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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68423 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68423)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The story of Abraham Lincoln, by Mary
-A. Hamilton
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The story of Abraham Lincoln
- The children's heroes series
-
-Author: Mary A. Hamilton
-
-Editor: John Lang
-
-Illustrator: S. T. Dadd
-
-Release Date: June 29, 2022 [eBook #68423]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was created from images
- of public domain material made available by the University
- of Toronto Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF ABRAHAM
-LINCOLN ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE CHILDREN’S HEROES SERIES
- EDITED BY JOHN LANG
-
-
- THE STORY OF
- ABRAHAM LINCOLN
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration--Map of the Southern United States]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: For the first time he saw negroes being scourged]
-
-
-
-
- THE STORY OF
- ABRAHAM
- LINCOLN
-
- BY MARY A. HAMILTON
- WITH PICTURES BY S. T. DADD
-
- LONDON: T. C. & E. C. JACK
- NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- MARGOT
-
-
-
-
-O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!
-
- “O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done!
- The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won.
- The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
- While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;
- But O heart! heart! heart!
- O the bleeding drops of red,
- Where on the deck my Captain lies,
- Fallen cold and dead.
-
- O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
- Rise up--for you the flag is flung--for you the bugle trills,
- For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths--for you the shores a-crowding:
- For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
- Here Captain! dear father!
- This arm beneath your head!
- It is some dream that on the deck
- You’ve fallen cold and dead.
-
- My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,
- My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will,
- The ship is anchor’d safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,
- From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;
- Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells!
- But I with mournful tread
- Walk the deck; my Captain lies,
- Fallen cold and dead.”
-
- --_Walt Whitman._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- Chapter Page
-
- I. Boyhood 1
- II. The Young Backwoodsman 17
- III. Slavery 30
- IV. Lincoln the Lawyer 44
- V. Defeat of the Little Giant 57
- VI. The New President and Secession 73
- VII. The War 84
- VIII. Victory 100
- IX. “O Captain! My Captain!” 110
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PICTURES
-
-
- “For the first time he saw negroes being
- scourged” _Frontispiece_
-
- “The bullet passed right through his heart” 6
-
- “Sometimes he did sums on the wooden shovel” 14
-
- “His huge arms closed round Armstrong like a
- vice” 24
-
- “Springing to his feet, he poured out what was in
- his mind” 58
-
- Lincoln reading Emancipation Proclamation to his
- Cabinet 94
-
- Lincoln discussing plan of campaign with General
- Grant 104
-
- “Lincoln visited all the divisions of his army in
- turns” 110
-
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-BOYHOOD
-
-
-IN this little book I am going to try to tell you something about
-Abraham Lincoln. There is far more to say about him than can be fitted
-into so small a space; and perhaps when you are older you will read
-about him for yourselves, and read his wonderful speeches.
-
-The greatest names in American history are those of George Washington
-and Abraham Lincoln. These two men are great in the true sense of the
-word; they are great because they loved their country, purely and
-passionately, better than themselves, and gave their lives to its
-service. They thought nothing of their own honour and glory: to the
-last they were simple and true. Americans may well be proud of two
-such patriots; and from them every one may be glad to learn what real
-greatness means. Their work has made America what it is.
-
-Less than forty years before Abraham Lincoln was born, America belonged
-to England. In the time of Charles I., numbers of people who loved
-freedom and hated the wrongful government of the king left their
-country and sailed to the New World. Samuel Lincoln was one of these
-men.
-
-For a long time they were few in number. The greatest part of the
-country was unknown forest, inhabited by wild beasts, or vast plains
-which belonged to fierce tribes of Red Indians. Life for the early
-settlers was very hard and rough. They had to cut down trees to build
-their houses, and to kill wild animals to get their food. Nevertheless
-they soon grew to love the country where they lived, where they married
-and brought up their children; and their wild open life made freedom
-more precious to them than anything else. They began to resent the
-action of the English Government, which wanted to tax them to pay for
-wars which were agreed upon in the Parliament in London, where America
-had no voice to speak for her. On July 4, 1776, in the reign of
-George III., the chief citizens met together and declared that America
-was a free united country, with a right to govern itself. The 4th of
-July--“Independence Day”--is the greatest day of all in America.
-
-For seven years there was war. In this war Abraham’s great-grandfather,
-John Lincoln, served as a soldier. The Americans were led by George
-Washington.
-
-England was defeated, and America--the United States of America--was
-a free country. From this time on, America belonged to the Americans.
-But a great many years had to pass before they made of the country the
-America that we know. Now there are towns everywhere: you can get from
-one end to the other of the great country, far bigger than the whole
-of Europe, by trains that travel day and night from north to south and
-east to west. Then there were very few towns, most of them along the
-coast, and no railways. All the west was unknown.
-
-After the war was over, bands of explorers set out to fight the
-Indians and to find new homes for themselves. And Abraham Lincoln’s
-grandfather, after whom he was named, was one of the first of these
-explorers. He sold his little piece of land in Virginia, and tramped
-through the forests till he found a place to build a new home, carrying
-his youngest son Thomas on one shoulder, and with his loaded rifle in
-his other hand ready to shoot any Indian who should attack him. In
-Kentucky some white men had already settled and built a small fort;
-near it Lincoln cut down trees and built a hut for himself and his wife
-and his three sons to live in.
-
-When Abraham was a small boy he used to listen to the stories which his
-father Thomas told of their life there in the constant fear of Indian
-attack. There was one story which Thomas told very often, the story of
-his father’s death.
-
-He was at work cutting down the trees, so as to clear an open space
-near the house which he could plough and then sow with seed.
-
-One morning he set out as usual with his three boys. They were talking
-together as they walked, and none of them saw that behind one of the
-trees an Indian was hiding, his dark skin strangely painted with arrows
-and circles in white and scarlet, and on his head a tuft of black
-feathers standing upright and waving as he moved. In his hand he had a
-gun. As soon as the father had passed, the Indian came out from behind
-the tree, moving without making any sound. He shot at Abraham from
-behind, and the bullet passed right through his heart. The father fell
-down dead before the eyes of his sons. They were terrified. The two
-eldest ran off, one to the house and the other to the fort, to bring
-help. Thomas, the youngest, was only six. He could not run so fast as
-his brothers, and he was too much frightened to try. He stood still
-beside his father’s body, not understanding what had happened. His
-eldest brother, Mordecai, made all speed to the house. As soon as he
-reached it he took down a gun, loaded it, and jumped up to the window
-so that he might shoot at the Indian out of it. As he looked out he saw
-the Indian walk up to the place where the dead body lay, look at it for
-a moment, then pick up little Thomas, put him under his arm, and turn
-to walk away with him. Mordecai felt his heart stand still with fear;
-but he was a brave boy, and his father had taught him how to shoot at
-a long distance. He aimed straight at the white star painted on the
-Indian’s naked chest. There was an awful moment. Then the Indian fell
-back dead upon the ground, dropping the child from his arms. Thomas ran
-to the house as fast as his legs would carry him, screaming with fear,
-for now several other Indians began to appear from the wood. Mordecai
-fired again and again at them from the house; and people came from the
-fort, brought by his brother, and drove the Indians away.
-
-Mordecai, when he grew up, spent his life in waging war upon the
-Indians, killing them wherever he met them. Thomas was neither so
-strong nor so clever as his brother. He became a carpenter, but he
-was never a very good carpenter. He was not very good at anything but
-sitting by the fire telling stories. He did that very well indeed, and
-people generally were fond of him; but he was not a successful person.
-He had none of his son’s wonderful power of work; he always wanted to
-do something else, not the thing before him, and live somewhere else,
-not settle down to work where he was.
-
-[Illustration: The bullet passed right through his heart]
-
-He built himself a log-cabin at Elizabethtown, on the edge of the
-forest, and when he was twenty-eight he got married and took his wife
-to live there.
-
-It is said that all great men have had great mothers. Nancy Hanks had
-much more character than her husband, and her son was much more like
-her. She had a very sweet, unselfish nature, and every one loved her.
-She had had more education than her husband, and could read and write:
-she taught him to sign his name.
-
-After their first child came--a daughter called Sarah--Thomas Lincoln,
-who always thought he could make a fortune somewhere else, moved
-farther west to a place called Nolin’s Creek. The place was not at
-all attractive, but it was cheap. The soil was hard; it was rocky
-and barren, and nothing but weeds seemed to grow in it. Only a very
-energetic man could have made much out of it, and Thomas was not very
-energetic. They were very poor.
-
-It was here, in an uncomfortable log-cabin, that his son Abraham was
-born, on the 12th of February 1809; and here he lived until he was
-seven.
-
-The hut had only one room. It was very roughly built. Stout logs had
-been laid on top of one another, then bound together with twigs, and
-the holes filled up with clay and grass and handfuls of dead leaves.
-There was no ceiling, only the log roof.
-
-The two children climbed up a shaky ladder to a loft in the roof, where
-they slept on a bed of dry leaves, covered with an old deerskin, lying
-close together to keep themselves warm. As they lay there, they could
-count the stars that looked in through the spaces between the logs that
-made the roof. The windows had no glass; the door was only an opening
-over which a deerskin was hung as a curtain. In winter it was terrible.
-The wind blew in, icy cold; there was nothing to keep it out, except
-when sometimes the entrance was blocked up with snow, and no one could
-go out or come in until a pathway had been dug.
-
-In the autumn the house used to be full of dead leaves that whirled
-about in the middle of the floor. The only comfort in the hut was the
-huge fire; it filled up nearly the whole of one side, and in front of
-it was a great bearskin rug. On this the two children spent the days
-in winter, playing together, or leaning against their mother’s knee
-while she told them stories--fairy tales, or true stories about Indians
-and old American history, or parables from the Bible. In the winter you
-could not keep warm anywhere else; and in the autumn there were damp
-fogs that made it unwholesome outside, or heavy rains that came through
-the roof; the only thing to do was to get as near the fire as possible.
-Above it were ranged all the household pots and pans; the meat, a
-haunch of venison, or a couple of rabbits, hung from the roof. Cooking
-was very simple, for there was no choice of food: it consisted of game
-shot in the forest, or fish caught in the streams, roots and berries
-from the wood; bread was made of flour ground from Indian corn, which
-was the only thing that grew in the rough fields. Until he was a grown
-man Abraham had never tasted any other sort of bread.
-
-The life was uncomfortable, often dangerous--for an Indian attack was
-possible at any time--and always the same. No visitors came to see
-the Lincolns; there were few friends for them to go and see, only the
-scattered settlers living in huts like their own.
-
-Abraham very soon learnt to make himself useful. He would cut and bring
-home wood for the fire; help his mother in the house, or his father
-out-of-doors. In summer he spent long hours roaming about the woods. He
-soon learned to use a rifle, for it was not safe to go far unarmed, and
-he became a good shot. He remembered very little about this time when
-he grew older. One day he had been out fishing, and at the end of it
-he caught a single fish. With this he was walking home to supper, when
-he met a soldier. His mother had taught him he must always be good to
-soldiers, who fought for their country, and therefore the little boy
-gave the soldier his fish.
-
-His father always thought that he should be better off somewhere else.
-He heard that across the Ohio River there was rich land which any one
-could have who chose to go and take it: so when Abraham was seven,
-and his sister nine, they moved. The father built a raft, and put his
-family and all the goods he had, after selling his house, on to it, and
-they sailed down the river, getting food on the way by shooting and
-fishing, till they came to a place they liked called Little Pigeon
-Creek. It was simply an opening in the forest.
-
-Here they disembarked, and for a year they lived in a roughly built
-shelter, without a floor or doors or windows, while the father and
-his son built a better cabin, and cut down trees and shrubs to clear
-a place for planting corn. When it was finished, Abraham’s aunt and
-uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow, and two cousins, John and Denis Hanks,
-came to live with them. The three boys were great friends, and they
-worked together on the farm until they all grew up.
-
-Abe, as they called him, was a very tall boy for his age: his long legs
-were always in his way, and they seemed to get longer every day. He
-never wore stockings until he was a young man, but moccasins, such as
-the Indians wear--shoes of leather, with a fringe round the top--and
-long deerskin leggings; a deerskin shirt which his mother had made
-him, and a cap which was seldom on his head, it being covered enough
-by his thick black hair. His hair was never tidy; always in his eyes,
-and having to be pushed back. Abe was clever with his axe, and a good
-workman; his mother had taught him to spell, but there was little
-chance of learning in Pigeon’s Creek.
-
-For a year the little family lived there very happily; then a
-mysterious sickness broke out in the place, no one knew why or how to
-cure it. They called it the milk sickness; many people fell ill of it,
-and hardly any one recovered. Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow both died of it in
-the autumn, and a few days afterwards Mrs. Lincoln sickened and died
-too. To her children this was a terrible grief. Abraham, though a boy
-when she died, never forgot his mother: she had taught him his first
-lessons, and from her came that sweetness of nature, that power of
-thinking first of others, that made every one who knew him love him. It
-was at the time of his mother’s death that the sadness which never left
-him came upon him. In later life, people who really knew him said that,
-in spite of his fun and power of making other people laugh, he was the
-saddest man they ever knew.
-
-A dreary winter followed. At the end of it Thomas Lincoln brought home
-a new wife to his little cabin. Sally Bush was a widow, with three
-children; she was a good and kind woman, and Abe really loved her
-and she him. She said afterwards that he had never all his life given
-her a cross word or look, or refused to do anything she asked him;
-that he was the best boy she had ever seen. He was indeed the sunshine
-of the house; but in many ways he was very lonely. He was hungry for
-knowledge, for books and teaching. All the schooling he ever had was
-a month now and then with a travelling teacher who passed through
-Pigeon’s Creek on his way to somewhere else; but none of these teachers
-knew much beyond the three R’s: one who knew Latin was regarded as a
-sort of magician. In all, he had not so much as one year at school,
-taught by five different teachers.
-
-But Abe was not the sort of boy to learn nothing because there was
-nobody to teach him. He had a few books that had been his mother’s,
-and he read them again and again until he knew everything that was in
-them. John Hanks, his cousin, says of him: “When Abe and I returned to
-the house from work, he would go to the cupboard, snatch a piece of
-corn-bread, take down a book, sit down, cock his legs as high as his
-head, and read.” The Bible and “Pilgrim’s Progress,” “Æsop’s Fables,”
-and “Robinson Crusoe,” these were his books; he knew them by heart.
-In the intervals of work he used to tell them to his companions. He
-thought over every word until he understood it. In this way he learned
-more from a few books than many people do from whole libraries, because
-he learned to think. He questioned everything, and asked himself if he
-thought so too, and why he thought so.
-
-One day he borrowed the life of George Washington from a farmer who
-lived near; as he lay in the loft he read it with eagerness. In the
-middle he was called away to work, and in the meantime the rain came in
-and ruined the book. Abraham went in despair to the farmer and told him
-what had happened. “Never mind,” said the farmer. “You do three days’
-work for me for nothing and you may keep the book; I don’t want it.” To
-his joy he thus became possessed of a new treasure to be studied again
-and again. This book more than any other made him a patriot: he longed
-to get out into the great big world where he could serve his country.
-In the evenings he used to sit silent for hours, thinking. Sometimes he
-did sums of all sorts on the wooden shovel; making figures on it with
-a piece of charcoal. When it was quite full he shaved off the top
-with his knife so as to have a clean slate in the morning.
-
-[Illustration: Sometimes he did sums on the wooden shovel]
-
-All his companions liked Abe and admired him. He worked very hard,
-but farm work did not interest him; he liked dinner and play better;
-and sometimes he used to stop work and climb on to a gate or a
-dead tree-stump, and make absurd speeches or comic sermons to his
-companions, or recite passages from his favourite books.
-
-They thought him a quaint fellow, with some strange ideas. One of these
-strange ideas was his tenderness to animals. He never cared much for
-sport, because it seemed to him cruel. He showed his tenderness to
-animals when quite a small boy. One day he was playing in the woods
-with a boy called John Davis. In their game they ran a hedgehog into a
-crevice between two rocks, and it got caught fast. For two hours they
-tried every sort of plan to get it out, but without any success. They
-were not able to pull it out, and it could not move itself. Abraham
-could not bear to leave the poor thing to die in pain. He ran off to
-the blacksmith’s shop, quite a quarter of a mile away, and borrowed a
-pole with an iron hook fastened to the end; with this they were able
-to set the little animal free. This care for animals was only one sign
-of Abraham’s tenderness of heart. All little children and old people
-trusted him and his word. He was very soon known as “Honest Abe.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE YOUNG BACKWOODSMAN
-
-
-FOR Abraham life was dull and very monotonous: the round of work was
-much the same, summer and winter. He longed to escape from the dull
-work of a farm labourer; to go out and see the world. Until he was
-twenty-one, however, he was bound to serve his father; and his father
-seems to have had no idea that his son was fit for anything better than
-ordinary farm work. Other people nevertheless were struck by Abraham.
-
-Until he was nineteen he had not left home at all; but then one day a
-rich landowner who lived near came to him. He wanted some one to help
-his son to take a raft loaded with different kinds of goods down the
-Ohio River, selling the goods at the different places they passed.
-Abraham had struck this Mr. Gentry as being an honest and capable lad;
-he therefore asked him to undertake the voyage, and Abraham consented
-at once, glad of any chance of seeing something of life outside the
-settlement.
-
-He took charge of the raft and steered it successfully down the river;
-the voyage took them past the great southern sugar plantations, right
-down to New Orleans. They had no adventures of any sort until they had
-almost come to New Orleans.
-
-One night they encamped at Baton Rouge, a place on the bank of the
-river. Here they fastened their raft, and lay down to sleep on it for
-the night, wrapped up in thick blankets. They were both sound asleep.
-Suddenly Abraham started up. He heard the sound of many soft footsteps
-all round him. In the darkness, at first, he could see nothing; then
-he became aware that a band of negroes was attacking the raft, ready
-to steal their goods and to murder them. Abraham’s cry waked up his
-companion, young Allan Gentry, and they threw themselves upon the
-negroes. If Abraham had not been uncommonly strong and active they
-must both have lost their lives, for the negroes far outnumbered
-them. He seized a huge log of wood, which served him as a club, and
-brandished it in his hand. His great height and the unknown weapon
-which he whirled round his head, terrified the negroes. He hit first
-one and then another on the head and threw them overboard, Allan Gentry
-helping. The fight was very fierce for a few moments, and then the
-negroes turned and fled. Abraham and Allan pursued them a long way into
-the darkness, but the thieves did not dare to return, though two men
-could not have held their own for long against such numbers.
-
-The voyage ended successfully, and Abraham returned home for two more
-years. At the end of that time his father again moved. John Hanks had
-gone west to Illinois; he wrote to his uncle, praising the new country,
-and urging him to come there too. Thomas Lincoln was always ready to
-try something new: he sold his farm and his land to a neighbour. All
-the goods of the household were packed in a waggon drawn by oxen; the
-family walked beside it. They tramped for more than a week until they
-came to the new State; the journey was not easy. It was February. The
-forest roads were ankle-deep in mud; the prairie a mere swamp, very
-difficult for walking. They had to cross streams that were swollen into
-rivers by the rains.
-
-At last they arrived. John Hanks had chosen a plantation for them, and
-got logs ready for building the house. Abraham worked very hard, and
-helped his father and John Hanks to make a cabin; then, with his own
-hands, he ploughed fifteen acres of ground. When that was done he cut
-down walnut trees, split them, and built a high and solid fence which
-went right round his father’s property.
-
-Abraham lived in Illinois until he was made President of the United
-States. Once he was addressing a meeting there, years after this, and
-Denis Hanks marched in amid the shouts and applause of the crowd,
-carrying on his shoulder a piece of the railing that Abraham had made
-for his father. It is now in the Museum at Washington, kept as a
-national treasure. How little could Abraham himself or any one who knew
-him at this time, have dreamed that this rail-splitter was to be the
-greatest man in America.
-
-The winter that followed was one of the most severe ever known in
-Illinois; it is always referred to as the winter of deep snow. When
-spring came at last, Abraham said good-bye to his father and mother,
-and went out into the world to make a livelihood for himself. His
-boyish days were over. He was now twenty-one, and very tall and strong
-for his age. More than six feet four inches in height, he seldom met
-a man taller than himself. He is a great exception to the saying that
-all great men have been small--for example, Napoleon, Cæsar, Hannibal,
-Shakespeare. Abraham was very well built; it was not till he stood up
-among other men that you realised that he was head and shoulders taller
-than most of them.
-
-In the ordinary sense of the word, he had had no education. He knew
-no language but his own, and that not very well at this time. When
-asked could he write, he replied, “Well, I guess I could make a few
-rabbit-tracks.” He had taught himself all the arithmetic he knew. But
-he knew two things that are the most important that can be got from any
-training: how to think, and how to work. When he made clear to himself
-what it was right to do, he did it without talking about it, all his
-life.
-
-His experience in taking Mr. Gentry’s cargo down to New Orleans
-induced a merchant called Offutt to offer him another job of the
-same kind. Offutt was an adventurous sort of dealer, who did all
-kinds of business. He wanted some one to help him who had a head on
-his shoulders, and he soon saw that Lincoln had plenty of sense. He
-therefore engaged him, and Lincoln took his cousin, John Hanks, to help
-him. They did not make much money by the voyage, but Lincoln showed
-great skill in managing the raft.
-
-On this trip Lincoln came for the first time really face to face with
-slavery. New Orleans was a great slave market, and they spent some
-time there. For the first time he saw negroes being sold in the open
-streets, chained together in gangs. For the first time, too, he saw
-negroes being beaten; fastened to a block and scourged till the blood
-ran from their backs. Every one took it all as a matter of course, but
-Lincoln was deeply struck. His heart bled. At the time he said nothing,
-but he was silent for a long while afterwards, thinking over what
-he had seen. There and then, as his cousin used to tell afterwards,
-slavery ran its iron into him: to see these men chained was a torment
-to him, and he never forgot it: the picture was printed on his memory
-never to be forgotten, only to be wiped out when there were no more
-slaves in America. He was often in the slave states after this; but
-slavery always seemed to him horrible.
-
-Offutt was quite satisfied with the way in which the young backwoodsman
-had managed the trip. After his return he offered him a post in his
-grocery store at New Salem. He had a kind of half shop, half office,
-with a mill behind it; here he sold everything that any one could want
-to buy--grocery, drapery, stationery, miscellaneous goods of all kinds.
-Lincoln was clerk, superintendent of the mill, and general assistant.
-
-Offutt soon began to admire his assistant immensely. He declared that
-Lincoln was the cleverest fellow he knew--he could read, and talk like
-a book; he was so strong and active that he could beat any one at
-running, jumping, or wrestling. Lincoln did not know any one in New
-Salem, and this “wooling and pulling,” as he called it, of Offutt’s
-annoyed him a good deal; as he knew, it was not at all likely to make
-people like him. The young fellows of the place did not mind his
-supposed cleverness; they knew nothing about that, and cared nothing;
-but they did resent the idea that he was stronger than they were.
-
-At first they did nothing: he looked rather a dangerous person to
-attack, and not at all likely to take things meekly. Offutt’s loud and
-continual praise, however, was more than they could stand. As Lincoln
-was on his way home one evening a group of the strongest fellows in
-New Salem, the “boys of Clary’s Grove,” attacked him. Jock Armstrong,
-the biggest and burliest of them all, challenged him to a “wrastle.”
-Jock was not as tall as Lincoln, but he was much more solidly built,
-with huge shoulders like an ox and immensely strong arms: no one in New
-Salem had ever been able to throw him, and he expected an easy victory
-over this strange clerk.
-
-But Abe was as strong and as skilful as Jock: though he was thin his
-muscles were made of iron; his huge arms closed round the burly fellow
-like a vice. Even when his companions came to the champion’s rescue
-Abe was a match for them. Armstrong was a sportsman and not ashamed
-to take a beating: he admired a man who was able to throw him. After
-this Lincoln had no stauncher friend, and he soon grew to be a person
-of importance in New Salem. His strength and his honesty made him
-respected.
-
-[Illustration: His huge arms closed round Armstrong like a vice]
-
-Of his honesty there are numberless stories. One evening he was making
-up his accounts for the day. While doing so he found that he had
-charged a woman, who had come in in the morning to buy a great number
-of little things, 6-1/4 cents--that is, about 3d.--too much. Until it
-was time to shut up the shop the money seemed to burn in his pocket.
-It was late when the time for locking up came, but he could not wait.
-He started off at once for the woman’s house, though it was several
-miles off, and walked there and back in the darkness to pay her her 3d.
-before he went to bed. He knew he could not sleep until he had done so.
-
-People trusted him: those who were in trouble soon found out how wise
-and gentle he was, and they went to him for advice and help. He had a
-wonderful way of quite forgetting himself, and only thinking of making
-other people happy: generally silent, he could tell stories so that
-every one laughed. But though he enjoyed talking and going to see
-people, he always worked very hard.
-
-And he did not only work in the shop: he was always eager to learn
-more. After the day’s task was done, he would walk miles to get hold of
-some book that he wanted, and read it on the way home. When his cousin,
-a lazy fellow, wrote to ask his advice, he replied: “What is wrong with
-you is your habit of needlessly wasting time: go to work; that is the
-only cure for your difficulty.”
-
-When he came to New Salem he met people who had been well educated, and
-he was at once struck by the difference between their way of speaking
-and his. He resolved to learn to speak correctly. One evening he walked
-to Kirkham and back--it was twelve miles away--and bought a grammar
-there. For the next few weeks he spent all his spare time in studying
-it: he used to sit with his feet on the mantelpiece and work for hours
-without moving. In this way he soon knew all there was to know about
-grammar. When you read his speeches you will find that they are written
-in English as beautiful and simple as that of the Bible, which was the
-book he knew best of all.
-
-He only remained with Offutt for a year. Offutt was too fond of talking
-to make his business a success, and he had to give up the store. It was
-Lincoln’s first attempt at earning his living, and learning a trade did
-not seem very successful. Instead of at once looking for some new work
-of the same sort he enlisted as a soldier. The State of Illinois was
-thrown into a state of wild excitement by an attack made at this time
-by a powerful Indian tribe. Black Hawk crossed the Mississippi at the
-head of an army of red warriors. To drive them back, the Government
-of the country called for volunteers, and Abraham, who was one of the
-first to offer himself, was made a captain. The men entered for three
-months, during which they did a great deal of skirmishing and marching
-about, but took part in no regular battles. At the end of the time
-most of them went back to work. Abraham enlisted again; this time as
-a private in a battalion of scouts. He was not present at any battle,
-but he learnt something of war and a good deal of soldiers; it was hard
-work and not much glory. By the autumn Black Hawk was captured, and the
-war was at an end. Lincoln’s horse had been stolen, and he had to walk
-back to New Salem, a three days’ tramp. His campaigning had not been a
-great success.
-
-When he returned, the elections for members of the Illinois Parliament
-were going on, and he offered himself as a candidate; spending the
-ten days between his return from the war and the time of election in
-making speeches. In New Salem he was popular, but he was not yet well
-known even there; he was young, and had had no experience. He was not
-elected, but he made good friends at the election time, and he began to
-be a capital speaker.
-
-Meetings were not very formal in those days. One day when Lincoln was
-addressing a large hall full of people, in the middle of his speech
-he saw that a ruffian in the crowd was attacking a friend of his;
-they were struggling together, and his friend seemed to be having the
-worst of it. Lincoln jumped down from the platform where he stood, and
-marched to the middle of the room. He picked up the ruffian in his
-mighty arms and threw him some ten feet, so that he fell right outside
-the hall. There he lay, and did not attempt to return. Lincoln came
-back on to the platform and went on with his speech, just as if nothing
-had happened.
-
-After the election he thought of becoming a blacksmith. Instead of
-this, he joined with a man called Berry in buying a store. Berry was
-a stupid and not very honest man. He got into debt; then he took to
-drinking, and soon afterwards died, leaving Lincoln with the business
-ruined and a lot of debts to pay.
-
-After this he did not try storekeeping again: he was made postmaster
-of New Salem. This meant very little work: few people wrote letters
-there: he could carry the whole post in his hat, and he read every
-newspaper that came. He now had plenty of time for reading, and he
-read ceaselessly. Most of all, he read American history. The “Life of
-Washington” had been his earliest treasure; and as a boy he had pored
-over an old copy of the statutes of Indiana. This was, perhaps, the
-beginning of his interest in law. Now he was in a town, though a small
-one, and it was possible to get hold of books. He used to lie on his
-back under a tree, with his feet high up against the trunk, only moving
-so as to keep in the shade, and laying down the book now and then to
-think over what he had read and make sure that he understood it.
-
-He studied surveying in this way for six weeks, and John Calhoun, the
-surveyor of the county, was so much astonished by his knowledge that
-he made him his assistant. His reading in law and history deepened his
-interest in politics: nothing interested him so much. He was resolved
-sooner or later to get into Parliament. One failure could not make him
-despair. There was a great world outside, and the door into Parliament
-was the door into that world. He was resolved to make his way in.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-SLAVERY
-
-
-IT would be a great mistake to think that Abraham Lincoln won success
-easily.
-
-Looking back over the lives of great men, one is apt to think “How
-fortune helped them;” “What astonishing luck they must have had;” when
-one knows the end, it seems certain from the beginning. But when you
-know more about any one really great man, you are sure to find that he
-has risen only by endless hard work, and by knowing from the beginning
-what he wanted to be and do, and thinking only of that.
-
-Success is never easy, and for Lincoln the path to it was a hard and
-uphill way. You have seen in what difficulties his life began; how he
-taught himself everything he learned, and made for himself every penny
-that he possessed. His first effort to get into Parliament, like his
-first efforts to make a living, seemed a failure. But this did not make
-him despair. Other people had risen, and he was going to rise. He was
-sure of one thing, that there is always plenty of room at the top, and
-he meant to reach the top. There is always a place for a man of strong
-purpose, who is honest, and who can think for himself. If a man really
-wants to serve his country, nothing need prevent him from doing it. And
-Lincoln saw that the first step to serving your country well is to be a
-good workman, a good friend, and a good citizen of your own town.
-
-When the next election came he stood again, and this time he was
-elected; and after his two years of service came to an end, he was
-elected again. For eight years he was a member of the Parliament of his
-own State of Illinois; then, after four years away from politics, he
-was made member of Congress--that is, of the American Parliament, to
-which the States send representatives.
-
-To be in Parliament was to be in touch with the big world; to have a
-share in the settlement of big questions. In the Illinois Parliament,
-Lincoln met a great many clever men; men who rose to important posts
-later. Few of them suspected that this tall, awkward, country-looking
-young lawyer, who did not speak much, but could tell such
-extraordinarily funny stories when he chose, was going to rise to be
-American President, to prove himself greater than any American of their
-time. Most of the members were small lawyers like himself. They were
-sent to Parliament because they were men in whom their fellow-citizens
-had confidence. They were honest men, but few of them had any more
-knowledge of politics than Lincoln himself.
-
-The State of Illinois was very new, and its affairs had not yet become
-complicated. Lincoln soon learnt the ins and outs of parliamentary
-business; and he only found one man who was a better speaker than
-himself. This was a man with whom he was to have a great deal to do all
-his life; a man already well known in politics, and followed by a large
-party.
-
-His name was Stephen Arnold Douglas. He was two years younger than
-Lincoln; like him he had been brought up in the rough surroundings of
-the West, where he had gone as a boy. His father was poor, but he
-was a gentleman. Well educated himself, he had given his son a good
-education of a sort.
-
-When he was twenty-one Douglas became a lawyer. Very soon he became
-the foremost barrister in North Illinois, and soon entered the State
-Parliament. In the year of Lincoln’s election he had been made
-Secretary of State; he was therefore a person of importance. Douglas
-was extremely clever; as a boy he learnt things quickly, and remembered
-them easily, unlike Lincoln, who learnt very slowly; he had a wonderful
-power of speech: he was ready and able to speak on any subject, and,
-even if he really knew very little about it, he always gave people the
-impression that he knew everything. He used to tell people what they
-wanted to hear, whereas Lincoln had a way of speaking the truth whether
-it was pleasant or not.
-
-Douglas was very popular: he understood how to rule men, and he was
-intensely ambitious. Ambition was the strongest feeling in his heart;
-and his ambition was for himself: he dreamed already of being President
-of the United States. He was a short, thickly-built man; but it was the
-smallness of his mind, his selfish aims, that made Lincoln say that
-Douglas was the least man that he had ever met: he seemed to “Honest
-Abe” to care not at all for what he said or did, so long as his own
-success was safe; success was his one object.
-
-It was an ambition very different from Lincoln’s. Indeed, Lincoln was
-unlike any of the members whom he met: his aims were quite different
-from theirs. He looked to a future beyond himself. He did not think of
-his own success. What he wanted to attain by success was the power to
-help his country. Patriotism was his first and strongest feeling, and
-his patriotism was of the truest kind. He did not want to make America
-great because she ruled over a vast extent of territory: such greatness
-did not appeal to him at all. He wanted her to be great in the sense
-that she really lived up to the ideal set before her for ever in the
-Declaration of Independence--the ideal of a union of free men governing
-themselves well.
-
-And Lincoln’s ideals were real to him: in every question he was guided
-by his patriotism. He did not mind saying what he thought, whether
-people liked him for it or not: they must like him for what he was,
-and not for what he said, and unless they loved what was right, their
-liking was not worth having. When, after long thinking, he came to
-see what he thought the truth on any subject, he spoke out so that
-every one who heard must understand: he never said one thing and meant
-another, as Douglas did: he was as honest in his thoughts as in his
-actions.
-
-Now in American politics there was one great question, more important
-than every other, the question of slavery. Cautious politicians, men
-with an eye to their own success, thought that this question had better
-be left alone. Really thoughtful men, men like Lincoln, saw that this
-question could not be left alone for ever. Some day, and the sooner the
-better, it must be settled. Anyhow, it was every honest man’s duty to
-say what he thought. It is difficult now to realise quite what slavery
-meant. Perhaps you have read or heard of a book called “Uncle Tom’s
-Cabin.” It was written about this time by an American lady, who wanted
-to make all Americans see what slavery did mean--how terrible it could
-be.
-
-If you drew a line across America just south of Lincoln’s State of
-Illinois, slavery did not exist in the Northern States; it did exist
-in all the Southern States. Whenever the question was discussed, most
-people from the North thought it rather a bad thing, some thought it a
-very bad thing; people from the South all thought it was a good, or at
-least, a necessary, thing. They all agreed as a rule in thinking that,
-whether it was a good thing or a bad thing, there it was, and there was
-no good discussing it.
-
-The real wrong lay far back in the past. Centuries ago, merchants had
-brought negroes over from Africa, and sold them in America as slaves.
-
-As is always the case, when once the wrong had been brought in,
-when the evil had begun, it was almost impossible to get rid of it
-when people had grown used to it. When people could buy slaves who
-did not cost very much to do work for them, they did not want to do
-it themselves, especially if the work was disagreeable. They began
-to believe that black men were intended by nature to do all the
-disagreeable things. English merchants made great fortunes by bringing
-slaves to America; and the English Government supported them. And when,
-after the war, America was a free country, the Union of States which
-made it so was half composed of States that held slaves. These slaves
-were most valuable property. The men who drew up the Constitution,
-George Washington and Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton,
-declared in it, “All men are free and equal: all men possess rights,
-which no one can take away from them.” The Northern States gave up
-their slaves, and decided that slavery was illegal: the Southern States
-did not. They refused to join the Union unless they were allowed to
-keep their slaves. Now of course it was absurd to call a country free
-where slavery existed, or to say that all men have rights when millions
-of black men had no rights at all.
-
-To the Southerner a black man was not a man, but a piece of property.
-
-But it would not be quite fair to think that the Northerners who gave
-up slaves had always more lofty ideas than the Southerners. You must
-remember that slaves were much more useful in the South than in the
-North. The climate of the North was cold, and the work not of the sort
-that could be well done by untrained negroes. In the South it was
-so hot that it was difficult for white men to work, and work on the
-plantations needed no special skill.
-
-At the time when the Declaration of Independence was drawn up and
-signed, one thing seemed to every American more important than
-anything else: that the country should be united in one whole. North
-and South must join together; no difference could outweigh a common
-nationality. The Southerners would not join the Union unless they were
-allowed to keep their slaves: therefore the Northerners left slavery in
-the South. They hoped, however, that it would gradually die out; and
-therefore a law was passed which declared that after twenty years no
-more slaves were to be brought from Africa.
-
-When Southerners declared, as they very often did, that slaves were
-very well treated, that they were much happier and more comfortable
-than if they were free, this was true to a certain extent. Those slaves
-who were employed in the houses and gardens of their masters, those who
-were used as servants, were often very well treated. But however well
-they were treated, it is wrong for a man to have other men entirely
-in his power; wrong for him, and wrong for them. And although some
-masters did not abuse their power, some did--and all could, if ever
-they wanted to--without feeling that they were doing anything wrong. A
-white gentleman could beat his black slave to death if he chose; he
-would not be punished any more than if he beat a dog to death, and his
-friends would still think him a gentleman. Moreover, far the greater
-number of the slaves were not used as servants, but used as labourers
-on the cotton plantations. Here they were under the charge of an
-overseer. His one idea was to get as much work out of them as possible.
-They worked all day, and at night were often herded together in any
-sort of shed.
-
-After Eli Whitney, a young American, invented a machine called the
-cotton gin, by using which one negro could pick twenty times as
-much cotton in a day as before, the business of working the cotton
-plantations with slaves made the Southern landowners very rich.
-Slaves were cheap: in a few days they made as much for their masters
-as they cost them, and their masters could make them work as hard
-as they liked. They were quite ignorant: their masters taught them
-nothing; they had no way of escape; they were absolutely at the mercy
-of the overseer with his whip. The masters came to regard these black
-fellow-beings simply as property: not so valuable as a horse, rather
-more useful than a dog; they often forgot that they had any feelings.
-Children were sold away from their parents; a husband was sent to one
-plantation, and his wife to another. They were sometimes beaten for
-the smallest fault. If they tried to escape, bloodhounds were used to
-hunt them down. Dealers led them about in chains, and sold them in the
-public market exactly like animals. People who came from the North
-to the South, as Abraham Lincoln did, on his trip down the Ohio, and
-saw how the slaves were treated, were often shocked; but in the South
-people were used to it.
-
-North of a certain line, slavery did not exist. Slaves used sometimes
-to run away from their masters and escape across this line; but in
-every Northern State there was a law, that escaped slaves had to be
-handed back to their master if he claimed them. The masters used to
-offer a reward to any one who handed back to them the body of their
-slave, alive or dead. This led to all sorts of difficulties, because
-in the Northern States a great many free negroes lived. Very often
-some one who was eager for the reward would capture an innocent free
-negro and hand him over to the master, declaring that he answered to
-the description of the missing slave. The question as to whether he
-was, or not, was decided not in the Northern State where he had been
-captured, but in the Southern State where the master lived, and no
-Southern court could be trusted to decide fairly in a case between a
-white man and a black.
-
-Gradually this injustice roused a small party in the North, which
-openly declared that slavery was an abominable thing, and ought not to
-exist in America. The Abolitionists, as they called themselves, said
-that it was a disgrace to a free country that slavery should exist in
-it; that as long as it did exist, the Declaration of Independence had
-no meaning. Slavery ought to be abolished.
-
-When Abraham Lincoln was about twenty-one, a paper called _The
-Liberator_ began to appear. It was edited by a great man called William
-Lloyd Garrison. Its object was to rouse people to see the evils of
-slavery, and to get it made illegal. The Abolitionists were few in
-number, and very unpopular. They had to suffer for their beliefs in
-the North as well as in the South. The offices where _The Liberator_
-was printed were attacked by mobs of furious people, who burst in
-at the doors, broke every pane of glass in the windows, destroyed
-the printing press, and threw the type into the river. In St. Louis,
-William Lloyd Garrison was dragged round the town with a rope round his
-waist, while crowds of angry people hooted and hissed, spat at him,
-and threw rotten eggs and stones at his head. He only just escaped
-death. Many of his followers were murdered in the open streets. Even
-in Illinois, an innocent preacher, who had sympathised with them, was
-thrown into the river and drowned.
-
-The Southern States were roused to fury. In the North, even sensible
-people who did not like slavery thought it very unwise to say anything
-against it. Slavery was a fact--it was no good to discuss it. Several
-Northern States sent petitions to Parliament, declaring their opinion
-that it was very unwise to discuss Abolition.
-
-In Illinois, this was the view taken by nearly all Lincoln’s friends.
-Lincoln did not agree with them. He thought the Abolitionists very
-often unwise; nothing, he saw, could be more dangerous than to rouse
-the feeling of the South: but nothing could make him seem to approve of
-slavery.
-
-For Lincoln to see that any action was right, and to do it, was the
-same thing. He and one other man, called Stone, sent in a protest to
-the Illinois Parliament; in it they declared that they believed slavery
-to be founded upon injustice and upon bad policy. Lincoln spoke because
-he must. He had seen what slavery meant, and he hated slavery. But he
-saw that the South would not allow slavery to be abolished: if the
-North tried to do it, the country would be divided into two halves.
-He was not ready to face that. His love for his country came before
-everything. Everything must be borne, rather than that it should be
-divided.
-
-The Abolitionists were a small party; and for the next seventeen years,
-the question of slavery was left as it was, as far as Parliament was
-concerned. During these seventeen years, Lincoln was perpetually
-turning it over in his mind; thinking and reading about it, and helping
-other people to think about it too.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-LINCOLN THE LAWYER
-
-
-TWO years after Lincoln entered the Illinois Parliament, its meetings,
-which had been held at Vandalia, were transferred to Springfield. In
-Springfield Lincoln lived for the next five-and-twenty years, until
-he left it to go to Washington as President of the United States.
-Springfield was a country town, which thought itself rather important.
-The people paid a good deal of attention to dress; they gave evening
-parties of a quiet sort, where they played cards and talked politics.
-The business of the most prominent persons in the town was law. Almost
-all the members of Parliament were lawyers.
-
-Lincoln found that his surveying did not occupy his time, or bring in
-a very large income; he had studied law-books, and knew very nearly
-as much as most of the young barristers of Springfield. Major Stuart,
-under whom he had served in the war against Black Hawk, took him into
-partnership. The partnership was not very successful. Lincoln was
-rather ignorant, and Stuart was too much occupied with his duties as
-member of Congress--the American Parliament--to teach him much.
-
-After four years Lincoln left Stuart and joined another friend, Judge
-Stephen D. Logan. Logan had made Lincoln’s acquaintance at the time
-of his first unsuccessful candidature for the Illinois Parliament. He
-had then greatly admired the young man’s pluck and good sense, and the
-cheerful way in which he accepted his defeat. Later, he had been struck
-by the sound reasoning of his political speeches. Logan himself was not
-only a first-rate lawyer, he was a man of wide education and culture:
-Abraham learned more than law from him. Even after Lincoln left the
-partnership, and set up an office of his own, the two men remained
-close friends.
-
-Although busy during the winter in Parliament, Lincoln worked very hard
-at his business. He knew that no one can succeed in anything without
-hard work, and he saw that to become a really good lawyer would help
-him in politics, and make him a more useful citizen of the State.
-Moreover, he understood, more clearly than most men have done, that
-every deed in life is connected to every other; no man can escape the
-consequences of what he is and does. Every act and every speech is
-important.
-
-Lincoln was four times elected to the Illinois Parliament--that is,
-he sat in it for eight years. For four years--between 1845-49--he was
-member for Illinois in Congress. In Congress he spoke and voted against
-the war that was being waged against Mexico. The aim of the war was the
-conquest of Texas and California. The South urged this because they
-wanted the number of slave-owning States to be equal to the number of
-free States. They were always afraid that new States would be created
-out of the undeveloped territory in the North-West; and, if this
-were to happen, the slave States would be in a minority in Congress.
-If Texas were added as a slave State, the slave States would have a
-majority of one: there would be fourteen free and fifteen slave States.
-The Northern members, for the most part, did not see the point; they
-did not unite against the Southern demands; and consequently the South
-succeeded. In the war Mexico was defeated, and Texas was added to the
-Union.
-
-At the end of his last year of membership, 1849, Lincoln applied for
-a post in the Government office. Why he did so it is difficult to
-understand, for it would have put an end to his political career, as
-officials may not sit in the House. Fortunately his request was refused.
-
-He returned to his home in Springfield, where he lived in a big, plain
-house, painted a dirty yellow, with a big piece of untidy garden
-behind, and a small field at the side. He had married seven years
-before, and had now three sons. He was devoted to these boys, and used
-to play all sorts of games with them, as they grew bigger.
-
-For the next five years he devoted himself mainly to his work as a
-lawyer. He was now forty years of age. In Springfield and everywhere in
-Illinois he was admired, respected, and loved. But the high opinion of
-other people never made him easily satisfied with himself. To the end
-of his life he never stopped working and learning. He now resolved to
-become a really good lawyer. He knew that in law he could learn the art
-of persuading people, and of expressing clearly what he wanted to say.
-To help in this he took up the study of mathematics with extraordinary
-energy. Examining his own speeches, he seemed to find in them some
-confusion of thought. To make his own ideas clear, and to be sure that
-he expressed them clearly and truly, and never conveyed to others an
-impression that was not true, he bought a text-book of Euclid. The
-first six books of this he learnt by heart. He said “I wanted to know
-what was the meaning of the word ‘demonstrate.’ Euclid taught me what
-demonstration was.”
-
-After a year or two Lincoln was regarded as the equal of any lawyer in
-Springfield. He had one weakness, however. If he did not believe in the
-justice of his case, or if he thought the man for whom he had to speak
-was not quite honest, he did not defend well. His friend Judge Davis
-says, “A wrong cause was poorly defended by him.”
-
-A story is told of a man who came to Lincoln’s office and asked his
-help in getting six hundred dollars from a poor widow. Lincoln listened
-to the man and then said, “Yes, there is no reasonable doubt but I can
-gain your case for you. I can set a whole neighbourhood at loggerheads.
-I can distress a widowed mother and her six fatherless children, and
-thereby get for you six hundred dollars which rightfully belong, as it
-appears to me, as much to them as it does to you. I advise you to try
-your hand at making six hundred dollars some other way.”
-
-Every one in Springfield valued “Honest Abe’s” opinion. All sorts of
-people brought their troubles to him. His sympathy and his tenderness
-of heart made them trust him. He was one of the people; he never felt
-himself above them. To the end of his life he did not grow proud,
-and he was never ashamed of his early poverty. When he was President
-he told some of his friends of a dream he had had, which might very
-well have been true. He dreamt that at some big public meeting he was
-walking through the hall up to the platform, from which he was going to
-speak. As he passed, a lady sitting at the end of one of the rows of
-seats said to another sitting next her, so loudly that he could hear:
-“Is that Mr. Lincoln? Why, he looks a very common sort of person!” “I
-thought to myself in my dream,” said Lincoln, “that it was true, but
-that God Almighty seemed to prefer common people, for He had made so
-many of them.”
-
-Nothing in Lincoln is more truly great than his power of seeing the
-value of common things and common people. He knew that the things
-which appeal to men as men, which are common to humanity, are the most
-valuable of all. He counted on this when he abolished slavery. Freedom
-is a right common to all men; and there is somewhere in every one an
-instinct which knows that it is wrong to make other people do things
-which are too disagreeable to do yourself.
-
-During these years at Springfield, Abraham read a great deal.
-Shakespeare and Burns were his favourite poets: he knew Shakespeare
-better than any other book except the Bible. He read and thought
-unceasingly about politics, and he talked about them with his friends.
-The history of America he studied until he knew everything there was
-to know. Above all, he thought about slavery. Events were taking place
-which made it plain that the question of slavery could not be left
-where it was. It was no longer possible to act as if the difference
-between North and South did not exist.
-
-As years went on the difference became more and more plain. The North,
-which had been poor and barren, only half cultivated by ignorant and
-uneducated settlers, was growing richer than the prosperous lazy
-South. Workmen came to the North from all parts of the world: poor men
-with good brains and strong arms, ready and able to work intelligently,
-to improve the land, to make wheat grow where stones and bushes had
-been. None of these men went to the South, for there work was done by
-slaves so cheaply that no paid worker had a chance. But the difference
-between the intelligent labour of free men working for themselves, and
-the mechanical labour of slaves working for their masters, soon began
-to tell.
-
-In the North schools sprang up everywhere: the people became better and
-better educated. Men who had grown up in the backwoods, like Abraham
-Lincoln, taught themselves, and rose to be lawyers and statesmen by
-their own efforts; others who had had the chance of being taught, did
-the same. It was possible for any man of brains to rise from the bottom
-to the top. Inventions were made which enabled all kinds of new work to
-be done and new wealth produced. The North was rich in material: richer
-in the men she had to work it, who were helped and encouraged by the
-freedom which threw every career open to real talent.
-
-In the South all power was in the hands of the aristocratic families,
-who had had it always. The work was done by slaves: owners did not
-want to educate their slaves, for then they were afraid that they would
-want their freedom. The coal mines of the South were not discovered;
-they could not have been worked by slaves. The South began to be very
-jealous of the North, and the North began to disapprove of the South.
-More and more people began to see that slavery was wrong: people were
-not yet ready to say that slavery ought to cease to be, but they were
-ready to say that it must not be extended.
-
-At the time of the Mexican war the South had shown that it wanted to
-extend slavery. This frightened the North. In 1850 an agreement was
-made, known as the Missouri Compromise. By this a line (36°30’), called
-Mason and Dixon’s line, was drawn across the map of America. North of
-this line, slavery was never to exist. Speakers on both sides declared
-that the Missouri Compromise was as fixed as the Constitution itself.
-Stephen Arnold Douglas was the loudest in expressing this opinion. “It
-is eternal and fundamental,” he declared.
-
-Douglas was a trader of the great party known as the Democrats. He
-held that the people of every State had a right to decide questions
-affecting that State, and not the Central American Government.
-
-Douglas had one great aim, which was to him far more important than any
-question of political right or wrong: he wanted to be made President.
-To secure this, he saw that he must get the support of the South. To
-win the support of the South, he took a most dangerous and important
-step: one which was the immediate cause of the war which broke out six
-years later. He declared that the people of any state or territory
-could decide whether or not they would have slavery in their State:
-they could establish it or prohibit it.
-
-He went further than this. Two new territories had been organised
-in the north-west--Nebraska and Kansas. They claimed to be admitted
-to the Union as States. Both States were, of course, north of Mason
-and Dixon’s line, and therefore by the Missouri Compromise they must
-be free States. But the South was bent on creating new slave States
-as fast as the North could create free States: they wanted to make
-Kansas a slave State. Stephen Douglas therefore introduced, in 1854,
-the famous Kansas-Nebraska Bill. It declared that Kansas might be
-slave-holding or free, as the people of the territory should decide.
-
-The result of this Bill was for the first time to unite together a
-strong party in the North in opposition to the Democrats, who were
-allied to the South. This new party called itself Republican. Lincoln
-was a spokesman of their views. They declared, firstly, that Congress,
-which is the Parliament representing all the States which together
-formed the Union, has the right to decide whether slavery shall be
-lawful in any particular State or not, and not the people of that
-State alone. Secondly, they declared that, in the case of Kansas,
-Congress had already, four years ago, decided that Kansas could not
-have slavery, because it lay beyond the line, north of which slavery
-could not exist. Resolutions were passed in many of the Northern
-State Parliaments against the Kansas-Nebraska Bill. The Parliament of
-Illinois sent one.
-
-Now it was quite clear to keen-sighted politicians that, while Douglas
-and his party pretended that they wanted to give the people of Kansas
-the choice between owning slaves and not doing so, what they really
-wanted was to force Kansas to have slaves. Those who supported the
-Missouri Congress declared that it was illegal to give Kansas the
-choice however she used it.
-
-Events soon proved that Kansas was not to have any choice at all.
-Kansas had few inhabitants; but the opinion of the people of the State
-was against slavery. Next door to Kansas, however, on the east, was the
-slave-holding State of Missouri. From Missouri bands of armed men came
-into Kansas in order to vote for slavery at the election and to prevent
-the real voters from using their votes against it. Free fighting went
-on in the State. An election was held at which armed men kept away
-those who would have voted for freedom, and a pro-slavery man was
-chosen. But few of the people of Kansas had been allowed to vote. The
-free party met at another place afterwards, and a genuine popular vote
-elected an anti-slavery man. Civil war went on in Kansas for two years.
-
-Now the importance of these events is this. Up till now most people in
-the North had believed that slavery ought to be left alone, because
-it would gradually die out. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill and the Kansas
-election made it perfectly clear that the South was not going to
-let slavery die out; on the contrary, they wanted to spread it to
-strengthen themselves against the North.
-
-Douglas was member for Chicago, in the north of Illinois. He came
-down to Illinois to win the State to his views, and made a series
-of speeches there. This at once called Lincoln to the fore. He saw
-more clearly, perhaps, than any man in America what the Kansas Bill
-meant. It meant that either North and South must separate, as the
-Abolitionists--that is, the party which held that slavery ought to
-cease to be--and some people in the South hoped; or that the North
-would have to force the South to abandon the attempt to spread slavery.
-He made a series of great speeches in Illinois, in which he made it
-quite clear that Douglas and his followers, and the men of the South,
-might say that they wanted to leave States free to have slavery or not
-as they chose, but what they really desired was to force them to have
-slavery whether they chose or not. “This declared indifference, but, as
-I must think, covert real zeal for the spread of slavery, I cannot but
-hate: I hate it because of the monstrous injustice of slavery
-itself ... I say that no man is good enough to govern another man
-without that man’s consent. Slavery is founded upon the selfishness
-of man’s nature; opposition to it, on his love of justice.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-DEFEAT OF THE LITTLE GIANT
-
-
-LINCOLN had worked very hard in Illinois. All this year he was making
-speeches; educating the people of the State; helping them to understand
-the big questions before them; making things clear in his own mind by
-putting them into the clear and simple words that would carry their
-importance to the minds of others.
-
-A great meeting was held, summoned by the editors of the newspapers
-that were against the Kansas Bill; they invited prominent men from
-different parts of the country to come and address them.
-
-Lincoln was among those who went, and his speech was by far the most
-important of all that were delivered there. He had not, indeed,
-intended to say anything; but he was roused by the weakness of those
-who did address the meeting. Springing to his feet, he poured out what
-was in his mind, and could not be kept back, in such burning and
-eloquent words that the reporters dropped their pencils and listened
-spellbound. The whole audience was carried away by excitement: it was
-one of the greatest speeches that Lincoln ever made, we are told by
-all who heard it, but there is no record of it. Lincoln himself spoke
-in a transport of enthusiasm: the words came, how he hardly knew; he
-could not afterwards write down what he had said. The reporters were so
-deeply moved that they only took down a sentence here and there. The
-speech was a warning to the growing Republican party: sentences were
-quoted and remembered.
-
-The North was indeed beginning to awaken to the need of uniting against
-slavery; but it took four years before it fully awoke. And as long as
-the North was divided the South was irresistible. When the presidential
-election came, in 1856, the votes of the South carried the day.
-
-[Illustration: Springing to his feet, he poured out what was in his
-mind]
-
-Had a strong man, with definite and wise views, been elected, had
-Lincoln been elected, the war between North and South that came four
-years later might have been prevented. But Lincoln’s fame had not
-yet travelled far beyond Illinois; he was not even nominated. Mr.
-Buchanan, the new President, called himself a Democrat: he believed
-in Douglas’s policy of State rights; but he was a tool in the hands
-of the South. Weak and undecided, his stupid administration made war
-inevitable. He did not satisfy the South; and he showed the North how
-great a danger they were in, so that when the next election came they
-were ready to act.
-
-The Republican party gradually grew strong. More and more Northern
-voters came to see that its policy, no extension of slavery, was the
-only right one. The pro-slavery party in Kansas continued to behave in
-the most violent way; civil war continued.
-
-In Congress, Charles Sumner made a number of eloquent speeches on what
-he called the “crime against Kansas”; and in them he openly attacked
-slavery. One day, as he was sitting in the members’ reading-room, a
-Southern member called Brookes came in. Although there were several
-other people in the room, Brookes fell upon Sumner, and with his
-heavy walking-stick, which was weighted with lead at the end, beat
-him within an inch of his life. For the next four years Sumner was an
-invalid, and unable to take part in politics. This incident caused
-great indignation in the North; their indignation was heightened by the
-attempt to force slavery on Kansas, till it grew in very many cases to
-a real hatred of slavery itself.
-
-But there was still a large party in the North which did not disapprove
-of slavery. This party was led, of course, by Douglas. Douglas had
-been successful up till now, because he represented the ordinary man
-of the North, whose conscience was not yet awake, who did not see that
-slavery, in itself, was wrong. Lincoln had never really succeeded until
-now, because his conscience had always been awake, and the ordinary
-Northerner was not ready to follow him.
-
-The whole question of slavery was brought under discussion in the next
-year--1857--by the famous case of a negro called Dred Scott. Dred
-Scott claimed his freedom before the United States courts, because his
-master, a doctor, had taken him to live in the free State of Illinois.
-The chief-justice--Taney--was an extreme pro-slavery man. He was not
-satisfied with deciding the case against Dred Scott; he went much
-further, and declared that since a negro is property and not a person
-in the legal sense, he could not bring a case before an American
-court. A negro, he declared, has no rights which a white man is bound
-to respect.
-
-The South, of course, was delighted with this verdict. What it meant
-was this. When the Declaration of Independence declared that all men
-are equal, and possess right to life and liberty, what was intended was
-not all men, but all white men, since black men are not legally men.
-And yet free negroes had fought in the War of Independence, and signed
-the Declaration.
-
-To the North such reasoning was hateful. People like Mr. Seward of New
-York began to say, If slavery is part of the Constitution of America,
-there is a law that is higher than the Constitution--the moral law.
-Abraham Lincoln in a noble speech declared: “In some respects the black
-woman is certainly not my equal, but in her natural right to eat the
-bread she earns with her own hands she is my equal, and the equal of
-all others.” The point was, could a negro have rights? The Dred Scott
-decision declared “no,” the South shouted “no.” The Republican party
-said “yes.” In this same year a free election at last took place in
-Kansas; and a huge majority decided that the State should not hold
-slaves.
-
-All these events showed that troublous times were coming.
-
-In the next year a set of speeches was made which showed people how
-things stood. In 1858 Lincoln stood against Douglas as candidate for
-the State of Illinois. Douglas was one of the most famous and popular
-men then living in America. He was far the cleverest man and the best
-speaker of his party; he stood for all those who, though they might not
-want to have slaves themselves, thought that slavery was not wrong;
-that black men were intended by a kind Providence to be useful to white
-men. If any State wanted slaves, let them have them--why not?
-
-As Lincoln said, “Douglas is so put up by nature, that a lash upon his
-back would hurt him, but a lash upon anybody else’s back does not hurt
-him.”
-
-Those who did not know Lincoln thought it absurd that he, an unknown
-man from the country, should dare to stand against Douglas, the “Little
-Giant.” But Lincoln was not afraid; he did not think of himself; he
-wanted people to hear what he had to say. He arranged with Douglas
-that they should hold a number of meetings together in Illinois. They
-arranged it in this way. At half the meetings Douglas spoke first
-for an hour; then Lincoln replied, speaking for an hour and a half,
-and Douglas answered him in half-an-hour’s speech. At the other half,
-Lincoln began and Douglas followed, Lincoln ending.
-
-You can imagine one of these meetings. A large hall, roughly built for
-the most part, the seats often made of planks laid on top of unhewn
-logs, packed with two or three thousand people, intensely eager to hear
-and learn. Some of them were already followers of Douglas, the most
-popular man in America: all of them had heard of the “Little Giant,”
-the cleverest speaker in the States. Immense cheering as Douglas rose
-to his feet. A small man with a big head: a handsome face with quickly
-moving, keen, dark eyes; faultlessly dressed. A well-bred gentleman,
-secure of himself--a lawyer with all his art at the end of his tongue:
-able to persuade any one that black was white, to wrap up anything
-in so many charming words that only the cleverest could see when one
-statement did not follow from another, when an argument was not a
-proof: quick to see and stab the weak points in any one else. A voice
-rich and mellow, various and well trained, pleased all who heard it.
-
-For an hour he spoke, amid complete silence, only broken by outbursts
-of applause. When he ended, there were deafening cheers--then a pause,
-and “Lincoln,” “Lincoln,” from all parts of the hall.
-
-Lincoln seemed an awkward countryman beside the senator. His tall body
-seemed too big for the platform, and his ill-fitting black clothes
-hung loosely upon it, as if they had been made for some one else. When
-he began to speak his voice was harsh and shrill. His huge hands,
-the hands of a labourer, with the big knuckles and red, ugly wrists,
-got knotted together as if nothing could unfix them. Soon, however,
-he became absorbed in what he was saying; he ceased to be nervous;
-everything seemed to change. As he forgot himself, his body seemed
-to expand and straighten itself, so that every one else looked small
-and mean beside him; his voice became deep and clear, reaching to the
-farthest end of the hall, and his face, that had appeared ugly, was lit
-up with an inner light that made it more than beautiful. The deep grey
-eyes seemed to each man in the hall to be looking at him and piercing
-his soul. The language was so simple that the most ignorant man in the
-hall could follow it and understand. Everything was clear. There was
-no hiding under fine words; nothing was left out, nothing unnecessary
-was said. No one could doubt what Lincoln meant; and he was not going
-to let any one doubt what Douglas meant.
-
-The greatest debate of all was that at the meeting at Freeport. At
-Freeport Lincoln asked Douglas a question, against the advice of all
-his friends. He asked whether, if a State wanted not to have slavery,
-it could so decide? Lincoln knew that if Douglas said “No. A state
-which had slavery must keep it,” the people of Illinois would not vote
-for him, and he would lose this election. If he said “yes” he would be
-elected, and not Lincoln. Lincoln knew this; he knew that if Douglas
-said “yes,” he was safe, and he would say “yes.”
-
-“Where do you come in, then?” his friends asked him. “Why do you ask
-him this? If you do, Douglas is sure to get in. You are ruining your
-own chances.”
-
-“I do not come in anywhere,” said Lincoln; “but that does not matter.
-What does matter is this. If Douglas says ‘yes,’ as he will, he will
-get into the Senate now; but two years after this he will stand for
-election as President. If he says ‘yes’ now, the South will vote
-against him then, and he will not be elected. He must not be elected.
-No one who believes in spreading slavery must be elected. It does not
-matter about me.”
-
-Lincoln was quite right. He saw further than any one else. Douglas said
-“yes,” and he was elected for Illinois. But the Democratic party in
-the South, whose support had made him strong, began to distrust him.
-“Douglas,” said Lincoln, “is followed by a crowd of blind men; I want
-to make some of these blind men see.”
-
-Lincoln was defeated, but he did not think of himself. His speeches
-against Douglas were printed and read all over America. He was invited
-to speak in Ohio; and in the next year, in the beginning of 1860, a
-society in New York asked him to come and give them an address on
-politics.
-
-A huge audience, in which were all the best known and most brilliant
-men of the day, gathered to hear him; an audience very much unlike any
-that he had addressed before. They were all anxious to see what he
-was like--this backwoodsman and farm-labourer, who had met the great
-Stephen Arnold Douglas and proved a match for him in argument; whose
-speeches had been printed to express the views of a whole party.
-
-His appearance was strange and impressive. When he stood up his height
-was astonishing, because his legs were very long, and when sitting he
-did not appear tall. His face, thin and marked by deep lines, was very
-sad. A mass of black hair was pushed back from his high forehead: his
-eyebrows were black too, and stood out in his pale face: his dark-grey
-eyes were set deep in his head. The mouth could smile, but now it was
-stern and sad. The face was unlike other faces: when he spoke it was
-beautiful, for he felt everything he said. Abraham Lincoln was a common
-man: he had had no advantages of birth, of training: he had known
-extreme poverty: for years he had struggled without success in mean and
-small occupations: he had no knowledge but what he had taught himself.
-But no one who heard him speak could think him common.
-
-Speaking now to an audience in which were the cleverest people in New
-York, people who had read everything and seen everything and been
-everywhere, who had had every opportunity that he had not, he impressed
-them as much as he had impressed the people of Illinois. He was one of
-the greatest orators that ever lived. His words went straight to the
-people to whom they were spoken. What he said was as straightforward
-and as certain as a sum in arithmetic, as easy to follow: and behind
-it all you felt that the man believed every word of what he said, and
-spoke because he must. The truth was in him.
-
-Lincoln’s address in New York convinced the Republican party that here
-was the man they wanted.
-
-In 1860 there came the presidential election, always the most important
-event in American politics; this year more important than ever before.
-
-For the last half-century almost the Democratic party had been in
-power. They had been strong because they were united: they united the
-people of the South and those people in the North who thought that it
-was waste of time to discuss slavery, since slavery was part of the
-Constitution. Their policy on slavery had been to leave it alone. As
-long as they did this there was nothing to create another party in
-the North strong enough to oppose them. But when Douglas, in order to
-make his own position strong in the South, made slavery practical
-politics by bringing in a bill to allow Kansas to have slaves; and when
-the judges in the Dred Scott case roused sympathy with the negroes by
-declaring that slaves were not men but property, then the question
-united the divided North into a strong Republican party in which all
-were agreed. There was to be no slavery north of Mason and Dixon’s
-line. The attempt to force slavery on Kansas split the Democratic
-party. One section was led by Douglas, who had gone as far as he could:
-he was not ready to force Kansas to have slaves, if she did not want
-them, because people from Missouri wanted her to have them. He saw
-that to force slavery on the North in this way would mean division
-and war, and therefore he refused to go any further. By this refusal
-Douglas lost his supporters in the South. They joined the section led
-by Jefferson Davis--the Southern candidate for the presidentship.
-
-Jefferson Davis was the true leader of the South. Douglas as well as
-Lincoln had begun life as the child of a poor pioneer: each had risen
-by his own abilities and by constant hard work. Jefferson Davis was a
-true aristocrat. He was the son of rich and educated parents. All his
-life he had been waited on by slaves and surrounded by every comfort.
-While Lincoln was ploughing or hewing wood, while Douglas was working
-hard at the bar, Davis went first to the university at Kentucky and
-then to the military academy at West Point, from which he passed to the
-army. He served as a lieutenant at the time of the Black Hawk war, and
-it is very likely that he came across Lincoln, who was serving as a
-volunteer. After serving seven years in the army he married and settled
-down as a cotton planter in Mississippi. His estates were worked by
-slaves, of course. To him the negro was an animal, quite different from
-the white man, meant by nature to be under him and to serve him. Black
-men, unlike white, did not exist for themselves, with the equal right
-to live possessed by a man, an insect, or a tree, but had been created
-solely to be useful to white men.
-
-No two men could be more unlike than Lincoln and Davis. The groundwork
-of Davis’ nature was an intense pride. A friend described him as “as
-ambitious as Lucifer and as cold as a lizard.” He was cold in manner
-and seldom laughed. Lincoln was entirely humble-minded, full of
-passionate longing to help the weak. To Lincoln what was common was
-therefore precious. Jefferson Davis said the minority, and not the
-majority, ought to rule. And their looks were as unlike as their minds.
-Jefferson Davis, with his beautiful proud face, as cold and as handsome
-as a statue, expressed the utter contempt and scorn of the aristocrat
-for everything and every one beneath him.
-
-When the Democratic party met at Charleston to nominate their candidate
-for the presidentship, they were hopelessly divided. Douglas’s Freeport
-speech had set the South against him. For the last four years there
-had been a growing section which said that, as long as the South was
-fastened to the North, slavery was not safe. Now seven states, led by
-South Carolina, left the Democratic meeting and nominated Davis as
-their candidate.
-
-The Republican party met at Chicago. There was only one man strong,
-reasonable, and sane enough for every section of the party to accept.
-This was Abraham Lincoln. At the time of his nomination, Lincoln was
-playing barnball with his children in the field behind his house. When
-told that he had been chosen, he said, “You must be able to find some
-better man than me.” But he was ready to take up the difficult task.
-He knew that he could serve his country, and he was not afraid. He
-had a clear ideal before him--to preserve America as one united whole.
-He saw that war might come. As he had said, five years before, America
-could not endure for ever half slave and half free--it must be all
-free: and the South would not let slavery go without war.
-
-The election came in November. The result was that Lincoln was elected
-President. For four years the destiny of his country was in his hands.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE NEW PRESIDENT AND SECESSION
-
-
-LINCOLN’S election was a thunderbolt to the South. It meant that the
-great question of slavery would have to be decided one way or another.
-Lincoln was a man who had opinions, and opinions in which he believed,
-for which he would fight; he would not let things drift as Buchanan
-did. Buchanan’s policy would have ended in allowing the South to
-separate itself from the North; the Southern politicians knew this, and
-they wanted Buchanan’s policy carried on, so as to make that separation
-possible.
-
-Few men in the North, although many in the South, understood as
-clearly as Lincoln did the position of affairs. He saw that the time
-had come when active measures must be taken, a strong and decided
-policy maintained, if the Union was to be held together. He was a true
-patriot. He believed in the Union; he thought it a great and glorious
-thing. That North and South should be separated was to him like
-separating husband and wife; their strength and happiness lay in each
-other; they had grown together for eighty-four years; if they parted
-now, each must lose something it could never regain. He loved his
-country. He loved the South as well as the North. He believed that if
-the South tried to separate, the North would be justified, in the true
-interests of the American nation, in compelling her to remain.
-
-The great problem was now, as he saw: Could America hold together as
-one nation, half slave and half free? Could the Union be a real Union
-while there was this deep division, a division which it was now clear
-could not be got rid of, as the Northerners had hoped for so long, by
-the slow passage of time? Time alone would not induce the South to
-give up slavery. Slavery was a barbarous institution, degrading to the
-slaves and to those who owned them; the North could not accept it. If
-North and South were to hold together slavery must go. The great thing
-was to keep North and South united. This and this only was Lincoln’s
-great purpose. He hated slavery, but he would not have compelled
-the South to give up slavery if he had believed that the Union could
-have been maintained without that. North and South must hold together
-whatever it cost; only so could each part of the nation, and the nation
-as a whole, attain the best that was possible for it.
-
-Lincoln’s great difficulty was this. The South saw that the nation
-could not hold together for ever half slave and half free. Two years
-before Lincoln’s election, one of the members for South Carolina had
-written what was afterwards known as the Scarlet Letter. In it he
-declared, “We can make a revolution in the cotton States,” and there
-were many, even at that time, who shared his views. The South saw that,
-if they were to remain united to the North, slavery must go, and they
-were ready to separate from the North in order to keep slavery.
-
-But, while the South understood the position, the North did not. It did
-not understand it fully at the time of Lincoln’s election, or, indeed,
-until the end of the second year of the war. And because they did not
-understand they could not appreciate Lincoln’s policy, or support it
-as they ought to have done. All the time they criticised, blamed, and
-abused him, making his hard task harder.
-
-Not until after his death did all the Northerners see how great and how
-right he had been. Not until his death did Americans realise that had
-it not been for Lincoln the United States might have ceased to be.
-
-Lincoln’s speeches had been plain and outspoken enough; the South was
-terrified by his election. They resolved on separation.
-
-Lincoln, though elected in November 1860, did not actually become
-President until February 1861. During these three months he remained
-in the plain, yellow house at Springfield, his little office crowded
-every day with visitors who came to consult him, to advise him, or
-often merely to shake his hand. “Honest old Abe,” as they called him,
-had a joke or a kindly word for all of them. He was presented with
-many quaint gifts. An old woman came one day, and, after shaking
-hands with Lincoln, produced from under her huge cloak a vast pair of
-knitted stockings for the President to wear in winter. Lincoln thanked
-her graciously and led her out; then returning, he lifted up the
-stockings, and showing the enormous feet, said to his secretary, “The
-old lady seems to have guessed the latitude and longitude about right!”
-
-Lincoln spent the time reading and writing, drawing up memoranda,
-choosing his Cabinet, learning the difficult ins and outs of the new
-work before him. All these months he was thinking hard. His purpose was
-already clear: but the presidentship, always a heavy burden, had never
-been so heavy as it was to be for Lincoln.
-
-Things grew more serious every day. The weakness of Buchanan, who had
-no plan or purpose, allowed the South to do as it chose. The only
-chance of avoiding war lay in firm action now; but it was not in
-Buchanan’s nature to be firm. He had been made President by the votes
-of the South because he was not firm, because he would allow them to do
-as they chose. They dreaded Lincoln because he was firm, and therefore
-acted while there was yet time.
-
-On December 20, 1860, the chief men of South Carolina met together
-and declared the Union to be dissolved. Posters appeared all over the
-State: the South was in a state of feverish excitement. Within the
-month the States of Missouri, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
-and Texas--the chief cotton-growing, slave-owning States--also declared
-themselves to be separated from the Union; and these six States
-joined with South Carolina to form what they called the Southern
-Confederation, independent of the North. They chose for their first
-President Jefferson Davis.
-
-Buchanan did not know what to do. The question was: Has a State any
-right to leave the Union? America, of course, is a Federation: at the
-time of the Declaration of Independence the thirteen States that then
-existed joined themselves together for ever, and created a common
-Federal Government for common purposes, with a President at its head.
-Lincoln would have said one State has no more right to leave the others
-than an English county has to declare that it is a separate kingdom,
-not bound by the common law. Buchanan said “no,” too; but he also said,
-if a State does leave, the Federal Government has no right to force it
-to stay: which meant a standstill. “You ought not to want to go; but if
-you do, we have no right to prevent you.” Buchanan’s one idea, indeed,
-was to let things drift.
-
-There was one great and immediate difficulty. In each of the coast
-States of the Union the Federal Government had armed forts: in South
-Carolina there were two important ones, Fort Moultrie and Fort Sumter,
-with a small garrison in each, commanded by Major Anderson. South
-Carolina demanded that the garrisons should be withdrawn. Now to
-withdraw the garrisons and abandon the forts was to admit that South
-Carolina had a right to leave the Union, and to recognise the Southern
-Confederation as independent of the Federal Government. To maintain
-the forts more forces must be sent. Anderson wrote to say that he was
-not strong enough to hold out against an attack. Buchanan did nothing.
-Anderson, believing that an attack was going to be made on Fort
-Moultrie, which he was too weak to defend, removed all his men to Fort
-Sumter. The militia of South Carolina at once occupied Fort Moultrie.
-
-In the second week of the new year, 1861, a Government vessel, the
-_Star of the West_, sailed into the harbour of Charleston to bring
-provisions for Anderson. The _South Carolina_, having attacked the
-_Star of the West_, fired on the United States flag which it carried,
-and drove it out of the harbour. The Confederate Government, led by
-Jefferson Davis, then demanded that Fort Sumter should be given up to
-them. When Anderson refused, it was blockaded by much superior forces,
-and by the 12th of April it was taken by General Beauregard.
-
-Under these circumstances, when war was at hand, when half the nation
-was ready to take up arms against the other half, Lincoln took up
-the burden of office. It was a burden, indeed, which no ordinary man
-could have borne. Buchanan had simply looked on while rebellion was
-preparing itself; for Lincoln was the task of quelling it. But the fact
-of rebellion was not his greatest difficulty. This was the disunion of
-the North. One section--the Abolitionists--rejoiced at the secession of
-the South. “We shall no more be chained to the slave-owners.” Another
-section thought that, if the South wanted to go, why not let them.
-
-There was as yet only a very small section able to agree with Lincoln.
-Lincoln hated slavery but not slave-owners. He loved the South as much
-as the North. It was agony to him to know his country divided against
-itself. Well might he say, in the speech he made on leaving his old
-home at Springfield for ever, “There is a task before me greater than
-that which rested upon Washington.”
-
-It was very natural that men who had not known Lincoln should fear to
-have the fate of their country at so critical a time entrusted to a
-man of so small experience. But any one who knew Lincoln felt absolute
-confidence in him. Years of difficulty and disappointment, of constant
-struggle against every kind of obstacle, had made him what he was:
-clear-eyed to see where the right was; steadfast and unflinching to
-pursue it; tender-hearted and generous to sympathise with all those who
-stumbled on the way.
-
-Few people, indeed, understood him. In the years to come nearly all at
-one time or another abused him and distrusted him, and blamed him when
-things went wrong. For four years he bore the whole burden of a great
-responsibility; patiently and silently he endured disappointment and
-reproach. In the end he could say that if Washington had made America
-one, he had remade it so that it could never again be unmade.
-
-The speech he made when he entered on his duties as President showed
-how little bitterness there was in his heart towards the South. He
-said, “We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though
-passion may have strained, it must not break, our bonds of affection.
-The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and
-patriot grave to every heart and hearthstone all over this broad land,
-will yet swell the chorus of the Union when touched, as surely they
-will be, by the better angels of our nature.”
-
-The attack on Sumter and its fall made war inevitable. Lincoln was no
-Buchanan. War was horrible; civil war--war between men of the same
-country, between friends, often between relations--most horrible of
-all. But he could not, at whatever cost, allow the Union, for which his
-countrymen had fought so heroically eighty-four years ago, which had
-stood so long for such a high ideal of freedom all over the world--he
-could not allow the Union to be destroyed without fighting to preserve
-it. To him the secession of the Southern States meant something as
-unnatural as a separate kingdom in Scotland would be to us, and a
-kingdom based on something which we thought wholly wrong.
-
-“The question is,” he said, “whether in a free Government the minority
-have a right to break it up whenever they choose.” He declared that
-they had no such right. The whole population of the slave-holding
-States was much smaller than that of the free States, and among those
-States, while seven had seceded, eight remained at least nominally in
-the Union; and even in the seceding States themselves, there was a
-party in each that was ready to remain faithful to the Union, and not
-prepared to take up arms against it.
-
-They wanted war: their attack on Fort Sumter was a call to arms. They
-wanted war: they should have it. In the long run the North was bound to
-win: its population was half as great again, and its resources as much
-superior.
-
-Almost the first act of Lincoln’s Government was to call for 75,000
-volunteers.
-
-The attack upon Sumter and Lincoln’s call to arms roused the North
-from its apathy. Excitement grew when the 7th Massachusetts regiment,
-passing through Baltimore on its way to headquarters, was violently
-attacked by the mob: when the Southern army, already in the field,
-captured Harper’s Ferry and seized the Union arsenal at Gosport.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE WAR
-
-
-WAR began in Virginia. West Virginia was free, East Virginia
-slave-holding; the State was the natural meeting-place for the two
-armies. On the 21st July they met at Bull Run: the engagement could
-hardly be called a battle--on neither side was there any order or
-discipline. More than once during the day the Southern army seemed to
-be beaten, but it rallied, and the Federalists, as the Union soldiers
-were called, broke into a disgraceful retreat, which became an awful
-panic. The fugitives poured into Washington, haggard and dust-stained:
-everything seemed lost. Lincoln did not go to bed all night; he paced
-up and down in his room, expecting that the victorious Confederate army
-would march upon Washington, and the war be at an end. It did not come.
-The opportunity was lost. A battle had been gained; that was all.
-
-The moral effect of the battle of Bull Run was very great indeed. The
-South thought the war was over, the North saw that it had only begun.
-
-At first, the Confederates seemed to have great advantages. The army
-was the one profession for a Southern gentleman; nearly all their
-young men were trained at the military academy at West Point, and
-a great many of the officers of the United States army had been
-Southerners. These men now left the Union army and gave their services
-to the Confederates; among them was General Robert Lee, who became
-General-in-Chief of the Confederate army. Lincoln’s difficulties were
-greatly increased by the fact that so many officers and men went over
-to the Confederates. At the beginning, the South had a larger and
-better-trained army in the field; and at first there were plenty of
-volunteers. But after Bull Run, she thought the war was finished; and
-events proved that, in a long war, the North must win by reason of her
-greater staying power.
-
-The South was as enthusiastic as the North, and at the beginning better
-prepared, but not equal in resources of any sort. The South was
-entirely dependent on agriculture; all the necessaries of life came
-from the North and from Europe. Whereas the South had to import all her
-ammunition, the North had powder-magazines of her own, and a people of
-mechanics. And the Confederacy was soon to find that men are useless
-without arms. Great sufferings were endured, wonderful invention and
-patience was shown, on both sides there was great heroism; but in the
-end the resources of the North decided the day.
-
-Lincoln threw all his energy into the task of getting ready an army,
-and in a short time the Northern soldier was as well trained and
-equipped as the Southern.
-
-The battle of Bull Run roused the North: quickened by shame, the people
-were ready to fight to the bitter end. For the next two years, however,
-they were disheartened by continual disaster: army after army was
-destroyed, position after position lost: gloom descended on the nation.
-In the dark times of defeat men turned upon Lincoln and blamed him for
-everything.
-
-His position was difficult indeed. As head of the State, he was also
-commander of the army; but he had to entrust the actual management of
-the campaigns to others. He followed and understood their tactics, but
-was too wise to try to direct their movements. Only occasionally did
-he offer advice--wise advice, which his generals were not always wise
-enough to accept. At first the generals were not men of great ability.
-M’Clellan, the commander, drilled his army in a wonderful way, but
-never used it to any effect. In the Virginian campaign of 1861 and 1862
-he threw away numberless opportunities. His place was taken by Burnside
-at the end of 1862; but not until the rise of Ulysses S. Grant did
-Lincoln discover a really great commander. The generals quarrelled with
-one another, and all were ready to complain of the President. Lincoln’s
-difficulties were increased by the fact that many people, when they
-found that the North was not going to conquer immediately, said that
-the war was a mistake: the South ought to be allowed to go if it wanted
-to. Lincoln did not think it right to let the South go: and because to
-keep it was proving difficult, was never to him a reason for ceasing to
-do what he saw to be right.
-
-The newspapers abused Lincoln because the war, instead of being
-finished in three months, seemed likely to last for years. For long
-his own Cabinet was hardly loyal to him: each member thought he could
-manage affairs better himself. Seward, who was Chief Secretary,
-thought Lincoln stupid, and was anxious to arrange everything; but as
-experience of his chief taught him he became Lincoln’s devoted admirer.
-Chase the Treasurer plotted against him: Stanton the War Secretary
-openly declared that “things would go all right but for the imbecile at
-the head.” Stanton had no sense of humour, and an ungovernable temper.
-He did not understand Lincoln at all for a long time: his jokes puzzled
-and annoyed him, and he used to jump up and down with rage. He did
-not see that to a man of a deeply melancholy nature like Lincoln, a
-dreamer and something of a poet, some outlet, some way of escaping from
-himself, was necessary. Lincoln was marvellously patient with Stanton,
-and won his deep affection. The Cabinet might criticise; but Lincoln’s
-firm will dominated them all. The policy of the Government was the
-President’s policy.
-
-No quality is so hard to appreciate, until it succeeds, as patience;
-and for two years Lincoln was patient, and few understood.
-
-England and France were inclined to recognise the Confederacy. The
-English point of view was not one which reflected any glory on the
-nation. Lord Palmerston said, “We do not like slavery, but we want
-cotton.” And a poem in _Punch_ expressed the general point of view,
-against which only a few Englishmen protested--
-
- “Though with the North we sympathise,
- It must not be forgotten
- That with the South we’ve stronger ties,
- Which are composed of cotton,
- Whereof our imports mount unto
- A sum of many figures;
- And where would be our calico
- But for the toil of niggers?”
-
-France agreed with England. Under such circumstances there was a great
-danger that, unless the North proved itself able to cope with the
-Rebellion, England or France might send help to the Confederates. For
-two years the North did not prove this; for two years it seemed, except
-to the very far-seeing, almost certain that the South would win.
-
-The Northern plan of campaign was to attack and close round the
-Confederacy: to do this it was necessary to cross the Potomac river,
-and clear away the Southern armies that blockaded it. The Potomac was
-the centre of operations, while fighting went on constantly in Virginia
-and Missouri. Everything went against the North.
-
-On the 9th of August a desperate encounter took place at Wilson’s
-Creek, at which the Union army lost nearly two thousand men, including
-prisoners, and large supplies of arms and ammunition. In September the
-Confederates won a victory at Lexington, and in October the Federal
-troops were defeated at Ball’s Bluff.
-
-Lincoln’s plan was gradually to shut the South in, driving it behind
-its own boundaries by means of the armies invading from north and
-west, and blockading the ports from the sea. So far the first half
-of the plan was not successful. But the Civil War was won to a very
-large extent by the Northern navy. By blockading the Southern ports
-it prevented the South from getting supplies from Europe; and since
-the South depended for supplies of every sort from abroad, it was in a
-desperate position when cut off from the sea.
-
-More fortunate on sea than on land, Lincoln found in David Farragut
-an admiral almost as great as Nelson. Farragut was a Southerner by
-birth, but he had served for fifty years in the United States navy, and
-refused to desert it now. Patriotism to him meant devotion not to the
-pride but to the best interests of his country, and he thought that
-North and South could only attain their best interests when united.
-In April the Northern army suffered a severe defeat on land at the
-battle of Shiloh--the most disastrous yet experienced; but the news
-was balanced by the tidings of Farragut’s capture of New Orleans. The
-fighting in the harbour was tremendous.
-
-“Don’t flinch from that fire, boys,” cried the admiral; “there is a
-hotter fire for those who don’t do their duty!”
-
-Inspired by his example, his men did not flinch, and the town was
-captured. The North needed all the encouragement such naval victory
-could give it, for things were going very badly. Stonewall Jackson,
-the Southern commander, carried everything before him in Virginia.
-Washington was in danger; there was a panic in the capital. Jackson,
-however, did not want to attack Washington. His plan was to compel
-M’Clellan, who was slowly moving south to attack the Confederate
-capital at Richmond, to turn north again.
-
-There was fighting all through June; Jackson had been joined by Lee,
-the Confederate Commander-in-Chief. On the 1st of July a battle was
-fought at Malvern Hill. Lee and Jackson were defeated. M’Clellan ought
-now to have pushed on to Richmond, the Confederate capital, instead of
-which, with extraordinary stupidity, he continued to retreat.
-
-In August, the second battle of Bull Run resulted in another victory
-for the South. Both sides lost an extraordinary number of men. The
-panic in Washington grew more acute when, early in September, Lee
-prepared to invade Maryland. M’Clellan again delayed when he ought to
-have forced an engagement. The people of Maryland received the Southern
-army very coldly. On the 17th the armies met at Antietam. The battle
-was not really decisive; the losses of the North were as great as those
-of the South; but it put an end to their invasion. Lee recrossed the
-Potomac River to Virginia. M’Clellan again wasted time. He waited six
-weeks before pursuing Lee. In November M’Clellan was at last superseded.
-
-Events had gradually led Lincoln to see the necessity of taking one
-great step--the freeing of the slaves. The question of slavery was at
-the bottom of the war; it was the great division between North and
-South. Two reasons led Lincoln to take this step now. One was that
-he knew the negroes when free would fight, for the most part, for
-the North; and the North needed every help she could find. The other
-was the great difficulty of knowing what to do with the negro slaves
-which fell into the hands of the conquerors of any part of Southern
-territory. On the 22nd of September, very soon after the news of the
-battle of Antietam and Lee’s retreat from Maryland had arrived, Lincoln
-called a meeting of his Cabinet. None of them knew why he had summoned
-them.
-
-They found the President reading Artemus Ward; one story amused him
-so much that he read it aloud. They all laughed a great deal except
-Stanton, who could never see a joke, and did not understand that
-Lincoln must have broken down altogether under the fearful strain
-of all he had to bear, if he had not been able sometimes to forget
-himself. When he had finished reading the story, the President’s face
-grew grave again. He drew from his pocket a large sheet of foolscap,
-covered with his straight, regular writing, and read it to the Cabinet.
-
-It was the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared that, after
-January 1st of the coming year, all slaves were to be free; that
-Government would pay some compensation to loyal owners. No one dared
-oppose Lincoln when his mind was made up. His reason for introducing
-Emancipation now was, that he thought it would help the cause of Union,
-and that cause was to him sacred beyond everything. “As long as I am
-President,” he said later, “this war shall be carried on for the sole
-purpose of restoring the Union. But no human power can subdue this
-rebellion without the use of the Emancipation policy.”
-
-[Illustration: Lincoln reading the Emancipation Proclamation to his
-Cabinet]
-
-His first object in everything was to hold the American nation together
-as one whole. But, at the same time, he detested slavery as much as
-any man. “If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong.” An opportunity
-had now come when to strike a blow at slavery was to assist the Union
-cause. By freeing the blacks, Lincoln provided the North with a new
-resource, at the time when the South had nowhere to turn to for fresh
-resources. By declaring the abolition of slavery an unchangeable part
-of the Union, which the South must accept before peace could be made,
-he won the sympathy of Europe for the North, and prevented it from
-sending help to the South at a time when such help would have changed
-the balance of affairs.
-
-Up till now both England and France had shown themselves ready to
-sympathise with the South. English newspapers abused Lincoln and the
-North in the most violent language. In the English dockyards vessels
-had been built and equipped which were used by the South as privateers
-to do great damage to the Northern navy. One of these was the famous
-_Alabama_. But when the war was a war against slavery, English feeling
-was all on the side of the North.
-
-The United States was made a really free country: slavery, which had
-made such a name a mockery, was wiped off the statute book.
-
-Lincoln showed rare judgment and courage in doing what he did at
-this time. At first a large section in the North was opposed to
-Emancipation, but gradually all united in admiring the wisdom of
-Lincoln’s action. The South knew that if they were conquered slavery
-was gone. And however black things might look, Lincoln and the North
-were not going to give in till they did conquer. They had set their
-teeth; they were going to fight to the bitter end.
-
-M’Clellan had been dismissed, but his successors were not much more
-successful. In December Burnside threw away thousands of lives in an
-attempt to scale Mary’s Heights. Men were shot down in heaps by the
-enemy, and the army fell into a panic; a battle against overwhelming
-odds ended in a complete defeat. Lincoln’s heart bled for the loss of
-so many splendid citizens: there was deep indignation in Washington,
-much of it vented against the President.
-
-The darkest moment of the war came when, in May, the news of the battle
-of Chancellorsville reached the Government. Hooker met Jackson: a long
-and fearfully bloody battle followed. There were dreadful losses on
-both sides: another valuable opportunity of pressing south was lost.
-In the battle “Stonewall” Jackson was killed, shot accidentally by his
-own men; a disastrous loss to the Southern side, though the North was
-defeated.
-
-All hope seemed gone from the North.
-
-Up till now the North had lost more than the South. It had suffered
-most of all from a lack of really able commanders. Now, however,
-Lincoln discovered a really great general in Ulysses S. Grant, and from
-this time on the fortune of the war began to change.
-
-The North was richer: it had more men, money, and resources to draw on;
-in a long struggle the South was bound to be worn out. Grant saw this
-and planned accordingly. Grant had distinguished himself early in the
-war by the capture of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, on the Mississippi,
-in February 1862; in the following April he had driven the Confederates
-back to Corinth after one of the most expensive battles of the war.
-Grant was a man of the most reckless personal courage; as a general
-his great fault was that he exposed his men needlessly. Complaints were
-early made of him to Lincoln; but Lincoln’s wonderful eye discerned a
-great soldier in Grant. “I can’t spare that man; he fights.” Later he
-was told that Grant drank. “Pray tell me what brand of whisky he takes,
-that I may send a barrel to each of my other generals.”
-
-Lincoln and Grant always understood each other. Each was a man of
-intense strength of character, given to doing things rather than
-talking of them. Grant had not Lincoln’s tenderness of heart, or
-the beauty of his pure and generous nature; but he had his power of
-concentrating his whole mind upon the task in hand. He knew Lincoln’s
-secret: “Work, work, is the main thing.”
-
-The battle of Chancellorsville, May 1863, was for the North the darkest
-moment of the war; things were never so dark again. Only Lincoln’s
-supreme faith and courage could have risen from such a series of
-defeats unshaken. The newspapers were full of abuse of the President;
-plots were on foot against him to prevent his re-election when the
-time came. In February he had lost his son Willie after a long and
-painful illness. But he never quailed.
-
-And his patience was at last to be rewarded. After Chancellorsville his
-unflinching belief in the justice of his course, in spite of opposition
-and discontent, was to be rewarded: he was to look, if only for a
-moment, upon an America not only free but united.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-VICTORY
-
-
-AFTER Chancellorsville the South thought that all was won, and a
-movement was set on foot to attack Washington. Lee marched north with
-an army that, though only half fed, was full of enthusiasm, and on
-July 1 took up his position at Gettysburg, where he was faced by the
-Federal army under General Meade. The battle lasted three days, and the
-slaughter was terrific; in spite of the desperate determination of the
-Confederates, the day ended in a victory for the Union.
-
-Lee was driven back, and forced to retreat into Virginia. The invasion
-was at an end. The victory, though brilliant, was not followed up,
-perhaps because of the heavy losses of the Union army; but it was the
-turning-point of the war. Washington was never again in such danger;
-the Confederates had lost the one great opportunity of attack since
-Bull Run.
-
-Deep national thankfulness was felt at this, the first great victory
-for the North. The battlefield was only a few miles from the capital,
-and many of the citizens and the most prominent men of the town
-assembled to perform a service for the dead who had fallen there.
-Lincoln was called upon to speak. He had not prepared anything, but
-the short speech which he gave made a deep impression upon all who
-heard it, and puts into very noble words the thoughts that were always
-present to his mind.
-
-“Fourscore and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth a new
-nation upon this continent, conceived in liberty and dedicated to
-the proposition that all men are created equal. 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 meet to dedicate a
-portion of it as a final resting-place of those who here gave their
-lives that the nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper
-that we should do this. But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we
-cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living
-and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our power
-to add or detract. The world will take 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
-that they have thus far so nobly carried on. It is rather for us to
-be dedicated here to the great task remaining before us: that from
-these honoured dead we take increased devotion for the cause for which
-they here gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly
-resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation
-shall, under God, have a new birth of freedom, and that the government
-of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from
-the earth.”
-
-In words like these, Lincoln inspired the people of the North to see
-the greatness of the cause for which they were fighting; they were
-fighting for liberty, for a free government of free men, for a United
-America that might be to the world a pattern of such a free government.
-If the South won, if America were a house divided for ever against
-itself, one half would have slavery; if the North won, and America
-were a whole again, slavery was gone; the Declaration of Independence,
-proclaiming the equal rights of all men to life and liberty, would be
-for the first time fully realised.
-
-And encouragement came at last. On the Fourth of July, on Independence
-Day, Grant telegraphed to Lincoln the news of the capture of Vicksburg.
-In the beginning of May Grant had defeated Pemberton, the Confederate
-general, and shut him up in the town with his great army. After an
-unsuccessful assault in the end of May, he sat down patiently before
-the town, prepared to wear out its resistance. After great sufferings,
-the famishing garrison surrendered; Pemberton and 30,000 men, whom the
-South could but ill spare, were prisoners of war. Hundreds of cannon
-and thousands of muskets fell into the victor’s hands. Vicksburg was a
-position of importance, the key to the Mississippi. Lincoln could now
-say, “The Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea.”
-
-The joy in the North over these two victories was intense. The drooping
-spirits began to rise again; and as things went better, men turned
-with new confidence to the patient man whose courage had never failed
-him. With renewed spirit the North set itself to the great task before
-it.
-
-Lincoln now had men who were able to carry out great designs. By the
-end of 1863 things looked hopeful. The army had a nucleus of veterans
-who had received the best possible training, and a set of generals
-whose positions had been won not by political influence, but by hard
-work. Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan were men of ability, experience, and
-power.
-
-[Illustration: Lincoln discussing the plan of campaign with General
-Grant]
-
-The plan of campaign for 1864, drawn up, under Lincoln’s advice, by
-Grant and Sherman, was masterly; carried out magnificently, it led to
-the complete triumph of the North. It was the complete development of
-Lincoln’s earlier plans. Grant, with the army of the west, was to face
-Lee in Virginia and drive him south; finally, to capture Richmond, the
-Confederate headquarters, and force Lee to yield. Sherman, marching
-south and east, was to carry the war into the heart of the Confederacy;
-to follow General Johnson, push him to the sea, and capture him.
-“We intend,” said Sherman, “to fight Joseph Johnson till he is
-satisfied.” Then Sherman, marching north, was to co-operate with
-Grant by cutting off Lee’s retreat. Meantime Sheridan was to deal with
-General Early in the Shenandoah valley, west and south of Washington.
-
-By May 1864 Grant crossed the Potomac and entered the wild district,
-full of hills and woods and undergrowth, known as the Wilderness, where
-the Union armies had suffered so many defeats. Grant saw that the only
-thing was to wear the Southern army out by hard fighting; and he fought
-hard all summer. He lost some thirty thousand men in the Wilderness.
-His policy was to bear so continuously on the enemy that they, having
-fewer men, and less possibility of recruiting, must be worn out.
-Slowly, with an immense loss of life on both sides, Grant forced Lee
-south.
-
-Sherman meantime was fighting his way to Georgia. His task was as
-difficult as Grant’s. The country was wild, and well adapted for
-concealing the enemy. It was impossible for him to communicate with the
-rest of the army.
-
-After an expedition into Alabama, Sherman started on his “March to the
-Sea.” Johnson disputed every inch of the way. There was incessant
-skirmishing, but Sherman advanced step by step.
-
-While Sherman and Grant were thus slowly wearing down the resistance of
-the enemy, the Unionists were once more encouraged by a brilliant naval
-success. In August Farragut came victorious out of a terrific fight
-in Mobile Bay. Entering the harbour in spite of the line of mines, he
-“plucked victory out of the very jaws of defeat.”
-
-Sherman was now besieging Atlanta, which he captured on September
-1. About the same date Sheridan defeated Early at Winchester in the
-Shenandoah Valley.
-
-These successes decided the presidential election. Lincoln had been
-unanimously nominated as the Republican candidate, “not,” as he said,
-“because they have decided I am the greatest or best man in America,
-but rather they have concluded that it is not wise to swop horses while
-crossing a river, and have further concluded that I am not so poor
-a horse that they might not make a botch of it in trying to swop.”
-Against him the Democratic party, whose main principle was opposition
-to the war, supported ex-General M’Clellan, declaring “the war is
-a failure.” The Democrats found their main supporters among those
-(and they were fairly numerous) who disliked Lincoln’s Emancipation
-proclamation.
-
-Lincoln made no efforts to secure his re-election. He had been before
-the nation as President for four years: his policy was tried, his
-opinions known. Even M’Clellan did not dare to propose to abandon the
-Union. On that point the North was now united, and that being so the
-successes of September made Lincoln’s re-election practically certain.
-Out of 233 electoral votes Lincoln received 212; he had a majority in
-every free State save one. The election was a complete triumph for the
-President.
-
-The noble words of the address which he delivered on taking up his
-duties for a second time mark the spirit in which he celebrated that
-triumph. “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--to do all that may achieve and cherish a just and lasting
-peace among ourselves and with all nations.”
-
-On November 16 Sherman marched on by Atlanta. By December he had
-reached Savannah and began to bombard the city. It surrendered on
-December 21, and Sherman wrote to Lincoln: “I beg to present to you,
-as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah.” Leaving Savannah early in
-the New Year, 1865, the army marched, ravaging, through South Carolina.
-Columbia was burned and Charleston captured. By March, Sherman was in
-North Carolina and in communication with Grant. The net was ready to be
-drawn round the Confederate army.
-
-Grant meantime was bearing steadily on. The losses of the Union armies
-were enormous, and made the President’s tender heart bleed. Grant
-began to be hampered by the inferior quality of his troops, and during
-the summer months matters seemed to be going ill with the North. In
-September, however, Sheridan inflicted a series of defeats upon Early
-in the Shenandoah Valley, and on October 18 vanquished him decisively
-at Cedar Creek.
-
-The remaining Confederate army, under Hood, was defeated at Nashville
-in the West, and now Lee’s was the only army in the field. The
-Confederacy was “surrounded by a band of fire.” The sea was in the
-hands of the Union; the Mississippi shut off any help from the coast.
-Sherman had harried Georgia and Carolina, destroying their supplies;
-Sheridan had raided Virginia; Grant was at the gates of Richmond.
-
-Through the whole summer of 1864 and the winter of 1865 Grant besieged
-Richmond. There were indecisive engagements, but the armies did no
-more than “feel” each other. With the spring, however, Grant took the
-offensive again. On March 31 Sheridan gained a brilliant victory at
-Five Forks, and this enabled Grant to break Lee’s lines. On April 3 the
-Stars and Stripes floated over Richmond. On April 9 Lee and his army
-surrendered to Grant at Appomatox.
-
-The war was at an end.
-
-Lincoln had been with Grant’s army during the closing days of March;
-he entered Richmond on April 3. Everywhere the negroes saluted him as
-their liberator, kneeling on the ground before him and clasping his
-knees: “May de Lawd bress and keep you, Massa Presidum Linkum.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-“O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!”
-
-
-NO one had suffered more deeply during the war than the President. His
-purpose never faltered. Even at the moment when success seemed farthest
-distant, his resolve stood firm; cost what it might the Union must be
-preserved. When almost every other man despaired of the Northern cause,
-Lincoln’s invincible faith in the right and justice of their purpose
-sustained his country.
-
-To attain that purpose thousands of lives had to be sacrificed; but the
-purpose was worth the loss of thousands of lives. Yet Lincoln’s heart
-bled for every one of them.
-
-[Illustration: Lincoln visited all the divisions of his army in turn]
-
-All day long he received visits from distracted relations, mothers
-and wives asking him to pardon their sons or husbands in prison
-as deserters or captured from the enemy; asking for tidings of their
-beloved ones at the front. His generals complained that he undermined
-the discipline of the army by pardoning what he called his “leg”
-cases--cases where men had run away before the enemy. “If Almighty God
-gives a man a cowardly pair of legs, how can he help their running away
-with him?” said Lincoln.
-
-The story of William Scott is a case which shows the way in which
-Lincoln used to act. William Scott was a young boy from a Northern
-farm, who, after marching for forty-eight hours without sleep, offered
-to stand on guard duty for a sick comrade. Worn out, he fell asleep,
-and was condemned to be shot for being asleep on duty in face of the
-enemy. Lincoln made it his custom to visit all the divisions of his
-army in turns, and, as it happened, two days before the execution he
-was with the division in which Willie Scott was, and heard of the
-case. He went to see the boy, and talked to him about his home and his
-mother. As he was leaving the prison tent he put his hands on the lad’s
-shoulders, and said--
-
-“My boy, you are not going to be shot to-morrow.... I am going to trust
-you and send you back to your regiment. But I have been put to a great
-deal of trouble on your account. I have come here from Washington,
-where I had a great deal to do. Now, what I want to know is, how are
-you going to pay my bill?”
-
-Willie did not know what to say: perhaps he could get his friends to
-help him, he said at last.
-
-“No,” said Lincoln, “friends cannot pay it; only one man in the world
-can pay it, and that is William Scott. If from this day on William
-Scott does his duty, my bill is paid.”
-
-William Scott never forgot these words. Just before his death in one of
-the later battles of the war, he asked his comrades to tell President
-Lincoln that he had never forgotten what he had said.
-
-All the time, people who did not know the President threw on his
-shoulders all the blame for the long continuance of the war. Until
-the last year of the war, the newspapers abused him continually. The
-horrible loss of life in Grant’s last campaign was laid to his charge.
-Only those who came to the President to ask his help in their own
-suffering, understood what his suffering was; he suffered with each of
-them--he suffered with the South as well as the North. After Antietam,
-he had said, “I shall not live to see the end; this war is killing me.”
-The crushing burden he had borne so long and patiently had bent even
-his strong shoulders.
-
-But it had not been borne in vain. The time seemed at last to have come
-when all America would understand how much they owed to the patient
-endurance of the President. And there was work still to be done which
-needed all his wisdom. The South was conquered. It had to be made one
-with the North. The pride of the conquerors had to be curbed, the
-bitterness of the conquered softened.
-
-Lincoln returned from Richmond to Washington, in his heart the profound
-resolve “to bind up the nation’s wounds” as he, and only he, could do
-it.
-
-April 14 was Good Friday, and a day of deep thankfulness in the North.
-In the morning Lincoln held a Cabinet meeting, at which General Grant
-was present. The question of reconstruction, of making one whole
-out of the divided halves, was discussed. Some of the Cabinet were
-anxious to wreak vengeance on the South, to execute the leaders of the
-rebellion. Such was not Lincoln’s view.
-
-“Enough lives have been sacrificed. We must extinguish our resentments
-if we expect harmony and union.”
-
-His noble patriotism could still say to the South, “We are not enemies,
-but friends.” His life was now even more precious to the South than to
-the North.
-
-After the Cabinet meeting, Lincoln spent some time in talking with his
-son Robert, who had returned from the field with General Grant, under
-whom he had served as a captain. In the afternoon he went for a drive
-with Mrs. Lincoln. His mood was calm and happy: for the first time for
-four years he could look forward peacefully to the future, and to the
-great tasks still before him.
-
-In the evening he went to the theatre with his wife and two young
-friends: the play was “Our American Cousin.” The President was fond of
-the theatre--it was one of his few recreations: his appearance on this
-night was something of a public ceremony; therefore, although he was
-tired when evening came, he went because he knew that many people would
-be disappointed if he did not. The President had a box to the left of
-the stage. Suddenly, about the middle of the last act, a man appeared
-at the back of the box, a knife in one hand and a pistol in the other,
-put the pistol to the President’s head and fired; then wounding Major
-Rathbone, the only other man in the box, with his knife, he vaulted on
-to the stage. As he leapt his spur caught the flag hanging from the
-box and he fell, breaking his leg. Nevertheless he rose instantly, and
-brandishing his knife and crying, “_Sic semper tyrannis!_”--“The South
-is avenged!” fled across the stage and out of sight.
-
-The horrified audience was thunderstruck. The President lay quite
-still: the bullet had passed right through his head. The wound was
-mortal. He was carried to a house across the street, where he lay,
-quite unconscious, till the morning, surrounded by his friends,
-their faces as pale and haggard as his own. About seven, “a look of
-unspeakable peace came upon his worn features.” Stanton, the War
-Secretary, rose from his knees by his side, saying, “Now he belongs to
-the ages.”
-
-There was profound sorrow through the whole of America; sorrow that
-checked all rejoicings over the victory of the North. Thus, indirectly,
-Lincoln’s death helped the reconciliation between North and South,
-though nothing could counterbalance the loss of his wise guidance.
-
-Washington was shrouded in black: even the poorest inhabitants showing
-their sorrow in their dress. The body was taken to Springfield,
-Illinois, to be buried; and all the towns on the way showed their deep
-mourning and respect. Now, and not till now, did Americans begin to
-understand what a man they had lost.
-
- “He knew to bide his time,
- And can his fame abide,
- Still patient in his simple faith sublime
- Till the wise years decide.
- Great captains with their guns and drums
- Disturb our judgment for the hour,
- But at last silence comes:
- These all are gone, and, standing like a tower,
- Our children shall behold his fame,
- The kindly, earnest, brave, far-seeing man,
- Sagacious, patient, dreading praise, not blame,
- New birth of our new soil, the first American.”
-
-So James Russell Lowell wrote of Lincoln when the celebration of
-Independence Day in the year of his death revived the vivid sense of
-loss.
-
-The passage of years have only made clearer how great he was. Perfectly
-simple, perfectly sincere, he thought out for himself an ideal, and
-spent the whole of his life and all his strength in pursuing it.
-
-He loved America, not because it was powerful and strong, but because
-it had been based on a great idea--the idea of liberty: his work for
-America was to realise that idea. He never thought of his own personal
-success: he wanted to be President because he saw a great work to be
-done and believed that he could do it. He never became rich: his own
-tastes remained entirely simple. He was said to have worn the same
-top-hat all his life.
-
-The first thing that struck any one about Lincoln was his extraordinary
-appearance. He always dressed in black, with a big black tie, very
-often untied, or in the wrong place: his clothes looked as if they had
-been made to fit some one else, and had never been new. His feet were
-enormous; so were his hands, covered on state occasions with white kid
-gloves.
-
-In cold weather he used to wear a large grey shawl instead of an
-overcoat. One day, before he was made President, some friends were
-discussing Lincoln and Douglas, and comparing their heights. When
-Lincoln came into the room some one asked him, “How long ought a man’s
-legs to be?”
-
-“Long enough to reach from his body to the ground,” said Lincoln coolly.
-
-Lincoln might look uncouth or even grotesque, but he did not look weak:
-he was the most striking figure wherever he went. No one who saw him
-often, no one who went to him in trouble, or to ask his advice, thought
-long of his appearance. Those who had once felt the sympathy of his
-wonderful, sad eyes, thought of that only. Those who really knew him,
-knew him to be the best man they had ever met.
-
-Lincoln was often profoundly sad, and then suddenly boisterously gay.
-He enjoyed a joke or a funny story immensely: he often used to shock
-thoughtless people by telling some comic story on what they thought
-an unsuitable occasion; but he told it so well that however much they
-might disapprove they were generally forced to laugh.
-
-Always rather a dreamer, he was fond of poetry. He knew long passages
-of Shakespeare by heart, especially Hamlet, Macbeth, and Richard III.
-The Bible he had known from his childhood; of Burns he was very fond.
-
-Lincoln’s rise to power, as even so short an account as this will
-have shown you, was not due to any extraordinary good fortune or any
-advantages at start. He taught himself all that he knew; he made
-himself what he was.
-
-It was his character more than anything else that made him great. His
-early struggles had taught him that self-reliance which enabled him to
-persevere in a course which he thought right in spite of opposition,
-disloyalty, and abuse; they taught him the toleration which made him
-slow to judge others, generous to praise them, little apt to expect
-them to understand or praise him. He stood alone.
-
-Not till he had gone did his people realise how much he had given
-them; how much they had lost in him. He gave them, indeed, the most
-priceless gift a patriot can give his country--the example of sincere,
-devoted, and unselfish service.
-
- THE END
-
- Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & CO.
- Edinburgh & London
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-usage.
-
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-as typeset.
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The story of Abraham Lincoln, by Mary A. Hamilton</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The story of Abraham Lincoln</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>The children&#039;s heroes series</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Mary A. Hamilton</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: John Lang</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: S. T. Dadd</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 29, 2022 [eBook #68423]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was created from images of public domain material made available by the University of Toronto Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter adblock">
-<p class="no-indent">THE CHILDREN’S HEROES SERIES</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Edited by John Lang</span></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="ph2 center no-indent"><span class="smaller">THE STORY OF</span><br />
-ABRAHAM LINCOLN</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 626px;">
-<img src="images/i_map.jpg" width="626" alt="Map of Southern United States" /></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="Frontispiece"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" width="400" alt="For the first time he saw negroes being scourged" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">For the first time he saw negroes being scourged</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1><span class="smaller">THE STORY OF</span><br />
-ABRAHAM<br />
-LINCOLN</h1>
-
-<p class="center p4b no-indent">BY MARY A. HAMILTON<br />
-WITH PICTURES BY S. T. DADD</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;">
-<img src="images/i_logo.jpg" width="180" alt="Publishers Logo" /></div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent p4">LONDON: T. C. &amp; E. C. JACK<br />
-NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center no-indent">TO<br />
-MARGOT</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class=" ph2 nobreak">O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The ship has weathered every rack, the prize we sought is won.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring;</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">But O heart! heart! heart!</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">O the bleeding drops of red,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Where on the deck my Captain lies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">Fallen cold and dead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Rise up&mdash;for you the flag is flung&mdash;for you the bugle trills,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For you bouquets and ribbon’d wreaths&mdash;for you the shores a-crowding:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Here Captain! dear father!</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">This arm beneath your head!</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">It is some dream that on the deck</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">You’ve fallen cold and dead.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The ship is anchor’d safe and sound, its voyage closed and done,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won;</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells!</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">But I with mournful tread</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Walk the deck; my Captain lies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent14">Fallen cold and dead.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right no-indent">&mdash;<i>Walt Whitman.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="nobreak ph2">CONTENTS</p></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="CONTENTS">
-
-<tr><td class="tdc"><small>Chapter</small></td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-<td class="tdl"><small>Page</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">I.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Boyhood</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">II.</td>
-<td class="tdl">The Young Backwoodsman</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">III.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Slavery</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Lincoln the Lawyer</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">V.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Defeat of the Little Giant</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdl">The New President and Secession</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdl">The War</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">VIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl">Victory</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdch">IX.</td>
-<td class="tdl">“O Captain! My Captain!”</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">LIST OF PICTURES</p></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="LIST OF PICTURES">
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“For the first time he saw negroes being<br />
-<span class="hang">scourged”</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“The bullet passed right through his heart”</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo1">6</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“Sometimes he did sums on the wooden shovel”</td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo2">14</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“His huge arms closed round Armstrong like a<br />
-<span class="hang">vice”</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo3">24</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“Springing to his feet, he poured out what was in<br />
-<span class="hang">his mind”</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo4">58</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Lincoln reading Emancipation Proclamation to his<br />
-<span class="hang">Cabinet</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo5">94</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Lincoln discussing plan of campaign with General<br />
-<span class="hang">Grant</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo6">104</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“Lincoln visited all the divisions of his army in<br />
-<span class="hang">turns”</span></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo7">110</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1 nobreak">THE STORY OF<br />
-ABRAHAM LINCOLN</p></div>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-<span class="smaller">BOYHOOD</span></h2>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>n</span> this little book I am going to try to tell
-you something about Abraham Lincoln.
-There is far more to say about him than can
-be fitted into so small a space; and perhaps
-when you are older you will read about
-him for yourselves, and read his wonderful
-speeches.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest names in American history are
-those of George Washington and Abraham
-Lincoln. These two men are great in the
-true sense of the word; they are great because
-they loved their country, purely and
-passionately, better than themselves, and
-gave their lives to its service. They thought
-nothing of their own honour and glory: to
-the last they were simple and true. Americans<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>
-may well be proud of two such patriots;
-and from them every one may be glad to learn
-what real greatness means. Their work has
-made America what it is.</p>
-
-<p>Less than forty years before Abraham
-Lincoln was born, America belonged to England.
-In the time of Charles I., numbers of
-people who loved freedom and hated the
-wrongful government of the king left their
-country and sailed to the New World.
-Samuel Lincoln was one of these men.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time they were few in number.
-The greatest part of the country was unknown
-forest, inhabited by wild beasts, or
-vast plains which belonged to fierce tribes of
-Red Indians. Life for the early settlers was
-very hard and rough. They had to cut down
-trees to build their houses, and to kill wild
-animals to get their food. Nevertheless they
-soon grew to love the country where they
-lived, where they married and brought up
-their children; and their wild open life made
-freedom more precious to them than anything
-else. They began to resent the action
-of the English Government, which wanted to
-tax them to pay for wars which were agreed
-upon in the Parliament in London, where
-America had no voice to speak for her. On
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>July 4, 1776, in the reign of George III., the
-chief citizens met together and declared that
-America was a free united country, with a
-right to govern itself. The 4th of July&mdash;“Independence
-Day”&mdash;is the greatest day of
-all in America.</p>
-
-<p>For seven years there was war. In this
-war Abraham’s great-grandfather, John Lincoln,
-served as a soldier. The Americans
-were led by George Washington.</p>
-
-<p>England was defeated, and America&mdash;the
-United States of America&mdash;was a free
-country. From this time on, America belonged
-to the Americans. But a great many
-years had to pass before they made of the
-country the America that we know. Now
-there are towns everywhere: you can get
-from one end to the other of the great
-country, far bigger than the whole of Europe,
-by trains that travel day and night from
-north to south and east to west. Then
-there were very few towns, most of them
-along the coast, and no railways. All the
-west was unknown.</p>
-
-<p>After the war was over, bands of explorers
-set out to fight the Indians and to find new
-homes for themselves. And Abraham Lincoln’s
-grandfather, after whom he was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>named, was one of the first of these explorers.
-He sold his little piece of land in
-Virginia, and tramped through the forests
-till he found a place to build a new home,
-carrying his youngest son Thomas on one
-shoulder, and with his loaded rifle in his
-other hand ready to shoot any Indian who
-should attack him. In Kentucky some
-white men had already settled and built a
-small fort; near it Lincoln cut down trees
-and built a hut for himself and his wife and
-his three sons to live in.</p>
-
-<p>When Abraham was a small boy he used
-to listen to the stories which his father
-Thomas told of their life there in the constant
-fear of Indian attack. There was one
-story which Thomas told very often, the
-story of his father’s death.</p>
-
-<p>He was at work cutting down the trees,
-so as to clear an open space near the house
-which he could plough and then sow with
-seed.</p>
-
-<p>One morning he set out as usual with his
-three boys. They were talking together as
-they walked, and none of them saw that
-behind one of the trees an Indian was
-hiding, his dark skin strangely painted
-with arrows and circles in white and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>scarlet, and on his head a tuft of black
-feathers standing upright and waving as
-he moved. In his hand he had a gun. As
-soon as the father had passed, the Indian
-came out from behind the tree, moving
-without making any sound. He shot
-at Abraham from behind, and the bullet
-passed right through his heart. The father
-fell down dead before the eyes of his sons.
-They were terrified. The two eldest ran
-off, one to the house and the other to the
-fort, to bring help. Thomas, the youngest,
-was only six. He could not run so fast
-as his brothers, and he was too much
-frightened to try. He stood still beside his
-father’s body, not understanding what had
-happened. His eldest brother, Mordecai,
-made all speed to the house. As soon as
-he reached it he took down a gun, loaded
-it, and jumped up to the window so that
-he might shoot at the Indian out of it. As
-he looked out he saw the Indian walk up to
-the place where the dead body lay, look
-at it for a moment, then pick up little
-Thomas, put him under his arm, and turn
-to walk away with him. Mordecai felt his
-heart stand still with fear; but he was a
-brave boy, and his father had taught him
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>how to shoot at a long distance. He
-aimed straight at the white star painted on
-the Indian’s naked chest. There was an
-awful moment. Then the Indian fell back
-dead upon the ground, dropping the child
-from his arms. Thomas ran to the house
-as fast as his legs would carry him, screaming
-with fear, for now several other Indians
-began to appear from the wood. Mordecai
-fired again and again at them from the
-house; and people came from the fort,
-brought by his brother, and drove the
-Indians away.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">Mordecai, when he grew up, spent his life
-in waging war upon the Indians, killing
-them wherever he met them. Thomas was
-neither so strong nor so clever as his
-brother. He became a carpenter, but he
-was never a very good carpenter. He was
-not very good at anything but sitting by
-the fire telling stories. He did that very
-well indeed, and people generally were
-fond of him; but he was not a successful
-person. He had none of his son’s wonderful
-power of work; he always wanted to
-do something else, not the thing before
-him, and live somewhere else, not settle
-down to work where he was.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo1"><img src="images/i_007.jpg" width="400" alt="The bullet passed right through his heart" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">The bullet passed right through his heart</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2">He built himself a log-cabin at Elizabethtown,
-on the edge of the forest, and when
-he was twenty-eight he got married and
-took his wife to live there.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that all great men have had
-great mothers. Nancy Hanks had much
-more character than her husband, and her
-son was much more like her. She had a
-very sweet, unselfish nature, and every one
-loved her. She had had more education than
-her husband, and could read and write: she
-taught him to sign his name.</p>
-
-<p>After their first child came&mdash;a daughter
-called Sarah&mdash;Thomas Lincoln, who always
-thought he could make a fortune somewhere
-else, moved farther west to a place
-called Nolin’s Creek. The place was not
-at all attractive, but it was cheap. The
-soil was hard; it was rocky and barren,
-and nothing but weeds seemed to grow in
-it. Only a very energetic man could have
-made much out of it, and Thomas was not
-very energetic. They were very poor.</p>
-
-<p>It was here, in an uncomfortable log-cabin,
-that his son Abraham was born, on the 12th
-of February 1809; and here he lived until
-he was seven.</p>
-
-<p>The hut had only one room. It was very
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>roughly built. Stout logs had been laid on
-top of one another, then bound together
-with twigs, and the holes filled up with
-clay and grass and handfuls of dead leaves.
-There was no ceiling, only the log roof.</p>
-
-<p>The two children climbed up a shaky ladder
-to a loft in the roof, where they slept on
-a bed of dry leaves, covered with an old deerskin,
-lying close together to keep themselves
-warm. As they lay there, they could count
-the stars that looked in through the spaces
-between the logs that made the roof. The
-windows had no glass; the door was only
-an opening over which a deerskin was hung
-as a curtain. In winter it was terrible. The
-wind blew in, icy cold; there was nothing to
-keep it out, except when sometimes the
-entrance was blocked up with snow, and no
-one could go out or come in until a pathway
-had been dug.</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn the house used to be
-full of dead leaves that whirled about in
-the middle of the floor. The only comfort
-in the hut was the huge fire; it filled
-up nearly the whole of one side, and in
-front of it was a great bearskin rug. On
-this the two children spent the days in
-winter, playing together, or leaning against
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>their mother’s knee while she told them
-stories&mdash;fairy tales, or true stories about
-Indians and old American history, or parables
-from the Bible. In the winter you could not
-keep warm anywhere else; and in the
-autumn there were damp fogs that made it
-unwholesome outside, or heavy rains that
-came through the roof; the only thing to
-do was to get as near the fire as possible.
-Above it were ranged all the household pots
-and pans; the meat, a haunch of venison,
-or a couple of rabbits, hung from the roof.
-Cooking was very simple, for there was no
-choice of food: it consisted of game shot in
-the forest, or fish caught in the streams,
-roots and berries from the wood; bread
-was made of flour ground from Indian corn,
-which was the only thing that grew in the
-rough fields. Until he was a grown man
-Abraham had never tasted any other sort
-of bread.</p>
-
-<p>The life was uncomfortable, often dangerous&mdash;for
-an Indian attack was possible at
-any time&mdash;and always the same. No visitors
-came to see the Lincolns; there were few
-friends for them to go and see, only the
-scattered settlers living in huts like their
-own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></p>
-
-<p>Abraham very soon learnt to make himself
-useful. He would cut and bring
-home wood for the fire; help his mother
-in the house, or his father out-of-doors.
-In summer he spent long hours roaming
-about the woods. He soon learned to
-use a rifle, for it was not safe to go far
-unarmed, and he became a good shot. He
-remembered very little about this time when
-he grew older. One day he had been out
-fishing, and at the end of it he caught a
-single fish. With this he was walking
-home to supper, when he met a soldier.
-His mother had taught him he must always
-be good to soldiers, who fought for their
-country, and therefore the little boy gave
-the soldier his fish.</p>
-
-<p>His father always thought that he should
-be better off somewhere else. He heard that
-across the Ohio River there was rich land
-which any one could have who chose to go
-and take it: so when Abraham was seven,
-and his sister nine, they moved. The father
-built a raft, and put his family and all
-the goods he had, after selling his house, on
-to it, and they sailed down the river, getting
-food on the way by shooting and fishing,
-till they came to a place they liked called
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>Little Pigeon Creek. It was simply an opening
-in the forest.</p>
-
-<p>Here they disembarked, and for a year
-they lived in a roughly built shelter, without
-a floor or doors or windows, while the
-father and his son built a better cabin, and
-cut down trees and shrubs to clear a place
-for planting corn. When it was finished,
-Abraham’s aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.
-Sparrow, and two cousins, John and Denis
-Hanks, came to live with them. The three
-boys were great friends, and they worked
-together on the farm until they all grew
-up.</p>
-
-<p>Abe, as they called him, was a very tall
-boy for his age: his long legs were always
-in his way, and they seemed to get longer
-every day. He never wore stockings until
-he was a young man, but moccasins, such as
-the Indians wear&mdash;shoes of leather, with a
-fringe round the top&mdash;and long deerskin
-leggings; a deerskin shirt which his mother
-had made him, and a cap which was seldom
-on his head, it being covered enough
-by his thick black hair. His hair was never
-tidy; always in his eyes, and having to be
-pushed back. Abe was clever with his axe,
-and a good workman; his mother had taught
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>him to spell, but there was little chance of
-learning in Pigeon’s Creek.</p>
-
-<p>For a year the little family lived there
-very happily; then a mysterious sickness
-broke out in the place, no one knew why
-or how to cure it. They called it the milk
-sickness; many people fell ill of it, and hardly
-any one recovered. Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow
-both died of it in the autumn, and a few
-days afterwards Mrs. Lincoln sickened and
-died too. To her children this was a terrible
-grief. Abraham, though a boy when she
-died, never forgot his mother: she had
-taught him his first lessons, and from her
-came that sweetness of nature, that power
-of thinking first of others, that made every one
-who knew him love him. It was at the
-time of his mother’s death that the sadness
-which never left him came upon him. In
-later life, people who really knew him said
-that, in spite of his fun and power of making
-other people laugh, he was the saddest man
-they ever knew.</p>
-
-<p>A dreary winter followed. At the end of
-it Thomas Lincoln brought home a new
-wife to his little cabin. Sally Bush was
-a widow, with three children; she was a
-good and kind woman, and Abe really loved
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>her and she him. She said afterwards that
-he had never all his life given her a cross
-word or look, or refused to do anything she
-asked him; that he was the best boy she
-had ever seen. He was indeed the sunshine
-of the house; but in many ways he was
-very lonely. He was hungry for knowledge,
-for books and teaching. All the schooling
-he ever had was a month now and then
-with a travelling teacher who passed through
-Pigeon’s Creek on his way to somewhere
-else; but none of these teachers knew much
-beyond the three R’s: one who knew Latin
-was regarded as a sort of magician. In all,
-he had not so much as one year at school,
-taught by five different teachers.</p>
-
-<p>But Abe was not the sort of boy to learn
-nothing because there was nobody to teach
-him. He had a few books that had been
-his mother’s, and he read them again and
-again until he knew everything that was
-in them. John Hanks, his cousin, says of
-him: “When Abe and I returned to the house
-from work, he would go to the cupboard,
-snatch a piece of corn-bread, take down a
-book, sit down, cock his legs as high as his
-head, and read.” The Bible and “Pilgrim’s
-Progress,” “Æsop’s Fables,” and “Robinson
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>Crusoe,” these were his books; he knew
-them by heart. In the intervals of work
-he used to tell them to his companions. He
-thought over every word until he understood
-it. In this way he learned more from a few
-books than many people do from whole
-libraries, because he learned to think. He
-questioned everything, and asked himself if
-he thought so too, and why he thought so.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">One day he borrowed the life of George
-Washington from a farmer who lived near;
-as he lay in the loft he read it with eagerness.
-In the middle he was called away to
-work, and in the meantime the rain came
-in and ruined the book. Abraham went in
-despair to the farmer and told him what
-had happened. “Never mind,” said the
-farmer. “You do three days’ work for me
-for nothing and you may keep the book; I
-don’t want it.” To his joy he thus became
-possessed of a new treasure to be studied
-again and again. This book more than
-any other made him a patriot: he longed
-to get out into the great big world where
-he could serve his country. In the evenings
-he used to sit silent for hours, thinking.
-Sometimes he did sums of all sorts on the
-wooden shovel; making figures on it with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>a piece of charcoal. When it was quite full
-he shaved off the top with his knife so as
-to have a clean slate in the morning.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo2"><img src="images/i_014.jpg" width="400" alt="Sometimes he did sums on the wooden shovel" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">Sometimes he did sums on the wooden shovel</p>
-
-<p class="p2">All his companions liked Abe and admired
-him. He worked very hard, but farm work
-did not interest him; he liked dinner and
-play better; and sometimes he used to stop
-work and climb on to a gate or a dead tree-stump,
-and make absurd speeches or comic
-sermons to his companions, or recite passages
-from his favourite books.</p>
-
-<p>They thought him a quaint fellow, with
-some strange ideas. One of these strange
-ideas was his tenderness to animals. He
-never cared much for sport, because it
-seemed to him cruel. He showed his tenderness
-to animals when quite a small boy.
-One day he was playing in the woods with
-a boy called John Davis. In their game
-they ran a hedgehog into a crevice between
-two rocks, and it got caught fast. For two
-hours they tried every sort of plan to get it
-out, but without any success. They were
-not able to pull it out, and it could not move
-itself. Abraham could not bear to leave the
-poor thing to die in pain. He ran off to
-the blacksmith’s shop, quite a quarter of a
-mile away, and borrowed a pole with an iron
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>hook fastened to the end; with this they
-were able to set the little animal free. This
-care for animals was only one sign of Abraham’s
-tenderness of heart. All little children
-and old people trusted him and his word.
-He was very soon known as “Honest
-Abe.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE YOUNG BACKWOODSMAN</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">F</span>or</span> Abraham life was dull and very
-monotonous: the round of work was
-much the same, summer and winter. He
-longed to escape from the dull work of a
-farm labourer; to go out and see the world.
-Until he was twenty-one, however, he was
-bound to serve his father; and his father
-seems to have had no idea that his son
-was fit for anything better than ordinary
-farm work. Other people nevertheless were
-struck by Abraham.</p>
-
-<p>Until he was nineteen he had not left
-home at all; but then one day a rich landowner
-who lived near came to him. He
-wanted some one to help his son to take
-a raft loaded with different kinds of goods
-down the Ohio River, selling the goods at
-the different places they passed. Abraham
-had struck this Mr. Gentry as being an
-honest and capable lad; he therefore asked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>him to undertake the voyage, and Abraham
-consented at once, glad of any chance of seeing
-something of life outside the settlement.</p>
-
-<p>He took charge of the raft and steered
-it successfully down the river; the voyage
-took them past the great southern sugar
-plantations, right down to New Orleans.
-They had no adventures of any sort until
-they had almost come to New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>One night they encamped at Baton Rouge,
-a place on the bank of the river. Here they
-fastened their raft, and lay down to sleep
-on it for the night, wrapped up in thick
-blankets. They were both sound asleep.
-Suddenly Abraham started up. He heard
-the sound of many soft footsteps all round
-him. In the darkness, at first, he could see
-nothing; then he became aware that a band
-of negroes was attacking the raft, ready to
-steal their goods and to murder them.
-Abraham’s cry waked up his companion,
-young Allan Gentry, and they threw themselves
-upon the negroes. If Abraham had
-not been uncommonly strong and active
-they must both have lost their lives, for
-the negroes far outnumbered them. He
-seized a huge log of wood, which served
-him as a club, and brandished it in his
-hand. His great height and the unknown
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>weapon which he whirled round his head,
-terrified the negroes. He hit first one and
-then another on the head and threw them
-overboard, Allan Gentry helping. The fight
-was very fierce for a few moments, and then
-the negroes turned and fled. Abraham and
-Allan pursued them a long way into the
-darkness, but the thieves did not dare to
-return, though two men could not have held
-their own for long against such numbers.</p>
-
-<p>The voyage ended successfully, and Abraham
-returned home for two more years.
-At the end of that time his father again
-moved. John Hanks had gone west to
-Illinois; he wrote to his uncle, praising the
-new country, and urging him to come there
-too. Thomas Lincoln was always ready to
-try something new: he sold his farm and
-his land to a neighbour. All the goods of
-the household were packed in a waggon
-drawn by oxen; the family walked beside
-it. They tramped for more than a week
-until they came to the new State; the journey
-was not easy. It was February. The
-forest roads were ankle-deep in mud; the
-prairie a mere swamp, very difficult for walking.
-They had to cross streams that were
-swollen into rivers by the rains.</p>
-
-<p>At last they arrived. John Hanks had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>chosen a plantation for them, and got logs
-ready for building the house. Abraham
-worked very hard, and helped his father and
-John Hanks to make a cabin; then, with his
-own hands, he ploughed fifteen acres of
-ground. When that was done he cut down
-walnut trees, split them, and built a high
-and solid fence which went right round his
-father’s property.</p>
-
-<p>Abraham lived in Illinois until he was
-made President of the United States. Once
-he was addressing a meeting there, years
-after this, and Denis Hanks marched in
-amid the shouts and applause of the crowd,
-carrying on his shoulder a piece of the railing
-that Abraham had made for his father.
-It is now in the Museum at Washington,
-kept as a national treasure. How little
-could Abraham himself or any one who knew
-him at this time, have dreamed that this
-rail-splitter was to be the greatest man in
-America.</p>
-
-<p>The winter that followed was one of the
-most severe ever known in Illinois; it is
-always referred to as the winter of deep
-snow. When spring came at last, Abraham
-said good-bye to his father and mother, and
-went out into the world to make a livelihood
-for himself. His boyish days were over. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>was now twenty-one, and very tall and
-strong for his age. More than six feet four
-inches in height, he seldom met a man taller
-than himself. He is a great exception to
-the saying that all great men have been
-small&mdash;for example, Napoleon, Cæsar, Hannibal,
-Shakespeare. Abraham was very well
-built; it was not till he stood up among
-other men that you realised that he was head
-and shoulders taller than most of them.</p>
-
-<p>In the ordinary sense of the word, he had
-had no education. He knew no language
-but his own, and that not very well at this
-time. When asked could he write, he replied,
-“Well, I guess I could make a few
-rabbit-tracks.” He had taught himself all
-the arithmetic he knew. But he knew two
-things that are the most important that can
-be got from any training: how to think, and
-how to work. When he made clear to himself
-what it was right to do, he did it without
-talking about it, all his life.</p>
-
-<p>His experience in taking Mr. Gentry’s
-cargo down to New Orleans induced a
-merchant called Offutt to offer him another
-job of the same kind. Offutt was an adventurous
-sort of dealer, who did all kinds of
-business. He wanted some one to help him
-who had a head on his shoulders, and he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>soon saw that Lincoln had plenty of sense.
-He therefore engaged him, and Lincoln took
-his cousin, John Hanks, to help him. They
-did not make much money by the voyage,
-but Lincoln showed great skill in managing
-the raft.</p>
-
-<p>On this trip Lincoln came for the first
-time really face to face with slavery. New
-Orleans was a great slave market, and they
-spent some time there. For the first time
-he saw negroes being sold in the open
-streets, chained together in gangs. For the
-first time, too, he saw negroes being beaten;
-fastened to a block and scourged till the
-blood ran from their backs. Every one
-took it all as a matter of course, but Lincoln
-was deeply struck. His heart bled.
-At the time he said nothing, but he was
-silent for a long while afterwards, thinking
-over what he had seen. There and then,
-as his cousin used to tell afterwards, slavery
-ran its iron into him: to see these men
-chained was a torment to him, and he never
-forgot it: the picture was printed on his
-memory never to be forgotten, only to be
-wiped out when there were no more slaves
-in America. He was often in the slave states
-after this; but slavery always seemed to him
-horrible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p>Offutt was quite satisfied with the way
-in which the young backwoodsman had
-managed the trip. After his return he
-offered him a post in his grocery store
-at New Salem. He had a kind of half
-shop, half office, with a mill behind it; here
-he sold everything that any one could want
-to buy&mdash;grocery, drapery, stationery, miscellaneous
-goods of all kinds. Lincoln was
-clerk, superintendent of the mill, and general
-assistant.</p>
-
-<p>Offutt soon began to admire his assistant
-immensely. He declared that Lincoln was
-the cleverest fellow he knew&mdash;he could read,
-and talk like a book; he was so strong
-and active that he could beat any one at
-running, jumping, or wrestling. Lincoln
-did not know any one in New Salem, and
-this “wooling and pulling,” as he called
-it, of Offutt’s annoyed him a good deal; as
-he knew, it was not at all likely to make
-people like him. The young fellows of the
-place did not mind his supposed cleverness;
-they knew nothing about that, and cared
-nothing; but they did resent the idea that
-he was stronger than they were.</p>
-
-<p>At first they did nothing: he looked rather
-a dangerous person to attack, and not at all
-likely to take things meekly. Offutt’s loud
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>and continual praise, however, was more
-than they could stand. As Lincoln was on
-his way home one evening a group of the
-strongest fellows in New Salem, the “boys
-of Clary’s Grove,” attacked him. Jock Armstrong,
-the biggest and burliest of them all,
-challenged him to a “wrastle.” Jock was
-not as tall as Lincoln, but he was much
-more solidly built, with huge shoulders like
-an ox and immensely strong arms: no one
-in New Salem had ever been able to throw
-him, and he expected an easy victory over
-this strange clerk.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">But Abe was as strong and as skilful as
-Jock: though he was thin his muscles were
-made of iron; his huge arms closed round
-the burly fellow like a vice. Even when his
-companions came to the champion’s rescue
-Abe was a match for them. Armstrong was a
-sportsman and not ashamed to take a beating:
-he admired a man who was able to throw
-him. After this Lincoln had no stauncher
-friend, and he soon grew to be a person of
-importance in New Salem. His strength
-and his honesty made him respected.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo3"><img src="images/i_024.jpg" width="400" alt="His huge arms closed round Armstrong like a vice" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">His huge arms closed round Armstrong like a vice</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Of his honesty there are numberless
-stories. One evening he was making up
-his accounts for the day. While doing so
-he found that he had charged a woman, who
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>had come in in the morning to buy a great
-number of little things, 6-1/4 cents&mdash;that is,
-about 3d.&mdash;too much. Until it was time to
-shut up the shop the money seemed to burn
-in his pocket. It was late when the time
-for locking up came, but he could not wait.
-He started off at once for the woman’s house,
-though it was several miles off, and walked
-there and back in the darkness to pay her
-her 3d. before he went to bed. He knew
-he could not sleep until he had done so.</p>
-
-<p>People trusted him: those who were in
-trouble soon found out how wise and gentle
-he was, and they went to him for advice and
-help. He had a wonderful way of quite
-forgetting himself, and only thinking of
-making other people happy: generally
-silent, he could tell stories so that every
-one laughed. But though he enjoyed talking
-and going to see people, he always
-worked very hard.</p>
-
-<p>And he did not only work in the shop:
-he was always eager to learn more. After
-the day’s task was done, he would walk
-miles to get hold of some book that he
-wanted, and read it on the way home.
-When his cousin, a lazy fellow, wrote to
-ask his advice, he replied: “What is wrong
-with you is your habit of needlessly wasting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>time: go to work; that is the only cure for
-your difficulty.”</p>
-
-<p>When he came to New Salem he met
-people who had been well educated, and
-he was at once struck by the difference
-between their way of speaking and his.
-He resolved to learn to speak correctly.
-One evening he walked to Kirkham and
-back&mdash;it was twelve miles away&mdash;and
-bought a grammar there. For the next
-few weeks he spent all his spare time in
-studying it: he used to sit with his feet
-on the mantelpiece and work for hours
-without moving. In this way he soon knew
-all there was to know about grammar.
-When you read his speeches you will find
-that they are written in English as beautiful
-and simple as that of the Bible, which
-was the book he knew best of all.</p>
-
-<p>He only remained with Offutt for a year.
-Offutt was too fond of talking to make his
-business a success, and he had to give up
-the store. It was Lincoln’s first attempt
-at earning his living, and learning a trade
-did not seem very successful. Instead of
-at once looking for some new work of the
-same sort he enlisted as a soldier. The
-State of Illinois was thrown into a state of
-wild excitement by an attack made at this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>time by a powerful Indian tribe. Black
-Hawk crossed the Mississippi at the head
-of an army of red warriors. To drive them
-back, the Government of the country called
-for volunteers, and Abraham, who was one
-of the first to offer himself, was made
-a captain. The men entered for three
-months, during which they did a great
-deal of skirmishing and marching about,
-but took part in no regular battles. At the
-end of the time most of them went back to
-work. Abraham enlisted again; this time
-as a private in a battalion of scouts. He
-was not present at any battle, but he learnt
-something of war and a good deal of soldiers;
-it was hard work and not much glory. By
-the autumn Black Hawk was captured,
-and the war was at an end. Lincoln’s horse
-had been stolen, and he had to walk back to
-New Salem, a three days’ tramp. His campaigning
-had not been a great success.</p>
-
-<p>When he returned, the elections for members
-of the Illinois Parliament were going
-on, and he offered himself as a candidate;
-spending the ten days between his return
-from the war and the time of election in
-making speeches. In New Salem he was
-popular, but he was not yet well known
-even there; he was young, and had had no
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>experience. He was not elected, but he
-made good friends at the election time, and
-he began to be a capital speaker.</p>
-
-<p>Meetings were not very formal in those
-days. One day when Lincoln was addressing
-a large hall full of people, in the middle of
-his speech he saw that a ruffian in the
-crowd was attacking a friend of his; they
-were struggling together, and his friend
-seemed to be having the worst of it. Lincoln
-jumped down from the platform where he
-stood, and marched to the middle of the
-room. He picked up the ruffian in his
-mighty arms and threw him some ten feet,
-so that he fell right outside the hall. There
-he lay, and did not attempt to return. Lincoln
-came back on to the platform and went on with
-his speech, just as if nothing had happened.</p>
-
-<p>After the election he thought of becoming
-a blacksmith. Instead of this, he joined
-with a man called Berry in buying a store.
-Berry was a stupid and not very honest
-man. He got into debt; then he took to
-drinking, and soon afterwards died, leaving
-Lincoln with the business ruined and a lot
-of debts to pay.</p>
-
-<p>After this he did not try storekeeping
-again: he was made postmaster of New
-Salem. This meant very little work: few
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>people wrote letters there: he could carry
-the whole post in his hat, and he read every
-newspaper that came. He now had plenty
-of time for reading, and he read ceaselessly.
-Most of all, he read American history.
-The “Life of Washington” had been his
-earliest treasure; and as a boy he had pored
-over an old copy of the statutes of Indiana.
-This was, perhaps, the beginning of his
-interest in law. Now he was in a town,
-though a small one, and it was possible to
-get hold of books. He used to lie on his
-back under a tree, with his feet high up
-against the trunk, only moving so as to
-keep in the shade, and laying down the book
-now and then to think over what he had read
-and make sure that he understood it.</p>
-
-<p>He studied surveying in this way for six
-weeks, and John Calhoun, the surveyor of the
-county, was so much astonished by his knowledge
-that he made him his assistant. His
-reading in law and history deepened his interest
-in politics: nothing interested him so
-much. He was resolved sooner or later to
-get into Parliament. One failure could not
-make him despair. There was a great world
-outside, and the door into Parliament was
-the door into that world. He was resolved
-to make his way in.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-<span class="smaller">SLAVERY</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>t</span> would be a great mistake to think
-that Abraham Lincoln won success
-easily.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back over the lives of great men,
-one is apt to think “How fortune helped
-them;” “What astonishing luck they must
-have had;” when one knows the end, it
-seems certain from the beginning. But
-when you know more about any one really
-great man, you are sure to find that he has
-risen only by endless hard work, and by
-knowing from the beginning what he
-wanted to be and do, and thinking only of
-that.</p>
-
-<p>Success is never easy, and for Lincoln
-the path to it was a hard and uphill way.
-You have seen in what difficulties his life
-began; how he taught himself everything
-he learned, and made for himself every
-penny that he possessed. His first effort to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>get into Parliament, like his first efforts to
-make a living, seemed a failure. But this
-did not make him despair. Other people
-had risen, and he was going to rise. He
-was sure of one thing, that there is always
-plenty of room at the top, and he meant to
-reach the top. There is always a place for
-a man of strong purpose, who is honest, and
-who can think for himself. If a man really
-wants to serve his country, nothing need
-prevent him from doing it. And Lincoln
-saw that the first step to serving your
-country well is to be a good workman, a
-good friend, and a good citizen of your own
-town.</p>
-
-<p>When the next election came he stood
-again, and this time he was elected; and
-after his two years of service came to an
-end, he was elected again. For eight
-years he was a member of the Parliament
-of his own State of Illinois; then, after
-four years away from politics, he was
-made member of Congress&mdash;that is, of the
-American Parliament, to which the States
-send representatives.</p>
-
-<p>To be in Parliament was to be in touch
-with the big world; to have a share in
-the settlement of big questions. In the
-Illinois Parliament, Lincoln met a great
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>many clever men; men who rose to important
-posts later. Few of them suspected
-that this tall, awkward, country-looking
-young lawyer, who did not speak
-much, but could tell such extraordinarily
-funny stories when he chose, was going to
-rise to be American President, to prove
-himself greater than any American of their
-time. Most of the members were small
-lawyers like himself. They were sent to
-Parliament because they were men in whom
-their fellow-citizens had confidence. They
-were honest men, but few of them had any
-more knowledge of politics than Lincoln
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>The State of Illinois was very new, and
-its affairs had not yet become complicated.
-Lincoln soon learnt the ins and outs of
-parliamentary business; and he only found
-one man who was a better speaker than
-himself. This was a man with whom he
-was to have a great deal to do all his
-life; a man already well known in politics,
-and followed by a large party.</p>
-
-<p>His name was Stephen Arnold Douglas.
-He was two years younger than Lincoln;
-like him he had been brought up in the
-rough surroundings of the West, where he
-had gone as a boy. His father was poor,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>but he was a gentleman. Well educated
-himself, he had given his son a good education
-of a sort.</p>
-
-<p>When he was twenty-one Douglas became
-a lawyer. Very soon he became the
-foremost barrister in North Illinois, and
-soon entered the State Parliament. In
-the year of Lincoln’s election he had been
-made Secretary of State; he was therefore
-a person of importance. Douglas was extremely
-clever; as a boy he learnt things
-quickly, and remembered them easily, unlike
-Lincoln, who learnt very slowly; he had a
-wonderful power of speech: he was ready
-and able to speak on any subject, and,
-even if he really knew very little about it, he
-always gave people the impression that he
-knew everything. He used to tell people
-what they wanted to hear, whereas Lincoln
-had a way of speaking the truth
-whether it was pleasant or not.</p>
-
-<p>Douglas was very popular: he understood
-how to rule men, and he was intensely ambitious.
-Ambition was the strongest feeling in
-his heart; and his ambition was for himself:
-he dreamed already of being President of
-the United States. He was a short, thickly-built
-man; but it was the smallness of his
-mind, his selfish aims, that made Lincoln
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>say that Douglas was the least man that
-he had ever met: he seemed to “Honest
-Abe” to care not at all for what he said
-or did, so long as his own success was
-safe; success was his one object.</p>
-
-<p>It was an ambition very different from
-Lincoln’s. Indeed, Lincoln was unlike any
-of the members whom he met: his aims
-were quite different from theirs. He looked
-to a future beyond himself. He did not
-think of his own success. What he wanted
-to attain by success was the power to help
-his country. Patriotism was his first and
-strongest feeling, and his patriotism was of
-the truest kind. He did not want to make
-America great because she ruled over a vast
-extent of territory: such greatness did not
-appeal to him at all. He wanted her to be
-great in the sense that she really lived up
-to the ideal set before her for ever in the
-Declaration of Independence&mdash;the ideal of a
-union of free men governing themselves well.</p>
-
-<p>And Lincoln’s ideals were real to him: in
-every question he was guided by his patriotism.
-He did not mind saying what he
-thought, whether people liked him for it or
-not: they must like him for what he was,
-and not for what he said, and unless they
-loved what was right, their liking was not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>worth having. When, after long thinking,
-he came to see what he thought the truth
-on any subject, he spoke out so that every
-one who heard must understand: he never
-said one thing and meant another, as
-Douglas did: he was as honest in his
-thoughts as in his actions.</p>
-
-<p>Now in American politics there was one
-great question, more important than every
-other, the question of slavery. Cautious
-politicians, men with an eye to their own
-success, thought that this question had better
-be left alone. Really thoughtful men, men
-like Lincoln, saw that this question could
-not be left alone for ever. Some day, and
-the sooner the better, it must be settled.
-Anyhow, it was every honest man’s duty to
-say what he thought. It is difficult now to
-realise quite what slavery meant. Perhaps
-you have read or heard of a book called
-“Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” It was written about
-this time by an American lady, who wanted
-to make all Americans see what slavery did
-mean&mdash;how terrible it could be.</p>
-
-<p>If you drew a line across America just
-south of Lincoln’s State of Illinois, slavery
-did not exist in the Northern States; it did
-exist in all the Southern States. Whenever
-the question was discussed, most people from
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>the North thought it rather a bad thing,
-some thought it a very bad thing; people
-from the South all thought it was a good, or
-at least, a necessary, thing. They all agreed
-as a rule in thinking that, whether it was a
-good thing or a bad thing, there it was, and
-there was no good discussing it.</p>
-
-<p>The real wrong lay far back in the past.
-Centuries ago, merchants had brought
-negroes over from Africa, and sold them
-in America as slaves.</p>
-
-<p>As is always the case, when once the
-wrong had been brought in, when the evil
-had begun, it was almost impossible to get
-rid of it when people had grown used to it.
-When people could buy slaves who did not
-cost very much to do work for them, they
-did not want to do it themselves, especially
-if the work was disagreeable. They began
-to believe that black men were intended by
-nature to do all the disagreeable things.
-English merchants made great fortunes by
-bringing slaves to America; and the English
-Government supported them. And when,
-after the war, America was a free country,
-the Union of States which made it so was
-half composed of States that held slaves.
-These slaves were most valuable property.
-The men who drew up the Constitution,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>George Washington and Thomas Jefferson
-and Alexander Hamilton, declared in it,
-“All men are free and equal: all men possess
-rights, which no one can take away
-from them.” The Northern States gave up
-their slaves, and decided that slavery was
-illegal: the Southern States did not. They
-refused to join the Union unless they were
-allowed to keep their slaves. Now of course
-it was absurd to call a country free where
-slavery existed, or to say that all men have
-rights when millions of black men had no
-rights at all.</p>
-
-<p>To the Southerner a black man was not
-a man, but a piece of property.</p>
-
-<p>But it would not be quite fair to think
-that the Northerners who gave up slaves
-had always more lofty ideas than the Southerners.
-You must remember that slaves
-were much more useful in the South than
-in the North. The climate of the North
-was cold, and the work not of the sort
-that could be well done by untrained
-negroes. In the South it was so hot that
-it was difficult for white men to work, and
-work on the plantations needed no special
-skill.</p>
-
-<p>At the time when the Declaration of
-Independence was drawn up and signed,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>one thing seemed to every American more
-important than anything else: that the
-country should be united in one whole.
-North and South must join together; no
-difference could outweigh a common nationality.
-The Southerners would not join the
-Union unless they were allowed to keep their
-slaves: therefore the Northerners left slavery
-in the South. They hoped, however, that
-it would gradually die out; and therefore
-a law was passed which declared that after
-twenty years no more slaves were to be
-brought from Africa.</p>
-
-<p>When Southerners declared, as they very
-often did, that slaves were very well treated,
-that they were much happier and more
-comfortable than if they were free, this was
-true to a certain extent. Those slaves who
-were employed in the houses and gardens
-of their masters, those who were used as
-servants, were often very well treated. But
-however well they were treated, it is wrong
-for a man to have other men entirely in his
-power; wrong for him, and wrong for them.
-And although some masters did not abuse
-their power, some did&mdash;and all could, if
-ever they wanted to&mdash;without feeling that
-they were doing anything wrong. A white
-gentleman could beat his black slave to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>death if he chose; he would not be punished
-any more than if he beat a dog to
-death, and his friends would still think him
-a gentleman. Moreover, far the greater
-number of the slaves were not used as
-servants, but used as labourers on the
-cotton plantations. Here they were under
-the charge of an overseer. His one idea
-was to get as much work out of them as
-possible. They worked all day, and at
-night were often herded together in any
-sort of shed.</p>
-
-<p>After Eli Whitney, a young American,
-invented a machine called the cotton gin,
-by using which one negro could pick twenty
-times as much cotton in a day as before,
-the business of working the cotton plantations
-with slaves made the Southern landowners
-very rich. Slaves were cheap: in a
-few days they made as much for their
-masters as they cost them, and their masters
-could make them work as hard as they
-liked. They were quite ignorant: their
-masters taught them nothing; they had no
-way of escape; they were absolutely at the
-mercy of the overseer with his whip. The
-masters came to regard these black fellow-beings
-simply as property: not so valuable
-as a horse, rather more useful than a dog;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>they often forgot that they had any feelings.
-Children were sold away from their parents;
-a husband was sent to one plantation, and
-his wife to another. They were sometimes
-beaten for the smallest fault. If they tried
-to escape, bloodhounds were used to hunt
-them down. Dealers led them about in
-chains, and sold them in the public market
-exactly like animals. People who came
-from the North to the South, as Abraham
-Lincoln did, on his trip down the Ohio,
-and saw how the slaves were treated, were
-often shocked; but in the South people
-were used to it.</p>
-
-<p>North of a certain line, slavery did not
-exist. Slaves used sometimes to run away
-from their masters and escape across this
-line; but in every Northern State there was
-a law, that escaped slaves had to be handed
-back to their master if he claimed them.
-The masters used to offer a reward to any
-one who handed back to them the body of
-their slave, alive or dead. This led to all
-sorts of difficulties, because in the Northern
-States a great many free negroes lived.
-Very often some one who was eager for the
-reward would capture an innocent free negro
-and hand him over to the master, declaring
-that he answered to the description of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>missing slave. The question as to whether
-he was, or not, was decided not in the
-Northern State where he had been captured,
-but in the Southern State where the master
-lived, and no Southern court could be trusted
-to decide fairly in a case between a white
-man and a black.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually this injustice roused a small
-party in the North, which openly declared
-that slavery was an abominable thing, and
-ought not to exist in America. The Abolitionists,
-as they called themselves, said that
-it was a disgrace to a free country that
-slavery should exist in it; that as long as
-it did exist, the Declaration of Independence
-had no meaning. Slavery ought to be
-abolished.</p>
-
-<p>When Abraham Lincoln was about twenty-one,
-a paper called <i>The Liberator</i> began to
-appear. It was edited by a great man
-called William Lloyd Garrison. Its object
-was to rouse people to see the evils of slavery,
-and to get it made illegal. The Abolitionists
-were few in number, and very unpopular.
-They had to suffer for their beliefs in the
-North as well as in the South. The offices
-where <i>The Liberator</i> was printed were
-attacked by mobs of furious people, who
-burst in at the doors, broke every pane of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>glass in the windows, destroyed the printing
-press, and threw the type into the river.
-In St. Louis, William Lloyd Garrison was
-dragged round the town with a rope round
-his waist, while crowds of angry people
-hooted and hissed, spat at him, and threw
-rotten eggs and stones at his head. He only
-just escaped death. Many of his followers
-were murdered in the open streets. Even
-in Illinois, an innocent preacher, who had
-sympathised with them, was thrown into the
-river and drowned.</p>
-
-<p>The Southern States were roused to fury.
-In the North, even sensible people who did
-not like slavery thought it very unwise to
-say anything against it. Slavery was a fact&mdash;it
-was no good to discuss it. Several
-Northern States sent petitions to Parliament,
-declaring their opinion that it was very
-unwise to discuss Abolition.</p>
-
-<p>In Illinois, this was the view taken by
-nearly all Lincoln’s friends. Lincoln did not
-agree with them. He thought the Abolitionists
-very often unwise; nothing, he saw,
-could be more dangerous than to rouse the
-feeling of the South: but nothing could
-make him seem to approve of slavery.</p>
-
-<p>For Lincoln to see that any action was
-right, and to do it, was the same thing. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>and one other man, called Stone, sent in a
-protest to the Illinois Parliament; in it
-they declared that they believed slavery to
-be founded upon injustice and upon bad
-policy. Lincoln spoke because he must.
-He had seen what slavery meant, and he
-hated slavery. But he saw that the South
-would not allow slavery to be abolished: if
-the North tried to do it, the country would
-be divided into two halves. He was not
-ready to face that. His love for his country
-came before everything. Everything must
-be borne, rather than that it should be
-divided.</p>
-
-<p>The Abolitionists were a small party; and
-for the next seventeen years, the question
-of slavery was left as it was, as far as
-Parliament was concerned. During these
-seventeen years, Lincoln was perpetually
-turning it over in his mind; thinking and
-reading about it, and helping other people
-to think about it too.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-<span class="smaller">LINCOLN THE LAWYER</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>wo</span> years after Lincoln entered the
-Illinois Parliament, its meetings, which
-had been held at Vandalia, were transferred
-to Springfield. In Springfield Lincoln
-lived for the next five-and-twenty
-years, until he left it to go to Washington as
-President of the United States. Springfield
-was a country town, which thought itself
-rather important. The people paid a good
-deal of attention to dress; they gave evening
-parties of a quiet sort, where they
-played cards and talked politics. The business
-of the most prominent persons in the
-town was law. Almost all the members of
-Parliament were lawyers.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln found that his surveying did not
-occupy his time, or bring in a very large
-income; he had studied law-books, and
-knew very nearly as much as most of
-the young barristers of Springfield. Major
-Stuart, under whom he had served in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>war against Black Hawk, took him into
-partnership. The partnership was not very
-successful. Lincoln was rather ignorant,
-and Stuart was too much occupied with
-his duties as member of Congress&mdash;the
-American Parliament&mdash;to teach him much.</p>
-
-<p>After four years Lincoln left Stuart
-and joined another friend, Judge Stephen
-D. Logan. Logan had made Lincoln’s
-acquaintance at the time of his first unsuccessful
-candidature for the Illinois Parliament.
-He had then greatly admired the
-young man’s pluck and good sense, and
-the cheerful way in which he accepted his
-defeat. Later, he had been struck by the
-sound reasoning of his political speeches.
-Logan himself was not only a first-rate
-lawyer, he was a man of wide education
-and culture: Abraham learned more than
-law from him. Even after Lincoln left the
-partnership, and set up an office of his
-own, the two men remained close friends.</p>
-
-<p>Although busy during the winter in Parliament,
-Lincoln worked very hard at his
-business. He knew that no one can succeed
-in anything without hard work, and
-he saw that to become a really good
-lawyer would help him in politics, and
-make him a more useful citizen of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>State. Moreover, he understood, more
-clearly than most men have done, that
-every deed in life is connected to every
-other; no man can escape the consequences
-of what he is and does. Every
-act and every speech is important.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln was four times elected to the
-Illinois Parliament&mdash;that is, he sat in it for
-eight years. For four years&mdash;between
-1845-49&mdash;he was member for Illinois in
-Congress. In Congress he spoke and
-voted against the war that was being
-waged against Mexico. The aim of the
-war was the conquest of Texas and California.
-The South urged this because they
-wanted the number of slave-owning States
-to be equal to the number of free States.
-They were always afraid that new States
-would be created out of the undeveloped
-territory in the North-West; and, if this
-were to happen, the slave States would be
-in a minority in Congress. If Texas were
-added as a slave State, the slave States
-would have a majority of one: there would
-be fourteen free and fifteen slave States.
-The Northern members, for the most part,
-did not see the point; they did not unite
-against the Southern demands; and consequently
-the South succeeded. In the war
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>Mexico was defeated, and Texas was added
-to the Union.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of his last year of membership,
-1849, Lincoln applied for a post in
-the Government office. Why he did so it
-is difficult to understand, for it would have
-put an end to his political career, as
-officials may not sit in the House. Fortunately
-his request was refused.</p>
-
-<p>He returned to his home in Springfield,
-where he lived in a big, plain house, painted
-a dirty yellow, with a big piece of untidy
-garden behind, and a small field at the side.
-He had married seven years before, and had
-now three sons. He was devoted to these
-boys, and used to play all sorts of games
-with them, as they grew bigger.</p>
-
-<p>For the next five years he devoted himself
-mainly to his work as a lawyer. He
-was now forty years of age. In Springfield
-and everywhere in Illinois he was admired,
-respected, and loved. But the high opinion
-of other people never made him easily satisfied
-with himself. To the end of his life he
-never stopped working and learning. He
-now resolved to become a really good lawyer.
-He knew that in law he could learn the art
-of persuading people, and of expressing
-clearly what he wanted to say. To help in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>this he took up the study of mathematics
-with extraordinary energy. Examining his
-own speeches, he seemed to find in them
-some confusion of thought. To make his
-own ideas clear, and to be sure that he expressed
-them clearly and truly, and never
-conveyed to others an impression that was
-not true, he bought a text-book of Euclid.
-The first six books of this he learnt by heart.
-He said “I wanted to know what was the
-meaning of the word ‘demonstrate.’ Euclid
-taught me what demonstration was.”</p>
-
-<p>After a year or two Lincoln was regarded
-as the equal of any lawyer in Springfield.
-He had one weakness, however. If he did
-not believe in the justice of his case, or if he
-thought the man for whom he had to speak
-was not quite honest, he did not defend well.
-His friend Judge Davis says, “A wrong
-cause was poorly defended by him.”</p>
-
-<p>A story is told of a man who came
-to Lincoln’s office and asked his help in
-getting six hundred dollars from a poor
-widow. Lincoln listened to the man and
-then said, “Yes, there is no reasonable doubt
-but I can gain your case for you. I can set
-a whole neighbourhood at loggerheads. I
-can distress a widowed mother and her six
-fatherless children, and thereby get for you
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>six hundred dollars which rightfully belong,
-as it appears to me, as much to them as it
-does to you. I advise you to try your hand at
-making six hundred dollars some other way.”</p>
-
-<p>Every one in Springfield valued “Honest
-Abe’s” opinion. All sorts of people brought
-their troubles to him. His sympathy and
-his tenderness of heart made them trust
-him. He was one of the people; he never
-felt himself above them. To the end of his
-life he did not grow proud, and he was
-never ashamed of his early poverty. When
-he was President he told some of his friends
-of a dream he had had, which might very
-well have been true. He dreamt that at
-some big public meeting he was walking
-through the hall up to the platform, from
-which he was going to speak. As he passed,
-a lady sitting at the end of one of the rows
-of seats said to another sitting next her, so
-loudly that he could hear: “Is that Mr.
-Lincoln? Why, he looks a very common
-sort of person!” “I thought to myself in
-my dream,” said Lincoln, “that it was true,
-but that God Almighty seemed to prefer
-common people, for He had made so many
-of them.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing in Lincoln is more truly great
-than his power of seeing the value of common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-things and common people. He knew
-that the things which appeal to men as
-men, which are common to humanity, are
-the most valuable of all. He counted on
-this when he abolished slavery. Freedom
-is a right common to all men; and there is
-somewhere in every one an instinct which
-knows that it is wrong to make other people
-do things which are too disagreeable to do
-yourself.</p>
-
-<p>During these years at Springfield, Abraham
-read a great deal. Shakespeare and Burns
-were his favourite poets: he knew Shakespeare
-better than any other book except
-the Bible. He read and thought unceasingly
-about politics, and he talked about them
-with his friends. The history of America
-he studied until he knew everything there
-was to know. Above all, he thought about
-slavery. Events were taking place which
-made it plain that the question of slavery
-could not be left where it was. It was no
-longer possible to act as if the difference
-between North and South did not exist.</p>
-
-<p>As years went on the difference became
-more and more plain. The North, which
-had been poor and barren, only half cultivated
-by ignorant and uneducated settlers, was
-growing richer than the prosperous lazy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>South. Workmen came to the North
-from all parts of the world: poor men with
-good brains and strong arms, ready and able
-to work intelligently, to improve the land, to
-make wheat grow where stones and bushes
-had been. None of these men went to the
-South, for there work was done by slaves so
-cheaply that no paid worker had a chance.
-But the difference between the intelligent
-labour of free men working for themselves,
-and the mechanical labour of slaves working
-for their masters, soon began to tell.</p>
-
-<p>In the North schools sprang up everywhere:
-the people became better and better
-educated. Men who had grown up in the
-backwoods, like Abraham Lincoln, taught
-themselves, and rose to be lawyers and statesmen
-by their own efforts; others who had
-had the chance of being taught, did the same.
-It was possible for any man of brains to rise
-from the bottom to the top. Inventions were
-made which enabled all kinds of new work
-to be done and new wealth produced. The
-North was rich in material: richer in the
-men she had to work it, who were helped
-and encouraged by the freedom which threw
-every career open to real talent.</p>
-
-<p>In the South all power was in the hands
-of the aristocratic families, who had had it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>always. The work was done by slaves:
-owners did not want to educate their slaves,
-for then they were afraid that they would
-want their freedom. The coal mines of the
-South were not discovered; they could not
-have been worked by slaves. The South
-began to be very jealous of the North, and
-the North began to disapprove of the South.
-More and more people began to see that
-slavery was wrong: people were not yet
-ready to say that slavery ought to cease
-to be, but they were ready to say that it
-must not be extended.</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the Mexican war the South
-had shown that it wanted to extend slavery.
-This frightened the North. In 1850 an agreement
-was made, known as the Missouri Compromise.
-By this a line (36°30’), called Mason
-and Dixon’s line, was drawn across the map
-of America. North of this line, slavery was
-never to exist. Speakers on both sides declared
-that the Missouri Compromise was
-as fixed as the Constitution itself. Stephen
-Arnold Douglas was the loudest in expressing
-this opinion. “It is eternal and fundamental,”
-he declared.</p>
-
-<p>Douglas was a trader of the great party
-known as the Democrats. He held that the
-people of every State had a right to decide
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>questions affecting that State, and not the
-Central American Government.</p>
-
-<p>Douglas had one great aim, which was to
-him far more important than any question of
-political right or wrong: he wanted to be made
-President. To secure this, he saw that he
-must get the support of the South. To win
-the support of the South, he took a most dangerous
-and important step: one which was the
-immediate cause of the war which broke out
-six years later. He declared that the people
-of any state or territory could decide whether
-or not they would have slavery in their State:
-they could establish it or prohibit it.</p>
-
-<p>He went further than this. Two new territories
-had been organised in the north-west&mdash;Nebraska
-and Kansas. They claimed to
-be admitted to the Union as States. Both
-States were, of course, north of Mason and
-Dixon’s line, and therefore by the Missouri
-Compromise they must be free States. But
-the South was bent on creating new slave
-States as fast as the North could create free
-States: they wanted to make Kansas a slave
-State. Stephen Douglas therefore introduced,
-in 1854, the famous Kansas-Nebraska
-Bill. It declared that Kansas might be slave-holding
-or free, as the people of the territory
-should decide.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
-
-<p>The result of this Bill was for the first time
-to unite together a strong party in the North
-in opposition to the Democrats, who were
-allied to the South. This new party called
-itself Republican. Lincoln was a spokesman
-of their views. They declared, firstly,
-that Congress, which is the Parliament
-representing all the States which together
-formed the Union, has the right to decide
-whether slavery shall be lawful in any particular
-State or not, and not the people of
-that State alone. Secondly, they declared
-that, in the case of Kansas, Congress had
-already, four years ago, decided that Kansas
-could not have slavery, because it lay beyond
-the line, north of which slavery could not
-exist. Resolutions were passed in many of
-the Northern State Parliaments against the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill. The Parliament of
-Illinois sent one.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was quite clear to keen-sighted
-politicians that, while Douglas and his party
-pretended that they wanted to give the
-people of Kansas the choice between owning
-slaves and not doing so, what they
-really wanted was to force Kansas to have
-slaves. Those who supported the Missouri
-Congress declared that it was illegal to give
-Kansas the choice however she used it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span></p>
-
-<p>Events soon proved that Kansas was not
-to have any choice at all. Kansas had few
-inhabitants; but the opinion of the people
-of the State was against slavery. Next
-door to Kansas, however, on the east, was
-the slave-holding State of Missouri. From
-Missouri bands of armed men came into
-Kansas in order to vote for slavery at the
-election and to prevent the real voters from
-using their votes against it. Free fighting
-went on in the State. An election was held
-at which armed men kept away those who
-would have voted for freedom, and a pro-slavery
-man was chosen. But few of the
-people of Kansas had been allowed to vote.
-The free party met at another place afterwards,
-and a genuine popular vote elected
-an anti-slavery man. Civil war went on in
-Kansas for two years.</p>
-
-<p>Now the importance of these events is
-this. Up till now most people in the North
-had believed that slavery ought to be left
-alone, because it would gradually die out.
-The Kansas-Nebraska Bill and the Kansas
-election made it perfectly clear that the
-South was not going to let slavery die out;
-on the contrary, they wanted to spread it to
-strengthen themselves against the North.</p>
-
-<p>Douglas was member for Chicago, in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>north of Illinois. He came down to Illinois
-to win the State to his views, and made a
-series of speeches there. This at once called
-Lincoln to the fore. He saw more clearly,
-perhaps, than any man in America what the
-Kansas Bill meant. It meant that either
-North and South must separate, as the
-Abolitionists&mdash;that is, the party which held
-that slavery ought to cease to be&mdash;and some
-people in the South hoped; or that the
-North would have to force the South to
-abandon the attempt to spread slavery. He
-made a series of great speeches in Illinois,
-in which he made it quite clear that Douglas
-and his followers, and the men of the South,
-might say that they wanted to leave States
-free to have slavery or not as they chose,
-but what they really desired was to force
-them to have slavery whether they chose or
-not. “This declared indifference, but, as I
-must think, covert real zeal for the spread
-of slavery, I cannot but hate: I hate it because
-of the monstrous injustice of slavery itself ... I
-say that no man is good enough to govern
-another man without that man’s consent.
-Slavery is founded upon the selfishness of
-man’s nature; opposition to it, on his love
-of justice.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-<span class="smaller">DEFEAT OF THE LITTLE GIANT</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">L</span>incoln</span> had worked very hard in Illinois.
-All this year he was making
-speeches; educating the people of the
-State; helping them to understand the big
-questions before them; making things clear
-in his own mind by putting them into the
-clear and simple words that would carry
-their importance to the minds of others.</p>
-
-<p>A great meeting was held, summoned by
-the editors of the newspapers that were
-against the Kansas Bill; they invited prominent
-men from different parts of the
-country to come and address them.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln was among those who went, and
-his speech was by far the most important
-of all that were delivered there. He had
-not, indeed, intended to say anything; but
-he was roused by the weakness of those
-who did address the meeting. Springing
-to his feet, he poured out what was in his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>mind, and could not be kept back, in
-such burning and eloquent words that
-the reporters dropped their pencils and
-listened spellbound. The whole audience
-was carried away by excitement: it was
-one of the greatest speeches that Lincoln
-ever made, we are told by all who heard it,
-but there is no record of it. Lincoln himself
-spoke in a transport of enthusiasm:
-the words came, how he hardly knew; he
-could not afterwards write down what he
-had said. The reporters were so deeply
-moved that they only took down a sentence
-here and there. The speech was a warning
-to the growing Republican party: sentences
-were quoted and remembered.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">The North was indeed beginning to
-awaken to the need of uniting against
-slavery; but it took four years before it
-fully awoke. And as long as the North
-was divided the South was irresistible.
-When the presidential election came, in
-1856, the votes of the South carried the day.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo4"><img src="images/i_058.jpg" width="400" alt="Springing to his feet, he poured out what was in his mind" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">Springing to his feet, he poured out what was in his mind</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Had a strong man, with definite and
-wise views, been elected, had Lincoln been
-elected, the war between North and South
-that came four years later might have been
-prevented. But Lincoln’s fame had not yet
-travelled far beyond Illinois; he was not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>even nominated. Mr. Buchanan, the new
-President, called himself a Democrat: he
-believed in Douglas’s policy of State rights;
-but he was a tool in the hands of the
-South. Weak and undecided, his stupid
-administration made war inevitable. He
-did not satisfy the South; and he showed
-the North how great a danger they were
-in, so that when the next election came
-they were ready to act.</p>
-
-<p>The Republican party gradually grew
-strong. More and more Northern voters
-came to see that its policy, no extension of
-slavery, was the only right one. The pro-slavery
-party in Kansas continued to behave
-in the most violent way; civil war continued.</p>
-
-<p>In Congress, Charles Sumner made a
-number of eloquent speeches on what he
-called the “crime against Kansas”; and
-in them he openly attacked slavery. One
-day, as he was sitting in the members’
-reading-room, a Southern member called
-Brookes came in. Although there were
-several other people in the room, Brookes
-fell upon Sumner, and with his heavy walking-stick,
-which was weighted with lead at
-the end, beat him within an inch of his life.
-For the next four years Sumner was an
-invalid, and unable to take part in politics.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>This incident caused great indignation in
-the North; their indignation was heightened
-by the attempt to force slavery on Kansas,
-till it grew in very many cases to a real
-hatred of slavery itself.</p>
-
-<p>But there was still a large party in the
-North which did not disapprove of slavery.
-This party was led, of course, by Douglas.
-Douglas had been successful up till now,
-because he represented the ordinary man
-of the North, whose conscience was not
-yet awake, who did not see that slavery,
-in itself, was wrong. Lincoln had never
-really succeeded until now, because his conscience
-had always been awake, and the
-ordinary Northerner was not ready to follow
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The whole question of slavery was brought
-under discussion in the next year&mdash;1857&mdash;by
-the famous case of a negro called Dred Scott.
-Dred Scott claimed his freedom before the
-United States courts, because his master, a
-doctor, had taken him to live in the free State
-of Illinois. The chief-justice&mdash;Taney&mdash;was
-an extreme pro-slavery man. He was not
-satisfied with deciding the case against Dred
-Scott; he went much further, and declared
-that since a negro is property and not a
-person in the legal sense, he could not bring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>a case before an American court. A negro,
-he declared, has no rights which a white
-man is bound to respect.</p>
-
-<p>The South, of course, was delighted with
-this verdict. What it meant was this. When
-the Declaration of Independence declared
-that all men are equal, and possess right to
-life and liberty, what was intended was not
-all men, but all white men, since black men
-are not legally men. And yet free negroes
-had fought in the War of Independence, and
-signed the Declaration.</p>
-
-<p>To the North such reasoning was hateful.
-People like Mr. Seward of New York
-began to say, If slavery is part of the Constitution
-of America, there is a law that is
-higher than the Constitution&mdash;the moral law.
-Abraham Lincoln in a noble speech declared:
-“In some respects the black woman is
-certainly not my equal, but in her natural
-right to eat the bread she earns with her
-own hands she is my equal, and the equal of
-all others.” The point was, could a negro
-have rights? The Dred Scott decision declared
-“no,” the South shouted “no.” The
-Republican party said “yes.” In this same
-year a free election at last took place in
-Kansas; and a huge majority decided that
-the State should not hold slaves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span></p>
-
-<p>All these events showed that troublous
-times were coming.</p>
-
-<p>In the next year a set of speeches was
-made which showed people how things stood.
-In 1858 Lincoln stood against Douglas as
-candidate for the State of Illinois. Douglas
-was one of the most famous and popular
-men then living in America. He was far the
-cleverest man and the best speaker of his
-party; he stood for all those who, though
-they might not want to have slaves themselves,
-thought that slavery was not wrong;
-that black men were intended by a kind
-Providence to be useful to white men. If
-any State wanted slaves, let them have them&mdash;why
-not?</p>
-
-<p>As Lincoln said, “Douglas is so put up
-by nature, that a lash upon his back would
-hurt him, but a lash upon anybody else’s
-back does not hurt him.”</p>
-
-<p>Those who did not know Lincoln thought
-it absurd that he, an unknown man from
-the country, should dare to stand against
-Douglas, the “Little Giant.” But Lincoln
-was not afraid; he did not think of himself;
-he wanted people to hear what he had to say.
-He arranged with Douglas that they should
-hold a number of meetings together in Illinois.
-They arranged it in this way. At half the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>meetings Douglas spoke first for an hour;
-then Lincoln replied, speaking for an hour
-and a half, and Douglas answered him in
-half-an-hour’s speech. At the other half,
-Lincoln began and Douglas followed, Lincoln
-ending.</p>
-
-<p>You can imagine one of these meetings.
-A large hall, roughly built for the most part,
-the seats often made of planks laid on top
-of unhewn logs, packed with two or three
-thousand people, intensely eager to hear
-and learn. Some of them were already
-followers of Douglas, the most popular man
-in America: all of them had heard of
-the “Little Giant,” the cleverest speaker in
-the States. Immense cheering as Douglas
-rose to his feet. A small man with a big
-head: a handsome face with quickly moving,
-keen, dark eyes; faultlessly dressed. A well-bred
-gentleman, secure of himself&mdash;a lawyer
-with all his art at the end of his tongue: able
-to persuade any one that black was white,
-to wrap up anything in so many charming
-words that only the cleverest could see when
-one statement did not follow from another,
-when an argument was not a proof: quick
-to see and stab the weak points in any one
-else. A voice rich and mellow, various and
-well trained, pleased all who heard it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
-
-<p>For an hour he spoke, amid complete
-silence, only broken by outbursts of applause.
-When he ended, there were deafening cheers&mdash;then
-a pause, and “Lincoln,” “Lincoln,”
-from all parts of the hall.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln seemed an awkward countryman
-beside the senator. His tall body seemed
-too big for the platform, and his ill-fitting
-black clothes hung loosely upon it, as if
-they had been made for some one else.
-When he began to speak his voice was
-harsh and shrill. His huge hands, the
-hands of a labourer, with the big knuckles
-and red, ugly wrists, got knotted together
-as if nothing could unfix them. Soon,
-however, he became absorbed in what he
-was saying; he ceased to be nervous;
-everything seemed to change. As he forgot
-himself, his body seemed to expand
-and straighten itself, so that every one else
-looked small and mean beside him; his
-voice became deep and clear, reaching to the
-farthest end of the hall, and his face, that
-had appeared ugly, was lit up with an
-inner light that made it more than beautiful.
-The deep grey eyes seemed to each
-man in the hall to be looking at him and
-piercing his soul. The language was so
-simple that the most ignorant man in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>hall could follow it and understand. Everything
-was clear. There was no hiding under
-fine words; nothing was left out, nothing
-unnecessary was said. No one could doubt
-what Lincoln meant; and he was not going
-to let any one doubt what Douglas meant.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest debate of all was that at
-the meeting at Freeport. At Freeport
-Lincoln asked Douglas a question, against
-the advice of all his friends. He asked
-whether, if a State wanted not to have
-slavery, it could so decide? Lincoln knew
-that if Douglas said “No. A state which
-had slavery must keep it,” the people of
-Illinois would not vote for him, and he
-would lose this election. If he said “yes”
-he would be elected, and not Lincoln.
-Lincoln knew this; he knew that if Douglas
-said “yes,” he was safe, and he would say
-“yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you come in, then?” his friends
-asked him. “Why do you ask him this?
-If you do, Douglas is sure to get in. You
-are ruining your own chances.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not come in anywhere,” said Lincoln;
-“but that does not matter. What
-does matter is this. If Douglas says
-‘yes,’ as he will, he will get into the
-Senate now; but two years after this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>he will stand for election as President.
-If he says ‘yes’ now, the South will vote
-against him then, and he will not be
-elected. He must not be elected. No one
-who believes in spreading slavery must be
-elected. It does not matter about me.”</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln was quite right. He saw further
-than any one else. Douglas said “yes,” and
-he was elected for Illinois. But the Democratic
-party in the South, whose support
-had made him strong, began to
-distrust him. “Douglas,” said Lincoln, “is
-followed by a crowd of blind men; I want to
-make some of these blind men see.”</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln was defeated, but he did not
-think of himself. His speeches against
-Douglas were printed and read all over
-America. He was invited to speak in Ohio;
-and in the next year, in the beginning of
-1860, a society in New York asked him to
-come and give them an address on politics.</p>
-
-<p>A huge audience, in which were all the
-best known and most brilliant men of the
-day, gathered to hear him; an audience
-very much unlike any that he had addressed
-before. They were all anxious to see what
-he was like&mdash;this backwoodsman and farm-labourer,
-who had met the great Stephen
-Arnold Douglas and proved a match for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>him in argument; whose speeches had been
-printed to express the views of a whole party.</p>
-
-<p>His appearance was strange and impressive.
-When he stood up his height was
-astonishing, because his legs were very
-long, and when sitting he did not appear
-tall. His face, thin and marked by deep
-lines, was very sad. A mass of black hair
-was pushed back from his high forehead:
-his eyebrows were black too, and stood out
-in his pale face: his dark-grey eyes were
-set deep in his head. The mouth could
-smile, but now it was stern and sad. The
-face was unlike other faces: when he spoke
-it was beautiful, for he felt everything he
-said. Abraham Lincoln was a common man:
-he had had no advantages of birth, of training:
-he had known extreme poverty: for
-years he had struggled without success in
-mean and small occupations: he had no
-knowledge but what he had taught himself.
-But no one who heard him speak could think
-him common.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking now to an audience in which
-were the cleverest people in New York,
-people who had read everything and seen
-everything and been everywhere, who had
-had every opportunity that he had not, he
-impressed them as much as he had impressed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-the people of Illinois. He was one
-of the greatest orators that ever lived. His
-words went straight to the people to whom
-they were spoken. What he said was as
-straightforward and as certain as a sum in
-arithmetic, as easy to follow: and behind
-it all you felt that the man believed every
-word of what he said, and spoke because
-he must. The truth was in him.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s address in New York convinced
-the Republican party that here was the man
-they wanted.</p>
-
-<p>In 1860 there came the presidential election,
-always the most important event in
-American politics; this year more important
-than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>For the last half-century almost the
-Democratic party had been in power. They
-had been strong because they were united:
-they united the people of the South and
-those people in the North who thought
-that it was waste of time to discuss slavery,
-since slavery was part of the Constitution.
-Their policy on slavery had been to leave
-it alone. As long as they did this there
-was nothing to create another party in the
-North strong enough to oppose them. But
-when Douglas, in order to make his own
-position strong in the South, made slavery
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>practical politics by bringing in a bill to allow
-Kansas to have slaves; and when the judges
-in the Dred Scott case roused sympathy with
-the negroes by declaring that slaves were
-not men but property, then the question
-united the divided North into a strong
-Republican party in which all were agreed.
-There was to be no slavery north of Mason
-and Dixon’s line. The attempt to force
-slavery on Kansas split the Democratic
-party. One section was led by Douglas,
-who had gone as far as he could: he was
-not ready to force Kansas to have slaves, if
-she did not want them, because people from
-Missouri wanted her to have them. He saw
-that to force slavery on the North in this
-way would mean division and war, and therefore
-he refused to go any further. By this
-refusal Douglas lost his supporters in the
-South. They joined the section led by Jefferson
-Davis&mdash;the Southern candidate for the
-presidentship.</p>
-
-<p>Jefferson Davis was the true leader of the
-South. Douglas as well as Lincoln had
-begun life as the child of a poor pioneer:
-each had risen by his own abilities and by
-constant hard work. Jefferson Davis was
-a true aristocrat. He was the son of rich
-and educated parents. All his life he had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>been waited on by slaves and surrounded by
-every comfort. While Lincoln was ploughing
-or hewing wood, while Douglas was
-working hard at the bar, Davis went first
-to the university at Kentucky and then to
-the military academy at West Point, from
-which he passed to the army. He served as
-a lieutenant at the time of the Black Hawk
-war, and it is very likely that he came across
-Lincoln, who was serving as a volunteer.
-After serving seven years in the army he
-married and settled down as a cotton planter
-in Mississippi. His estates were worked by
-slaves, of course. To him the negro was an
-animal, quite different from the white man,
-meant by nature to be under him and to
-serve him. Black men, unlike white, did
-not exist for themselves, with the equal
-right to live possessed by a man, an insect,
-or a tree, but had been created solely
-to be useful to white men.</p>
-
-<p>No two men could be more unlike than
-Lincoln and Davis. The groundwork of
-Davis’ nature was an intense pride. A friend
-described him as “as ambitious as Lucifer
-and as cold as a lizard.” He was cold in
-manner and seldom laughed. Lincoln was
-entirely humble-minded, full of passionate
-longing to help the weak. To Lincoln
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>what was common was therefore precious.
-Jefferson Davis said the minority, and not
-the majority, ought to rule. And their looks
-were as unlike as their minds. Jefferson
-Davis, with his beautiful proud face, as cold
-and as handsome as a statue, expressed the
-utter contempt and scorn of the aristocrat
-for everything and every one beneath him.</p>
-
-<p>When the Democratic party met at Charleston
-to nominate their candidate for the
-presidentship, they were hopelessly divided.
-Douglas’s Freeport speech had set the South
-against him. For the last four years there
-had been a growing section which said that,
-as long as the South was fastened to the
-North, slavery was not safe. Now seven
-states, led by South Carolina, left the
-Democratic meeting and nominated Davis
-as their candidate.</p>
-
-<p>The Republican party met at Chicago.
-There was only one man strong, reasonable,
-and sane enough for every section of the
-party to accept. This was Abraham Lincoln.
-At the time of his nomination, Lincoln was
-playing barnball with his children in the
-field behind his house. When told that he
-had been chosen, he said, “You must be
-able to find some better man than me.” But
-he was ready to take up the difficult task.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>He knew that he could serve his country,
-and he was not afraid. He had a clear ideal
-before him&mdash;to preserve America as one
-united whole. He saw that war might come.
-As he had said, five years before, America
-could not endure for ever half slave and
-half free&mdash;it must be all free: and the
-South would not let slavery go without war.</p>
-
-<p>The election came in November. The
-result was that Lincoln was elected President.
-For four years the destiny of his
-country was in his hands.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE NEW PRESIDENT AND SECESSION</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">L</span>incoln’s</span> election was a thunderbolt
-to the South. It meant that the great
-question of slavery would have to be decided
-one way or another. Lincoln was a man
-who had opinions, and opinions in which
-he believed, for which he would fight; he
-would not let things drift as Buchanan did.
-Buchanan’s policy would have ended in
-allowing the South to separate itself from
-the North; the Southern politicians knew
-this, and they wanted Buchanan’s policy
-carried on, so as to make that separation
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Few men in the North, although many in
-the South, understood as clearly as Lincoln
-did the position of affairs. He saw that
-the time had come when active measures
-must be taken, a strong and decided
-policy maintained, if the Union was to be
-held together. He was a true patriot.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>He believed in the Union; he thought it
-a great and glorious thing. That North
-and South should be separated was to him
-like separating husband and wife; their
-strength and happiness lay in each other;
-they had grown together for eighty-four
-years; if they parted now, each must lose
-something it could never regain. He loved
-his country. He loved the South as well as
-the North. He believed that if the South
-tried to separate, the North would be
-justified, in the true interests of the American
-nation, in compelling her to remain.</p>
-
-<p>The great problem was now, as he saw:
-Could America hold together as one nation,
-half slave and half free? Could the Union
-be a real Union while there was this deep
-division, a division which it was now clear
-could not be got rid of, as the Northerners
-had hoped for so long, by the slow passage
-of time? Time alone would not induce the
-South to give up slavery. Slavery was a
-barbarous institution, degrading to the
-slaves and to those who owned them;
-the North could not accept it. If North
-and South were to hold together slavery
-must go. The great thing was to keep
-North and South united. This and this
-only was Lincoln’s great purpose. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>hated slavery, but he would not have compelled
-the South to give up slavery if he
-had believed that the Union could have
-been maintained without that. North and
-South must hold together whatever it cost;
-only so could each part of the nation, and
-the nation as a whole, attain the best that
-was possible for it.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s great difficulty was this. The
-South saw that the nation could not hold
-together for ever half slave and half free.
-Two years before Lincoln’s election, one
-of the members for South Carolina had
-written what was afterwards known as the
-Scarlet Letter. In it he declared, “We
-can make a revolution in the cotton States,”
-and there were many, even at that time,
-who shared his views. The South saw
-that, if they were to remain united to the
-North, slavery must go, and they were
-ready to separate from the North in order
-to keep slavery.</p>
-
-<p>But, while the South understood the position,
-the North did not. It did not understand
-it fully at the time of Lincoln’s election,
-or, indeed, until the end of the second
-year of the war. And because they did
-not understand they could not appreciate
-Lincoln’s policy, or support it as they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>ought to have done. All the time they
-criticised, blamed, and abused him, making
-his hard task harder.</p>
-
-<p>Not until after his death did all the
-Northerners see how great and how right
-he had been. Not until his death did
-Americans realise that had it not been for
-Lincoln the United States might have
-ceased to be.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s speeches had been plain and outspoken
-enough; the South was terrified
-by his election. They resolved on separation.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln, though elected in November 1860,
-did not actually become President until
-February 1861. During these three months
-he remained in the plain, yellow house at
-Springfield, his little office crowded every
-day with visitors who came to consult him,
-to advise him, or often merely to shake his
-hand. “Honest old Abe,” as they called
-him, had a joke or a kindly word for all of
-them. He was presented with many quaint
-gifts. An old woman came one day, and,
-after shaking hands with Lincoln, produced
-from under her huge cloak a vast pair of
-knitted stockings for the President to wear
-in winter. Lincoln thanked her graciously
-and led her out; then returning, he lifted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>up the stockings, and showing the enormous
-feet, said to his secretary, “The old
-lady seems to have guessed the latitude and
-longitude about right!”</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln spent the time reading and writing,
-drawing up memoranda, choosing his
-Cabinet, learning the difficult ins and outs
-of the new work before him. All these
-months he was thinking hard. His purpose
-was already clear: but the presidentship,
-always a heavy burden, had never been so
-heavy as it was to be for Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>Things grew more serious every day.
-The weakness of Buchanan, who had no
-plan or purpose, allowed the South to do
-as it chose. The only chance of avoiding
-war lay in firm action now; but it was not
-in Buchanan’s nature to be firm. He had
-been made President by the votes of the
-South because he was not firm, because he
-would allow them to do as they chose.
-They dreaded Lincoln because he was firm,
-and therefore acted while there was yet
-time.</p>
-
-<p>On December 20, 1860, the chief men of
-South Carolina met together and declared
-the Union to be dissolved. Posters appeared
-all over the State: the South was in a state
-of feverish excitement. Within the month
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>the States of Missouri, Alabama, Florida,
-Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas&mdash;the chief
-cotton-growing, slave-owning States&mdash;also
-declared themselves to be separated from
-the Union; and these six States joined
-with South Carolina to form what they
-called the Southern Confederation, independent
-of the North. They chose for
-their first President Jefferson Davis.</p>
-
-<p>Buchanan did not know what to do. The
-question was: Has a State any right to
-leave the Union? America, of course, is
-a Federation: at the time of the Declaration
-of Independence the thirteen States
-that then existed joined themselves together
-for ever, and created a common Federal
-Government for common purposes, with a
-President at its head. Lincoln would have
-said one State has no more right to leave
-the others than an English county has to
-declare that it is a separate kingdom, not
-bound by the common law. Buchanan said
-“no,” too; but he also said, if a State does
-leave, the Federal Government has no right
-to force it to stay: which meant a standstill.
-“You ought not to want to go; but
-if you do, we have no right to prevent
-you.” Buchanan’s one idea, indeed, was
-to let things drift.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
-
-<p>There was one great and immediate difficulty.
-In each of the coast States of the
-Union the Federal Government had armed
-forts: in South Carolina there were two
-important ones, Fort Moultrie and Fort
-Sumter, with a small garrison in each,
-commanded by Major Anderson. South
-Carolina demanded that the garrisons
-should be withdrawn. Now to withdraw
-the garrisons and abandon the forts was to
-admit that South Carolina had a right to
-leave the Union, and to recognise the
-Southern Confederation as independent of
-the Federal Government. To maintain the
-forts more forces must be sent. Anderson
-wrote to say that he was not strong enough
-to hold out against an attack. Buchanan
-did nothing. Anderson, believing that an
-attack was going to be made on Fort
-Moultrie, which he was too weak to defend,
-removed all his men to Fort Sumter.
-The militia of South Carolina at once
-occupied Fort Moultrie.</p>
-
-<p>In the second week of the new year, 1861,
-a Government vessel, the <i>Star of the West</i>,
-sailed into the harbour of Charleston to bring
-provisions for Anderson. The <i>South Carolina</i>,
-having attacked the <i>Star of the West</i>, fired
-on the United States flag which it carried,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>and drove it out of the harbour. The Confederate
-Government, led by Jefferson Davis,
-then demanded that Fort Sumter should be
-given up to them. When Anderson refused,
-it was blockaded by much superior forces,
-and by the 12th of April it was taken by
-General Beauregard.</p>
-
-<p>Under these circumstances, when war was
-at hand, when half the nation was ready to
-take up arms against the other half, Lincoln
-took up the burden of office. It was a
-burden, indeed, which no ordinary man could
-have borne. Buchanan had simply looked
-on while rebellion was preparing itself; for
-Lincoln was the task of quelling it. But the
-fact of rebellion was not his greatest difficulty.
-This was the disunion of the North.
-One section&mdash;the Abolitionists&mdash;rejoiced at
-the secession of the South. “We shall no
-more be chained to the slave-owners.”
-Another section thought that, if the South
-wanted to go, why not let them.</p>
-
-<p>There was as yet only a very small section
-able to agree with Lincoln. Lincoln hated
-slavery but not slave-owners. He loved the
-South as much as the North. It was agony
-to him to know his country divided against
-itself. Well might he say, in the speech he
-made on leaving his old home at Springfield
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>for ever, “There is a task before me greater
-than that which rested upon Washington.”</p>
-
-<p>It was very natural that men who had
-not known Lincoln should fear to have the
-fate of their country at so critical a time
-entrusted to a man of so small experience.
-But any one who knew Lincoln felt absolute
-confidence in him. Years of difficulty
-and disappointment, of constant struggle
-against every kind of obstacle, had made
-him what he was: clear-eyed to see where
-the right was; steadfast and unflinching to
-pursue it; tender-hearted and generous to
-sympathise with all those who stumbled on
-the way.</p>
-
-<p>Few people, indeed, understood him. In
-the years to come nearly all at one time or
-another abused him and distrusted him, and
-blamed him when things went wrong. For
-four years he bore the whole burden of a
-great responsibility; patiently and silently
-he endured disappointment and reproach.
-In the end he could say that if Washington
-had made America one, he had remade it so
-that it could never again be unmade.</p>
-
-<p>The speech he made when he entered on
-his duties as President showed how little
-bitterness there was in his heart towards
-the South. He said, “We are not enemies,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>but friends. We must not be enemies.
-Though passion may have strained, it must
-not break, our bonds of affection. The
-mystic chords of memory, stretching from
-every battlefield and patriot grave to every
-heart and hearthstone all over this broad
-land, will yet swell the chorus of the
-Union when touched, as surely they will
-be, by the better angels of our nature.”</p>
-
-<p>The attack on Sumter and its fall made
-war inevitable. Lincoln was no Buchanan.
-War was horrible; civil war&mdash;war between
-men of the same country, between friends,
-often between relations&mdash;most horrible of
-all. But he could not, at whatever cost,
-allow the Union, for which his countrymen
-had fought so heroically eighty-four years
-ago, which had stood so long for such a
-high ideal of freedom all over the world&mdash;he
-could not allow the Union to be destroyed
-without fighting to preserve it. To him the
-secession of the Southern States meant
-something as unnatural as a separate kingdom
-in Scotland would be to us, and a
-kingdom based on something which we
-thought wholly wrong.</p>
-
-<p>“The question is,” he said, “whether in a
-free Government the minority have a right
-to break it up whenever they choose.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>He declared that they had no such right.
-The whole population of the slave-holding
-States was much smaller than that of
-the free States, and among those States,
-while seven had seceded, eight remained at
-least nominally in the Union; and even in
-the seceding States themselves, there was a
-party in each that was ready to remain
-faithful to the Union, and not prepared to
-take up arms against it.</p>
-
-<p>They wanted war: their attack on Fort
-Sumter was a call to arms. They wanted
-war: they should have it. In the long run
-the North was bound to win: its population
-was half as great again, and its resources as
-much superior.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the first act of Lincoln’s Government
-was to call for 75,000 volunteers.</p>
-
-<p>The attack upon Sumter and Lincoln’s
-call to arms roused the North from its
-apathy. Excitement grew when the 7th
-Massachusetts regiment, passing through
-Baltimore on its way to headquarters, was
-violently attacked by the mob: when the
-Southern army, already in the field, captured
-Harper’s Ferry and seized the Union arsenal
-at Gosport.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-<span class="smaller">THE WAR</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">W</span>ar</span> began in Virginia. West Virginia
-was free, East Virginia slave-holding;
-the State was the natural meeting-place for
-the two armies. On the 21st July they met
-at Bull Run: the engagement could hardly
-be called a battle&mdash;on neither side was there
-any order or discipline. More than once
-during the day the Southern army seemed to
-be beaten, but it rallied, and the Federalists,
-as the Union soldiers were called, broke into
-a disgraceful retreat, which became an awful
-panic. The fugitives poured into Washington,
-haggard and dust-stained: everything
-seemed lost. Lincoln did not go to bed all
-night; he paced up and down in his room,
-expecting that the victorious Confederate
-army would march upon Washington, and
-the war be at an end. It did not come.
-The opportunity was lost. A battle had
-been gained; that was all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
-
-<p>The moral effect of the battle of Bull Run
-was very great indeed. The South thought
-the war was over, the North saw that it
-had only begun.</p>
-
-<p>At first, the Confederates seemed to have
-great advantages. The army was the one
-profession for a Southern gentleman; nearly
-all their young men were trained at the
-military academy at West Point, and a great
-many of the officers of the United States
-army had been Southerners. These men
-now left the Union army and gave their
-services to the Confederates; among them
-was General Robert Lee, who became
-General-in-Chief of the Confederate army.
-Lincoln’s difficulties were greatly increased
-by the fact that so many officers and men
-went over to the Confederates. At the
-beginning, the South had a larger and better-trained
-army in the field; and at first there
-were plenty of volunteers. But after Bull
-Run, she thought the war was finished; and
-events proved that, in a long war, the North
-must win by reason of her greater staying
-power.</p>
-
-<p>The South was as enthusiastic as the
-North, and at the beginning better prepared,
-but not equal in resources of any
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>sort. The South was entirely dependent on
-agriculture; all the necessaries of life came
-from the North and from Europe. Whereas
-the South had to import all her ammunition,
-the North had powder-magazines of her own,
-and a people of mechanics. And the Confederacy
-was soon to find that men are useless
-without arms. Great sufferings were endured,
-wonderful invention and patience was
-shown, on both sides there was great heroism;
-but in the end the resources of the North
-decided the day.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln threw all his energy into the task
-of getting ready an army, and in a short
-time the Northern soldier was as well
-trained and equipped as the Southern.</p>
-
-<p>The battle of Bull Run roused the North:
-quickened by shame, the people were ready
-to fight to the bitter end. For the next two
-years, however, they were disheartened by
-continual disaster: army after army was
-destroyed, position after position lost: gloom
-descended on the nation. In the dark times
-of defeat men turned upon Lincoln and
-blamed him for everything.</p>
-
-<p>His position was difficult indeed. As head
-of the State, he was also commander of the
-army; but he had to entrust the actual management<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-of the campaigns to others. He
-followed and understood their tactics, but
-was too wise to try to direct their movements.
-Only occasionally did he offer advice&mdash;wise
-advice, which his generals were not
-always wise enough to accept. At first the
-generals were not men of great ability.
-M’Clellan, the commander, drilled his army
-in a wonderful way, but never used it to any
-effect. In the Virginian campaign of 1861
-and 1862 he threw away numberless opportunities.
-His place was taken by Burnside
-at the end of 1862; but not until the rise
-of Ulysses S. Grant did Lincoln discover
-a really great commander. The generals
-quarrelled with one another, and all were
-ready to complain of the President. Lincoln’s
-difficulties were increased by the fact that
-many people, when they found that the North
-was not going to conquer immediately, said
-that the war was a mistake: the South
-ought to be allowed to go if it wanted to.
-Lincoln did not think it right to let the South
-go: and because to keep it was proving
-difficult, was never to him a reason for ceasing
-to do what he saw to be right.</p>
-
-<p>The newspapers abused Lincoln because
-the war, instead of being finished in three
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>months, seemed likely to last for years. For
-long his own Cabinet was hardly loyal to
-him: each member thought he could manage
-affairs better himself. Seward, who was
-Chief Secretary, thought Lincoln stupid, and
-was anxious to arrange everything; but as
-experience of his chief taught him he became
-Lincoln’s devoted admirer. Chase the
-Treasurer plotted against him: Stanton the
-War Secretary openly declared that “things
-would go all right but for the imbecile at the
-head.” Stanton had no sense of humour, and
-an ungovernable temper. He did not understand
-Lincoln at all for a long time: his
-jokes puzzled and annoyed him, and he used
-to jump up and down with rage. He did
-not see that to a man of a deeply melancholy
-nature like Lincoln, a dreamer and
-something of a poet, some outlet, some
-way of escaping from himself, was necessary.
-Lincoln was marvellously patient with
-Stanton, and won his deep affection. The
-Cabinet might criticise; but Lincoln’s firm
-will dominated them all. The policy of the
-Government was the President’s policy.</p>
-
-<p>No quality is so hard to appreciate, until
-it succeeds, as patience; and for two years
-Lincoln was patient, and few understood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span></p>
-
-<p>England and France were inclined to recognise
-the Confederacy. The English point
-of view was not one which reflected any glory
-on the nation. Lord Palmerston said, “We
-do not like slavery, but we want cotton.”
-And a poem in <i>Punch</i> expressed the general
-point of view, against which only a few
-Englishmen protested&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Though with the North we sympathise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">It must not be forgotten</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That with the South we’ve stronger ties,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which are composed of cotton,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whereof our imports mount unto</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A sum of many figures;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And where would be our calico</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But for the toil of niggers?”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>France agreed with England. Under such
-circumstances there was a great danger
-that, unless the North proved itself able to
-cope with the Rebellion, England or France
-might send help to the Confederates. For
-two years the North did not prove this;
-for two years it seemed, except to the
-very far-seeing, almost certain that the
-South would win.</p>
-
-<p>The Northern plan of campaign was to
-attack and close round the Confederacy:
-to do this it was necessary to cross the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>Potomac river, and clear away the Southern
-armies that blockaded it. The Potomac
-was the centre of operations, while fighting
-went on constantly in Virginia and
-Missouri. Everything went against the
-North.</p>
-
-<p>On the 9th of August a desperate encounter
-took place at Wilson’s Creek, at
-which the Union army lost nearly two
-thousand men, including prisoners, and
-large supplies of arms and ammunition.
-In September the Confederates won a victory
-at Lexington, and in October the
-Federal troops were defeated at Ball’s
-Bluff.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s plan was gradually to shut
-the South in, driving it behind its own
-boundaries by means of the armies invading
-from north and west, and blockading
-the ports from the sea. So far the first
-half of the plan was not successful. But
-the Civil War was won to a very large extent
-by the Northern navy. By blockading
-the Southern ports it prevented the South
-from getting supplies from Europe; and
-since the South depended for supplies of
-every sort from abroad, it was in a desperate
-position when cut off from the sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span></p>
-
-<p>More fortunate on sea than on land,
-Lincoln found in David Farragut an admiral
-almost as great as Nelson. Farragut
-was a Southerner by birth, but he had served
-for fifty years in the United States navy,
-and refused to desert it now. Patriotism
-to him meant devotion not to the pride but
-to the best interests of his country, and he
-thought that North and South could only
-attain their best interests when united. In
-April the Northern army suffered a severe
-defeat on land at the battle of Shiloh&mdash;the
-most disastrous yet experienced; but
-the news was balanced by the tidings of
-Farragut’s capture of New Orleans. The
-fighting in the harbour was tremendous.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t flinch from that fire, boys,” cried
-the admiral; “there is a hotter fire for
-those who don’t do their duty!”</p>
-
-<p>Inspired by his example, his men did not
-flinch, and the town was captured. The
-North needed all the encouragement such
-naval victory could give it, for things were
-going very badly. Stonewall Jackson, the
-Southern commander, carried everything
-before him in Virginia. Washington was
-in danger; there was a panic in the capital.
-Jackson, however, did not want to attack
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>Washington. His plan was to compel
-M’Clellan, who was slowly moving south
-to attack the Confederate capital at Richmond,
-to turn north again.</p>
-
-<p>There was fighting all through June;
-Jackson had been joined by Lee, the
-Confederate Commander-in-Chief. On the
-1st of July a battle was fought at Malvern
-Hill. Lee and Jackson were defeated.
-M’Clellan ought now to have pushed on
-to Richmond, the Confederate capital, instead
-of which, with extraordinary stupidity,
-he continued to retreat.</p>
-
-<p>In August, the second battle of Bull Run
-resulted in another victory for the South.
-Both sides lost an extraordinary number
-of men. The panic in Washington grew
-more acute when, early in September, Lee
-prepared to invade Maryland. M’Clellan
-again delayed when he ought to have
-forced an engagement. The people of
-Maryland received the Southern army very
-coldly. On the 17th the armies met at
-Antietam. The battle was not really decisive;
-the losses of the North were as
-great as those of the South; but it put
-an end to their invasion. Lee recrossed
-the Potomac River to Virginia. M’Clellan
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>again wasted time. He waited six weeks
-before pursuing Lee. In November M’Clellan
-was at last superseded.</p>
-
-<p>Events had gradually led Lincoln to see
-the necessity of taking one great step&mdash;the
-freeing of the slaves. The question
-of slavery was at the bottom of the war;
-it was the great division between North
-and South. Two reasons led Lincoln to
-take this step now. One was that he
-knew the negroes when free would fight,
-for the most part, for the North; and the
-North needed every help she could find.
-The other was the great difficulty of knowing
-what to do with the negro slaves
-which fell into the hands of the conquerors
-of any part of Southern territory. On the
-22nd of September, very soon after the
-news of the battle of Antietam and Lee’s
-retreat from Maryland had arrived, Lincoln
-called a meeting of his Cabinet. None
-of them knew why he had summoned
-them.</p>
-
-<p>They found the President reading Artemus
-Ward; one story amused him so
-much that he read it aloud. They all
-laughed a great deal except Stanton, who
-could never see a joke, and did not understand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-that Lincoln must have broken down
-altogether under the fearful strain of all he
-had to bear, if he had not been able sometimes
-to forget himself. When he had
-finished reading the story, the President’s
-face grew grave again. He drew from his
-pocket a large sheet of foolscap, covered
-with his straight, regular writing, and
-read it to the Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">It was the Emancipation Proclamation,
-which declared that, after January 1st of
-the coming year, all slaves were to be
-free; that Government would pay some
-compensation to loyal owners. No one
-dared oppose Lincoln when his mind was
-made up. His reason for introducing
-Emancipation now was, that he thought
-it would help the cause of Union, and
-that cause was to him sacred beyond
-everything. “As long as I am President,”
-he said later, “this war shall be
-carried on for the sole purpose of restoring
-the Union. But no human power
-can subdue this rebellion without the use
-of the Emancipation policy.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo5"><img src="images/i_094.jpg" width="400" alt="Lincoln reading the Emancipation Proclamation to his Cabinet" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">Lincoln reading the Emancipation Proclamation to his Cabinet</p>
-
-<p class="p2">His first object in everything was to
-hold the American nation together as one
-whole. But, at the same time, he detested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-slavery as much as any man. “If
-slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong.”
-An opportunity had now come when to
-strike a blow at slavery was to assist
-the Union cause. By freeing the blacks,
-Lincoln provided the North with a new
-resource, at the time when the South had
-nowhere to turn to for fresh resources. By
-declaring the abolition of slavery an unchangeable
-part of the Union, which the
-South must accept before peace could be
-made, he won the sympathy of Europe
-for the North, and prevented it from sending
-help to the South at a time when
-such help would have changed the balance
-of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>Up till now both England and France
-had shown themselves ready to sympathise
-with the South. English newspapers abused
-Lincoln and the North in the most violent
-language. In the English dockyards vessels
-had been built and equipped which were
-used by the South as privateers to do great
-damage to the Northern navy. One of
-these was the famous <i>Alabama</i>. But when
-the war was a war against slavery, English
-feeling was all on the side of the North.</p>
-
-<p>The United States was made a really free
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>country: slavery, which had made such a
-name a mockery, was wiped off the statute
-book.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln showed rare judgment and
-courage in doing what he did at this time.
-At first a large section in the North was
-opposed to Emancipation, but gradually all
-united in admiring the wisdom of Lincoln’s
-action. The South knew that if they were
-conquered slavery was gone. And however
-black things might look, Lincoln and
-the North were not going to give in till
-they did conquer. They had set their teeth;
-they were going to fight to the bitter end.</p>
-
-<p>M’Clellan had been dismissed, but his
-successors were not much more successful.
-In December Burnside threw away
-thousands of lives in an attempt to scale
-Mary’s Heights. Men were shot down in
-heaps by the enemy, and the army fell into
-a panic; a battle against overwhelming
-odds ended in a complete defeat. Lincoln’s
-heart bled for the loss of so many splendid
-citizens: there was deep indignation in
-Washington, much of it vented against the
-President.</p>
-
-<p>The darkest moment of the war came
-when, in May, the news of the battle of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>Chancellorsville reached the Government.
-Hooker met Jackson: a long and fearfully
-bloody battle followed. There were dreadful
-losses on both sides: another valuable opportunity
-of pressing south was lost. In the
-battle “Stonewall” Jackson was killed, shot
-accidentally by his own men; a disastrous
-loss to the Southern side, though the North
-was defeated.</p>
-
-<p>All hope seemed gone from the North.</p>
-
-<p>Up till now the North had lost more than
-the South. It had suffered most of all from
-a lack of really able commanders. Now,
-however, Lincoln discovered a really great
-general in Ulysses S. Grant, and from this
-time on the fortune of the war began to
-change.</p>
-
-<p>The North was richer: it had more men,
-money, and resources to draw on; in a long
-struggle the South was bound to be worn
-out. Grant saw this and planned accordingly.
-Grant had distinguished himself
-early in the war by the capture of Fort
-Henry and Fort Donelson, on the Mississippi,
-in February 1862; in the following April he
-had driven the Confederates back to Corinth
-after one of the most expensive battles of
-the war. Grant was a man of the most
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>reckless personal courage; as a general
-his great fault was that he exposed his
-men needlessly. Complaints were early
-made of him to Lincoln; but Lincoln’s
-wonderful eye discerned a great soldier in
-Grant. “I can’t spare that man; he fights.”
-Later he was told that Grant drank. “Pray
-tell me what brand of whisky he takes,
-that I may send a barrel to each of my
-other generals.”</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln and Grant always understood
-each other. Each was a man of intense
-strength of character, given to doing things
-rather than talking of them. Grant had
-not Lincoln’s tenderness of heart, or the
-beauty of his pure and generous nature;
-but he had his power of concentrating his
-whole mind upon the task in hand. He
-knew Lincoln’s secret: “Work, work, is
-the main thing.”</p>
-
-<p>The battle of Chancellorsville, May 1863,
-was for the North the darkest moment of
-the war; things were never so dark again.
-Only Lincoln’s supreme faith and courage
-could have risen from such a series of
-defeats unshaken. The newspapers were
-full of abuse of the President; plots were
-on foot against him to prevent his re-election<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
-when the time came. In February
-he had lost his son Willie after a long and
-painful illness. But he never quailed.</p>
-
-<p>And his patience was at last to be rewarded.
-After Chancellorsville his unflinching
-belief in the justice of his course, in
-spite of opposition and discontent, was to
-be rewarded: he was to look, if only for
-a moment, upon an America not only free
-but united.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-<span class="smaller">VICTORY</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>fter</span> Chancellorsville the South thought
-that all was won, and a movement was
-set on foot to attack Washington. Lee
-marched north with an army that, though
-only half fed, was full of enthusiasm, and on
-July 1 took up his position at Gettysburg,
-where he was faced by the Federal army
-under General Meade. The battle lasted
-three days, and the slaughter was terrific;
-in spite of the desperate determination of
-the Confederates, the day ended in a victory
-for the Union.</p>
-
-<p>Lee was driven back, and forced to retreat
-into Virginia. The invasion was at an
-end. The victory, though brilliant, was not
-followed up, perhaps because of the heavy
-losses of the Union army; but it was the
-turning-point of the war. Washington was
-never again in such danger; the Confederates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-had lost the one great opportunity
-of attack since Bull Run.</p>
-
-<p>Deep national thankfulness was felt at this,
-the first great victory for the North. The
-battlefield was only a few miles from the
-capital, and many of the citizens and the
-most prominent men of the town assembled
-to perform a service for the dead who had
-fallen there. Lincoln was called upon to
-speak. He had not prepared anything, but
-the short speech which he gave made a
-deep impression upon all who heard it, and
-puts into very noble words the thoughts
-that were always present to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Fourscore and seven years ago, our
-fathers brought forth a new nation upon
-this continent, conceived in liberty and dedicated
-to the proposition that all men are
-created equal. 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 meet to dedicate a
-portion of it as a final resting-place of those
-who here gave their lives that the nation
-might live. It is altogether fitting and
-proper that we should do this. But, in a
-larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot
-consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>The brave men, living and dead, who
-struggled here, have consecrated it far above
-our power to add or detract. The world will
-take 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 that
-they have thus far so nobly carried on. It
-is rather for us to be dedicated here to the
-great task remaining before us: that from
-these honoured dead we take increased devotion
-for the cause for which they here gave
-the last full measure of devotion; that we
-here highly resolve that these dead shall
-not have died in vain; that this nation shall,
-under God, have a new birth of freedom, and
-that the government of the people, by the
-people, and for the people, shall not perish
-from the earth.”</p>
-
-<p>In words like these, Lincoln inspired the
-people of the North to see the greatness of
-the cause for which they were fighting; they
-were fighting for liberty, for a free government
-of free men, for a United America that
-might be to the world a pattern of such a
-free government. If the South won, if America
-were a house divided for ever against
-itself, one half would have slavery; if
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>the North won, and America were a
-whole again, slavery was gone; the Declaration
-of Independence, proclaiming the
-equal rights of all men to life and liberty,
-would be for the first time fully realised.</p>
-
-<p>And encouragement came at last. On
-the Fourth of July, on Independence Day,
-Grant telegraphed to Lincoln the news
-of the capture of Vicksburg. In the
-beginning of May Grant had defeated
-Pemberton, the Confederate general, and
-shut him up in the town with his great
-army. After an unsuccessful assault in
-the end of May, he sat down patiently
-before the town, prepared to wear out
-its resistance. After great sufferings, the
-famishing garrison surrendered; Pemberton
-and 30,000 men, whom the South
-could but ill spare, were prisoners of war.
-Hundreds of cannon and thousands of
-muskets fell into the victor’s hands. Vicksburg
-was a position of importance, the key
-to the Mississippi. Lincoln could now say,
-“The Father of Waters again goes unvexed
-to the sea.”</p>
-
-<p>The joy in the North over these two
-victories was intense. The drooping spirits
-began to rise again; and as things went
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>better, men turned with new confidence to
-the patient man whose courage had never
-failed him. With renewed spirit the North
-set itself to the great task before it.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">Lincoln now had men who were able to
-carry out great designs. By the end of
-1863 things looked hopeful. The army had
-a nucleus of veterans who had received the
-best possible training, and a set of generals
-whose positions had been won not
-by political influence, but by hard work.
-Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan were men of
-ability, experience, and power.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo6"><img src="images/i_104.jpg" width="400" alt="Lincoln discussing the plan of campaign with General Grant" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">Lincoln discussing the plan of campaign with General Grant</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The plan of campaign for 1864, drawn
-up, under Lincoln’s advice, by Grant and
-Sherman, was masterly; carried out magnificently,
-it led to the complete triumph of the
-North. It was the complete development
-of Lincoln’s earlier plans. Grant, with the
-army of the west, was to face Lee in
-Virginia and drive him south; finally,
-to capture Richmond, the Confederate headquarters,
-and force Lee to yield. Sherman,
-marching south and east, was to carry the
-war into the heart of the Confederacy; to
-follow General Johnson, push him to the
-sea, and capture him. “We intend,” said
-Sherman, “to fight Joseph Johnson till he is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>satisfied.” Then Sherman, marching north,
-was to co-operate with Grant by cutting off
-Lee’s retreat. Meantime Sheridan was to
-deal with General Early in the Shenandoah
-valley, west and south of Washington.</p>
-
-<p>By May 1864 Grant crossed the Potomac
-and entered the wild district, full of hills
-and woods and undergrowth, known as the
-Wilderness, where the Union armies had
-suffered so many defeats. Grant saw that
-the only thing was to wear the Southern
-army out by hard fighting; and he fought
-hard all summer. He lost some thirty thousand
-men in the Wilderness. His policy
-was to bear so continuously on the enemy
-that they, having fewer men, and less possibility
-of recruiting, must be worn out.
-Slowly, with an immense loss of life on
-both sides, Grant forced Lee south.</p>
-
-<p>Sherman meantime was fighting his way
-to Georgia. His task was as difficult as
-Grant’s. The country was wild, and well
-adapted for concealing the enemy. It was
-impossible for him to communicate with the
-rest of the army.</p>
-
-<p>After an expedition into Alabama, Sherman
-started on his “March to the Sea.”
-Johnson disputed every inch of the way.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>There was incessant skirmishing, but Sherman
-advanced step by step.</p>
-
-<p>While Sherman and Grant were thus
-slowly wearing down the resistance of the
-enemy, the Unionists were once more encouraged
-by a brilliant naval success. In
-August Farragut came victorious out of a
-terrific fight in Mobile Bay. Entering the
-harbour in spite of the line of mines, he
-“plucked victory out of the very jaws of
-defeat.”</p>
-
-<p>Sherman was now besieging Atlanta, which
-he captured on September 1. About the
-same date Sheridan defeated Early at Winchester
-in the Shenandoah Valley.</p>
-
-<p>These successes decided the presidential
-election. Lincoln had been unanimously
-nominated as the Republican candidate,
-“not,” as he said, “because they have decided
-I am the greatest or best man in
-America, but rather they have concluded
-that it is not wise to swop horses while
-crossing a river, and have further concluded
-that I am not so poor a horse that they
-might not make a botch of it in trying to
-swop.” Against him the Democratic party,
-whose main principle was opposition to the
-war, supported ex-General M’Clellan, declaring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-“the war is a failure.” The Democrats
-found their main supporters among
-those (and they were fairly numerous) who
-disliked Lincoln’s Emancipation proclamation.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln made no efforts to secure his re-election.
-He had been before the nation as
-President for four years: his policy was
-tried, his opinions known. Even M’Clellan
-did not dare to propose to abandon the
-Union. On that point the North was now
-united, and that being so the successes of
-September made Lincoln’s re-election practically
-certain. Out of 233 electoral votes
-Lincoln received 212; he had a majority in
-every free State save one. The election was
-a complete triumph for the President.</p>
-
-<p>The noble words of the address which
-he delivered on taking up his duties for
-a second time mark the spirit in which
-he celebrated that triumph. “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 that may achieve
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>and cherish a just and lasting peace among
-ourselves and with all nations.”</p>
-
-<p>On November 16 Sherman marched on by
-Atlanta. By December he had reached
-Savannah and began to bombard the city.
-It surrendered on December 21, and Sherman
-wrote to Lincoln: “I beg to present to
-you, as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah.”
-Leaving Savannah early in the
-New Year, 1865, the army marched, ravaging,
-through South Carolina. Columbia was
-burned and Charleston captured. By March,
-Sherman was in North Carolina and in
-communication with Grant. The net was
-ready to be drawn round the Confederate
-army.</p>
-
-<p>Grant meantime was bearing steadily on.
-The losses of the Union armies were enormous,
-and made the President’s tender
-heart bleed. Grant began to be hampered
-by the inferior quality of his troops, and
-during the summer months matters seemed
-to be going ill with the North. In September,
-however, Sheridan inflicted a series
-of defeats upon Early in the Shenandoah
-Valley, and on October 18 vanquished him
-decisively at Cedar Creek.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining Confederate army, under
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>Hood, was defeated at Nashville in the
-West, and now Lee’s was the only army in
-the field. The Confederacy was “surrounded
-by a band of fire.” The sea was in the hands
-of the Union; the Mississippi shut off any
-help from the coast. Sherman had harried
-Georgia and Carolina, destroying their supplies;
-Sheridan had raided Virginia; Grant
-was at the gates of Richmond.</p>
-
-<p>Through the whole summer of 1864 and
-the winter of 1865 Grant besieged Richmond.
-There were indecisive engagements, but the
-armies did no more than “feel” each other.
-With the spring, however, Grant took the
-offensive again. On March 31 Sheridan
-gained a brilliant victory at Five Forks,
-and this enabled Grant to break Lee’s lines.
-On April 3 the Stars and Stripes floated
-over Richmond. On April 9 Lee and his
-army surrendered to Grant at Appomatox.</p>
-
-<p>The war was at an end.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln had been with Grant’s army during
-the closing days of March; he entered
-Richmond on April 3. Everywhere the
-negroes saluted him as their liberator, kneeling
-on the ground before him and clasping
-his knees: “May de Lawd bress and keep
-you, Massa Presidum Linkum.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-<span class="smaller">“O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN!”</span></h2></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">N</span>o</span> one had suffered more deeply during
-the war than the President. His purpose
-never faltered. Even at the moment
-when success seemed farthest distant, his
-resolve stood firm; cost what it might the
-Union must be preserved. When almost
-every other man despaired of the Northern
-cause, Lincoln’s invincible faith in the right
-and justice of their purpose sustained his
-country.</p>
-
-<p class="p15b">To attain that purpose thousands of lives
-had to be sacrificed; but the purpose
-was worth the loss of thousands of lives.
-Yet Lincoln’s heart bled for every one of
-them.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<a id="illo7"><img src="images/i_110.jpg" width="400" alt="Lincoln visited all the divisions of his army in turn" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption no-indent">Lincoln visited all the divisions of his army in turn</p>
-
-<p class="p2">All day long he received visits from
-distracted relations, mothers and wives
-asking him to pardon their sons or husbands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-in prison as deserters or captured
-from the enemy; asking for tidings of
-their beloved ones at the front. His
-generals complained that he undermined
-the discipline of the army by pardoning
-what he called his “leg” cases&mdash;cases where
-men had run away before the enemy. “If
-Almighty God gives a man a cowardly
-pair of legs, how can he help their running
-away with him?” said Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>The story of William Scott is a case which
-shows the way in which Lincoln used to
-act. William Scott was a young boy from
-a Northern farm, who, after marching for
-forty-eight hours without sleep, offered to
-stand on guard duty for a sick comrade.
-Worn out, he fell asleep, and was condemned
-to be shot for being asleep on
-duty in face of the enemy. Lincoln made
-it his custom to visit all the divisions of
-his army in turns, and, as it happened,
-two days before the execution he was
-with the division in which Willie Scott was,
-and heard of the case. He went to see
-the boy, and talked to him about his home
-and his mother. As he was leaving the
-prison tent he put his hands on the lad’s
-shoulders, and said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“My boy, you are not going to be shot
-to-morrow.... I am going to trust you
-and send you back to your regiment.
-But I have been put to a great deal
-of trouble on your account. I have come
-here from Washington, where I had a
-great deal to do. Now, what I want to
-know is, how are you going to pay my
-bill?”</p>
-
-<p>Willie did not know what to say: perhaps
-he could get his friends to help him, he said
-at last.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Lincoln, “friends cannot pay
-it; only one man in the world can pay it,
-and that is William Scott. If from this
-day on William Scott does his duty, my
-bill is paid.”</p>
-
-<p>William Scott never forgot these words.
-Just before his death in one of the later
-battles of the war, he asked his comrades
-to tell President Lincoln that he had never
-forgotten what he had said.</p>
-
-<p>All the time, people who did not know the
-President threw on his shoulders all the
-blame for the long continuance of the war.
-Until the last year of the war, the newspapers
-abused him continually. The horrible loss
-of life in Grant’s last campaign was laid to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>his charge. Only those who came to the
-President to ask his help in their own suffering,
-understood what his suffering was; he
-suffered with each of them&mdash;he suffered with
-the South as well as the North. After
-Antietam, he had said, “I shall not live
-to see the end; this war is killing me.”
-The crushing burden he had borne so long
-and patiently had bent even his strong
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>But it had not been borne in vain. The
-time seemed at last to have come when all
-America would understand how much they
-owed to the patient endurance of the President.
-And there was work still to be done
-which needed all his wisdom. The South
-was conquered. It had to be made one with
-the North. The pride of the conquerors had
-to be curbed, the bitterness of the conquered
-softened.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln returned from Richmond to Washington,
-in his heart the profound resolve “to
-bind up the nation’s wounds” as he, and only
-he, could do it.</p>
-
-<p>April 14 was Good Friday, and a day of
-deep thankfulness in the North. In the
-morning Lincoln held a Cabinet meeting, at
-which General Grant was present. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>question of reconstruction, of making one
-whole out of the divided halves, was discussed.
-Some of the Cabinet were anxious
-to wreak vengeance on the South, to
-execute the leaders of the rebellion. Such
-was not Lincoln’s view.</p>
-
-<p>“Enough lives have been sacrificed. We
-must extinguish our resentments if we
-expect harmony and union.”</p>
-
-<p>His noble patriotism could still say to the
-South, “We are not enemies, but friends.”
-His life was now even more precious to the
-South than to the North.</p>
-
-<p>After the Cabinet meeting, Lincoln spent
-some time in talking with his son Robert,
-who had returned from the field with General
-Grant, under whom he had served as a
-captain. In the afternoon he went for a
-drive with Mrs. Lincoln. His mood was
-calm and happy: for the first time for four
-years he could look forward peacefully to
-the future, and to the great tasks still before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening he went to the theatre with
-his wife and two young friends: the play
-was “Our American Cousin.” The President
-was fond of the theatre&mdash;it was one of his few
-recreations: his appearance on this night
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>was something of a public ceremony; therefore,
-although he was tired when evening
-came, he went because he knew that many
-people would be disappointed if he did not.
-The President had a box to the left of the
-stage. Suddenly, about the middle of the
-last act, a man appeared at the back of the
-box, a knife in one hand and a pistol in the
-other, put the pistol to the President’s head
-and fired; then wounding Major Rathbone,
-the only other man in the box, with his
-knife, he vaulted on to the stage. As he
-leapt his spur caught the flag hanging from
-the box and he fell, breaking his leg. Nevertheless
-he rose instantly, and brandishing
-his knife and crying, “<i>Sic semper tyrannis!</i>”&mdash;“The
-South is avenged!” fled across the
-stage and out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>The horrified audience was thunderstruck.
-The President lay quite still: the bullet had
-passed right through his head. The wound
-was mortal. He was carried to a house
-across the street, where he lay, quite unconscious,
-till the morning, surrounded by his
-friends, their faces as pale and haggard as
-his own. About seven, “a look of unspeakable
-peace came upon his worn features.”
-Stanton, the War Secretary, rose from his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>knees by his side, saying, “Now he belongs
-to the ages.”</p>
-
-<p>There was profound sorrow through the
-whole of America; sorrow that checked all
-rejoicings over the victory of the North.
-Thus, indirectly, Lincoln’s death helped the
-reconciliation between North and South,
-though nothing could counterbalance the
-loss of his wise guidance.</p>
-
-<p>Washington was shrouded in black: even
-the poorest inhabitants showing their sorrow
-in their dress. The body was taken to
-Springfield, Illinois, to be buried; and all
-the towns on the way showed their deep
-mourning and respect. Now, and not till
-now, did Americans begin to understand
-what a man they had lost.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“He knew to bide his time,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And can his fame abide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Still patient in his simple faith sublime</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Till the wise years decide.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Great captains with their guns and drums</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Disturb our judgment for the hour,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But at last silence comes:</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">These all are gone, and, standing like a tower,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our children shall behold his fame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The kindly, earnest, brave, far-seeing man,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sagacious, patient, dreading praise, not blame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">New birth of our new soil, the first American.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
-<p>So James Russell Lowell wrote of Lincoln
-when the celebration of Independence Day in
-the year of his death revived the vivid sense
-of loss.</p>
-
-<p>The passage of years have only made
-clearer how great he was. Perfectly simple,
-perfectly sincere, he thought out for himself
-an ideal, and spent the whole of his life and
-all his strength in pursuing it.</p>
-
-<p>He loved America, not because it was
-powerful and strong, but because it had
-been based on a great idea&mdash;the idea of
-liberty: his work for America was to
-realise that idea. He never thought of
-his own personal success: he wanted to
-be President because he saw a great
-work to be done and believed that he
-could do it. He never became rich: his
-own tastes remained entirely simple. He
-was said to have worn the same top-hat
-all his life.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing that struck any one about
-Lincoln was his extraordinary appearance.
-He always dressed in black, with a big black
-tie, very often untied, or in the wrong place:
-his clothes looked as if they had been made
-to fit some one else, and had never been
-new. His feet were enormous; so were his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>hands, covered on state occasions with white
-kid gloves.</p>
-
-<p>In cold weather he used to wear a large
-grey shawl instead of an overcoat. One
-day, before he was made President, some
-friends were discussing Lincoln and Douglas,
-and comparing their heights. When Lincoln
-came into the room some one asked
-him, “How long ought a man’s legs to
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Long enough to reach from his body
-to the ground,” said Lincoln coolly.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln might look uncouth or even grotesque,
-but he did not look weak: he
-was the most striking figure wherever
-he went. No one who saw him often, no
-one who went to him in trouble, or to
-ask his advice, thought long of his appearance.
-Those who had once felt the
-sympathy of his wonderful, sad eyes, thought
-of that only. Those who really knew him,
-knew him to be the best man they had
-ever met.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln was often profoundly sad, and
-then suddenly boisterously gay. He enjoyed
-a joke or a funny story immensely:
-he often used to shock thoughtless people
-by telling some comic story on what they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>thought an unsuitable occasion; but he
-told it so well that however much they
-might disapprove they were generally forced
-to laugh.</p>
-
-<p>Always rather a dreamer, he was fond of
-poetry. He knew long passages of Shakespeare
-by heart, especially Hamlet, Macbeth,
-and Richard III. The Bible he had known
-from his childhood; of Burns he was very
-fond.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln’s rise to power, as even so short
-an account as this will have shown you, was
-not due to any extraordinary good fortune
-or any advantages at start. He taught himself
-all that he knew; he made himself
-what he was.</p>
-
-<p>It was his character more than anything
-else that made him great. His
-early struggles had taught him that self-reliance
-which enabled him to persevere
-in a course which he thought right in
-spite of opposition, disloyalty, and abuse;
-they taught him the toleration which
-made him slow to judge others, generous
-to praise them, little apt to expect them
-to understand or praise him. He stood
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>Not till he had gone did his people realise
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>how much he had given them; how much
-they had lost in him. He gave them, indeed,
-the most priceless gift a patriot can give his
-country&mdash;the example of sincere, devoted,
-and unselfish service.</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">THE END</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">Printed by <span class="smcap">Ballantyne, Hanson</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">Co.</span><br />
-Edinburgh &amp; London<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="transnote"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Notes:</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent">Illustrations occurring in the middle of a paragraph have been
-moved to avoid interrupting the paragraph flow.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">On page 65, “yes,” has been changed to ‘yes,’ to conform to standard
-usage.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">All other variant spellings, punctuation and hyphenation have
-been left as typeset.</p></div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***</div>
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