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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketch of the life of Abraham Lincoln, by
+Isaac Newton Arnold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Sketch of the life of Abraham Lincoln
+
+Author: Isaac Newton Arnold
+
+Release Date: October 22, 2011 [EBook #37818]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCH OF LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roberta Staehlin, David Garcia, Matthew Wheaton
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
+Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Abraham Lincoln (signature)
+ ABRAHAM LINCOLN. PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.]
+
+ _Eng^d by H. B. Hall Jr. from a Photo by Brady & Co._
+
+ Published by Jno. B. Bachelder.
+ NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+ SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+ COMPILED IN MOST PART
+
+ FROM THE
+
+ HISTORY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, AND THE OVERTHROW OF SLAVERY.
+
+ PUBLISHED BY MESSRS. CLARK AND CO., CHICAGO.
+
+ BY
+ ISAAC N. ARNOLD
+
+
+ JOHN B. BACHELDER, PUBLISHER,
+ 59 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK.
+ 1869.
+
+
+ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by
+ JOHN B. BACHELDER,
+ In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for
+ the Southern District of New York.
+
+ ALVORD, PRINTER.
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.
+
+
+Time out of mind, words prefatory have been considered indispensable to
+the successful publication of a book. This sketch of the LIFE and DEATH
+of ABRAHAM LINCOLN is intended as an accompaniment to the Historical
+Painting which has rescued from oblivion, and, with almost perfect
+fidelity, transmitted to futurity, "THE LAST HOURS OF LINCOLN." In its
+preparation has been invoked the aid of one who in life was near the
+heart of MR. LINCOLN, and at death was a witness to that last sad scene,
+so accurately delineated by the painter's art--the Hon. ISAAC N. ARNOLD.
+His intimate and social relations with MR. LINCOLN, his unbounded
+admiration of the goodness and sincerity of the Great Emancipator,
+renders this invocation eminently appropriate. This sketch contains
+subject-matter never before made public, presented in the full dress of
+the author's happiest style.
+
+In confident reliance upon the affection of the people for the great
+Apostle of Liberty--the Martyr--who in his blood wrote his belief "that
+all men everywhere should be free," this sketch is submitted.
+
+JANUARY 1, 1869.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
+ LINCOLN ANCESTRY,
+ BOYHOOD OF LINCOLN,
+ YOUTHFUL DUTIES AND AMUSEMENTS,
+ EARLY EDUCATION,
+ ELECTED CAPTAIN--BLACK HAWK WAR,
+ NOMINATION FOR LEGISLATURE,
+ MEMBER OF THE LEGISLATURE,
+ ADMITTED TO THE BAR,
+ PRACTICE AT THE BAR,
+ PROFESSIONAL BEARING,
+ RETIREMENT FROM THE LEGISLATURE,
+ ANTI-SLAVERY PROCLIVITIES,
+ MARRIAGE,
+ MARY TODD,
+ CHILDREN,
+ IN CONGRESS,
+ STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS,
+ ABOLITION OF SLAVERY AT WASHINGTON,
+ SUCCESSOR IN CONGRESS--E. D. BAKER,
+ BEGINNING OF THE END OF SLAVERY,
+ LINCOLN IN THE KANSAS STRUGGLE,
+ LINCOLN AND DOUGLAS DEBATE,
+ EARLY ACQUAINTANCE OF LINCOLN AND DOUGLAS,
+ DOUGLAS AS A DEBATER,
+ DOUGLAS--LINCOLN--PERSONAL DESCRIPTION,
+ DOUGLAS--LINCOLN--PERSONAL DESCRIPTION CONTINUED,
+ COOPER INSTITUTE ADDRESS
+ CHICAGO CONVENTION--NOMINATION TO PRESIDENCY,
+ POPULAR VOTE--ELECTION,
+ JOURNEY TO WASHINGTON,
+ ARRIVAL AT WASHINGTON,
+ RECEPTION,
+ FIRST INAUGURATION,
+ CIVIL WAR,
+ THIRTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS,
+ CALLING OUT TROOPS,
+ REGULAR SESSION OF CONGRESS, DECEMBER, 1861,
+ SLAVERY LAWS PASSED,
+ EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION,
+ OWEN LOVEJOY,
+ PROCLAMATION ISSUED--JANUARY 1, 1863,
+ GETTYSBURG--CONSECRATION,
+ NEW YEAR--1864,
+ LIEUTENANT-GENERAL--NOMINATION OF ULYSSES S. GRANT,
+ CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT ABOLISHING SLAVERY,
+ SECOND INAUGURATION,
+ VISIT TO ARMY HEAD-QUARTERS--CITY POINT,
+ LINCOLN--GRANT--SHERMAN--PERSONAL APPEARANCE,
+ UNION TROOPS ENTER RICHMOND,
+ VISIT TO RICHMOND,
+ RETURN TO WASHINGTON,
+ REVIEW OF THE ARMY,
+ LAST DAYS OF LINCOLN,
+ ASSASSINATION,
+ VISIT TO FORD'S THEATER,
+ JOHN WILKES BOOTH,
+ DETAILS OF THE ASSASSINATION,
+ PRESIDENT REMOVED FROM THE THEATER,
+ DEATH OF LINCOLN
+ SCENES IN WASHINGTON
+ DEATH OF BOOTH
+ ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF SECRETARY SEWARD
+ RECEPTION OF MR. LINCOLN'S DEATH THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY
+ MEETING OF MEMBERS OF CONGRESS
+ COMMITTEE TO ATTEND THE REMAINS TO ILLINOIS
+ FUNERAL CEREMONIES
+ FUNERAL CORTEGE.--WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA, NEW JERSEY, NEW YORK,
+ OHIO, INDIANA, ILLINOIS
+ PERSONAL SKETCHES
+ FONDNESS FOR READING
+ LAST SUNDAY OF HIS LIFE
+ CONVERSATIONAL POWERS
+ PUBLIC SPEAKER
+ THE WORDS OF LINCOLN
+ HABITUAL MANNER OF TRANSACTING BUSINESS AT THE WHITE HOUSE
+ DESCRIPTION OF ROOMS AND FURNITURE
+ ETIQUETTE OF BUSINESS RECEPTION
+ GREATNESS OF HIS SERVICES
+ THE MOST DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENT
+ RELIGIOUS CREED
+ BELIEF IN A GOD
+
+
+
+
+SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+
+Modern history furnishes no life more eventful and important, terminated
+by a death so dramatic, as that of the Martyr President. Poetry and
+painting, sculpture and eloquence, have all sought to illustrate his
+career, but the grand epic poem of his life has yet to be written. We
+are too near him in point of time, fully to comprehend and appreciate
+his greatness and the vast influence he is to exert upon the world. The
+storms which marked his tempestuous political career have not yet
+entirely subsided, and the shock of his fearfully tragic death is still
+felt; but as the dust and smoke of war pass away, and the mists of
+prejudice which filled the air during the great conflict clear up, his
+character will stand out in bolder relief and more perfect outline.
+
+The ablest and most sincere apostle of liberty the world has ever seen
+was Abraham Lincoln. He was a Christian statesman, with faith in God and
+man. The two men, whose pre-eminence in American history the world will
+ever recognize, are Washington and Lincoln. The Republic which the first
+founded and the latter saved, has already crowned them as models for her
+children.
+
+Abraham Lincoln was born, February 12th, 1809, in Hardin County, in the
+Slave State of Kentucky.[1]
+
+[1] When the compiler of the Annals of Congress asked Mr. Lincoln to
+furnish him with data from which to compile a sketch of his life, the
+following brief, characteristic statement was given. It contrasts very
+strikingly with the voluminous biographies furnished by some small great
+men who have been in Congress:--
+
+"Born, February 12th, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky.
+
+"Education defective.
+
+"Profession, a Lawyer.
+
+"Have been a Captain of Volunteers in Black Hawk War.
+
+"Postmaster at a very small office.
+
+"Four times a member of the Illinois Legislature, and was a member of
+the Lower House of Congress.
+
+ "Yours, &c.,
+ "A. LINCOLN."
+
+His father Thomas and his grandfather Abraham were born in Rockingham
+County, Virginia. His ancestors were from Pennsylvania, and were Friends
+or Quakers. The grandfather after whom he was named, went early to
+Kentucky, and was murdered by the Indians, while at work upon his farm.
+The early and fearful conflicts in the dense forests of Kentucky,
+between the settlers and the Indians, gave to a portion of that
+beautiful State the name of the "_dark and bloody ground_." The subject
+of this sketch was the son, the grandson, and the great grandson of a
+pioneer. His ancestors had settled on the border, first in Pennsylvania,
+then in Virginia, and from thence to Kentucky. His grandfather had four
+sons and two daughters. Thomas the youngest son was the father of
+Abraham, and his life was a struggle with poverty, a hard-working man
+with very limited education. He could barely sign his name. In the
+twenty-eighth year of his age he married Nancy Hanks, a native of
+Virginia, she was one of those plain, dignified matrons, possessing a
+strong physical organization, and great common sense, with deep
+religious feeling, and the utmost devotion to her family and children,
+such as are not unusual in the early settlements of our country. Reared
+on the frontier, where life was a struggle, she could use the rifle and
+the implements of agriculture as well as the distaff and spinning-wheel.
+She was one of those strong, self-reliant characters, yet gentle in
+manners, often found in the humbler walks of life, fitted as well to
+command the respect, as the love of all to whom she was known. Abraham
+had a brother older, and a sister younger than himself, but both died
+many years before he reached distinction.
+
+In 1816, when he was only eight years old, the family removed to Spenser
+County, Indiana. The first tool the boy of the backwoods learns to use
+is the ax. This, young Lincoln, strong and athletic beyond his years,
+had learned to handle with some effect, even at that early age, and he
+began from this period to be of important service to his parents in
+cutting their way to, and building up, a home in the forests.
+
+A feat with the rifle soon after this period shows that he was not
+unaccustomed to its use: seeing a flock of wild turkeys approaching, the
+lad seized his father's rifle and succeeded in shooting one through a
+crack of his father's cabin.
+
+In the autumn of 1818 his mother died. Her death was to her family, and
+especially her favorite son Abraham, an irreparable loss. Although she
+died when in his tenth year, she had already deeply impressed upon him
+those elements of character which were the foundation of his greatness;
+perfect truthfulness, inflexible honesty, love of justice and respect
+for age, and reverence for God. He ever spoke of her with the most
+touching affection. "All that I am, or hope to be," said he, "I owe to
+my angel mother."
+
+It was his mother who taught him to read and write; from her he learned
+to read the Bible, and this book he read and re-read in youth, because
+he had little else to read, and later in life because he believed it was
+the word of God, and the best guide of human conduct. It was very rare
+to find, even among clergymen, any so familiar with it as he, and few
+could so readily and accurately quote its text.
+
+There is something very affecting in the incident that this boy--whom
+his mother had found time amidst her weary toil and the hard struggle of
+her rude life, to teach to write legibly, should find the first occasion
+of putting his knowledge of the pen to practical use, was in writing a
+letter to a traveling preacher, imploring him to come and perform
+religious services over his mother's grave. The preacher, a Mr. Elkin,
+came, though not immediately, traveling many miles on horseback through
+the wild forests; and some months after her death the family and
+neighbors gathered around the tree beneath which they had laid her, to
+perform the simple, solemn funeral rites. Hymns were sung, prayers said,
+and an address pronounced over her grave. The impression made upon young
+Lincoln by his mother was as lasting as life. Love of truth, reverence
+for religion, perfect integrity, were ever associated in his mind with
+the tenderest love and respect for her. His father subsequently married
+Mrs. Sally Johnson, of Kentucky, a widow with three children.
+
+In March, 1830, the family removed to Illinois, and settled in Macon
+County, near Decatur. Here he assisted his father to build a log-cabin;
+clear, fence, and plant, a few acres of land; and then, being now
+twenty-one years of age, he asked permission to seek his own fortune. He
+began by going out to work by the month, breaking up the prairie,
+splitting and chopping cord wood, and any thing he could find to do. His
+father not long afterward removed to Coles County, Illinois, where he
+lived until 1851, dying at the age of seventy-three. He lived to see his
+son Abraham one of the most distinguished men in the State, and received
+from him many memorials of his affection and kindness. His son often
+sent money to his father and other members of his family, and always
+treated them, however poor and illiterate, with the kindest
+consideration.
+
+It is clear from his own declarations that he early cherished an
+ambition, probably under the inspiration of his mother, to rise to a
+higher position. He had in all less than one year's attendance at
+school, but his mother having taught him to read and write, with an
+industry, application, and perseverance untiring, he applied himself to
+all the means of improvement within his reach. Fortunately,
+providentially, the Bible has been everywhere and always present in
+every cabin and home in the land. The influence of this book formed his
+character; he was able to obtain in addition to the Bible, AEsop's
+Fables, Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, Weems' Life of Washington, and
+Burns' Poems. These constituted nearly all he read before he reached the
+age of nineteen. Living on the frontier, mingling with the rude,
+hard-working, honest, and virtuous backwoodsmen, he became expert in the
+use of every implement of agriculture and woodcraft, and as an ax-man he
+had no superior.
+
+His days were spent in hard manual labor, and his evenings in study; he
+grew up free from idleness, and contracted no stain of intemperance,
+profanity, or vice; he drank no intoxicating liquors, nor did he use
+tobacco in any form.
+
+There is a tradition that while residing at New Salem, Mr. Lincoln
+entertained a boy's fancy for a prairie beauty named Ann Rutledge. Mr.
+Irving, in his life of Washington, says: "Before he (Washington) was
+fifteen years of age, he had conceived a passion for some unknown
+beauty, so serious as to disturb his otherwise well-regulated mind, and
+to make him really unhappy." Some romance has been published in regard
+to this early attachment of Lincoln, and gossip and imagination have
+converted a simple, boyish fancy, such as few reach manhood without
+having passed through, into a "grand passion." It has been produced in a
+form altogether too dramatic and highly-colored for the truth. The idea
+that this fancy had any permanent influence upon his life and character
+is purely imaginary. No man was ever a more devoted and affectionate
+husband and father than he.
+
+In the spring of 1832 Lincoln volunteered as a private in a company of
+soldiers raised by the Governor of Illinois, for what is known as the
+Black Hawk War. He was elected captain of the company, and served during
+the campaign, but had no opportunity of meeting the enemy.
+
+Soon after his return he was nominated for the State Legislature, and in
+the precinct in which he resided, out of 284 votes received all but
+seven. It was while a resident of New Salem that he became a practical
+surveyor.
+
+Up to this period the life of Lincoln had been one of labor, hardship,
+and struggle: his shelter had been the log-cabin; his food, the "_corn
+dodger and common doings_,"[2] the game of the forests and the prairie,
+and the products of the farm; his dress, the Kentucky jean and buckskin
+of the frontier; the tools with which he labored, the ax, the hoe, and
+the plow. He had made two trips to New Orleans; these and his soldiering
+in the Black Hawk War showed his fondness for adventure.
+
+[2] The settlers have an expression, "Corn dodger and common doin's," as
+contradistinguished from "Wheat bread and chickin fixin's."
+
+Thus far he had been a backwoodsman, a rail-splitter, a flatboatman, a
+clerk, a captain of volunteers, a surveyor. In 1834 he was elected to
+the Legislature of Illinois, receiving the highest vote of any one on
+the ticket. He was re-elected in 1836 (the term being for two years). At
+this session he met, as a fellow-member, Stephen A. Douglas, then
+representing Morgan County.
+
+He remained a member of the Legislature for eight years, and then
+declined being again a candidate.
+
+He was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of Illinois in the
+autumn of 1836, and his name first appears on the roll of attorneys in
+1837.
+
+In April of this year he removed to Springfield, and soon after entered
+into partnership with his friend, John T. Stewart. As a lawyer he early
+manifested, in a wonderful degree, the power of simplifying and making
+clear to the common understanding the most difficult and abstruse
+questions.
+
+The circuit practice--"riding the circuit" it was called--as conducted
+in Illinois thirty years ago, was admirably adapted to educate, develop,
+and discipline all there was in a man of intellect and character. Few
+books could be obtained upon the circuit, and no large libraries for
+consultation could be found anywhere. A mere case lawyer was a helpless
+child in the hands of the intellectual giants produced by these
+circuit-court contests, where novel questions were constantly arising,
+and must be immediately settled upon principle and analogy.[3]
+
+[3] Vide "History of Abraham Lincoln and the Overthrow of Slavery," p.
+76.
+
+A few elementary books, such as Blackstone's and Kent's Commentaries,
+Chitty's Pleadings, and Starkie's Evidence, could sometimes be found, or
+an odd volume would be carried along with the scanty wardrobe of the
+attorney in his saddle-bags. These were studied until the text was as
+familiar as the alphabet. By such aid as these afforded, and the
+application of principles, were all the complex questions which arose
+settled. Thirty years ago it was the practice of the leading members of
+the bar to follow the judge from county to county. The court-houses were
+rude log buildings, with slab benches for seats, and the roughest pine
+tables. In these, when courts were in session, Lincoln could be always
+found, dressed in Kentucky jean, and always surrounded by a circle of
+admiring friends--always personally popular with the judges, the
+lawyers, the jury, and the spectators. His wit and humor, his power of
+illustration by apt comparison and anecdote, his power to ridicule by
+ludicrous stories and illustrations, were inexhaustible.
+
+He always aided by his advice and counsel the young members of the bar.
+No embarrassed tyro in the profession ever sought his assistance in
+vain, and it was not unusual for him, if his adversary was young and
+inexperienced, kindly to point out to him formal errors in his pleadings
+and practice. His manner of conducting jury trials was very effective.
+
+He was familiar, frequently colloquial: at the summer terms of the
+courts, he would often take off his coat, and leaning carelessly on the
+rail of the jury box, would single out and address a leading juryman,
+in a conversational way, and with his invariable candor and fairness
+would proceed to reason the case. When he was satisfied that he had
+secured the favorable judgment of the juryman so addressed, he would
+turn to another, and address him in the same manner, until he was
+convinced the jury were with him. There were times when aroused by
+injustice, fraud, or some great wrong or falsehood, when his
+denunciation was so crushing that the object of it was driven from the
+court-room.
+
+There was a latent power in him which when aroused was literally
+overwhelming. This power was sometimes exhibited in political debate,
+and there were occasions when it utterly paralyzed his opponent. His
+replies to Douglas, at Springfield and Peoria, in 1858, were
+illustrations of this power. His examination and cross-examination of
+witnesses were very happy and effective. He always treated those who
+were disposed to be truthful with respect.
+
+Mr. Lincoln's professional bearing was so high, he was so courteous and
+fair that no man ever questioned his truthfulness or his honor. No one
+who watched him for half an hour in court in an important case ever
+doubted his ability. He understood human nature well; and read the
+character of party, jury, witnesses, and attorneys, and knew how to
+address and influence them. Probably as a jury lawyer, on the right
+side, he has never had his superior.
+
+Such was Mr. Lincoln at the bar, a fair, honest, able lawyer, on the
+right side irresistible, on the wrong comparatively weak.
+
+
+
+
+MR. LINCOLN FROM HIS RETIREMENT FROM THE ILLINOIS LEGISLATURE TO HIS
+ELECTION TO CONGRESS.
+
+
+A friend and associate of Mr. Lincoln, speaking of him, as he was in
+1840, says: "They mistake greatly who regard him as an uneducated man.
+In the physical sciences he was remarkably well read. In scientific
+mechanics, and all inventions and labor-saving machinery, he was
+thoroughly informed. He was one of the best practical surveyors in the
+State. He understood the general principles of botany, geology, and
+astronomy, and had a great treasury of practical useful knowledge."
+
+He continued to acquire knowledge and to grow intellectually until his
+death, and became one of the most intelligent and best-informed men in
+public life.
+
+Early in life he became an anti-slavery man, as well from the impulses
+of his heart as the convictions of his reason. He always had an intense
+hatred of oppression in every form, and an honest, earnest faith in the
+common people, and his sympathies were ever with the oppressed. The most
+conspicuous traits of his character were love of justice and love of
+truth. It is false, very arrogant, and to those who knew Lincoln in his
+earlier years, it is very amusing, for any man or set of men to assume
+to himself or themselves the credit of having inspired him with hatred
+of slavery. No man was less influenced by others in coming to his
+conclusions than he; and this was especially true in regard to questions
+involving right and justice. His own heart, his own observation, his own
+clear intellect led him to become an anti-slavery man. Long before he
+plead the cause of the slave before the American people, he said to a
+friend,[4] "It is strange that while our courts decide that a man does
+not lose his title to his property by its being stolen, but he may
+reclaim it whenever he can find it, yet if he himself is stolen he
+instantly loses his right to himself!"
+
+[4] Hon. Jos. Gillespie.
+
+In November, 1842, he was married to Miss Mary Todd, daughter of the
+Hon. Robert S. Todd, of Kentucky. The mother of Mrs. Lincoln died when
+she was young. She had sisters living at Springfield, Illinois. Visiting
+them, she made the acquaintance and won the heart of Mr. Lincoln. They
+had four children, Robert, Edward (who died in infancy), William, and
+Thomas. Robert and Thomas survive. William, a beautiful and promising
+boy, died at Washington, during his father's presidency. Mr. Lincoln was
+a most fond, tender, and affectionate husband and father. No man was
+ever more faithful and true in his domestic relations.
+
+
+
+
+LINCOLN IN CONGRESS.
+
+
+On the 6th of December, 1847, Mr. Lincoln took his seat in Congress. Mr.
+Douglas, who had already run a brilliant career in the lower House of
+Congress, at this same session took his seat in the Senate. Mr. Lincoln
+distinguished himself by able speeches upon the Mexican War, upon
+Internal Improvements, and by one of the most effective campaign
+speeches of that Congress in favor of the election of General Taylor to
+the Presidency. He proposed a bill for the abolition of slavery at the
+National capital. He declined a re-election, and was succeeded by his
+friend, the eloquent E. D. Baker, who was killed at Ball's Bluff.
+
+In 1852, he lead the electoral ticket of Illinois in favor of General
+Scott for President. Franklin Pierce was elected, and Mr. Lincoln
+remained quietly engaged in his professional pursuits until the repeal
+of the Missouri Compromise in 1854. This event was the beginning of the
+end of slavery. "It thoroughly roused the people of the Free States to a
+realization of the progress and encroachments of the slave power, and
+the necessity of preserving 'the jewel of freedom.'" From that hour the
+conflict went on between freedom and slavery, first by the ballot, and
+all the agencies by which public opinion is influenced, and then the
+slave-holders, seeing that their supremacy was departing, sought by arms
+to overthrow the government which they could no longer control.
+
+Mr. Lincoln, while a strong opponent of slavery, had up to this time
+rested in the hope that by peaceful agencies it was in the course of
+ultimate extinction. But now seeing the vast strides it was making, he
+became convinced its progress must be arrested or that it would dominate
+over the republic, and Slavery would become "lawful in all the States."
+From this time he gave himself with solemn earnestness to the cause of
+liberty and his country. He forgot himself in his great cause. He did
+not seek place, if the great cause could be better advanced by the
+promotion of another; hence his promotion of the election of Trumbull to
+the United States Senate.
+
+This unselfish devotion to principle was a great source of his power.
+Placing himself at the head of those who opposed the extension of, and
+who believed in the moral wrong of slavery, he entered upon his great
+mission with a singleness of purpose, an eloquence and power, which made
+him as the advocate of freedom, the most effective and influential
+speaker who ever addressed the American people.
+
+He brought to the tremendous struggle between freedom and slavery
+physical strength and endurance almost superhuman. Notwithstanding his
+modesty and the absence of all self-assertion, when we review the
+conflict from 1854 to 1865, when the struggle closed by the adoption of
+the constitutional amendment abolishing and prohibiting slavery forever
+throughout the republic, it is clear that Lincoln's speeches and
+writings did more to accomplish this result than any other agency.
+
+Following the repeal of the Missouri Compromise came the Kansas
+struggle, and the organization of a great party to resist the
+encroachments and aggressions of slavery. The people instinctively found
+the leader of such a party in Lincoln.
+
+Looking over the whole ground, with the sagacity which marked his
+far-seeing mind, he saw that the basis upon which to build were the
+grand principles of the Declaration of Independence. This foundation was
+broad enough to include old-fashioned Democrats who sympathized with
+Jefferson in his hatred of slavery; Whigs who had learned their love of
+liberty from the utterances of the Adamses and Channings, and the
+earlier speeches of Webster; and anti-slavery men, who recognized Chase
+and Sumner as their leaders.
+
+He now addressed himself to the work of consolidating out of all these
+elements a party, the distinctive characteristics of which should be the
+full recognition of the principles of the Declaration of Independence
+and hostility to the extension of Slavery. This was the party which in
+1856 gave John C. Fremont 114 electoral votes for President, and in
+1860, elected Lincoln to the executive chair.
+
+
+
+
+THE LINCOLN AND DOUGLAS DEBATE.
+
+
+In the midsummer of 1858, Senator Douglas, whose term approached its
+close, came home to canvass for re-election. It was in the midst of the
+Kansas struggle, and although he had broken with the administration of
+Buchanan, because he resisted the admission of Kansas into the Union,
+under the fraudulent Lecompton Constitution, and insisted that the
+people of that State, should enjoy the right by a fair vote, of deciding
+upon the character of their Constitution,[5] yet the people of Illinois
+did not forget that he was chiefly responsible for the repeal of the
+Missouri Compromise, and that he had indorsed the Dred Scott decision.
+On the 17th of June, 1858, the Republican State Convention of Illinois
+met and by acclamation nominated Mr. Lincoln for the Senate. He was
+unquestionably more indebted to Douglas for his greatness than to any
+other person.
+
+[5] That they "should be perfectly free to form and regulate their
+domestic institutions in their own way."
+
+In 1856 Lincoln said, "Twenty years ago Judge Douglas and I first became
+acquainted; we were both young then, he a trifle younger than I. Even
+then we were both ambitious, I perhaps quite as much as he. With me the
+race of ambition has proved a flat failure; with him it has been one of
+splendid success. His name fills the nation, and it is not unknown in
+foreign lands. I affect no contempt for the high eminence he has
+reached; so reached that the oppressed of my species might have shared
+with me in the elevation, I would rather stand on that eminence than
+wear the richest crown that ever pressed a monarch's brow."
+
+Ten years had not gone by, before the modest Lincoln, then so humbly
+expressing this noble sentiment, and to whom at that moment "The race of
+ambition seemed a flat failure;" ten years had not passed, ere he had
+reached an eminence on which his name filled, not a nation only, but the
+world; and he had indeed so reached it, that the oppressed did share
+with him in the elevation; and so far had he passed his then great
+rival, that the name of Douglas will be carried down to posterity,
+chiefly because of its association as a competitor with Lincoln.
+
+But in many particulars Douglas was not an unworthy competitor. The
+contest between these two champions was perhaps the most remarkable in
+American history. They were the acknowledged leaders, each of his party.
+Douglas had been a prominent candidate for the presidency, was well
+known and personally popular, not only in the West, but throughout the
+Union. Both were men of great and marked individuality of character. The
+immediate prize was the Senatorship of the great State of Illinois, and,
+in the future, the presidency. The result would largely influence the
+struggle for freedom in Kansas, and the question of slavery throughout
+the Union. The canvass attracted the attention of the people everywhere,
+and the speeches were reported and published, not only in the leading
+papers in the State, but reporters were sent from most of the large
+cities, to report the incidents of the debates, and describe the
+conflict.
+
+Douglas was at this time unquestionably the leading debater in the
+United States Senate. For years he had been accustomed to meet the
+great leaders of the nation in Congress, and he had rarely been
+discomfited. He had contended with Jefferson Davis, and Toombs, and
+Hunter, and with Chase, and Sumner, and Seward; and his friends claimed
+that he was the equal, if not the superior, of the ablest. He was
+fertile in resources, severe in denunciation, familiar with political
+history, and had participated so many years in Congressional debate,
+that he handled with readiness and facility all the weapons of political
+controversy. Of indomitable physical and moral courage, he was certainly
+among the most formidable men in the nation on the stump. In Illinois,
+where he had hosts of friends and enthusiastic followers, he possessed a
+power over the masses unequaled by any other man, a most striking
+exhibition of which was exhibited in this canvass, in which he held to
+himself the whole Democratic party of the State. The administration of
+Buchanan, with all its patronage wielded by the wily and unscrupulous
+Slidell, and running a separate ticket, was able to detach only 5,000
+out of 126,000 votes from him. There was something exciting, something
+which stirred the blood, in the boldness with which he threw himself
+into the conflict, and dealt his blows right and left against the
+Republican party on one side, and the administration of Buchanan, which
+sought his defeat, on the other.
+
+Two men presenting more striking contrasts, physically, intellectually,
+and morally, could not anywhere be found. Douglas was a short, sturdy,
+resolute man, with large head and chest, and short legs; his ability had
+gained for him the appellation of "The little giant of Illinois."
+
+Lincoln was of the Kentucky type of men, very tall, long-limbed,
+angular, awkward in gait and attitude, physically a real giant,
+large-featured, his eyes deep-set under heavy eyebrows, his forehead
+high and retreating, with heavy, dark hair.
+
+Their style of speaking, like every thing about them, was in striking
+contrast. Douglas, skilled by a thousand conflicts in all the strategy
+of a face to face encounter, stepped upon the platform and faced the
+thousands of friends and foes around him with an air of conscious power.
+There was an air of indomitable pluck, sometimes something approaching
+impudence in his manner, when he looked out on the immense throngs which
+surged and struggled before him. Lincoln was modest, but always
+self-possessed, with no self-consciousness, his whole mind evidently
+absorbed in his great theme, always candid, truthful, cool, logical,
+accurate; at times, inspired by his subject, rising to great dignity and
+wonderful power. The impression made by Douglas, upon a stranger who saw
+him for the first time on the platform, would be--"that is a bold,
+audacious, ready debater, an ugly opponent." Of Lincoln--"There is a
+candid, truthful, sincere man, who, whether right or wrong, believes he
+is right." Lincoln argued the side of freedom, with the most thorough
+conviction that on its triumph depended the fate of the Republic. An
+idea of the impression made by Lincoln in these discussions may be
+inferred from a remark made by a plain old Quaker, who, at the close of
+the Ottawa debate, said: "Friend, doubtless God _Almighty might_ have
+made an honester man than Abe Lincoln, but doubtless he never did." It
+is curious that the cause of freedom was plead by a Kentuckian, and that
+of slavery by a native of Vermont. Forgetful of the ancestral hatred of
+slavery to which he had been born, Douglas had, by marriage, become a
+slave-holder. Lincoln had one great advantage over his antagonist--he
+was always good-humored; while Douglas sometimes lost his temper,
+Lincoln never lost his.
+
+The great champions in these debates, and their discussions, have passed
+into history, and the world has ratified the popular verdict of the
+day--that Lincoln was the victor. It should be remembered, in justice to
+the intellectual power of Douglas, that Lincoln spoke for liberty, and
+he was the organ of a new and vigorous party, with a full consciousness
+of being in the right. Douglas was looking to the presidency as well as
+the senatorship, and must keep one eye on the slave-holder and the other
+on the citizens of Illinois.
+
+The debates in the old Continental Congress, and those on the Missouri
+question of 1820-1, those of Webster and Hayne, and Webster and Calhoun,
+are all historical; but it may be doubted if either were more important
+than these of Lincoln and Douglas.
+
+Mr. Lincoln, although his party received a majority of the popular vote
+was defeated for Senator, because certain Democratic Senators held over
+from certain Republican districts.
+
+On the 27th of February, 1860, Mr. Lincoln delivered his celebrated
+Cooper Institute address. Many went to hear the prairie orator,
+expecting to be entertained with noisy declamation, extravagant and
+verbose, and with plenty of amusing stories. The speech was so
+dignified, so exact in language and statement, so replete with
+historical learning, it exhibited such strength and grasp of thought and
+was so elevated in tone, that the intelligent audience were astonished
+and delighted. The closing sentence is characteristic, and should never
+be forgotten by those who advocate the right. "Let us have faith that
+_right_ makes _might_, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do
+our duty as we understand it."
+
+
+
+
+NOMINATION AND ELECTION AS PRESIDENT.
+
+
+When the National Convention met at Chicago in the June following, to
+nominate a candidate for President, while a majority of the delegates
+were divided among Messrs. Seward, Chase, Cameron, and Bates, Mr.
+Lincoln was the first choice of a large plurality, and the second choice
+of all; besides he was personally so popular with the people, his
+sobriquet of "Honest old Abe," "The Illinois Rail-splitter," satisfied
+the shrewd men who were studying the best means of securing success,
+that he was the most available man to head the ticket. These
+considerations made his nomination a certainty from the beginning.
+
+The nomination was hailed with enthusiasm throughout the Union. Never
+did a party enter upon a canvass with more zeal and energy. With the
+usual motives which actuate political parties there were in this canvass
+mingled a love of country, a devotion to liberty, a keen sense of the
+wrongs and outrages inflicted upon the Free State men of Kansas, which
+fired all hearts with enthusiasm. Mr. Lincoln received one hundred and
+eighty electoral votes, Douglas twelve, Breckinridge seventy-two, and
+John Bell of Tennessee, thirty-nine. Mr. Lincoln received of the popular
+vote 1,866,452, a plurality, but not a majority of the whole.
+
+By the election of Mr. Lincoln the executive power of the republic
+passed from the slave-holders. Mr. Lincoln and the great party who
+elected him contemplated no interference with slavery in the States.
+They meant to prevent its further extension, but the slave-holders
+instinctively felt that with the government in the hands of those who
+believed slavery morally wrong, the end of slavery was a mere question
+of time. Rather than yield, the slave aristocracy resolved "to take up
+the sword," and hence the terrible civil war.
+
+On the 11th of February, 1861, Mr. Lincoln left his quiet happy home at
+Springfield to enter upon that tempestuous political career which was to
+lead him through a martyr's grave to a deathless fame among the greatest
+and noblest patriots and benefactors of mankind. With a dim, mysterious
+foreshadowing of the future, he uttered to his friends and neighbors who
+gathered around him to say good-bye, his farewell. He seemed conscious
+that he might see the place which had been his home for "a quarter of a
+century, and where his children were born, and where one of them lay
+buried" no more. Weighed down with the consciousness of the great duties
+which devolved upon him, greater than those devolving upon any President
+since Washington, he humbly expressed his reliance upon Divine
+Providence, and asked his friends to pray that he might receive the
+assistance of "Almighty God." As he journeyed toward the capital,
+received everywhere with the earnest sympathies of the people, the loyal
+men of all parties assuring him of their support, his spirits rose, and
+when he passed the State line of his own State his hopefulness found
+expression in the words "behind the cloud the sun is shining still." And
+on he sped through the great Free States of the North. While on his way
+to the capital the people were everywhere deeply impressed by his modest
+yet firm reliance upon Providence. He went forth not leaning on his own
+strength, but resting on Almighty God.
+
+In the early gray of the morning of the 23d of February, 1861, he came
+in sight of the dome of the Capitol, then filled with traitors plotting
+his death and the overthrow of the Government. By anticipating the
+train, by which it had been publicly announced that he would pass
+through Baltimore, and passing through that city at night he escaped a
+deeply-laid conspiracy, which would otherwise have anticipated the crime
+of Booth. None who witnessed will ever forget the scene of his first
+inauguration.
+
+The veteran Scott had gathered a few soldiers of the Regular Army to
+preserve order and security; many Northern citizens thronged the
+streets, few of them conscious of the volcano of treason and murder
+seething beneath them. The departments and public offices were full of
+plotting traitors. Many of the rebel generals held commissions under the
+Government they were about to desert and betray. The ceremony of
+inauguration is always imposing; on this occasion it was especially so.
+Buchanan, sad, dejected, bowed with a seeming consciousness of duties
+unperformed, rode with the President-elect to the Capitol.
+
+There were gathered the Justices of the Supreme Court, both Houses of
+Congress, the representatives of foreign nations, and a vast concourse
+of citizens from all sections of the Union. There were Chase, and
+Seward, and Sumner, and Breckinridge, and Douglas, who was near the
+President, and was observed eagerly looking over the crowd, not
+unconscious of the personal danger of his great and successful rival.
+Mr. Lincoln was so absorbed with the gravity of the occasion and the
+condition of his country, that he utterly forgot himself, and there was
+observed a dignity, which sprung from a mind entirely engrossed with
+public duties.
+
+He was perfectly cool, and stepping to the eastern colonnade of the
+Capitol, that voice, which had been often heard by tens of thousands on
+the prairies of the West, now read in clear and ringing tones his
+inaugural. On the threshold of war, he made a last appeal for peace. He
+declared his fixed resolve, firm as the everlasting rocks: "_I shall
+take care that the laws of the Union be faithfully executed in every
+State_."
+
+Yet his great, kind heart yearned for peace, and as he approached the
+close, his voice faltered with emotion. "I am loath to close," said he;
+"we are _not_ enemies, but friends; we must not be enemies. Though
+passion may have strained, it must not break the bonds of affection. The
+mystic cords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and patriot's
+grave, to every living heart and hearthstone over all this broad land,
+will yet swell with the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as
+surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature."
+
+Alas! these appeals for peace were received by those to whom they were
+addressed with coarse ribaldry, with sneers and jeers, and all the
+savage and barbarous passions which riot in blood. Lincoln was somewhat
+slow to learn that it was to force only--stern, unflinching force--that
+treason would yield.
+
+And now opened that terrible civil war which has no parallel in history.
+Space will not permit me to follow the President through those long and
+terrible days of victory and defeat, to final triumph. Through all,
+Lincoln was firm, constant, hopeful, sagacious, wise, confiding always
+in God, and in the people.
+
+
+
+
+THE THIRTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS.
+
+
+The special session of the Thirty-seventh Congress met on the 4th of
+July, 1861, agreeably to the call of the President. Many vacant chairs
+in the National Council impressed the spectator with the magnitude of
+the impending struggle. The old chiefs of the slave party were nearly
+all absent, some of them as members of a rebel government at Richmond,
+others in arms against their country. The President calmly, clearly,
+sadly reviewed the facts which compelled him to call into action the
+_war powers_ of the Government, and constrained him, as the Chief
+Magistrate, "_to accept war_." He asked Congress to confer upon him the
+power to make the war short and decisive. He asked for 400,000 men and
+400 millions of money. With hearty appreciation of the fidelity of the
+common people, he proudly points to the fact that, while large numbers
+of the officers of the Army and Navy had been guilty of the infamous
+crime of desertion, "not one common soldier or sailor is known to have
+deserted his flag."
+
+Congress responded promptly to this call, voting 500,000 men and 500
+millions of dollars to suppress the rebellion. From the beginning of the
+contest, the slaves flocked to the Union army as a place of security
+from their masters. They seemed to feel instinctively that freedom was
+to be found within its picket-lines and under the folds of its flag.
+They were ready to act as guides, as servants, to work, dig, and to
+fight for their liberty. And yet early in the war some officers
+permitted masters and agents to follow the blacks into the Union lines
+and carry away fugitive slaves. This action was rebuked by a resolution
+of Congress. At this session a law was passed giving freedom to all
+slaves employed in aiding the rebellion. In October, 1861, the military
+was authorized by the Secretary of War to avail itself of the services
+of "fugitives from labor," in such way as might be most beneficial to
+the service.
+
+The regular session of Congress assembled on the 2d of December, 1861.
+Great armies confronted each other in the field; and great conflicts
+were going on in the public mind, but the way to victory through
+emancipation was not yet clearly opened. The President was feeling his
+way, watching the progress of public opinion; striving to secure to the
+Union the Border States of Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri. On the
+subject of Emancipation, he said in his message: "the Union must be
+preserved, and all _indispensable means_ must be used," but he wisely
+waited until the public sentiment should consolidate, and all other
+means of maintaining the integrity of the nation should have been
+exhausted. During this session the way was prepared for the great edict
+of Emancipation; Slavery was abolished at the National Capital,
+prohibited forever in all the Territories, the slaves of rebels declared
+free, and the Government authorized to employ slaves as soldiers, and
+every person in the military or naval service of the Republic prohibited
+from aiding in the arrest of any fugitive slave. These measures were all
+urged by the personal and political friends of the President, and became
+laws with his sanction and hearty assent. They prepared the way for the
+final overthrow of slavery.
+
+
+
+
+THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION.
+
+
+In April, 1862, it was known at Washington that the President was
+considering the subject of emancipating the slaves as a war measure. The
+Border States selected their ablest man, the venerable John J.
+Crittenden, from Mr. Lincoln's native State, to make a public appeal to
+him to stay his hand. The eloquent Kentuckian discharged the part
+assigned him well. Never shall I forget the scene when, with great
+emotion before Congress he said, that although he had voted against and
+opposed Mr. Lincoln, he had been won to his side. "_And now_," said he,
+"there is a niche near to Washington which should be occupied by him who
+shall save his country. Mr. Lincoln has a mighty destiny! * * * He is no
+coward, he may be President _of all the people_ and fill that niche, but
+if he chooses to be in these times a mere sectarian and party man, that
+place will be reserved for some future and better patriot." "It is in
+his power to occupy a place next to Washington, the _founder_ and
+_preserver_ side by side." It was understood the Border State men
+everywhere were ready to crown him the peer of Washington if he would
+not touch slavery.
+
+It was OWEN LOVEJOY, the early abolitionist, who made an instantaneous,
+impromptu reply, a reply the eloquence of which thrilled Congress and
+the country, and is in my judgment among the finest specimens of
+American eloquence.
+
+Said he, "Let Abraham Lincoln make himself, as I trust he will, the
+Emancipator, the liberator of a race, and his name shall not only be
+enrolled in this earthly temple, but it will be traced on the living
+stones of that Temple, which rears itself amidst the thrones of Heaven."
+Alluding to what Crittenden had said, he added, "There is a niche for
+Abraham Lincoln in Freedom's holy fane. In that niche he shall stand
+proudly, gloriously, with shattered fetters, and broken chains and
+slave-whips beneath his feet. * * This is a fame worth living for; ay,
+more, it is a fame worth _dying_ for, even though (said he with
+prophetic prescience) that death led through the blood of Gethsemane and
+the agony of the accursed tree."
+
+These two speeches were read to Mr. Lincoln in his library at the White
+House, a room to which he sometimes retired. He was moved by the picture
+which Lovejoy drew. The tremendous responsibilities growing out of the
+slavery question, how he ought to treat those sons of "unrequited toil,"
+were questions sinking deeper and deeper into his heart. With a purpose
+firmly to follow the path of duty, as God should give him to see his
+duty, he earnestly sought the divine guidance.
+
+Speaking afterward of Emancipation, Mr. Lincoln said: "When, in March,
+May, and July, 1862, I made earnest and successive appeals to the Border
+States to favor compensated emancipation, I believed the indispensable
+necessity for military emancipation and arming the blacks would come,
+unless averted by that measure. They declined the proposition and I was
+in my best judgment driven to the alternative of either surrendering the
+Union or issuing the Emancipation Proclamation."[6]
+
+[6] See Letter of the President to A. G. Hodges, dated April 4, 1864.
+
+Before issuing the proclamation, he had appealed to the Border States
+to adopt gradual emancipation. His appeal is one of the most earnest and
+eloquent papers in all history. "Our country," said he, "is in great
+peril, demanding the loftiest views and boldest action to bring a speedy
+relief; once relieved, its form of government is saved to the world, its
+beloved history and cherished memories are vindicated, and its future
+fully assured and rendered inconceivably grand."
+
+The appeal was received by some with apathy, by others with caviling and
+opposition, and was followed by action on the part of none. Meanwhile
+his friends urged emancipation. They declared there could be no
+permanent peace while slavery lived. "Seize," cried they, "the
+thunderbolt of Liberty, and shatter Slavery to atoms, and then the
+Republic will live." After the great battle of Antietam, the President
+called his cabinet together, and announced to them that "_in obedience
+to a solemn vow to God_," he was about to issue the edict of Freedom.
+
+The proclamation came, modestly, sublimely, reverently the great act was
+done. "Sincerely believing it to be an act of justice, warranted by the
+Constitution, upon military necessity, he invoked upon it the
+considerate judgment of mankind and the gracious favor of Almighty God."
+
+On the first of January, 1863, the Executive mansion, as is usual on New
+Year's Day, was crowded with the officials, foreign and domestic, of the
+National Capital; the men of mark of the army and navy and from civil
+life crowded around the care-worn President, to express their kind
+wishes for him personally, and their prayers for the future of the
+country.
+
+During the reception, after he had been shaking hands with hundreds, a
+secretary hastily entered and told him the Proclamation (the final
+proclamation) was ready for his signature. Leaving the crowd, he went to
+his office, taking up a pen, attempting to write, and was astonished to
+find he could not control the muscles of his hand and arm sufficiently
+to write his name. He said to me, "I paused, and a feeling of
+superstition, a sense of the vast responsibility of the act, came over
+me; then, remembering that my arm had been well-nigh paralyzed by two
+hours' of hand-shaking, I smiled at my superstitious feeling, and wrote
+my name."
+
+This Proclamation, the Declaration of Independence, and _Magna Charta_,
+these be great landmarks, each indicating an advance to a higher and
+more Christian civilization. Upon these will the historian linger, as
+the stepping-stones toward a higher plane of existence. From this time
+the war meant _universal liberty_. When, in June, 1858, at his home in
+Springfield, Lincoln startled the country by the announcement, "this
+nation can not endure half _slave_, and _half free_," and when he
+concluded that remarkable speech by declaring, with uplifted eye and the
+inspired voice of a prophet, "we shall not fail if we stand firm, _we
+shall not fail_, wise councils may accelerate or mistakes delay, but
+sooner or later the victory is sure to come," he looked to years of
+peaceful controversy and final triumph through the ballot-box. He
+anticipated no war, and he did not foresee, unless in those mysterious,
+dim shadows, which sometimes startle by half revealing the future, his
+own elevation to the presidency; he little dreamed that he was to be the
+instrument in the hands of God to speak those words which should
+emancipate a race and free his country!
+
+I have not space to follow the movements of the armies; the long, sad
+campaigns of the grand army of the Potomac under McClellan, Pope,
+Burnside, Hooker, Meade; nor the varying fortunes of war in the great
+Valley of the Mississippi under Freemont, and Halleck, and Buell. Armies
+had not only to be organized, but educated and trained, and especially
+did the President have to search for and find those fitted for high
+command.
+
+Ultimately he found such and placed them at the head of the armies. Up
+to 1863, there had been vast expenditures of blood and treasure, and,
+although great successes had been achieved and progress made, yet there
+had been so many disasters and grievous failures, that the hopes of the
+insurgents of final success were still confident. With all the great
+victories in the South, and Southwest, by land and on the sea, the
+Mississippi was still closed. The President opened the campaign of 1863
+with the determination of accomplishing two great objects, first to get
+control of and open the Mississippi; second to destroy the army of
+Virginia under Lee, and seize upon the rebel capital. By the capture of
+Vicksburg, and the fall of Port Hudson, the first and primary object of
+the campaign was realized.
+
+"The 'Father of Waters' again went unvexed to the sea. Thanks to the
+great Northwest for it, nor yet wholly to them. Three hundred miles up
+they met New England, Empire, Keystone, and Jersey, hewing their way
+right and left. The army South, too, in more colors than one, lent a
+helping hand."[7] While the gallant armies of the West were achieving
+these victories, operations in the East were crowned by the decisively
+important triumph at Gettysburg. Let us pass over the scenes of
+conflict, on the sea and on the land, at the East and at the West, and
+come to that touching incident in the life of Lincoln, the consecration
+of the battle-field of Gettysburg as a National cemetery.
+
+[7] See letter of Mr. Lincoln to State Convention of Illinois.
+
+
+
+
+GETTYSBURG.
+
+
+Here, late in the autumn of that year of battles, a portion of that
+battle-ground was to be consecrated as the last resting-place of those
+who there gave their lives that the Republic might live.
+
+There were gathered there the President, his Cabinet, members of
+Congress, Governors of States, and a vast and brilliant assemblage of
+officers, soldiers, and citizens, with solemn and impressive ceremonies
+to consecrate the earth to its pious purpose. New England's most
+distinguished orator and scholar was selected to pronounce the oration.
+The address of Everett was worthy of the occasion. When the elaborate
+oration was finished, the tall, homely form of Lincoln arose; simple,
+rude, majestic, slowly he stepped to the front of the stage, drew from
+his pocket a manuscript, and commenced reading that wonderful address,
+which an English scholar and statesman has pronounced the finest in the
+English language. The polished periods of Everett had fallen somewhat
+coldly upon the ear, but Lincoln had not finished the first sentence
+before the magnetic influence of a grand idea eloquently uttered by a
+sympathetic nature, pervaded the vast assemblage. He said:--
+
+"Fourscore and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth on this
+continent a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the
+proposition that all men are created equal.
+
+"Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation,
+or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are
+met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a
+portion of that field as a final resting-place for those who here gave
+their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and
+proper that we should do this.
+
+"But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate--we can not consecrate--we
+can not hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who
+struggled here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or
+detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we _say_
+here, but it can never forget what they _did_ here. It is for us, the
+living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they
+who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced.
+
+"It is, rather, for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining
+before us, that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to
+that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion, that
+we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain: that
+this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom: and that
+government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not
+perish from the earth."
+
+He was so absorbed with the heroic sacrifices of the soldiers as to be
+utterly unconscious that he was _the great actor_ in the drama, and that
+his simple words would live as long as the memory of the heroism he
+there commemorated.
+
+Closing his brief address amidst the deepest emotions of the crowd, he
+turned to Everett and congratulated him upon his success. "Ah, Mr.
+Lincoln," said the orator, "I would gladly exchange my hundred pages for
+your twenty lines."
+
+
+
+
+1864.
+
+
+On the first of January, 1864, Mr. Lincoln received his friends as was
+usual on New Year's day, and the improved prospects of the country, made
+it a day of congratulation. The decisive victories East and West
+enlivened and made buoyant and hopeful the spirits of all. One of the
+most devoted friends of Mr. Lincoln calling upon him, after exchanging
+congratulations over the progress of the Union armies during the past
+year, said:--
+
+"I hope, Mr. President, one year from to-day, I may have the pleasure of
+congratulating you on the consummation of three events which seem now
+very probable."
+
+"What are they?" said Mr. Lincoln.
+
+"First, That the rebellion may be completely crushed. Second, That
+slavery may be entirely destroyed, and prohibited forever throughout the
+Union. Third, That Abraham Lincoln may have been triumphantly re-elected
+President of the United States."
+
+"I would be very glad," said Mr. Lincoln, with a twinkle in his eye, "to
+compromise, by securing the success of the first two propositions."
+
+
+
+
+LIEUTENANT-GENERAL GRANT.
+
+
+On the 22d of February, 1864, President Lincoln nominated General U. S.
+Grant as Lieutenant-General of all the armies of the United States, and
+on the 9th of March, at the White House, he, in person, presented the
+victorious General with his commission, and sent him forth to consummate
+with the armies of the East, his world-renowned successes at the West.
+Then followed the memorable campaign of 1864-5. Sherman's brilliant
+Atlanta campaign; Sheridan's glorious career in the Valley of the
+Shenandoah; Thomas's victories in Tennessee, the triumph at Lookout
+Mountain; Sherman's "Grand march to the sea," the fall of Mobile, the
+capture of Fort Fisher, and Wilmington, indicating the near approach of
+peace through war. In the midst of these successes, Mr. Lincoln was
+triumphantly re-elected, the people thereby stamping upon his
+administration their grateful approval. At the session of Congress, of
+1864-5, he urged the adoption of an amendment of the Constitution
+abolishing and prohibiting slavery forever throughout the Republic,
+thereby consummating his own great work of Emancipation.
+
+
+
+
+CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT ABOLISHING SLAVERY.
+
+
+As the great leader in the overthrow of slavery, he had seen his action
+sanctioned by an emphatic majority of the people, and now the
+constitutional majority of two-thirds of both branches of Congress had
+voted to submit to the States this amendment of the organic law.
+
+Illinois, the home of Lincoln, as was fit, took the lead in ratifying
+this amendment, and other States rapidly followed, until more than the
+requisite number was obtained, and the amendment adopted. Meanwhile,
+military successes continued, until the victory over slavery and
+rebellion was won.
+
+
+
+
+LINCOLN'S SECOND INAUGURATION.
+
+
+It was known, by a dispatch received at the Capitol at midnight, on the
+3d of March, 1865, that Lee had sought an interview with Grant, to
+arrange terms of surrender. On the next day Lincoln again stood on the
+eastern colonnade of the Capitol, again to swear fidelity to the
+Republic, her Constitution, and laws; but, how changed the scene from
+his first inauguration. No traitors now occupied high places under the
+Government. Crowds of citizens and soldiers who would have died for
+their beloved Chief Magistrate now thronged the area. Liberty loyalty,
+and victory had crowned the eagles of our armies. No conspirators were
+now mingling in the crowd, unless perchance the assassin Booth might
+have been lurking there. Many patriots and statesmen were in their
+graves. Douglas was dead, and Ellsworth, and Baker, and McPherson, and
+Reynolds, and Wadsworth, and a host of martyrs, had given their lives
+that liberty and the Republic might triumph. It was a very touching
+spectacle to see the long lines of invalid and wounded soldiers, from
+the great hospitals about Washington, some on crutches, some who had
+lost an arm, many pale from unhealed wounds, who gathered to witness the
+scene. As Lincoln ascended the platform, and his tall form, towering
+above all his associates, was recognized, cheers and shouts of welcome
+filled the air, and not until he raised his arm motioning for silence,
+could the acclamations be hushed. He paused a moment, looked over the
+scene, and still hesitated. What thronging memories passed through his
+mind! Here, four years before, he had stood pleading, oh, how earnestly,
+for _peace_. But, even while he pleaded, the rebels took up the sword,
+and he was forced to "_accept war_."
+
+Now four long, bloody, weary years of devastating war had passed, and
+those who made the war were everywhere discomfited, and being
+overthrown. That barbarous institution which had caused the war, had
+been destroyed, and the dawn of peace already brightened the sky. Such
+the scene, and such the circumstances under which Lincoln pronounced his
+second Inaugural, a speech which has no parallel since Christ's Sermon
+on the Mount.
+
+Who shall say that I am irreverent when I declare, that the passage,
+"Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray that this _mighty scourge_ of
+war _may speedily pass away_! yet, if God wills that it continue until
+all the wealth piled by the bondsmen's two hundred and fifty years of
+unrequited toil shall be sunk, and every drop of blood drawn by the
+lash, shall be paid by another drawn by the sword, as was said three
+thousand years ago, so it must be said now, that the judgments of the
+Lord are true and righteous altogether," could only have been inspired
+by that _Holy Book_, which daily he read, and from which he ever sought
+guidance?
+
+Where, but from the teachings of Christ, could he have learned that
+charity in which he so unconsciously described his own moral nature,
+"_With malice toward none, with charity for all_, with firmness in the
+right, as God gives us to see the right, let us finish the work we are
+in, _to bind up the nation's wounds_, to care for him who hath borne the
+battle, and for his widow and his orphans, to do all which may achieve a
+just and lasting peace, among ourselves and among all nations."
+
+
+
+
+END OF THE WAR.
+
+
+And now Mr. Lincoln gave his whole attention to the movements of the
+armies, which, as he confidently hoped, were on the eve of final and
+complete triumph. On the 27th of March he visited the head-quarters of
+General Grant, at City Point, to concert with his most trusted military
+chiefs the final movements against Lee, and Johnston. Grant was still at
+bay before Petersburg. Sherman with his veterans, after occupying
+Georgia and South Carolina, had reached Goldsboro', North Carolina, on
+his victorious march north. It was the hope and purpose of the two
+great leaders, whose generous friendship for each other made them ever
+like brothers, now and there to crush the armies of Lee and Johnston,
+and finish the "job."
+
+An artist has worthily painted the scene of the meeting of Lincoln and
+his cabinet, when he first announced and read to them his proclamation
+of Emancipation. Another artist is now recording for the American people
+the scene of this memorable meeting of the President and the Generals,
+which took place in the cabin of the steamer "River Queen," lying at the
+dock in the James River. Three men more unlike personally and mentally,
+and yet of more distinguished ability, have rarely been called together.
+Although so entirely unlike, each was a type of American character, and
+all had peculiarities not only American, but Western.
+
+Lincoln's towering form had acquired dignity by his great deeds, and the
+great ideas to which he had given expression. His rugged features,
+lately so deeply furrowed with care and responsibility, were now radiant
+with hope and confidence. He met the two great leaders with grateful
+cordiality; with clear intelligence he grasped the military situation,
+and listened with eager confidence to their details of the final moves
+which should close this terrible game of war.
+
+Contrasting, with the giant-like stature of Lincoln, was the short,
+sturdy, resolute form of the hero of Fort Donelson and Vicksburg, so
+firm and iron-like, every feature of his face and every attitude and
+movement so quiet, yet all expressive of inflexible will and never
+faltering determination, "to fight it out on this line."
+
+There, too, was Sherman, with his broad intellectual forehead, his
+restless eye, his nervous energy, his sharply outlined features bronzed
+by that magnificent campaign from Chattanooga to Atlanta and from
+Atlanta to the Sea, and now fresh from the conquest of Georgia and South
+Carolina. On the eve of final triumph, Lincoln, with characteristic
+humanity deplored the necessity which all realized, of one more hard and
+deadly battle. They separated, Sherman hastening to his post, and Grant
+commenced those brilliant movements which in ten days ended the war. Now
+followed in rapid succession the fall of Richmond, the surrender of Lee,
+the capitulation of Johnston and his army, the capture of Jefferson
+Davis, and the final overthrow of the rebellion.
+
+The Union troops, on the morning of the 4th of April, entered the rebel
+capital. Among the exulting columns which followed the eagles of the
+Republic, were some regiments of negro soldiers, who marched through the
+streets of Richmond singing their favorite song of "John Brown's soul is
+marching on."
+
+On the day of its capture, President Lincoln, with Admiral Porter,
+visited Richmond. Leading his youngest son, a lad, by the hand, he
+walked from the James River landing to the house just vacated by the
+rebel President. From the time of the issuing of his proclamation to
+this, his triumphant entry into the rebel capital, he had been ever
+ready and anxious for peace. To all the world he had proclaimed, what he
+said so emphatically to the rebel emissaries at Hampton Roads. "There
+are just two indispensable conditions of peace, national unity, and
+national liberty." "The national authority must be restored through all
+the States, and I will _never recede_ from my position on the slavery
+question." He would never violate the national faith, and now God had
+crowned his efforts with complete success. He entered Richmond as a
+conqueror, but as its preserver he issued no decree of proscription or
+confiscation, and to all the South his policy was, "with malice toward
+none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gave him
+to see the right, he sought to finish the work, and do all which should
+achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace."
+
+On the 9th of April he returned to Washington, and had scarcely arrived
+at the White House before the news of the surrender of Lee and all his
+army reached him. No language can adequately describe the joy and
+gratitude which filled the hearts of the President and the people.
+
+And here, before the attempt is made to sketch the darkest and most
+dastardly crime in all our annals, let us pause for one moment to
+mention that last review on the 22d and 23d of May, of these victorious
+citizen soldiers, who had come at the call of the President, and who,
+their work being done, were now to return again to their homes scattered
+throughout the country they had saved.
+
+These bronzed and scarred veterans who had survived the battle-fields of
+four years of active war, whose field of operations had been a
+continent, the brave men who had marched and fought their way from New
+England and the Northwest, to New Orleans and Charleston; those who had
+withstood and repelled the terrific charges of the rebels at Gettysburg;
+those who had fought beneath and above the clouds at Lookout Mountain;
+who had taken Fort Donelson, Vicksburg, Atlanta, New Orleans, Savannah,
+Mobile, Petersburg, and Richmond; the triumphal entry of these heroes
+into the National Capital of the Republic which they had saved and
+redeemed, was deeply impressive. Triumphal arches, garlands, wreaths of
+flowers, evergreens, marked their pathway. Acting President and
+Cabinet, Governors and Senators, ladies, children, citizens, all united
+to express the nation's gratitude to those by whose heroism it had been
+saved.
+
+But there was one great shadow over the otherwise brilliant spectacle.
+Lincoln, their great-hearted chief, he whom all loved fondly to call
+their "Father Abraham;" he whose heart had been ever with them in camp,
+and on the march, in the storm of battle, and in the hospital; he had
+been murdered, stung to death, by the fang of the expiring serpent which
+these soldiers had crushed. There were many thousands of these gallant
+men in Blue, as they filed past the White House, whose weather-beaten
+faces were wet with tears of manly grief. How gladly, joyfully would
+they have given their lives to have saved his.
+
+
+
+
+LAST DAYS OF LINCOLN.
+
+
+It has been already stated that Mr. Lincoln returned to the Capital on
+the 9th of April; from that day until the 14th was a scene of continued
+rejoicing, gratulation, and thanksgiving to Almighty God who had given
+to us the victory. In every city, town, village, and school district,
+bells rang, salutes were fired, and the Union flag, now worshiped more
+than ever by every loyal heart, waved from every home. The President was
+full of hope and happiness. The clouds were breaking away, and his
+genial, kindly nature was revolving plans of reconciliation and peace.
+How could he now bind up the wounds of his country and obliterate the
+scars of the war, and restore friendship and good feeling to every
+section? These considerations occupied his thoughts: there was no
+bitterness, no desire for revenge. On the morning of the 14th, Robert
+Lincoln, just returned from the army, where, on the staff of General
+Grant, he had witnessed the surrender of Lee, breakfasted with his
+father, and the happy hour was passed in listening to details of that
+event. The day was occupied, first, with an interview with Speaker
+Colfax, then exchanging congratulations with a party of old Illinois
+friends, then a cabinet meeting, attended by Gen. Grant, at which all
+remarked his hopeful, joyous spirit, and all bear testimony that in this
+hour of triumph, he had no thought of vengeance, but his mind was
+revolving the best means of bringing back to sincere loyalty, those who
+had been making war upon his country. He then drove out with Mrs.
+Lincoln alone, and during the drive he dwelt upon the happy prospect now
+before them, and contrasting the gloomy and distracting days of the war
+with the peaceful ones now in anticipation, and looking beyond the term
+of his Presidency, he, in imagination, saw the time when he should
+return again to his prairie home, meet his old friends, and resume his
+old mode of life. In fancy, he was again in his old law library, and
+before the courts: with these were mingled visions of a prairie farm,
+and once more the plow and the ax should become familiar to his hand.
+Such were some of the incidents and fancies of the last day of the life
+of Abraham Lincoln.
+
+
+
+
+THE ASSASSINATION.
+
+
+From the time of the election of Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency, many
+threats, public and private, were made of his assassination. An attempt
+to murder him would undoubtedly have been made, in February, 1861, on
+his passage through Baltimore, had not the plot been discovered, and the
+time of his passage been anticipated. From the day of his inauguration,
+he began to receive letters threatening assassination. He said: "The
+first one or two made me uncomfortable, but," said he, smiling, "there
+is nothing like getting _used_ to things." He was constitutionally
+fearless, and came to consider these letters as idle threats, meant only
+to annoy him, and it was very difficult for his friends to induce him to
+resort to any precautions.
+
+It was announced through the press that on the evening of the 14th of
+April, Mr. Lincoln and General Grant would attend Ford's Theater. The
+General did not attend, but Mr. Lincoln, being unwilling to disappoint
+the public expectation, accompanied by Mrs. Lincoln, Miss Harris, and
+Major Rathbone, was induced to go. The writer met him on the portico of
+the White House just as he was about to enter his carriage, exchanged
+greetings with him, and will never forget the radiant, happy expression
+of his countenance, and the kind, genial tones of his voice, as we
+parted _for the night_ as we then thought--_forever_ in this world, as
+it resulted.
+
+The President was received, as he always was, by acclamations. When he
+reached the door of his box, he turned, and smiled, and bowed in
+acknowledgment of the hearty greeting which welcomed him, and then
+followed Mrs. Lincoln into the box. This was at the right hand of the
+stage. In the corner nearest the stage sat Miss Harris, next her Mrs.
+Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln sat nearest the entrance, Major Rathbone being
+seated on a sofa, in the back part of the box. The theater, and
+especially the box occupied by the President's party, was most
+beautifully draped with the national colors. While the play was in
+progress, John Wilkes Booth visited the theater behind the scenes, left
+a horse ready saddled in the alley behind the building, leaving a door
+opening to this alley ready for his escape.
+
+In the midst of the play, at the hour of 10.30, a pistol shot, sharp and
+clear, is heard! a man with a bloody dagger in his hand leaps from the
+President's box to the stage exclaiming, "_Sic semper tyrannis_," "the
+South is avenged." As the assassin struck the stage, the spur on his
+boot having caught in the folds of the flag, he fell to his knee.
+Instantly rising, he brandished his dagger, darted across the stage, out
+of the door he had left open, mounted his horse and galloped away. The
+audience, startled and stupefied with horror, were for a few seconds
+spell-bound. Some one cries out in the crowd, "_John Wilkes Booth!_"
+This man, an actor, familiar with the locality, after arranging for his
+escape, had passed round to the front of the theater, entered, passed in
+to the President's box, entered at the open and unguarded door, and
+stealing up behind the President, who was intent upon the play, placed
+his pistol near the back of the head of Mr. Lincoln, and fired. The ball
+penetrated the brain, and the President fell upon his face mortally
+wounded, unconscious and speechless from the first. Major Rathbone had
+attempted to seize Booth as he rushed past toward the stage, and
+received from the assassin a severe cut in the arm.
+
+No words can describe the anguish and horror of Mrs. Lincoln. The scene
+was heart-rending; she prayed for death to relieve her suffering. The
+insensible form of the President was removed across the street to the
+house of a Mr. Peterson. Robert Lincoln soon reached the scene, and the
+members of the cabinet and personal friends crowded around the place of
+the fearful tragedy. And there the strong constitution of Mr. Lincoln
+struggled with death, until twenty-two minutes past seven the next
+morning, when his heart ceased to beat. The scene during that long
+fearful night of woe, at the house of Peterson, beggars description.
+
+News of the appalling deed spread through the city, and it was found
+necessary to restrain the anxious, weeping people by a double guard
+around the house. The surgeons from the first examination of the wound,
+pronounced it mortal; and the shock and the agony of that terrible night
+to Mrs. Lincoln was enough to distract the reason, and break the heart
+of the most self-controlled. Robert Lincoln sought, by manly
+self-mastery to control his own grief and soothe his mother, and aid her
+to sustain her overwhelming sorrow.
+
+When at last, the noble heart ceased to beat, the Rev. Dr. Gurley, in
+the presence of the family, the household, and those friends of the
+President who were present, knelt down, and touchingly prayed the
+Almighty Father, to aid and strengthen the family and friends to bear
+their terrible sorrow.
+
+I will not attempt with feeble pen to sketch the scenes of that terrible
+night; I leave that for the pencil of the artist!
+
+As has been said, the name of the assassin was John Wilkes Booth! He was
+shot by Boston Corbett, a soldier on the 21st of April.
+
+
+
+
+ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF SECRETARY SEWARD.
+
+
+On the same night of the assassination of the President, an accomplice
+of Booth attempted to murder Mr. Seward, the Secretary of State, in his
+own house, while confined to his bed from severe injuries received by
+being thrown from his carriage. He was terribly mangled; and his life
+was saved by the heroic efforts of his sons and daughter and a nurse,
+whose name was Robinson. Some of the accomplices of Booth were arrested,
+tried, convicted, and hung; but all were the mere tools and instruments
+of the Conspirators. Mystery and darkness yet hang over the chief
+instigators of this most cowardly murder: none can say whether the chief
+conspirators will ever, in this world, be dragged to light and
+punishment.
+
+The terrible news of the death of Lincoln was, on the morning of the
+15th, borne by telegraph to every portion of the Republic. Coming, as it
+did, in the midst of universal joy, no language can picture the horror
+and grief of the people on its reception. A whole nation wept. Persons
+who had not heard the news, coming into crowded cities, were struck with
+the strange aspect of the people. All business was suspended; gloom,
+sadness, grief, sat upon every face. The flag, which had everywhere,
+from every spire and masthead, roof, and tree, and public building, been
+floating in glorious triumph, was now lowered; and, as the hours of that
+dreary 15th of April passed on, the people, by common impulse, each
+family by itself, commenced draping their houses and public buildings in
+mourning, and before night the whole nation was shrouded in black.
+
+There were no classes of people in the Republic whose grief was more
+demonstrative than that of the soldiers and the freedmen. The vast
+armies, not yet disbanded, looked upon Lincoln as their father. They
+knew his heart had followed them in all their campaigns and marches and
+battles. Grief and vengeance filled their hearts. But the poor negroes
+everywhere wept and sobbed over a loss which they instinctively felt was
+to them irreparable. On the Sunday following his death, the whole people
+gathered to their places of public worship, and mingled their tears
+together over a bereavement which every one felt like the loss of a
+father or a brother. The remains of the President were taken to the
+White House. On the 17th, on Monday, a meeting of the members of
+Congress then in Washington, was held at the Capitol, to make
+arrangements for the funeral. This meeting named a committee of one
+member from each State and Territory, and the whole Congressional
+delegation from Illinois, as a Congressional Committee to attend the
+remains of Mr. Lincoln to their final resting-place in Illinois. Senator
+Sumner and others desired that his body should be placed under the dome
+of the Capitol at Washington. It was stated that a vault had been
+prepared there for the remains of Washington, but had never been used,
+because the Washington family and Virginia desired them to remain in the
+family vault at Mount Vernon. It was said it would be peculiarly
+appropriate for the remains of Lincoln to be deposited under the dome of
+the Capitol of the Republic he had saved and redeemed.
+
+The funeral took place on Wednesday, the 19th. The services were held in
+the East Room of the Executive Mansion. It was a bright, genial
+day--typical of the kind and genial nature of him whom a nation was so
+deeply mourning.
+
+After the sad ceremonies at the National Capital, the remains of the
+President and of his beloved son Willie, who died at the White House
+during his presidency, were placed on a funeral car, and started on its
+long pilgrimage to his old home in Illinois, and it was arranged that
+the train should take nearly the same route as that by which he had come
+from Springfield to Washington in assuming the Executive Chair.
+
+And now the people of every State, city, town, and hamlet, came with
+uncovered heads, with streaming eyes, with their offerings of wreaths
+and flowers, to witness the passing train. It is impossible to describe
+the scenes. Minute-guns, the tolling of bells, music, requiems, dirges,
+military and civic displays, draped flags, black covering every public
+building and private house, everywhere indicated the pious desire of the
+people to do honor to the dead: two thousand miles, along which every
+house was draped in black, and from which, everywhere, hung the national
+colors in mourning. The funeral ceremonies at Baltimore were peculiarly
+impressive: nowhere were the manifestations of grief more universal; but
+the sorrow of the negroes, who thronged the streets in thousands, and
+hung like a dark fringe upon the long procession, was especially
+impressive. Their coarse, homely features were convulsed with a grief
+which they could not control; their emotional natures, excited by the
+scene, and by each other, until sobs and cries and tears, rolling down
+their black faces, told how deeply they felt their loss. When the
+remains reached Philadelphia, a half million of people were in the
+streets, to do honor to all that was left of him, who, in old
+Independence Hall, four years before, had declared that he would sooner
+die, sooner be assassinated, than give up the principles of the
+Declaration of Independence. He _had_ been assassinated because he would
+_not_ give them up. All felt, when the remains were placed in that
+historic room, surrounded by the memories of the great men of the Past,
+whose portraits from the walls looked down upon the scene, that a peer
+of the best and greatest of the revolutionary worthies was now added to
+the list of those who had served the Republic.
+
+Through New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Indiana, to Illinois, all the people
+followed the funeral train as mourners, but when the remains reached his
+own State, where he had been personally known to every one, where the
+people had all heard him on the stump and in court, every family
+mourned him as a father and a brother. The train reached Springfield on
+the 3d of May; and the corpse was taken to Oak Ridge Cemetery, and
+there, among his old friends and neighbors, his clients, and
+constituents, surrounded by representatives from the Army and Navy, with
+delegations from every State, with all the people, the world for his
+mourners--was he buried.
+
+
+
+
+PERSONAL SKETCHES OF LINCOLN.[8]
+
+[8] The substance of what follows is from chapter 29th of "The History
+of Abraham Lincoln, and The Overthrow of Slavery," by Isaac N. Arnold.
+
+
+In the remaining pages, I shall attempt to give a word-picture of Mr.
+Lincoln, his person, his moral and intellectual characteristics, and
+some personal recollections, so as to aid the reader, as far as I may be
+able, in forming an ideal of the man.
+
+Physically, he was a tall, spare man, six feet and four inches in
+height. He stooped, leaning forward as he walked. He was very athletic,
+with long, sinewy arms, large, bony hands, and of great physical power.
+Many anecdotes of his strength are given, which show that it was equal
+to that of two or three ordinary men. He lifted with ease five or six
+hundred pounds. His legs and arms were disproportionately long, as
+compared with his body; and when he walked, he swung his arms to and fro
+more than most men. When seated, he did not seem much taller than
+ordinary men. In his movements there was no grace, but an impression of
+awkward strength and vigor.
+
+He was naturally diffident, and even to the day of his death, when in
+crowds, and not speaking or acting, and conscious of being observed, he
+seemed to shrink with bashfulness. When he became interested, or spoke,
+or listened, this appearance left him, and he indicated no
+self-consciousness. His forehead was high and broad, his hair very dark,
+nearly black, and rather stiff and coarse, his eyebrows were heavy, his
+eyes dark-gray, very expressive and varied; now sparkling with humor and
+fun, and then deeply sad and melancholy; flashing with indignation at
+injustice or wrong, and then kind, genial, droll, dreamy; according to
+his mood.
+
+His nose was large, and clearly defined and well shaped; cheek-bones
+high and projecting. His mouth coarse, but firm. He was easily
+caricatured--but difficult to represent as he was, in marble or on
+canvass. The best bust of him is that of Volk, which was modeled from a
+cast taken from life in May, 1860, while he was attending court at
+Chicago.
+
+Among the best portraits, in the judgment of his family and intimate
+friends, are those of Carpenter, in the picture of the Reading of the
+Proclamation of Emancipation before the Cabinet, and that of Marshall.
+
+He would be instantly recognized as belonging to that type of tall,
+thin, large-boned men, produced in the northern portion of the Valley of
+the Mississippi, and exhibiting its peculiar characteristics in a most
+marked degree in Illinois, Kentucky and Tennessee. In any crowd in the
+United States, he would have been readily pointed out as a Western man.
+His stature, figure, manner, voice, and accent, indicated that he was of
+the Northwest. His manners were cordial, familiar, genial; always
+perfectly self-possessed, he made every one feel at home, and no one
+approached him without being impressed with his kindly, frank nature,
+his clear, good sense, and his transparent truthfulness and integrity.
+There is more or less of expression and character in handwriting.
+Lincoln's was plain, simple, clear, and legible, as that of Washington;
+but unlike that of Washington, it was without ornament.
+
+In endeavoring to state those qualities which gave him success and
+greatness, among the most important, it seems to me, were a supreme love
+of truth, and a wonderful capacity to ascertain it. Mentally, he had a
+perfect eye for truth. His mental vision was clear and accurate: he saw
+things as they were. I mean that every thing presented to his mind for
+investigation, he saw divested of every extraneous circumstance, every
+coloring, association, or accident which could mislead. This gave him at
+the bar a sagacity which seemed almost instinctive, in sifting the true
+from the false, and in ascertaining facts; and so it was in all things
+through life. He ever sought the real, the true, and the right. He was
+exact, carefully accurate in all his statements. He analyzed well; he
+saw and presented what lawyers call the very _gist_ of every question,
+divested of all unimportant or accidental relations, so that his
+statement was a demonstration. At the bar, his exposition of his case,
+or a question of law, was so clear, that, on hearing it, most persons
+were surprised that there should be any controversy about it. His
+reasoning powers were keen and logical, and moved forward to a
+demonstration with the precision of mathematics. What has been said
+implies that he possessed not only a sound judgment, which brought him
+to correct conclusions, but that he was able so to present questions as
+to bring others to the same result.
+
+His memory was capacious, ready, and tenacious. His reading was limited
+in extent, but his memory was so ready, and so retentive, that in
+history, poetry, and general literature, no one ever remarked any
+deficiency. As an illustration of the power of his memory, I recollect
+to have once called at the White House, late in his Presidency, and
+introducing to him a Swede and a Norwegian; he immediately repeated a
+poem of eight or ten verses, describing Scandinavian scenery and old
+Norse legends. In reply to the expression of their delight, he said that
+he had read and admired the poem several years before, and it had
+entirely gone from him, but seeing them recalled it.
+
+The two books which he read most were the Bible and Shakespeare. With
+these he was very familiar, reading and studying them habitually and
+constantly. He had great fondness for poetry, and eloquence, and his
+taste and judgment in each was exquisite. Shakespeare was his favorite
+poet; Burns stood next. I know of a speech of his at a Burns festival,
+in which he spoke at length of Burns's poems; illustrating what he said
+by many quotations, showing perfect familiarity with and full
+appreciation of the peasant poet of Scotland. He was extremely fond of
+ballads, and of simple, sad, and plaintive music.
+
+He was a most admirable reader. He read and repeated passages from the
+Bible and Shakespeare with great simplicity but remarkable expression
+and effect. Often when going to and from the army, on steamers and in
+his carriage, he took a copy of Shakespeare with him, and not
+unfrequently read, aloud to his associates. After conversing upon public
+affairs, he would take up his Shakespeare, and addressing his
+companions, remark, "What do you say now to a scene from Macbeth, or
+Hamlet, or Julius Caesar," and then he would read aloud, scene after
+scene, never seeming to tire of the enjoyment.
+
+On the last Sunday of his life, as he was coming up the Potomac, from
+his visit to City Point and Richmond, he read aloud many extracts from
+Shakespeare. Among others, he read, with an accent and feeling which no
+one who heard him will ever forget, extracts from Macbeth, and among
+others the following:--
+
+ "Duncan is in his grave;
+ After life's fitful fever, he sleeps well.
+ Treason has done his worst; nor steel, nor poison,
+ Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing
+ Can touch him farther."
+
+After "treason" had "_done his worst_," the friends who heard him on
+that occasion remembered that he read that passage very slowly over
+twice, and with an absorbed and peculiar manner. Did he feel a
+mysterious presentiment of his approaching fate?
+
+His conversation was original, suggestive, instructive, and playful;
+and, by its genial humor, fascinating and attractive beyond comparison.
+Mirthfulness and sadness were strongly combined in him. His mirth was
+exuberant, it sparkled in jest, story, and anecdote; and the next moment
+those peculiarly sad, pathetic, melancholy eyes, showed a man "familiar
+with sorrow, and acquainted with grief." I have listened for hours at
+his table, and elsewhere, when he has been surrounded by statesmen,
+military leaders, and other distinguished men of the nation, and I but
+repeat the universally concurring verdict of all, in stating that as a
+conversationalist he had no equal. One might meet in company with him
+the most distinguished men, of various pursuits and professions, but
+after listening for two or three hours, on separating, it was what
+Lincoln had said that would be remembered. His were the ideas and
+illustrations that would not be forgotten. Men often called upon him for
+the pleasure of listening to him. I have heard the reply to an
+invitation to attend the theater, "No, I am going up to the White House.
+I would rather hear Lincoln talk for half an hour, than attend the best
+theater in the world."
+
+As a public speaker, without any attempt at oratorical display, I think
+he was the most effective of any man of his day. When he spoke,
+everybody listened. It was always obvious, before he completed two
+sentences, that he had something to say, and it was sure to be something
+original, something different from any thing heard from others, or which
+had been read in books. He impressed the hearer at once, as an earnest,
+sincere man, who believed what he said. To-day, there are more of the
+sayings of Lincoln repeated by the people, more quotations, sentences,
+and extracts from his writings and speeches, familiar as "household
+words," than from those of any other American.
+
+I know no book, except the Bible and Shakespeare, from which so many
+familiar phrases and expressions have been taken as from his writings
+and speeches. Somebody has said, "I care not who makes the laws, if I
+may write the ballads of a nation." The words of Lincoln have done more
+in the last six years to mold and fashion the American character than
+those of any other man, and their influence has been all for truth,
+right, justice, and liberty. Great as has been Lincoln's services to the
+people, as their President, his influence, derived from his words and
+his example, in molding the future national character, in favor of
+justice, right, liberty, truth, and real, sincere, unostentatious
+reverence for God, is scarcely less important. The Republic of the
+future, the matured national character, will be more influenced by him
+than by any other man. This is evidence of his greatness, intellectual,
+and still more, moral. In this power of impressing himself upon the
+people, he contrasts with many other distinguished men in our history.
+Few quotations from Jefferson, or Adams, or Webster, live in the
+every-day language of the people. Little of Clay survives; not much of
+Calhoun, and who can quote, off-hand, half a dozen sentences from
+Douglas? But you hear Lincoln's words, not only in every cabin and
+caucus, and in every stump speech, but at every school-house,
+high-school, and college declamation, and by every farmer and artisan,
+as he tells you story after story of Lincoln's, and all to the point,
+hitting the nail on the head every time, and driving home the argument.
+Mr. Lincoln was not a scholar, but where is there a speech more
+exhaustive in argument than his Cooper Institute address? Where any
+thing more full of pathos than his farewell to his neighbors at
+Springfield, when he bade them good-bye, on starting for the capital?
+Where any thing more eloquent than his appeal for peace and union, in
+his first Inaugural, or than his defense of the Declaration of
+Independence in the Douglas debates? Where the equal of his speech at
+Gettysburg? Where a more conclusive argument than in his letter to the
+Albany Meeting on Arrests? What is better than his letter to the
+Illinois State Convention; and that to Hodges of Kentucky, in
+explanation of his anti-slavery policy? Where is there any thing equal
+in simple grandeur of thought and sentiment, to his last Inaugural? From
+all of these, and many others, from his every-day talks, are extracts on
+the tongues of the people, as familiar, and nearly as much reverenced,
+as texts from the Bible; and these are shaping the national character.
+"Though dead, he yet speaketh."
+
+As a public speaker, if excellence is measured by results, he had no
+superior. His manner was generally earnest, often playful; sometimes,
+but this was rare, he was vehement and impassioned. There have been a
+few instances, at the bar and on the stump, when, wrought up to
+indignation by some great personal wrong, or by an aggravated case of
+fraud or injustice, or when speaking of the fearful wrongs and injustice
+of slavery, he broke forth in a strain of impassioned vehemence which
+carried every thing before him.
+
+Generally, he addressed the reason and judgment, and the effect was
+lasting. He spoke extemporaneously, but not without more or less
+preparation. He had the power of repeating, without reading it, a
+discourse or speech which he had prepared or written out. His great
+speech, in opening the Douglas canvass, in June, 1858, was carefully
+written out, but so naturally spoken that few suspected that it was not
+extemporaneous. In his style, manner of presenting facts, and way of
+putting things to the people, he was more like Franklin than any other
+American. His illustrations, by anecdote and story, were not unlike the
+author of _Poor Richard_.
+
+A great cause of his intellectual power was the thorough exhaustive
+investigation he gave to every subject. Take, for illustration, his
+Cooper Institute speech. Hundreds of able and intelligent men have
+spoken on the same subject treated by him in that speech, yet what they
+said will all be forgotten, and his will survive; because his address is
+absolutely perfect for the purpose for which it was designed. Nothing
+can be added to it.
+
+Mr. Lincoln, however, required time thoroughly to investigate before he
+came to his conclusions, and the movements of his mind were not rapid;
+but when he reached his conclusions he believed in them, and adhered to
+them with great firmness and tenacity. When called upon to decide
+quickly upon a new subject or a new point, he often erred, and was ever
+ready to change when satisfied he was wrong.
+
+It was the union, in Mr. Lincoln, of the capacity clearly to see the
+truth, and an innate love of truth, and justice, and right in his heart,
+that constituted his character and made him so great. He never
+demoralized his intellectual or moral powers, either by doing wrong that
+good might come, or by advocating error because it was popular.
+Although, as a statesman, eminently practical, and looking to the
+possible good of to-day, he ever kept in mind the absolute truth and
+absolute right, toward which he always aimed.
+
+Mr. Lincoln was an unselfish man; he never sought his own advancement at
+the expense of others. He was a just man; he never tried to pull others
+down that he might rise. He disarmed rivalry and envy by his rare
+generosity. He possessed the rare wisdom of magnanimity. He was
+eminently a tender-hearted, kind, and humane man. These traits were
+illustrated all through his life. He loved to pardon: he was averse to
+punish. It was difficult for him to deny the request of a child, a
+woman, or of any who were weak and suffering. Pages of incidents might
+be quoted, showing his ever-thoughtful kindness, gratitude to, and
+appreciation of the soldiers. The following note (written to a lady
+known to him only by her sacrifices for her country) is selected from
+many on this subject:--
+
+ "EXECUTIVE MANSION, WASHINGTON,
+ "November, 1864.
+
+ "DEAR MADAM:--
+
+ "I have been shown, in the files of the War Department, a
+ statement of the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts, that you
+ are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the
+ field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any
+ words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the
+ grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I can not refrain from
+ tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the
+ thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our
+ Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement,
+ and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost,
+ and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly
+ a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.
+
+ "Yours very respectfully,
+ "ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+ "To Mrs. BIXBY, Boston, Massachusetts."
+
+One summer's day, in walking along the shaded path which leads from the
+White House to the War Department, I saw the tall form of the President
+seated on the grass under a tree, with a wounded soldier sitting by his
+side. He had a bundle of papers in his hand. The soldier had met him in
+the path, and, recognizing him, had asked his aid. Mr. Lincoln sat down
+upon the grass, investigated the case, and sent the soldier away
+rejoicing. In the midst of the rejoicings over the triumphs at
+Chattanooga and Lookout Mountain, he forgets not to telegraph to Grant,
+"Remember Burnside" at Knoxville.
+
+His charity, in the best sense of that word, was pervading. When others
+railed, he railed not again. No bitter words, no denunciation can be
+found in his writings or speeches. Literally, in his heart there was
+"malice toward none, and charity for all."
+
+Mr. Lincoln was by nature a gentleman. No man can point, in all his
+lifetime, to any thing mean, small, tricky, dishonest, or false; on the
+contrary, he was ever open, manly, brave, just, sincere, and true. That
+characteristic, attributed to him by some, of coarse story-telling, did
+not exist. I assert that my intercourse with him was constant for many
+years before he went to Washington, and I saw him daily, during the
+greater part of his Presidency; and although his stories and anecdotes
+were racy, witty, and pointed beyond all comparison, yet I never heard
+one of a character to need palliation or excuse. If a story had wit and
+was apt, he did not reject it, because to a vulgar or impure mind it
+suggested coarse ideas; but he himself was unconscious of any thing but
+its wit and aptness.
+
+It may interest the people who did not visit Washington during his
+Presidency, to know something of his habits, and the room he occupied
+and transacted business in, during his administration. His
+reception-room was on the second floor, on the south side of the White
+House, and the second apartment from the southeast corner. The corner
+room was occupied by Mr. Nicolay, his private secretary; next to this
+was the President's reception-room. It was, perhaps, thirty by twenty
+feet. In the middle of the west side, was a large marble fireplace, with
+old-fashioned brass andirons, and a large, high, brass fender. The
+windows looked to the south, upon the lawn and shrubbery on the south
+front of the White House, taking in the unfinished Washington Monument,
+Alexandria, the Potomac, and down that beautiful river toward Mount
+Vernon. Across the Potomac was Arlington Heights. The view from these
+windows was altogether very beautiful.
+
+The furniture of this room consisted of a long oak table, covered with
+cloth, and oak chairs. This table stood in the center of the room, and
+was the one around which the Cabinet sat, at Cabinet meetings, and is
+faithfully painted in Carpenter's picture of the Emancipation
+Proclamation. At the end of the table, near the window, was a large
+writing-table and desk, with pigeon-holes for papers, such as are common
+in lawyers' offices. In front of this, in a large arm-chair, Mr. Lincoln
+usually sat. Behind his chair, and against the west wall of the room,
+was another writing-desk high enough to write upon when standing, and
+upon the top of this were a few books, among which were the Statutes of
+the United States, a Bible, and a copy of Shakespeare. There was a
+bureau, with wooden doors, with pigeon-holes for papers, standing
+between the windows. Here the President kept such papers as he wished
+readily to refer to. There were two plain sofas in the room; generally
+two or three map-frames, from which hung military maps, on which the
+movements of the armies were continually traced and followed. The only
+picture in the room was an old engraving of Jackson, which hung over
+the fireplace; late in his administration was added a fine photograph of
+John Bright. Two doors opened into this room--one from the Secretary's,
+the other from the great hall, where the crowd usually waited. A
+bell-cord hung within reach of his hand, while he sat at his desk. There
+was an ante-room adjoining this, plainly furnished; but the crowd
+usually pressed to the hall, from which an entrance might be directly
+had to the President's room. A messenger stood at the door, and took in
+the cards and names of visitors.
+
+Here, in this room, more plainly furnished than many law and business
+offices--plainer than the offices of the heads of bureaus in the
+Executive Departments--Mr. Lincoln spent the days of his Presidency.
+Here he received everybody, from the Lieutenant-General and
+Chief-Justice, down to the private soldier and humblest citizen. Custom
+had established certain rules of precedence, fixing the order in which
+officials should be received. The members of the Cabinet and the high
+officers of the army were, of course, received always promptly. Senators
+and members of Congress, who are usually charged with the presentation
+of petitions and recommendations for appointments, and who are expected
+to right every wrong and correct every evil each one of their respective
+constituents may be suffering, or imagine himself to be suffering, have
+an immense amount of business with the Executive. I have often seen as
+many as ten or fifteen Senators and twenty or thirty Members of the
+House in the hall, waiting their turn to see the President. They would
+go to the ante-room, or up to the hall in front of the reception-room,
+and await their turns. The order of precedence was, first the
+Vice-President, if present, then the Speaker of the House, and then
+Senators and Members of the House in the order of their arrival, and the
+presentation of their cards. Frequently Senators and Members would go
+to the White House as early as eight or nine in the morning, to secure
+precedence and an early interview. While they waited, the loud ringing
+laugh of Mr. Lincoln, in which he was sure to be joined by all _inside_,
+but which was rather provoking to those _outside_, was often heard by
+the waiting and impatient crowd. Here, from early morning to late at
+night, he sat, listened, and decided--patient, just, considerate,
+hopeful. All the people came to him as to a father. He was more
+accessible than any of the leading members of his Cabinet--much more so
+than Mr. Seward, shut up in the State Department, writing his voluminous
+dispatches; far more so than Mr. Stanton, indefatigable, stern, abrupt,
+but ever honest and faithful. Mr. Lincoln saw everybody--governors,
+senators, congressmen, officers, ministers, bankers, merchants,
+farmers--all classes of people; all approached him with confidence, from
+the highest to the lowest; but this incessant labor and fearful
+responsibility told upon his vigorous frame. He left Illinois for the
+capital, with a frame of iron and nerves of steel. His old friends, who
+knew him in Illinois as a man who knew not what illness was, who knew
+him ever genial and sparkling with fun, as the months and years of the
+war passed slowly on, saw the wrinkles on his forehead deepened into
+furrows; and the laugh of old days became sometimes almost hollow; it
+did not now always seem to come from the heart, as in former years.
+Anxiety, responsibility, care, thought, wore upon even his giant frame,
+and his nerves of steel became at times irritable. For more than four
+years he had no respite, no holidays. When others fled away from the
+dust and heat of the capital, he must stay; he would not leave the helm
+until the danger was past and the ship was in port.
+
+Mrs. Lincoln watched his care-worn face with the anxiety of an
+affectionate wife, and sometimes took him from his labors almost in
+spite of himself. She urged him to ride, and to go to the theater and
+places of amusement, to divert his mind from his engrossing cares.
+
+Let us for a moment try to appreciate the greatness of his work and his
+services. He was the Commander-in-Chief, during the war, of the largest
+army and navy in the world; and this army and navy was created during
+his administration, and its officers were sought out and appointed by
+him. The operations of the Treasury were vast beyond all previous
+conceptions of the ability of the country to sustain; and yet, when he
+entered upon the Presidency, he found an empty treasury, the public
+credit shaken, no army, no navy, the officers all strangers, many
+deserting, more in sympathy with the rebels, Congress divided, and
+public sentiment unformed. The party which elected him were in a
+minority. The old Democratic party, which had ruled the country for half
+a century, hostile to him, and, by long political association, in
+sympathy with the insurgent States. His own party, new, made up of
+discordant elements, and not yet consolidated, unaccustomed to rule, and
+neither his party nor himself possessing any _prestige_. He entered the
+White House, the object of personal prejudice to a majority of the
+people, and of contempt to a powerful minority. And yet I am satisfied,
+from the statement of the conversation of Mr. Lincoln with Mr. Bateman,
+quoted hereafter, and from various other reasons, that he himself more
+fully appreciated the terrible conflict before him than any man in the
+nation, and that even then he hoped and expected to be the _Liberator_
+of the slaves. He did not yet clearly perceive the manner in which it
+was to be done, but he believed it would be done, and that God would
+guide him.
+
+In four years, this man crushed the most stupendous rebellion, supported
+by armies more vast, and resources greater than were ever before
+combined to overthrow any government. He held together and consolidated,
+against warring factions, his own great party, and strengthened it by
+securing the confidence and bringing to his aid a large proportion of
+all other parties. He was re-elected almost by acclamation, and he led
+the people, step by step, up to emancipation, and saw his work crowned
+by the Constitutional Amendment, eradicating Slavery from the Republic
+for ever. Did this man lack firmness? Study the boldness of the
+Emancipation! See with what fidelity he stood by his Proclamation! In
+his message of 1863, he said: "I will _never_ retract the proclamation,
+nor return to slavery any person made free by it." In 1864, he said: "If
+it should ever be made a duty of the Executive to return to slavery any
+person made free by the Proclamation or the acts of Congress, some other
+person, not I, must execute the law."
+
+When hints of peace were suggested as obtainable by giving over the
+negro race again to bondage, he repelled it with indignation. When the
+rebel Vice-President, Stephens, at Fortress Monroe, tempted him to give
+up the freedman, and seek the glory of a foreign war, in which the Union
+and Confederate soldiers might join, neither party sacrificing its
+honor, he was inflexible; he would die sooner than break the nation's
+plighted faith.
+
+Mr. Lincoln did not enter with reluctance upon the plan of emancipation;
+and in this statement I am corroborated by Lovejoy and Sumner, and many
+others. If he did not act more promptly, it was because he knew he must
+not go faster than the people. Men have questioned the firmness,
+boldness, and will of Mr. Lincoln. He had no vanity in the exhibition
+of power, but he quietly acted, when he felt it his duty so to do, with
+a boldness and firmness never surpassed.
+
+What bolder act than the surrender of Mason and Slidell, against the
+resolution of Congress and the almost universal popular clamor, without
+consulting the Senate or taking advice from his Cabinet? The removals of
+McClellan and Butler, the modification of the orders of Fremont and
+Hunter, were acts of a bold, decided character. He acted for himself,
+taking personally the responsibility of deciding the great questions of
+his administration.
+
+He was the most democratic of all the presidents. Personally, he was
+homely, plain, without pretension, and without ostentation. He believed
+in the people, and had faith in their good impulses. He ever addressed
+himself to their reason, and not to their prejudices. His language was
+simple, sometimes quaint, never sacrificing expression to elegance. When
+he spoke to the people, it was as though he said to them, "Come, let us
+reason together." There can not be found in all his speeches or writings
+a single vulgar expression, nor an appeal to any low sentiment or
+prejudice. He had nothing of the demagogue. He never himself alluded to
+his humble origin, except to express regret for the deficiencies of his
+education. He always treated the people in such a way, that they knew
+that he respected them, believed them honest, capable of judging
+correctly, and disposed to do right.
+
+I know not how, in a few words, I can better indicate his political and
+moral character, than by the following incident: A member of Congress,
+knowing the purity of his life, his reverence for God, and his respect
+for religion, one day expressed surprise, that he had not joined a
+church. After mentioning some difficulties he felt in regard to some
+articles of faith, Mr. Lincoln said, "_Whenever any church_ will
+inscribe over its altar, as its sole qualification for membership,
+Christ's condensed statement of both Law and Gospel, '_Thou shalt love
+the Lord, thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
+all thy mind, and thy neighbor as thyself_,' that church will I join
+with all my heart."
+
+Love to God, as the great Father, love to man as his brother,
+constituted the basis of his political and moral creed.
+
+One day, when one of his friends was denouncing his political enemies,
+"Hold on," said Mr. Lincoln, "Remember what St. Paul says, 'and now
+abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; _but the greatest of these is
+charity_.'"
+
+From the day of his leaving Springfield to assume the duties of the
+Presidency, when he so impressively asked his friends and neighbors to
+invoke upon him the guidance and wisdom of God, to the evening of his
+death, he seemed ever to live and act in the consciousness of his
+responsibility to Him, and with the trusting faith of a child he leaned
+confidingly upon His Almighty Arm. He was visited during his
+administration by many Christian delegations, representing the various
+religious denominations of the Republic, and it is known that he was
+relieved and comforted in his great work by the consciousness that the
+Christian world were praying for his success. Some one said to him, one
+day, "No man was ever so remembered in the prayers of the people,
+especially of those who pray not to be heard of men, as you are." He
+replied, "I have been a good deal helped by just that thought."
+
+The support which Mr. Lincoln received during his administration from
+the religious organizations, and the sympathy and confidence between the
+great body of Christians and the President, was indeed a source of
+immense strength and power to him.
+
+I know of nothing revealing more of the true character of Mr. Lincoln,
+his conscientiousness, his views of the slavery question, his sagacity
+and his full appreciation of the awful trial through which the country
+and he had to pass, than the following incident stated by Mr. Bateman,
+Superintendent of Public Instruction for Illinois.
+
+On one occasion, in the autumn of 1860, after conversing with Mr.
+Bateman at some length, on the, to him, strange conduct of Christian men
+and ministers of the Gospel supporting slavery, he said:--
+
+"I know there is a God, and that He hates injustice and slavery. I see
+the storm coming, and I know that His hand is in it. If He has a place
+and work for me--and I think He has--I believe I am ready. I am nothing,
+but truth is every thing. I know I am right, because I know that Liberty
+is right, for Christ teaches it, and Christ is God. I have told them
+that a house divided against itself can not stand; and Christ and Reason
+say the same; and they will find it so.
+
+"Douglas don't care whether slavery is voted up or down, but God cares,
+and humanity cares, and I care; and with God's help I shall not fail. I
+may not see the end; but it will come, and I shall be vindicated; and
+these men will find that they have not read their Bibles right."
+
+Much of this was uttered as if he were speaking to himself, and with a
+sad, earnest solemnity of manner impossible to be described. After a
+pause, he resumed: "Doesn't it appear strange that men can ignore the
+moral aspect of this contest? A revelation could not make it plainer to
+me that slavery or the Government must be destroyed. The future would be
+something awful, as I look at it, but for this rock on which I stand
+(alluding to the Testament which he still held in his hand). It seems as
+if God had borne with this thing (slavery) until the very teachers of
+religion had come to defend it from the Bible, and to claim for it a
+divine character and sanction; and now the cup of iniquity is full, and
+the vials of wrath will be poured out." After this, says Mr. Bateman,
+the conversation was continued for a long time. Every thing he said was
+of a peculiarly deep, tender, and religious tone, and all was tinged
+with a touching melancholy. He repeatedly referred to his conviction
+that the day of wrath was at hand, and that he was to be an actor in the
+terrible struggle which would issue in the overthrow of slavery, though
+he might not live to see the end.[9]
+
+[9] The foregoing statement has been verified by Mr. Bateman as
+substantially correct.
+
+Perhaps in all history there is no example of such great and long
+continued injustice as that of the British press during the war toward
+Mr. Lincoln. His death shamed them into decency. While he lived they
+sneered at his manners. Let them turn to their own Cromwell. They said
+his person was ugly. Has the world recognized the ability of Mirabeau,
+or that of Henry Brougham, notwithstanding their ugliness? They made
+scurrile jests about his figure, as though a statesman must be
+necessarily a sculptor's model! They were facetious about his dress, as
+though a greater than a Fox or a Chatham must be a Beau Brummel. They
+were horrified by his jokes. If the same had been told by the patrician
+Palmerston, instead of the plebeian Lincoln, they would not have lacked
+the "Attic salt," but would have rivaled Dean Swift or Sidney Smith.
+
+It has been truly said there is one parallel only, to English
+journalism's treatment of Lincoln, and that is to be found in their
+treatment of Napoleon. "The Corsican Ogre," and the "American Ape," were
+phrases coined in the same mint. But the great Corsican was England's
+bitter foe; Lincoln was never provoked either by his own or his
+country's wrongs, to hostility against Great Britain. Yet at the great
+Martyr's grave, even this injustice changed to respect and reverence;
+even "Punch" repented and said--
+
+ "Yes he had lived to shame me from my sneer,
+ To lame my pencil, and confute my pen;
+ To make me own this hind, of princes _peer_,
+ This rail-splitter a true-born _King_ of men."
+
+The place Mr. Lincoln will occupy in history, will be higher than any
+which he held while living. His Emancipation Proclamation is the most
+important historical event of the nineteenth century. Its influence will
+not be limited by time, nor bounded by locality. It will ever be treated
+by the historian as one of the great landmarks of human progress.
+
+He has been compared and contrasted with three great personages in
+history, who were assassinated,--with Caesar, with William of Orange, and
+with Henry IV. of France. He was a nobler type of man than either, as he
+was the product of a higher and more Christian civilization.
+
+The two great men by whose words and example our great continental
+Republic is to be fashioned and shaped are Washington and Lincoln.
+Representative men of the East, and of the West, of the Revolutionary
+era, and the era of Liberty for all. One sleeps upon the banks of the
+Potomac, and the other on the great prairies of the Valley of the
+Mississippi. Lincoln was as pure as Washington, as modest, as just, as
+patriotic; less passionate by nature, more of a democrat in his feelings
+and manners, with more faith in the people, and more hopeful of their
+future. Statesmen and patriots will study their record and learn the
+wisdom of goodness.
+
+
+END OF BOOK ADVERTISEMENTS
+
+
+ENGRAVED PORTRAIT OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN.
+
+The Portrait of Mr. LINCOLN, accompanying this book, has been engraved,
+for the Publisher, expressly for it. No labor or expense has been spared
+to produce a First-Class Engraving. It was executed by H. B. HALL, JR.,
+ESQ., who unquestionably stands in the front rank of American Engravers.
+The great Painting of
+
+ "The Last Hours of Lincoln,"
+
+is now being engraved by Mr. HALL, in the same style.
+
+This PORTRAIT of President LINCOLN is pronounced by all to be the most
+life-like--the best ever engraved of him. It may not be improper to
+state that I have a letter from his family to that effect, which I
+refrain to place in print. I will, however, publish a few from persons
+intimately acquainted with him, selecting from the large number that I
+have received.
+
+
+Engraved Portrait of President Lincoln.
+
+OPINIONS OF HIS FRIENDS.
+
+ "WASHINGTON, D. C., _June 22, 1868_.
+
+ "DEAR SIR:--
+
+"I have examined with interest the steel engraving of President LINCOLN
+published by you. I knew him intimately more than thirty years, being at
+times a member of his family.
+
+"I regard this portrait the happiest likeness--and it conveys to me the
+most pleasing recollection of ABRAHAM LINCOLN of any that I have seen.
+
+ "Very truly yours,
+ "J. B. S. TODD.
+
+ "COL. JOHN B. BACHELDER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "TREASURY DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, D. C., _July 30, 1868_.
+
+ "DEAR SIR:--
+
+"I have carefully examined the portrait of the late President, Mr.
+LINCOLN, engraved by Mr. H. B. HALL, Jr., and published by yourself. The
+engraving is exceedingly fine, and the _likeness_ is superior to any
+that I have seen. As a work of Art, it is in the highest degree
+creditable to Mr. HALL.
+
+ "Very respectfully,
+ "HUGH McCULLOCH,
+ "_Secretary of the Treasury_.
+
+ "COL. JOHN B. BACHELDER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "WAR DEPARTMENT, _July 30, 1868_.
+
+"* * * It is one of the most truthful likenesses of the late President
+that I have seen. * * *
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ "J. M. SCHOFIELD,
+ "_Secretary of War_.
+
+ "COL. JOHN B. BACHELDER."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "NAVY DEPARTMENT, _July 30, 1868_.
+
+"* * * I think it a correct and satisfactory likeness in all respects.
+
+ "GIDEON WELLES,
+ "_Secretary of Navy_.
+
+ "J. B. BACHELDER, ESQ."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "HEAD-QUARTERS, CORPS OF ENGINEERS,
+
+ "WASHINGTON, D. C., _July 30, 1868_.
+
+"* * * It is a beautiful piece of Art, indeed it is I think quite
+remarkable, presenting, as it does that characteristic expression of the
+eye as well as of the features and lines of the face. * * *
+
+ "I am very truly yours,
+ "A. A. HUMPHREYS,
+ "_Major-General_."
+
+
+A quarto edition of this Engraving has been published, suitable to
+frame, which will be sent free by mail to any part of the country on the
+reception of the price.
+
+STYLE AND PRICES.
+
+PRINT, =$1.00=; PLAIN PROOF, =$2.00=; INDIA PROOF, =$3.00=; ARTIST'S
+PROOF (selected and signed by the engraver, and tastefully framed in a
+_passe-partout_), =$5.00=. (Express delivery extra.)
+
+ _Orders Addressed to_
+ JOHN B. BACHELDER, Publisher,
+ =59 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK=.
+
+ PROSPECTUS OF WORKS
+
+ PUBLISHED BY
+
+ JOHN B. BACHELDER,
+
+ 59 BEEKMAN STREET,
+
+ NEW YORK.
+
+[Illustration: COL. MORROW, with the COLORS of the 24th MICH. VOLS.]
+
+
+GETTYSBURG.
+
+When a person is desirous of procuring a published work upon any
+subject, it is natural for him to inquire for the sources of information
+from which the author has compiled that work. I have, therefore, without
+wishing to be considered egotistical, concluded to issue this prospectus
+to such as have an interest in the Battle of Gettysburg, that they may
+know what I have already done, and what I yet propose to do, to
+eliminate the history of that battle.
+
+
+ISOMETRICAL DRAWING OF THE GETTYSBURG BATTLE-FIELD.
+
+In compiling the Isometrical Drawing of the Gettysburg Battle-field, it
+was first necessary to establish its extent and boundaries. When I
+arrived at Gettysburg the _debris_ of that great battle lay scattered
+for miles around. Fresh mounds of earth marked the resting-place of the
+fallen thousands, and many of the dead lay yet unburied. It therefore
+required no guide to point out the locality where the battle had been
+fought.
+
+As the term _field_, when applied to a battle, is generally used
+figuratively, and, by the general reader, might be misunderstood, it is
+well to consider at the start, that the battle-_field_ of Gettysburg not
+only embraces within its boundaries many _fields_, but forests as well,
+and even the town of Gettysburg itself is included in that battle-field.
+The formation of the ground and the positions of the troops, favored the
+plan of sketching the field while facing the west. Consequently the top
+of my DRAWING of it is west: the right hand, north; the left, south, &c.
+There was no point from which the whole field could be sketched, nor
+would such a position have favored this branch of Art. On the contrary,
+it was necessary to sketch from _every_ part of the field, combining the
+whole into one grand view.
+
+[Illustration: DEATH OF GEN. ZOOK.]
+
+Having located its boundaries, I commenced at the southeast corner, and
+gradually moving toward the _north_, I looked toward the _west_, and
+sketched it carefully, as far as the vision extended, including fields,
+forests, houses, barns, hills, and valleys; and every object, however
+minute, which would influence the result of a battle. Thus I continued
+to the northeast boundary, a distance of five and a half miles. The next
+day I resumed my work at the south (having advanced to the point where
+my vision had been obstructed the preceding day), and sketched another
+breadth to the north, as before: and so continued, day by day, until I
+had carried my Drawing forward four and a half miles, which included
+within its limits the town of Gettysburg. When the Battle-field had been
+_Isometrically_ drawn. I sketched in the _distance_ and added a sky.
+
+This Drawing was the result of eighty-four days spent on that field
+immediately after the battle, during which time I sketched accurately
+the twenty-five square miles which it represents.
+
+I spent two months in hospital writing down the statements of
+Confederate prisoners, and as they became convalescent, I went over the
+field with many of their officers, who located their positions and
+explained the movements of their commands during the battle.
+
+I then visited the ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, consulted with its
+Commander-in-Chief, Corps, Division, and Brigade commanders, and visited
+every Regiment and Battery engaged, to whose officers the sketch of the
+field was submitted, and they, after careful consultation, located upon
+it the positions of their respective commands.
+
+[Illustration: PHILLIPS' 5th MASS. BATTERY]
+
+From the information thus obtained, I have traced the movements of
+_every Regiment and Battery_ from the commencement to the close of the
+battle, and have located on the Drawing its most important position for
+each of the three days.
+
+Since its publication I issued an invitation to the officers of the Army
+of the Potomac to visit Gettysburg with me, and point out their
+respective positions and movements, thus giving an opportunity to the
+_actors_ in this great drama to correct any misapprehension, and
+establish, while still fresh in memory, the facts and details of this
+most important battle of the age. This invitation was responded to by
+over one thousand officers engaged in the battle; twenty-eight of whom
+were Generals commanding. And it may be interesting to those who possess
+the Drawing, to know that _but one solitary Regiment_ was discovered to
+be out of position on it.
+
+Many thousand copies of this work have been sold, yet the demand still
+continues, and orders are constantly coming in from all parts of the
+country. Though complete in itself, it is really but the _introduction_
+to other works yet to be published on this battle, and will be
+considered almost an indispensable companion to the history of it.
+
+It can be furnished at the following:
+
+
+PRICES.
+
+COLORED PROOF, on heavy plate paper, carefully finished in Water-Colors,
+$15.00
+
+PROOF, printed in tints, on paper as above, with positions of Regiments,
+colored, 10.00
+
+TINTED, printed with one tint, on lighter paper, 5.00
+
+The above styles have a sky, and are suitable to frame, and are
+accompanied by a key.
+
+PLAIN, on lighter paper, without sky, $3.00
+
+[Illustration: CAPTURE OF THE 8th LA. COLORS BY LT. YOUNG, ADG'T 107th
+OHIO VOLS.]
+
+The original plate has not been used except to print copies for
+_transfers_. The _first_ impressions from each transfer are reserved for
+PROOFS. Therefore the quality of the print can never materially change,
+as the original plate would furnish a thousand transfers. The _colored_
+PROOFS are carefully colored by an Artist. The TINTED and PLAIN editions
+are next printed, and when the plate is worn a new transfer is made.
+
+To any person remitting the money, for either of the above styles, I
+will forward the print by mail, to any part of the United States, FREE
+OF CHARGE, carefully packed on a roll: or, I will send it by express, at
+their expense, with bill for collection. I have sent hundreds by mail,
+to all parts of the country, and have yet to hear of the first copy
+being lost or injured, while it is quite a saving of expense. A _Key_,
+embracing a brief description of the battle, accompanies each print
+without extra charge. I have hundreds of letters of indorsement from
+which I select the following:--
+
+
+TESTIMONIALS.
+
+ "HEAD-QUARTERS ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. _Feb. 11, 1864._
+
+"I have examined Col. Bachelder's ISOMETRICAL DRAWING of the Gettysburg
+Battle-field, and am perfectly satisfied with the accuracy with which
+the topography is delineated, and the positions of the troops laid down.
+Col. B., in my judgment, deserves great credit for the time and labor he
+has devoted to obtaining the materials for this drawing, which have
+resulted in making it so accurate. * * * * I can cheerfully recommend it
+to all those who are desirous of procuring an accurate picture and
+faithful record of the events of this great battle. * * * *
+
+ "I remain most truly yours,
+ "GEO. G. MEADE,
+ "_Maj.-Gen. Comd'g. A. P._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "HEAD-QUARTERS SECOND ARMY CORPS. _Dec. 29, 1863._
+
+"The view of the Battle-field of Gettysburg prepared by Col. Bachelder,
+has been carefully examined by me. I find it as accurate as such a
+drawing can well be made. And _it is accurate_, as far as my knowledge
+extends.
+
+ "WINF'D S. HANCOCK,
+ "_Major-General Comd'g 2d Corps._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Col. Bachelder's Isometrical View of the Battle of Gettysburg is an
+admirable production, and a truthful rendering of the various positions
+assumed by the troops of my command.
+
+ "A. DOUBLEDAY,
+ "_Maj.-Gen. Vols., Comd'g 1st Corps._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "BOSTON, _Sept. 23, 1964_.
+
+"COL. BACHELDER:--I have examined your beautiful drawing of the
+Battle-field of Gettysburg and vicinity. The certificates of Gen. Meade
+and the Corps Commanders, which appear on its face, establish its
+accuracy on the highest authority. Your personal explorations, and your
+inquiries of all the commissioned officers in command of the Union Army,
+and of the Confederate officers made prisoners, have furnished you means
+of information not possessed, I imagine, by any other person. Such
+opportunities of observation as I had during three days passed at
+Gettysburg satisfy me of the fidelity of your delineation of the
+position of every regiment of the two armies on each of the three
+eventful days. * * * * I may add, that the engraving is beautifully
+executed and colored. Wishing you ample remuneration,
+
+ "I remain sincerely yours,
+ "EDWARD EVERETT."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "HEAD-QUARTERS FIFTH ARMY CORPS. _Sept. 28, 1864._
+
+ "MR. JNO. B. BACHELDER:--
+
+"DEAR SIR:--I am exceedingly gratified with receiving a finished copy of
+your print of the Battle-field of Gettysburg. I am familiar with your
+long and untiring labors in all the fields where truth could be reached,
+and know that your efforts were crowned with a success that leaves
+nothing more to be desired. You are authorized to add my name to those
+who bear testimony to Its accuracy.
+
+ "Very respectfully your obedient servant,
+ "G. K. WARREN.
+ "_Maj.-Gen. Vols., Comd'g 5th Corps._
+ "_Ch. Eng. at Gettysburg._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "ORANGE, _Oct. 1, 1864_.
+
+ "JNO. B. BACHELDER, Esq.:--
+
+"MY DEAR SIR:--I have carefully examined your Isometrical Drawing of the
+Battle-field of Gettysburg, with great interest and much profit. Never
+having been on that field, of course I can not express an opinion as to
+its accuracy--so abundantly indorsed for, however, by most competent
+judges: but I can say that it has given me a much clearer idea of the
+battle than I had before, and I earnestly hope that you will find it
+convenient to illustrate others of our great battles in the same manner.
+
+ "I am very truly yours,
+ "GEO. B. McCLELLAN."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "HEAD-QUARTERS DEP'T AND ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. _Oct. 24, 1864._
+
+ "MR. JNO. B. BACHELDER:--
+
+"MY DEAR SIR:--I was much gratified on receiving a copy of your
+beautiful drawing of the 'Gettysburg Battle-field.' I have never seen a
+painting or topographical map that could give so vivid a representation
+of a great battle. I regard it as an honor that you have associated my
+name with those of other corps commanders in your historical picture. Be
+pleased to accept my kind regards.
+
+ "Respectfully yours,
+ "O. O. HOWARD, _Major-General_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "COL. JNO. B. BACHELDER:--
+
+"DEAR SIR:--I have examined with care your Isometrical Drawing of the
+Gettysburg Battle-field, and can cheerfully bear testimony to the
+accuracy of the position of the troops on the right of our line.
+
+ "Yours very truly,
+ "H. W. SLOCUM,
+ "_Maj.-Gen. Vols., Comd'g Right Wing at Gettysburg._"
+
+[Illustration: WOFFORD'S FLANK ATTACK ON SWEITZER'S BRIGADE, DEATH OF
+COL. JEFFERS 4th MICH. VOLS.]
+
+
+HISTORY OF THE BATTLE.
+
+During my consultations with officers at the front, as well as on the
+Battle-field, I noted down with great care their conversations, and have
+books full of material thus rescued from oblivion.
+
+[Illustration: STANNARD'S BRIGADE OPENING ON PICKETTS' DIVISION.]
+
+Since the publication of the Drawing, and even before, I have been
+steadily engaged in compiling the History of the Battle of Gettysburg. I
+have traveled many thousand miles to add to my knowledge. I have
+received a great number of letters relating to it, and the Government
+have very considerately placed at my disposal the entire Reports of both
+the Union and Confederate officers; and have also given me access to the
+archives at Washington. They have recently ordered a re-survey of the
+field, which is now being done by Government Engineers in the most
+complete and scientific manner. A fine Topographical map is to be
+compiled and engraved, copies of which I have arranged to have to
+illustrate my History of the Battle. This book, in addition to the maps,
+which will cost several thousand dollars, will also be illustrated with
+Steel Plates and Wood-Cuts in a manner second to no book heretofore
+published in this country. Over $7,500 worth of illustrations are
+already engraved to embellish it, including fine Steel Portraits,
+executed by the best engravers in America, in line and stipple, of
+Generals Reynolds, Doubleday, Newton, Meredith, Stannard, Hancock,
+Gibbon, Zook, Hays, Webb, Hall, Sickles, Birney, Humphreys, Berdan,
+Sykes, Barnes, Tilton, Wright, Bartlett, Wheaton, Howard, Ames, Slocum,
+Williams, Geary, Kane, Pleasanton, Butterfield, Warren, Hunt, Ingalls,
+Randolph, Martin, and McGilvrey. Several others are in hand, and
+undoubtedly more will be added to the list. In addition to these the
+Portraits of leading Confederate Generals will be engraved. Many of the
+prominent scenes of the battle have already been beautifully designed
+and engraved on wood, samples of which embellish this circular, others
+are to be added, and to those interested I shall be pleased to furnish
+full information regarding either portraits or wood-cuts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I shall publish a POPULAR EDITION of the history, with portraits printed
+from transfers, and bound in cloth. Price. $7.50
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next will be the LIBRARY EDITION, royal octavo, printed on good fair
+paper, good plates, and substantially bound in sheep. $12.00
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The same size printed on fine paper. Proof Portraits--bound in half
+morocco, beveled boards. $17.50
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A FINE EDITION on tinted paper. Proof Portraits. Full morocco, gilt,
+beveled boards, gilt edges. $25.00
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LARGE PAPER EDITION (limited) will be printed from new type, and the
+original wood-cuts in the best style of modern hand-press work, on heavy
+toned paper, with the finest INDIA PROOF PORTRAITS. In Sheets, stitched,
+uncut, $100.00
+
+Elaborately bound. Full levant morocco, gilt. $125.00
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have now devoted five years and a half to collecting material for the
+history of the Battle of Gettysburg, but until quite recently I have
+felt unwilling to commence to write, knowing that other matter existed
+which it was important for me to have, and which, when obtained, might
+make a material change in the account. This reason no longer exists,
+though I shall still thankfully receive suggestions from any participant
+in the battle.
+
+Within another year the Government will have completed the Topographical
+Map of the field, by which time I hope to be ready to publish my work.
+As a publisher I would have done so long ago, but as a historian not
+until I feel that I have written the truth--the whole truth, and nothing
+but the truth.
+
+
+PAINTINGS OF THE BATTLE.
+
+I have also in progress, the finest Collection of Oil Paintings executed
+of any battle in this country. The whole to be known as
+
+ "THE GETTYSBURG ART GALLERY."
+
+[Illustration: REPULSE OF LONGSTREET'S CHARGE.]
+
+I have divided the Battle into a series of episodes, beginning with its
+commencement and continuing to its close, each to embrace such movements
+and operations as of themselves form a complete unit. Of each, I make an
+accurate historical design, which design I place in the hands of some
+eminent battle-scene painter, who will be responsible for the artistic
+rendering of the subject. Each painting is to be 7 x 4 ft., and when
+completed, will be exhibited in the places where the regiments
+represented in it were raised. The whole, together, will form a most
+complete and graphic representation of the Battle from its commencement
+to the close. Each of these paintings will be engraved on steel, and
+hereafter engravings may be had representing actual scenes, which,
+having been designed under the personal direction of the participants
+themselves, will possess the merit of historical truth.
+
+It must not be understood that this whole work is to be put in hand at
+once. It will be taken up in detail, and continued as rapidly as I have
+time and means to attend to it. I shall be happy to correspond with
+those interested in any portion of the Battle. When convenient, it will
+be better to call a meeting, at Gettysburg, of the officers of the
+command to be represented, before commencing a painting, that all the
+details may be properly arranged. I have already made a design,
+representing the "charge" of the 6th Wisconsin, 95th N. Y., and 14th N.
+Y. S. M., on the first day, resulting in the capture of the 2d
+Mississippi Regiment, which is now being painted by Alonzo Chappel,
+Esq., the eminent historical painter. I have recently met, at
+Gettysburg, the officers of the 3d Division, 1st Army Corps, and under
+their direction completed a design of their engagement on the afternoon
+of the first day, which will also embrace the movements of the 1st
+Brigade, 1st Division. This picture is now being painted by the
+distinguished battle-scene painter, James Walker, Esq.
+
+Fine Steel Engravings will be published from these paintings. Size
+(engraved surface), 12 x 21 in.
+
+
+PRICES:
+
+Prints, $5.00; Plain Proofs, $10.00; India Proofs, $15.00; Artist's
+Proofs, $25.00.
+
+[Illustration: DEATH OF MAJOR FERRY, 5^th MICH. CAV'Y.]
+
+Mr. Walker has just completed for me, his graphic representation of
+
+ THE REPULSE OF LONGSTREET'S CHARGE,
+
+on the afternoon of the third day, which will be exhibited in the
+principal cities of the country. This is also from my historical design,
+and has been painted under my immediate direction. Mr. Walker spent
+weeks at Gettysburg, transcribing the portraiture of the field to
+canvas, which has been done in the most pleasing and lifelike manner. We
+have received in this matter the kindest support and co-operation of the
+officers of the army, engaged on that portion of the field.
+
+Many distinguished general officers, on my invitation, visited
+Gettysburg, and went over the field with us, and pointed out all the
+details of this great turning point of the Rebellion; each explaining
+the movements of their several commands. Among those present at
+different times, were Generals Meade, Hancock, Gibbon, Howard,
+Doubleday, Stannard, Hunt, Warren, Humphreys, Graham, Burling, De
+Trobriand, Wistar, and Dana; together with a large number of Field,
+Line, and Staff-Officers. Most of these gentlemen have since kindly
+called at Mr. Walker's studio, and aided the work with their advice.
+Many others, who were unable to meet with us at Gettysburg, have, at
+considerable trouble, visited the studio in New York; among them,
+Generals Webb, Hall, Newton, Hazard, Sickles, Ward, Brewster, Berdan,
+and Gates, and Generals Wilcox and Longstreet, of the Confederate Army;
+the latter taking great interest in the painting, and leaving me a fine
+letter indorsing its accuracy. This painting has been designed
+_strictly_ in conformity to the directions of these gentlemen, given on
+the field for that purpose, and from the Reports of the Confederate
+Commanders, furnished to me by the Government.
+
+This great representative Battle-scene has not its equal in America, for
+correctness of design or accuracy of execution. Gibbon's and Hays's
+Divisions and the Corps Artillery, occupy the immediate foreground. It
+is on a canvas 7-1/2 x 20 feet, and represents, not only every Regiment
+engaged at that portion of the field, but where the formation of the
+ground would admit, the entire left wing is shown.
+
+It presents such an accurate and lifelike portrait of the country, that
+on it the movements of the first and second day's operations can readily
+be traced. No important scene has been screened behind large foreground
+figures, or, for the want of a knowledge of the details, hidden by
+convenient puffs of smoke; but every feature of this gigantic struggle
+has, in its proper place, been woven into a symmetrical whole.
+
+A fine steel plate is also to be engraved of this picture, which will be
+accompanied by a _Key_, by which the position of every Regiment and
+Battery can be determined.
+
+
+PRICE OF ENGRAVINGS.
+
+Print, $10.--Plain Proof, $25.--India Proof, $60.--Artist Proof (limited
+to 200 copies), $100.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following gentlemen, intimately identified with the Battle of
+Gettysburg, and exercising the highest commands at the battle, kindly
+furnished me these letters, as indorsements to an application to examine
+Confederate Reports of the Battle of Gettysburg at the War Department.
+
+ "PHILADELPHIA, _Nov. 3, 1867_.
+
+ "GENERAL:--
+
+"* * * * Mr. Bachelder has accumulated a vast amount of official and
+reliable testimony on our side, and I am of the opinion his work will be
+as truthful as the data in his possession will admit; I am greatly
+interested in his application being granted, and would most earnestly
+recommend permission being given him to examine the Confederate Reports,
+in case you do not see any strong reasons preventing it.
+
+ "Very truly yours,
+ "GEO. G. MEADE,
+ "_Major-General, U. S. A._
+
+ "GENERAL U. S. GRANT.
+ "_Sec. War, ad interim._"
+
+ PERMISSION GRANTED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [Extract of a letter from Major-General Humphreys, Chief of the
+ Corps of Engineers.]
+
+ "WASHINGTON, D. C., _Nov. 14, 1867_.
+
+ "GENERAL:--
+
+"* * * The information which Mr. Bachelder has collected concerning the
+Battle of Gettysburg, is extraordinary in amount and correctness. So far
+as I am able to judge, there is no battle of any war respecting which so
+many truthful accounts, so many exact details, have been collected and
+compiled. From every source, from the private to the general commanding
+the army, facts have been collected, and where discrepancies were found,
+evidence was multiplied, and in this way errors have been dissipated.
+
+Mr. Bachelder has peculiar qualifications for the task he has
+undertaken, and has devoted four years to it. * * *
+
+ "A. A. HUMPHREYS,
+ "_Major-General_.
+
+ "GENERAL U. S. GRANT.
+ "_Sec. of War, ad interim._"
+
+[Illustration: DEATH OF PRIVATE RIGGIN, GUIDON BEARER, RICKETTS' (PA)
+BATTERY]
+
+NOTE.--The wood-cuts interspersed through this circular have been
+engraved to illustrate scenes in the Battle of Gettysburg, and with many
+others will appear in the History of that Battle.
+
+
+"THE LAST HOURS OF LINCOLN."
+
+ORIGIN OF THIS HISTORICAL PAINTING.
+
+ABRAHAM LINCOLN, President of the United States, was assassinated by
+JOHN WILKES BOOTH on the night of April 14, 1865, at Ford's Theater,
+Washington, D. C. This night, fraught with woe to the peoples of two
+continents, sombered by its halo of diabolism, must forever remain the
+Golgotha of American history.
+
+At the threshold of the temple of peace--the High Priest was stricken
+down--and the great heart whose every throb was a pulsation of love for
+his country's enemies, was robed in silence. In company with Mrs.
+LINCOLN, Miss HARRIS, and Major RATHBONE, Mr. LINCOLN had sought a brief
+respite from the iron wheel of State toil, and in the search, through
+the medium of the assassin's bullet, found a respite for all time.
+
+Immediately after the fatal shot was fired, and under direction of
+Assistant-Surgeons LEALE and TAFT, he was removed to a private house,
+and placed upon a couch in a small bedroom. ROBERT LINCOLN, General
+TODD, and Dr. TODD, cousins of Mrs. LINCOLN, and other personal friends,
+speedily arrived. His family physician, Dr. STONE, and Surgeon-General
+BARNES, accompanied by Asst.-Surgeon General CRANE, were in early
+attendance, and later he was visited by Drs. HALL and LIEBERMANN, and
+other eminent physicians, all of whom agreed that the wound was unto
+death. The bullet had entered the back of his head, and lodged behind
+the right eye.
+
+Mr. LINCOLN was visited during the night by Vice-President JOHNSON and
+the entire cabinet, except Mr. SEWARD, including Secretaries MCCULLOCH,
+STANTON, WELLES, and USHER. Postmaster-General DENNISON, and
+Attorney-General SPEED, together with Asst.-Secretaries FIELD, ECKERT,
+and OTTO. There were also present Speaker COLFAX, Chief-Justice CARTTER,
+Senator WILSON, Representatives FARNSWORTH, ARNOLD, MARSTON, and
+ROLLINS, Governor OGLESBY, accompanied by Adjutant-General HAYNIE, Major
+HAY, Generals AUGER, MEIGS, and HALLECK, Ex-Governor FARWELL, Rev. Dr.
+GURLEY, and Commissioner FRENCH, Colonels VINCENT PELOUZE and
+RUTHERFORD, and Major ROCKWELL. Early in the night Mrs. LINCOLN sent for
+Mrs. Senator DIXON, who was accompanied by her sister and niece, Mrs.
+KINNEY and daughter. There were also a few others present during the
+night, but never more than half of those represented on the painting at
+any one time.
+
+By the publicity of the assassination it was soon known throughout the
+city, and thousands crowded the avenues leading to the house where the
+President lay.
+
+The news of this tragic event flashed with the speed of lightning
+throughout the land. From Maine to California consternation reigned, and
+feelings of surprise and grief were depicted on every face. The great
+man now martyred had for more than four years held the highest place in
+the gift of the American people, and on him their hopes had centered.
+The designer of the painting of
+
+ "THE LAST HOURS OF LINCOLN,"
+
+JNO. B. BACHELDER, arrived in Washington on the night of his death, and
+being impressed with the historic importance of the event, at once
+determined to collect such materials as should be necessary for an
+historical picture commemorating that sad scene, and should the demand
+warrant it, to publishing a steel-plate engraving from it. The design
+for the painting was soon completed, and arrangements having been made
+with BRADY & CO., Photographers, as soon as the remains of the President
+left the city each of the persons represented were visited, and at their
+convenience were _posed_ and photographed in the position which they now
+occupy in the painting. It being important that the best possible
+original should be had for the engraver's use, the design was placed in
+the hands of ALONZO CHAPEL, Esq., the historical painter, to whose
+genius the painting is to be credited. Much of its completeness is due
+to the kindness and attention of the persons represented; as all
+cheerfully gave their time for frequent sittings, both to the designer
+and painter.
+
+No expense has been spared to produce a work worthy the scene it
+represents, and the high encomiums given it by eminent judges is the
+best proof of the result.
+
+To publish any thing now short of a first-class copy of such a painting
+would be a breach of confidence to those who have so kindly aided in its
+production. The proprietor has therefore decided to have this picture
+engraved in the finest style of line and stipple, the engraved surface
+of the plate to be 18 x 31 inches; believing that nothing short of a
+_genuine work of art_ will meet the approval, and secure the patronage
+of the American people, and to those interested the proprietor can most
+confidently promise a suitable memento of their departed chief.
+
+The engraving is being executed by H. B. HALL, Jr., Esq., the eminent
+engraver upon steel.
+
+PRICE OF ENGRAVINGS.--PRINTS, =$15.00=; PLAIN PROOFS, =$35.00=; INDIA
+PROOFS, =$60.00=; ARTIST'S PROOFS (limited to 200 copies which will be
+numbered and signed by the artist and engraver), =$100.00=.
+
+A beautiful engraved and photographic _Key_ to the Engraving will be
+presented to the subscribers. It is a complete picture of itself, and
+may be had in advance _by subscribers only_.
+
+ JOHN B. BACHELDER, PUBLISHER, _59 Beekman Street. New York_.
+
+[Illustration: The Last Hours of Lincoln
+
+KEY
+
+ 1 Pres. LINCOLN.
+ 2 Mrs. LINCOLN.
+ 3 Vice Pres. JOHNSON.
+ 4 Maj. RATHBONE.
+ 5 Mr. ARNOLD. M.C.
+ 6 P.M. Gen. DENNISON.
+ 7 Sec. WELLES.
+ 8 Att^y Gen. SPEED.
+ 9 D^r. HALL.
+ 10 Dr. LEIBERMANN.
+ 11 Sec^y. USHER.
+ 12 Sec^y. McCOLLOCH.
+ 13 Gov. OGLESBY.
+ 14 Speaker COLFAX.
+ 15 Dr. STONE.
+ 16 Surg. Gen. BARNES.
+ 17 Mrs. Sen. DIXON.
+ 18 Dr. TODD.
+ 19 Ass^t. Surg. LEALE.
+ 20 Ass^t. Surg. TAFT.
+ 21 Ass^t. Sec^Y OTTO.
+ 22 Gen. FARNSWORTH. M. C.
+ 23 Sen. SUMNER.
+ 24 Surg. CRANE.
+ 25 Gen. TODD.
+ 26 ROB^T. LINCOLN.
+ 27 Rev. Dr. GURLEY.
+ 28 Ass^t. Sec^Y FIELD.
+ 29 Adj^t Gen. HAYNIE.
+ 30 Maj. FRENCH.
+ 31 Gen. AUGER.
+ 32 Col. VINCENT.
+ 33 Gen. HALLECK.
+ 34 Sec^y. STANTON.
+ 35 Col. RUTHERFORD.
+ 36 Ass^t. Sec^Y. ECKERT.
+ 37 Col. PELOUSE.
+ 38 Maj. HAY.
+ 39 Gen. MEIGS.
+ 40 Maj. ROCKWELL.
+ 41 Ex Gov. FARWELL.
+ 42 Judge CARTTER.
+ 43 Mr. ROLLINS, M. C.
+ 44 Gen. MARSTON. M. C.
+ 45 Mrs. KINNEY.
+ 46 Miss KINNEY.
+ 47 Miss HARRIS.
+]
+
+
+BRIEF SAYINGS OF EMINENT MEN.
+
+ SURGEON-GENERAL'S OFFICE, }
+ WASHINGTON CITY, _March 20, 1867_. }
+
+ Col. J. B. BACHELDER.
+
+SIR:--The picture of "The Last Hours of Lincoln." painted by Alonzo
+Chappel from your design, presents, with remarkable fidelity, the
+portraits of those in attendance at various times during the night of
+April 14, 1865, preserving truthfully the principal features of that
+most sad event.
+
+ Very respectfully yours,
+ J. K. BARNES. _Surgeon-General, U.S.A., Brevet Major-General._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is certainly a work of great interest and merit. I have looked upon
+it with the liveliest satisfaction on account of its singularly graphic
+delineation of the actual scene as myself beheld it, and also because
+the likenesses of most of the distinguished persons presented by the
+painting seem to me to be very accurate and striking.
+
+ P. D. GURLEY. _Pastor of the N. Y. Ave. Pres. Church_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I cheerfully bear testimony to the accuracy of the Portraits of the
+persons present on that melancholy occasion, and especially that of the
+martyred President.
+
+ W. T. OTTO. _Assistant Secretary of the Interior._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It gives me pleasure to testify to the accuracy with which you have
+represented the principal features of the scene in question, and to the
+fidelity of the portraits which you have introduced. You have been
+especially successful in the likeness of President Lincoln.
+
+ JOHN HAY,
+ _Brevet Colonel, formerly A. D. C. to President Lincoln_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The truthful likeness of President Lincoln, the fidelity of the
+portraits of those present on that most mournful night, and the
+excellent grouping of the figures, render this picture peculiarly
+valuable in an historical point of view, apart from its merits as a work
+of art.
+
+ C. H. CRANE, _Assistant Surgeon-General U. S. Army_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Without possessing a critical capacity for judgment, I can say, in all
+sincerity, that the painting as a whole, is faithful to the scene of the
+death-chamber on that eventful night, and impressively truthful in its
+portraiture.
+
+ D. K. CARTTER, _Chief-Justice_.
+
+The above gentlemen visited President Lincoln during his last hours, and
+are represented in the painting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is admirable as a picture, and of great value for the fidelity of the
+portraits.
+
+ A. A. HUMPHREYS, _Major-General_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DEAR SIR:--Permit me to thank you for the enjoyment of the luxury of
+grief afforded me in the viewing of the great picture commemorating "The
+Last Hours of Lincoln." It is deserving of great praise. If it has a
+fault, it is its high coloring. As I have personally known nearly all
+the forty odd persons who appear in it, I can speak with confidence of
+the truthfulness of the likenesses.
+
+ F. E. SPINNER, _Treasurer United States_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The majority of the portraits could hardly be improved.
+
+ O. O. HOWARD, _Major-General_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I know personally a large majority of the persons represented, and take
+pleasure in bearing my testimony to the singular fidelity of their
+portraits.
+
+ IRA HARRIS, _United States Senator_.
+
+
+EXTRACT FROM A CRITICISM.
+
+[_From the Washington Sunday Herald._]
+
+ WASHINGTON, _March 31, 1867_.
+
+A great picture has been designed of the "Last Hours of Abraham
+Lincoln." The designer is Mr. John B. Bachelder, the painter Alonzo
+Chappel. * * The value of such a picture of such a scene is enormous,
+and of a kind to ever increase with time. * * Looking like himself, from
+his finger-nails to his hard, protruding lip, Stanton, with paper and
+pencil in hand, and uplifted forefinger, is giving instructions to the
+soldierly General Auger, the then Military Commander of the District.
+* * Portraits so minutely like I have never seen, even from the brush of
+Elliot. * * *
+
+The grandeur in the face of Lincoln, is grand indeed. The cold hues of
+death are warmed to the eye by the red rays of a candle held over him,
+and the flickering flare causing a Rembrandt-like effect, is very
+felicitously managed. The eye rests in love and pity on it, turning from
+those around impatiently. * * *
+
+McCulloch who turns from the scene, and Johnson who sits in the left
+foreground, are wonderfully like. As is the erect Dennison beyond them;
+and Meigs, with his hand resting on the door-post, where he stood to
+prevent disturbing entrances; Dr. Stone and Surgeon-General Barnes,
+General Todd, Judge Otto, Sumner, Farnsworth, Speaker Colfax, and
+Governor Oglesby, are looking down on the face of Lincoln with an
+expression of respectful concern. * * * Judge Cartter and Ex-Governor
+Farwell stand in front of Meigs, forming the right foreground of the
+picture; they are given in profile and seem conversing.
+
+The greatness of the picture lies in its correct transcription of an
+actual scene and perfect portraiture of American men. It is just such a
+work as, above all others, should be American property, for if ever
+there was a _National_ picture, this is one.
+
+ ARC.
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
+
+PRICE.
+
+ PEOPLE'S EDITION. 8vo. Steel Portrait. Cloth $1.50
+
+ A FINE EDITION. 8vo. Proof Portrait. Fine binding, beveled
+ boards, Levant cloth, gilt edges 3.00
+
+ MEMORIAL EDITION. On heavy toned paper, large margin. India
+ Proof Portrait. Morocco, Antique, gilt edges 7.00
+
+ I am prepared to supply the Trade with the
+
+ "SKETCH of the LIFE of ABRAHAM LINCOLN," and the "PORTRAIT of
+ LINCOLN,"
+
+ ON LIBERAL TERMS.
+
+
+My other publications are sold exclusively by Subscription, including
+
+ THE STEEL ENGRAVING OF
+
+ "THE LAST HOURS OF LINCOLN;"
+
+ THE ISOMETRICAL DRAWING OF
+
+ "THE GETTYSBURG BATTLE-FIELD;"
+
+ "THE HISTORY OF THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG."
+
+ THE STEEL ENGRAVING OF
+
+ "THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG;" (LONGSTREET'S REPULSE.)
+
+ AND THE STEEL ENGRAVINGS OF THE DIFFERENT
+
+ "EPISODES OF THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG."
+
+Each of the latter forming a fine business opportunity for a man of
+energy, who has a small amount of capital, which he would invest with a
+certainty of _liberal returns_.
+
+To CANVASSERS of EXPERIENCE, having the CAPITAL and BUSINESS CAPACITY to
+manage the canvass of STATES, COUNTIES, or CITIES, I can offer superior
+inducements. (See separate notices of subjects.) Orders received for
+either of the above at the office of publication.
+
+From my intimate business relations with the BEST PAINTERS, DESIGNERS,
+STEEL ENGRAVERS, WOOD ENGRAVERS, and LITHOGRAPHERS, in this City, I am
+prepared to receive orders from my patrons, and have them executed under
+my immediate superintendence, in any style required.
+
+ =JOHN B. BACHELDER, Publisher=,
+
+ 59 BEEKMAN ST., NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketch of the life of Abraham Lincoln, by
+Isaac Newton Arnold
+
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