners
+ were calling the righteous to repentance. Finally the flag, insulted and
+ fired upon, trailed in surrender at Sumter; and then came the humiliation
+ of the riot at Baltimore, and the President for a few days practically a
+ prisoner in the capital of the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his apprenticeship had been served, and there was to be no more
+ failure. With faith and justice and generosity he conducted for four long
+ years a war whose frontiers stretched from the Potomac to the Rio Grande;
+ whose soldiers numbered a million men on each side. The labor, the
+ thought, the responsibility, the strain of mind and anguish of soul that
+ he gave to this great task, who can measure? "Here was place for no
+ holiday magistrate, no fair weather sailor," as Emerson justly said of
+ him. "The new pilot was hurried to the helm in a tornado. In four years&mdash;four
+ years of battle days&mdash;his endurance, his fertility of resources, his
+ magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting." "By his courage,
+ his justice, his even temper, his humanity, he stood a heroic figure in
+ the centre of a heroic epoch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What but a lifetime's schooling in disappointment, what but the pioneer's
+ self-reliance and freedom from prejudice, what but the clear mind, quick
+ to see natural right and unswerving in its purpose to follow it; what but
+ the steady self-control, the unwarped sympathy, the unbounded charity of
+ this man with spirit so humble and soul so great, could have carried him
+ through the labors he wrought to the victory he attained?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With truth it could be written, "His heart was as great as the world, but
+ there was no room in it to hold the memory of a wrong." So, "with malice
+ toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gave
+ him to see the right" he lived and died. We who have never seen him yet
+ feel daily the influence of his kindly life, and cherish among our most
+ precious possessions the heritage of his example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln, by Helen Nicolay
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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