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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Life Of Abraham Lincoln
- From His Birth To His Inauguration As President
-
-Author: Ward H. Lamon
-
-Illustrator: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2012 [EBook #40977]
-
-Language: English
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40977 ***
Produced by David Widger
@@ -20955,358 +20933,4 @@ Jesse W. Fell.
End of Project Gutenberg's The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
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-***** This file should be named 40977-8.txt or 40977-8.zip *****
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40977 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Life Of Abraham Lincoln
- From His Birth To His Inauguration As President
-
-Author: Ward H. Lamon
-
-Illustrator: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2012 [EBook #40977]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN;
-
-FROM HIS BIRTH TO HIS INAUGURATION AS PRESIDENT.
-
-By
-
-Ward H. Lamon.
-
-With Illustrations.
-
-Boston:
-
-James R. Osgood And Company,
-
-(Late Ticknor & Fields, And Fields, Osgood, & Co.)
-
-1872.
-
-
-[Illustration: Frontispiece]
-
-[Illustration: Titlepage]
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-IN the following pages I have endeavored to give the life of Abraham
-Lincoln, from his birth to his inauguration as President of the United
-States. The reader will judge the character of the performance by the
-work itself: for that reason I shall spare him the perusal of much
-prefatory explanation.
-
-At the time of Mr. Lincoln's death, I determined to write his history,
-as I had in my possession much valuable material for such a purpose. I
-did not then imagine that any person could have better or more extensive
-materials than I possessed. I soon learned, however, that Mr. William H.
-Herndon of Springfield, Ill., was similarly engaged. There could be no
-rivalry between us; for the supreme object of both was to make the real
-history and character of Mr. Lincoln as well known to the public as they
-were to us. He deplored, as I did, the many publications pretending to
-be biographies which came teeming from the press, so long as the public
-interest about Mr. Lincoln excited the hope of gain. Out of the mass
-of works which appeared, of one only--Dr. Holland's--is it possible to
-speak with any degree of respect.
-
-Early in 1869, Mr. Herndon placed at my disposal his remarkable
-collection of materials,--the richest, rarest, and fullest collection
-it was possible to conceive. Along with them came an offer of hearty
-co-operation, of which I have availed myself so extensively, that no art
-of mine would serve to conceal it. Added to my own collections, these
-acquisitions have enabled me to do what could not have been done
-before,--prepare an authentic biography of Mr. Lincoln.
-
-Mr. Herndon had been the partner in business and the intimate personal
-associate of Mr. Lincoln for something like a quarter of a century; and
-Mr. Lincoln had lived familiarly with several members of his family long
-before their individual acquaintance began. New Salem, Springfield, the
-old judicial circuit, the habits and friends of Mr. Lincoln, were as
-well known to Mr. Herndon as to himself. With these advantages, and from
-the numberless facts and hints which had dropped from Mr. Lincoln during
-the confidential intercourse of an ordinary lifetime, Mr. Herndon was
-able to institute a thorough system of inquiry for every noteworthy
-circumstance and every incident of value in Mr. Lincoln's career.
-
-The fruits of Mr. Herndon's labors are garnered in three enormous
-volumes of original manuscripts and a mass of unarranged letters
-and papers. They comprise the recollections of Mr. Lincoln's
-nearest friends; of the surviving members of his family and his
-family-connections; of the men still living who knew him and his parents
-in Kentucky; of his schoolfellows, neighbors, and acquaintances in
-Indiana; of the better part of the whole population of New Salem; of
-his associates and relatives at Springfield; and of lawyers, judges,
-politicians, and statesmen everywhere, who had any thing of interest or
-moment to relate. They were collected at vast expense of time, labor,
-and money, involving the employment of many agents, long journeys,
-tedious examinations, and voluminous correspondence. Upon the value of
-these materials it would be impossible to place an estimate. That I have
-used them conscientiously and justly is the only merit to which I lay
-claim.
-
-As a general thing, my text will be found to support itself; but whether
-the particular authority be mentioned or not, it is proper to remark,
-that each statement of fact is fully sustained by indisputable evidence
-remaining in my possession. My original plan was to verify every
-important statement by one or more appropriate citations; but it was
-early abandoned, not because it involved unwelcome labor, but because
-it encumbered my pages with a great array of obscure names, which the
-reader would probably pass unnoticed.
-
-I dismiss this volume into the world, with no claim for it of literary
-excellence, but with the hope that it will prove what it purports to
-be,--a faithful record of the life of Abraham Lincoln down to the 4th of
-March, 1861.
-
-Ward H. Lamon.
-
-Washington City, May, 1872.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-Birth.--His father and mother.--History of Thomas Lincoln and his family
-a necessary part of Abraham Lincoln's biography.--Thomas Lincoln's
-ancestors.--Members of the family remaining in Virginia.--Birth of
-Thomas Lincoln.--Removal to Kentucky.--Life in the Wilderness.--Lincolns
-settle in Mercer County.--Thomas Lincoln's father shot by
-Indians.--Widow and family remove to Washington County.--Thomas
-poor.--Wanders into Breckinridge County.--Goes to Hardin County.--Works
-at the carpenter's trade.--Cannot read or write.--Personal
-appearance.--Called "Linckhom," or "Linckhera."--Thomas Lincoln as
-a carpenter.--Marries Nancy Hanks.--Previously courted Sally
-Bush.--Character of Sally Bush.--The person and character of Nancy
-Hanks.--Thomas and Nancy Lincoln go to live in a shed.--Birth of a
-daughter.--They remove to Nolin Creek.--Birth of Abraham.--Removal to
-Knob Creek.--Little Abe initiated into wild sports.--His sadness.--Goes
-to school.--Thomas Lincoln concludes to move.--Did not fly from the
-taint of slavery.--Abraham Lincoln always reticent about the history and
-character of his family.--Record in his Bible... 1
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Thomas Lincoln builds a boat.--Floats down to the Ohio.--Boat
-capsizes.--Lands in Perry County, Indiana.--Selects a location.--Walks
-back to Knob Creek for wife and children.--Makes his way through
-the wilderness.--Settles between the two Pigeon Creeks.--Gentry
-ville.--Selects a site.--Lincoln builds a half-faced camp.--Clears
-ground and raises a small crop.--Dennis Hanks.--Lincoln builds a
-cabin.--State of the country.--Indiana admitted to the Union.--Rise
-of Gentryville.--Character of the people.--Lincoln's patent for his
-land.--His farm, cabin, furniture.--The milk-sickness.--Death of Nancy
-Hanks Lincoln.--Funeral discourse by David Elkin.--Grave.--Tom Lincoln
-marries Sally Bush.--Her goods and chattels.--Her surprise at the
-poverty of the Lincoln cabin.--Clothes and comforts Abe and his
-sister.--Abe leads a new life.--Is sent to school.--Abe's appearance and
-dress.--Learning "manners"--Abe's essays.--Tenderness for animals.--The
-last of school.--Abe excelled the masters.--Studied privately.--Did not
-like to work.--Wrote on wooden shovel and boards.--How Abe studied.--The
-books he read.--The "Revised Statute of Indiana."--Did not read the
-Bible.--No religious opinions.--How he behaved at home.--Touching
-recital by Mrs. Lincoln.--Abe's memory.--Mimicks the preachers.--Makes
-"stump-speeches" in the field.--Cruelly maltreated by his father.--Works
-out cheerfully.--Universal favorite.--The kind of people he lived
-amongst.--Mrs. Crawford's reminiscences.--Society about Gentryville.
---His step-mother.--His sister.--The Johnstons and Hankses.--Abe a
-ferryman and farm-servant.--His work and habits.--Works for Josiah
-Crawford.--Mrs. Crawford's account of him.--Crawford's books.--Becomes
-a wit and a poet.--Abe the tallest and strongest man in the
-settlement.--Hunting in the Pigeon Creek region.--His activity.--Love of
-talking and reading.--Fond of rustic sports.--Furnishes the
-literature.--Would not be slighted.--His satires.--Songs and
-chronicles.--Gentryville as "a centre of business."--Abe and other
-boys loiter about the village.--Very temperate.--"Clerks" for Col.
-Jones.--Abe saves a drunken man's life.--Fond of music.--Marriage of his
-sister Nancy.--Extracts from his copy-book.--His Chronicles.--Fight with
-the Grigs-bys.--Abe "the big buck of the lick."--"Speaking meetings"
-at Gentryville.--Dennis Hanks's account of the way he and Abe became so
-learned.--Abe attends a court.--Abe expects to be President.--Going
-to mill.--Kicked in the head by a horse.--Mr. Wood.--Piece on
-temperance.--On national politics.--Abe tired of home.--Works for
-Mr. Gentry.--Knowledge of astronomy and geography.--Goes to New
-Orleans.--Counterfeit money.--Fight with negroes.--Scar on his face.
---An apocryphal story...........19
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Abe's return from New Orleans.--Sawing planks for a new house.--The
-milk-sickness.--Removal to Illinois.--Settles near Decatur.--Abe leaves
-home.--Subsequent removals and death of Thomas Lincoln.--Abe's relations
-to the family.--Works with John Hanks after leaving home.--Splitting
-rails.--Makes a speech on the improvement of the Sangamon River.--Second
-voyage to New Orleans.--Loading and departure of the boat.--"Sticks" on
-New Salem dam.--Abe's contrivance to get her off.--Model in the Patent
-Office.--Arrival at New Orleans.--Negroes chained.--Abe touched by the
-sight.--Returns on a steamboat.--Wrestles with Daniel Needham.........73
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-The site of New Salem.--The village as it existed.--The
-first store.--Number of inhabitants.--Their
-houses.--Springfield.--Petersburg.--Mr. Lincoln appears a second time
-at New Salem.--Clerks at an election.--Pilots a boat to
-Beardstown.--Country store.--Abe as "first clerk."--"Clary's Grove
-Boys."--Character of Jack Armstrong.--He and Abe become intimate
-friends.--Abe's popularity.--Love of peace.--Habits of study.--Waylaying
-strangers for information.--Pilots the steamer "Talisman" up and down
-the Sangamon.......85
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Offutt's business gone to ruin.--The Black Hawk War.--Black Hawk crosses
-the Mississippi.--Deceived by his allies.--The governor's call for
-troops.--Abe enlists--Elected captain.--A speech.--Organization of the
-army.--Captain Lincoln under arrest.--The march.--Captain Lincoln's
-company declines to form.--Lincoln under arrest.--Stillman's
-defeat.--Wasting rations.--Hunger.--Mutiny.--March to Dixon.--Attempt
-to capture Black Hawk's pirogues.--Lincoln saves the life of
-an Indian.--Mutiny.--Lincoln's novel method of quelling
-it.--Wrestling.--His magnanimity.--Care of his men.--Dispute with a
-regular officer.--Reach Dixon.--Move to Fox River.--A stampede.--Captain
-Lincoln's efficiency as an officer.--Amusements of the camp.--Captain
-Lincoln re-enlists as a private.--Independent spy company.--Progress of
-the war.--Capture of Black Hawk.--Release.--Death.--Grave.--George
-W. Harrison's recollections.--Duties of the spy company.--Company
-disbanded.--Lincoln's horse stolen.--They start home on foot.--Buy
-a canoe.--Feast on a raft.--Sell the boat.--Walk again.--Arrive at
-Petersburg.--A sham battle........98
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-The volunteers from Sangamon return shortly before the State
-election.--Abe a candidate for the Legislature.--Mode of bringing
-forward candidates.--Parties and party names.--State and national
-politics.--Mr. Lincoln's position.--Old way of conducting
-elections.--Mr. Lincoln's first stump-speech.--"A general fight."--Mr.
-Lincoln's part in it.--His dress and appearance.--Speech at Island
-Grove.--His stories.--A third speech.--Agrees with the Whigs in the
-policy of internal improvements.--His own hobby.--Prepares an address to
-the people.--Mr. Lincoln defeated.--Received every vote but three cast
-in his own precinct....121
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Results of the canvass.--An opening in business.--The firm of Lincoln
-& Berry.--How they sold liquor.--What Mr. Douglas said.--The store a
-failure.--Berry's bad habits.--The credit system.--Lincoln's debts.--He
-goes to board at the tavern.--Studies law.--Walks to Springfield for
-books.--Progress in the law.--Does business for his neighbors.--Other
-studies.--Reminiscences of J. Y. Ellis.--Shy of ladies.--His
-apparel.--Fishing, and spouting Shakspeare and Burns.--Mr. Lincoln
-annoyed by company.--Retires to the country.--Bowlin Greene.--Mr.
-Lincoln's attempt to speak a funeral discourse.--John Calhoun.--Lincoln
-studies surveying.--Gets employment.--Lincoln appointed postmaster.--How
-he performed the duties.--Sale of Mr. Lincoln's personal property under
-execution.--Bought by James Short.--Lincoln's visits.--Old Hannah.--Ah.
-Trent.--Mr. Lincoln as a peacemaker.--His great strength.--The
-judicial quality.--Acting second in fights.--A candidate for the
-Legislature.--Elected.--Borrows two hundred dollars from Coleman
-Smoot.--How they got acquainted.--Mr. Lincoln writes a little book on
-infidelity.--It is burnt by Samuel Hill........135
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-James Rutledge.--His family.--Ann Rutledge.--John McNeil.--Is engaged
-to Ann.--His strange story.--The loveliness of Ann's person
-and character.--Mr. Lincoln courts her.--They are engaged to be
-married.--Await the return of McNeil.--Ann dies of a broken
-heart.--Mr. Lincoln goes crazy.--Cared for by Bowlin Greene.--The poem
-"Immortality."--Mr. Lincoln's melancholy broodings.--Interviews with
-Isaac Cogdale after his election to the Presidency.--Mr. Herndon's
-interview with McNamar.--Ann's grave.--The Concord cemetery...159
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Bennett Able and family.--Mary Owens.--Mr. Lincoln falls in love with
-her.--What she thought of him.--A misunderstanding.--Letters from Miss
-Owens.--Mr. Lincoln's letters to her.--Humorous account of the affair in
-a letter from Mr. Lincoln to another lady......172
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Mr. Lincoln takes his seat in the Legislature.--Schemes of internal
-improvement.--Mr. Lincoln a silent member.--Meets Stephen A.
-Douglas.--Log-rolling.--Mr. Lincoln a candidate for re-election.--The
-canvass.--"The Long Nine."--Speech at Mechanicsburg.--Fight.--Reply to
-Dr. Early.--Reply to George Forquer.--Trick on Dick Taylor.--Attempts
-to create a third party.--Mr. Lincoln elected.--Federal and State
-politics.--The Bank of the United States.--Suspension of specie
-payments.--Mr. Lincoln wishes to be the De Witt Clinton of
-Illinois.--The internal-improvement system.--Capital located
-at Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln's conception of the duty of a
-representative.--His part in passing the "system."--Begins
-his antislavery record.--Public sentiment against the
-Abolitionists.--History of antislavery in Illinois.--The
-Covenanters.--Struggle to amend the Constitution.--The "black
-code."--Death of Elijah P. Lovejoy.--Protest against proslavery
-resolutions.--No sympathy with extremists.--Suspension of
-specie payments.--Mr. Lincoln re-elected in 1838.--Candidate for
-Speaker.--Finances.--Utter failure of the internal-improvement
-"system."--Mr. Lincoln re-elected in 1840.--He introduces a bill.--His
-speech.--Financial expedients.--Bitterness of feeling.--Democrats seek
-to hold a quorum.--Mr. Lincoln jumps out of a window.--Speech by Mr.
-Lincoln.--The alien question.--The Democrats undertake to "reform" the
-judiciary.--Mr. Douglas a leader.--Protest of Mr. Lincoln and
-other Whigs.--Reminiscences of a colleague.--Dinner to "The Long
-Nine."--"Abraham Lincoln one of nature's noblemen."..........184
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-Capital removed to Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln settles there to practise
-law.--First case.--Members of the bar.--Mr. Lincoln's partnership with
-John T. Stuart.--Population and condition of Springfield.--Lawyers
-and politicians.--Mr. Lincoln's intense ambition.--Lecture before the
-Springfield Lyceum.--His style.--Political discussions run
-high.--Joshua F. Speed his most intimate friend.--Scene in Speed's
-store.--Debate.--Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn, and Thomas, against Lincoln,
-Logan, Baker, and Browning.--Presidential elector in 1840.--Stumping
-for Harrison.--Scene between Lincoln and Douglas in the Court-House.--A
-failure.--Redeems himself.--Meets Miss Mary Todd.--She takes Mr. Lincoln
-captive.--She refuses Douglas.--Engaged.--Miss Matilda Edwards.--Mr.
-Lincoln undergoes a change of heart.--Mr. Lincoln reveals to Mary the
-state of his mind.--She releases him.--A reconciliation.--Every thing
-prepared for the wedding.--Mr. Lincoln fails to appear.--Insane.--Speed
-takes him to Kentucky.--Lines on "Suicide."--His gloom.--Return
-to Springfield.--Secret meetings with Miss Todd.--Sudden
-marriage.--Correspondence with Mr. Speed on delicate subjects.--Relics
-of a great man and a great agony.--Miss Todd attacks James Shields in
-certain witty and sarcastic letters.--Mr. Lincoln's name "given up"
-as the author.--Challenged by Shields.--A meeting and an
-explanation.--Correspondence.--Candidate for Congressional
-nomination.--Letters to Speed and Morris.--Defeat.. 223
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector in 1844.--Debates with
-Calhoun.--Speaks in Illinois and Indiana.--At Gentryville.--Lincoln,
-Baker, Logan, Hardin, aspirants for Congress.--Supposed
-bargain.--Canvass for Whig nomination in 1846.--Mr. Lincoln
-nominated.--Opposed by Peter Cartwright.--Mr. Lincoln called a
-deist.--Elected.--Takes his seat.--Distinguished members.--Opposed
-to the Mexican War.--The "Spot Resolutions."--Speech of Mr.
-Lincoln.--Murmurs of disapprobation.--Mr. Lincoln for "Old Rough" in
-1848.--Defections at home.--Mr. Lincoln's campaign.--Speech.--Passage
-not generally published.--Letter to his father.--Second session.--The
-"Gott Resolution."--Mr. Lincoln's substitute..............274
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln in his character of country lawyer.--Public feeling at
-the time of his death.--Judge Davis's address at a bar-meeting.--Judge
-Drummond's address.--Mr. Lincoln's partnership with John T.
-Stuart.--With Stephen. T. Logan.--With William H. Herndon.--Mr.
-Lincoln "a case-lawyer."--Slow.--Conscientious.--Henry McHenry's
-case.--Circumstantial evidence.--A startling case.--Mr. Lincoln's
-account of it.--His first case in the Supreme Court.--Could not defend a
-bad case.--Ignorance of technicalities.--The Eighth Circuit.--Happy
-on the circuit.--Style of travelling.--His relations.--Young Johnson
-indicted.--Mr. Lincoln's kindness.--Jack Armstrong's son tried
-for murder.--Mr. Lincoln defends him.--Alleged use of a false
-almanac.--Prisoner discharged.--Old Hannah's account of it.--Mr.
-Lincoln's suit against Illinois Central Railway Company.--McCormick
-Reaping Machine case.--Treatment by Edwin M. Stanton........311
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-Mr. Lincoln not a candidate for re-election.--Judge Logan's defeat.--Mr.
-Lincoln an applicant for Commissioner of the Land Office.--Offered the
-Governorship of Oregon.--Views concerning the Missouri Compromise
-and Compromise of 1850.--Declines to be a candidate for Congress in
-1850.--Death of Thomas Lincoln.--Correspondence between Mr. Lincoln
-and John Johnston.--Eulogy on Henry Clay.--In favor of voluntary
-emancipation and colonization.--Answer to Mr. Douglas's Richmond
-speech.--Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill.--Mr. Lincoln's views
-concerning slavery.--Opposed to conferring political privileges
-upon negroes.--Aroused by the repeal of the Missouri
-Compromise.--Anti-Nebraska party.--Mr. Lincoln the leader.--Mr. Douglas
-speaks at Chicago.--At Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln replies.--A
-great speech.--Mr. Douglas rejoins.--The Abolitionists.--Mr.
-Herndon.--Determined to make Mr. Lincoln an Abolitionist.--They refuse
-to enter the Know-Nothing lodges.--The Abolitionists desire to force
-Mr. Lincoln to take a stand.--He runs away from Springfield.--He
-is requested to "follow up" Mr. Douglas.--Speech at
-Peoria.--Extract.--Slavery and popular sovereignty.--Mr. Lincoln and
-Mr. Douglas agree not to speak any more.--The election.--Mr. Lincoln
-announced for the Legislature by Wm. Jayne.--Mrs. Lincoln withdraws his
-name.--Jayne restores it.--He is elected.--A candidate for United-States
-Senator.--Resigns his seat.--Is censured.--Anti-Nebraska majority in
-the Legislature.--The balloting.--Danger of Governor Matteson's
-election.--Mr. Lincoln advises his friends to vote for Judge
-Trumbull.--Trumbull elected.--Charges of conspiracy and corrupt
-bargain.--Mr. Lincoln's denial.--Mr. Douglas imputes to Mr. Lincoln
-extreme Abolitionist views.--Mr. Lincoln's answer.............333
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-The struggle in Kansas.--The South begins the struggle.--The North meets
-it.--The Missourians and other proslavery forces.--Andrew H. Reeder
-appointed governor.--Election frauds.--Mr. Lincoln's views on
-Kansas.--Gov. Shannon arrives in the Territory.--The Free State men
-repudiate the Legislature.--Mr. Lincoln's "little speech" to the
-Abolitionists of Illinois.--Mr. Lincoln's party relations.--Mr. Lincoln
-agrees to meet the Abolitionists.--Convention at Bloomington.--Mr.
-Lincoln considered a convert.--His great speech.--Conservative
-resolutions.--Ludicrous failure of a ratification meeting at
-Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln's remarks.--Plot to break up the Know-Nothing
-party.--"National" Republican Convention.--Mr. Lincoln receives
-a hundred and ten votes for Vice-President.--National Democratic
-Convention.--Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector.--His
-canvass.--Confidential letter.--Imperfect fellowship with the
-Abolitionists.--Mr. Douglas's speech on Kansas in June, 1857.--Mr.
-Lincoln's reply.--Mr. Douglas committed to support of the Lecompton
-Constitution.--The Dred Scott Decision discussed.--Mr. Lincoln
-against negro equality.--Affairs in Kansas.--Election of a new
-Legislature.--Submission of the Lecompton Constitution to
-the people.--Method of voting on it.--Constitution finally
-rejected.--Conflict in Congress.--Mr. Douglas's defection.--Extract from
-a speech by Mr. Lincoln........366
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-Mr. Douglas opposes the Administration.--His course in
-Congress.--Squatter sovereignty in full operation.--Mr. Lincoln's
-definition of popular sovereignty and squatter sovereignty.--Mr.
-Douglas's private conferences with Republicans.--"Judge Trumbull's
-opinion.--Mr. Douglas nominated for senator by a Democratic
-Convention.--Mr. Lincoln's idea of what Douglas might accomplish at
-Charleston.--Mr. Lincoln writing a celebrated speech.--He is nominated
-for senator.--A startling doctrine.--A council of friends.--Same
-doctrine advanced at Bloomington.--The "house-divided" speech.--Mr.
-Lincoln promises to explain.--What Mr. Lincoln thought of Mr.
-Douglas.--What Mr. Douglas thought of Mr. Lincoln.--Popular canvass for
-senator.--Mr. Lincoln determines to "kill Douglas" as a
-Presidential aspirant.--Adroit plan to draw him out on squatter
-sovereignty.--Absurdities of Mr. Douglas.--The election.--Success of Mr.
-Douglas.--Reputation acquired by Mr. Lincoln..................389
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln writes and delivers a lecture.--The Presidency.--Mr.
-Lincoln's "running qualities."--He thinks himself unfit.--Nominated by
-"Illinois Gazette."--Letter to Dr. Canisius.--Letter to Dr. Wallace
-on the protective tariff policy.--Mr. Lincoln in Ohio and Kansas.--A
-private meeting of his friends.--Permitted to use his name for
-the Presidency.--An invitation to speak in New York.--Choosing a
-subject.--Arrives in New York.--His embarrassments.--Speech in Cooper
-Institute.--Comments of the press.--He is charged with mercenary
-conduct.--Letter concerning the charge.--Visits New England.--Style
-and character of his speeches.--An amusing encounter with a clerical
-politician...421
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-Meeting of the Republican State Convention.--Mr. Lincoln present.--John
-Hanks and the rails.--Mr. Lincoln's speech.--Meeting of the Republican
-National Convention at Chicago.--The platform.--Combinations to secure
-Mr. Lincoln's nomination.--The balloting.--Mr. Lincoln nominated.--Mr.
-Lincoln at Springfield waiting the results of the Convention.--How
-he received the news.--Enthusiasm at Springfield.--Official
-notification.--The "Constitutional Union" party.--The Democratic
-Conventions at Charleston and Baltimore.--The election.--The
-principle upon which Mr. Lincoln proposed to make appointments.--Mr.
-Stephens.--Mr. Gilmore.--Mr. Guthrie.--Mr. Seward.--Mr. Chase.--Mr.
-Bates.--The cases of Smith and Cameron.--Mr. Lincoln's visit
-to Chicago.--Mr. Lincoln's visit to his relatives in Coles
-County.--Apprehensions about assassination.--A visit from Hannah
-Armstrong... 444
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-Difficulties and peculiarities of Mr. Lincoln's position.--A general
-review of his character.--His personal appearance and habits.--His house
-and other property.--His domestic relations.--His morbid melancholy
-and superstition.--Illustrated by his literary tastes.--His humor.--His
-temperate habits and abstinence from sensual pleasures.--His
-ambition.--Use of politics for personal advancement.--Love of power
-and place.--Of justice.--Not a demagogue or a trimmer.--His religious
-views.--Attempt of the Rev. Mr. Smith to convert him.--Mr. Bateman's
-story as related by Dr. Holland.--Effect of his belief upon his mind and
-character...........466
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-Departure of the Presidential party from Springfield.--Affecting address
-by Mr. Lincoln to his friends and neighbors.--His opinions concerning
-the approaching civil war.--Discovery of a supposed plot to murder
-him at Baltimore.--Governor Hicks's proposal to "kill Lincoln and his
-men."--The plan formed to defeat the conspiracy.--The midnight ride
-from Harrisburg to Washington.--Arrival in Washington.--Before the
-Inauguration.--Inauguration Day.--Inaugural Address.--Mr. Lincoln's
-Oath.--Mr. Lincoln President of the United States.--Mr. Buchanan bids
-him farewell............505
-
-
-
-
-LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-ABRAHAM LINCOLN was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809. His
-father's name was Thomas Lincoln, and his mother's maiden name was Nancy
-Hanks. At the time of his birth, they are supposed to have been married
-about three years. Although there appears to have been but little
-sympathy or affection between Thomas and Abraham Lincoln, they were
-nevertheless connected by ties and associations which make the previous
-history of Thomas Lincoln and his family a necessary part of any
-reasonably full biography of the great man who immortalized the name by
-wearing it.
-
-Thomas Lincoln's ancestors were among the early settlers of Rockingham
-County in Virginia; but exactly whence they came, or the precise time of
-their settlement there, it is impossible to tell. They were manifestly
-of English descent; but whether emigrants directly from England
-to Virginia, or an offshoot of the historic Lincoln family in
-Massachusetts, or of the highly-respectable Lincoln family in
-Pennsylvania, are questions left entirely to conjecture. We have
-absolutely no evidence by which to determine them, Thomas Lincoln
-himself stoutly denied that his progenitors were either Quakers or
-Puritans; but he furnished nothing except his own word to sustain his
-denial: on the contrary, some of the family (distant relatives of Thomas
-Lincoln) who remain in Virginia believe themselves to have sprung from
-the New-England stock. They found their opinion solely on the fact that
-the Christian names given to the sons of the two families were the same,
-though only in a few cases, and at different times. But this might have
-arisen merely from that common religious sentiment which induces parents
-of a devotional turn to confer scriptural names on their children, or it
-might have been purely accidental. Abrahams, Isaacs, and Jacobs abound
-in many other families who claim no kindred on that account. In England,
-during the ascendency of the Puritans, in times of fanatical religious
-excitement, the children were almost universally baptized by the names
-of the patriarchs and Old-Testament heroes, or by names of their own
-pious invention, signifying what the infant was expected to do and to
-suffer in the cause of the Lord. The progenitors of all the American
-Lincolns were Englishmen, and they may have been Puritans. There is,
-therefore, nothing unreasonable in the supposition that they began the
-practice of conferring such names before the emigration of any of them;
-and the names, becoming matters of family pride and family tradition,
-have continued to be given ever since. But, if the fact that
-Christian names of a particular class prevailed among the Lincolns of
-Massachusetts and the Lincolns of Virginia at the same time is no proof
-of consanguinity, the identity of the surname is entitled to even less
-consideration. It is barely possible that they may have had a common
-ancestor; but, if they had, he must have lived and died so obscurely,
-and so long ago, that no trace of him can be discovered. It would be
-as difficult to prove a blood relationship between all the American
-Lincolns, as it would be to prove a general cousinship among all the
-Smiths or all the Joneses.1
-
- 1 At the end of this volume will be found a very interesting
- account of the family, given by Mr. Lincoln himself. The
- original is in his own handwriting, and is here reproduced
- in fac-simile.
-
-A patronymic so common as Lincoln, derived from a large geographical
-division of the old country, would almost certainly be taken by many who
-had no claim to it by reason of descent from its original possessors.
-
-Dr. Holland, who, of all Mr. Lincoln's biographers, has entered most
-extensively into the genealogy of the family, says that the father of
-Thomas was named Abraham; but he gives no authority for his statement,
-and it is as likely to be wrong as to be right. The Hankses--John and
-Dennis--who passed a great part of their lives in the company of Thomas
-Lincoln, tell us that the name of his father was Mordecai; and so also
-does Col. Chapman, who married Thomas Lincoln's step-daughter. The rest
-of those who ought to know are unable to assign him any name at all.
-Dr. Holland says further, that this Abraham (or Mordecai) had four
-brothers,--Jacob, John, Isaac, and Thomas; that Isaac went to Tennessee,
-where his descendants are now; that Thomas went to Kentucky after his
-brother Abraham; but that Jacob and John "are supposed to have" remained
-in Virginia.1 This is doubtless true, at least so far as it relates to
-Jacob and John; for there are at this day numerous Lincolns residing
-in Rockingham County,--the place from which the Kentucky Lincolns
-emigrated. One of their ancestors, Jacob,--who seems to be the brother
-referred to,--was a lieutenant in the army of the Revolution, and
-present at the siege of Yorktown. His military services were made the
-ground of a claim against the government, and Abraham Lincoln, whilst a
-representative in Congress from Illinois, was applied to by the family
-to assist them in prosecuting it. A correspondence of some length
-ensued, by which the presumed relationship of the parties was fully
-acknowledged on both sides. But, unfortunately, no copy of it is now
-in existence. The one preserved by the Virginians was lost or destroyed
-during the late war. The family, with perfect unanimity, espoused
-the cause of the Confederate States, and suffered many losses in
-consequence, of which these interesting papers may have been one.
-
- 1 The Life of Abraham Lincoln, by J. G. Holland, p. 20.
-
-Abraham (or Mordecai) the father of Thomas Lincoln, was the owner of
-a large and fertile tract of land on the waters of Linnville's Creek,
-about eight miles north of Harrisonburg, the court-house town of
-Rockingham County. It is difficult to ascertain the precise extent of
-this plantation, or the history of the title to it, inasmuch as all the
-records of the county were burnt by Gen. Hunter in 1864. It is clear,
-however, that it had been inherited by Lincoln, the emigrant to
-Kentucky, and that four, if not all, of his children were born upon it.
-At the time Gen. Sheridan received the order "to make the Valley of the
-Shenandoah a barren waste," this land was well improved and in a state
-of high cultivation; but under the operation of that order it was
-ravaged and desolated like the region around it.
-
-Lincoln, the emigrant, had three sons and two daughters. Thomas was the
-third son and the fourth child. He was born in 1778; and in 1780, or a
-little later, his father removed with his entire family to Kentucky.
-
-Kentucky was then the paradise of the borderer's dreams. Fabulous tales
-of its sylvan charms and pastoral beauties had for years been floating
-about, not only along the frontiers of Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North
-Carolina, but farther back in the older settlements. For a while it had
-been known as the "Cane Country," and then as the "Country of
-Kentucky." Many expeditions were undertaken to explore it; two or three
-adventurers, and occasionally only one at a time, passing down the Ohio
-in canoes. But they all stopped short of the Kentucky River. The Indians
-were terrible; and it was known that they would surrender any other
-spot of earth in preference to Kentucky. The canes that were supposed
-to indicate the promised land--those canes of wondrous dimensions,
-that shot up, as thick as they could stand, from a soil of inestimable
-fertility--were forever receding before those who sought them. One party
-after another returned to report, that, after incredible dangers and
-hardships, they had met with no better fortune than that which had
-attended the efforts of their predecessors, and that they had utterly
-failed to find the "canes." At last they were actually found by Simon
-Kenton, who stealthily planted a little patch of corn, to see how the
-stalk that bore the yellow grain would grow beside its "brother" of the
-wilderness. He was one day leaning against the stem of a great tree,
-watching his little assemblage of sprouts, and wondering at the strange
-fruitfulness of the earth which fed them, when he heard a footstep
-behind him. It was the great Daniel Boone's. They united their fortunes
-for the present, but subsequently each of them became the chief of a
-considerable settlement. Kenton's trail had been down the Ohio, Boone's
-from North Carolina; and from both those directions soon came hunters,
-warriors, and settlers to join them. But the Indians had no thought of
-relinquishing their fairest hunting-grounds without a long and desperate
-struggle. The rich carpet of natural grasses which fed innumerable
-herds of buffalo, elk, and deer, all the year round; the grandeur of
-its primeval forests, its pure fountains, and abundant streams,--made it
-even more desirable to them than to the whites. They had long contended
-for the possession of it; and no tribe, or confederacy of tribes, had
-ever been able to hold it to the exclusion of the rest. Here, from time
-immemorial, the northern and southern, the eastern and western Indians
-had met each other in mortal strife, mutually shedding the blood which
-ought to have been husbanded for the more deadly conflict with a common
-foe. The character of this savage warfare had earned for Kentucky the
-appellation of "the dark and bloody ground;" and, now that the whites
-had fairly begun their encroachments upon it, the Indians were resolved
-that the phrase should lose none of its old significance. White settlers
-might therefore count upon fighting for their lives as well as their
-lands.
-
-Boone did not make his final settlement till 1775. The Lincolns came
-about 1780. This was but a year or two after Clark's expedition into
-Illinois; and it was long, long before St. Clair's defeat and Wayne's
-victory. Nearly the whole of the north-west territory was then occupied
-by hostile Indians. Kentucky volunteers had yet before them many a day
-of hot and bloody work on the Ohio, the Muskingum, and the Miami, to say
-nothing of the continual surprises to which they were subjected at home.
-Every man's life was in his hand. From cabin to cabin, from settlement
-to settlement, his trail was dogged by the eager savage. If he went
-to plough, he was liable to be shot down between the handles; if he
-attempted to procure subsistence by hunting, he was hunted himself.
-Unless he abandoned his "clearing" and his stock to almost certain
-devastation, and shut up himself and his family in a narrow "fort," for
-months at a time, he might expect every hour that their roof would be
-given "to the flames, and their flesh to the eagles."
-
-To make matters worse, "the western country," and particularly Kentucky,
-had become the rendezvous of Tories, runaway conscripts, deserters,
-debtors, and criminals. Gen. Butler, who went there as a Commissioner
-from Congress, to treat with certain Indian tribes, kept a private
-journal, in which he entered a very graphic, but a very appalling
-description of the state of affairs in Kentucky. At the principal
-"points," as they were called, were collected hungry speculators,
-gamblers, and mere desperadoes,--these distinctions being the only
-divisions and degrees in society. Among other things, the journal
-contains a statement about land-jobbing and the traffic in town lots,
-at Louisville, beside which the account of the same business in "Martin
-Chuzzlewit" is absolutely tame. That city, now one of the most superb in
-the Union, was then a small collection of cabins and hovels, inhabited
-by a class of people of whom specimens might have been found a few
-months ago at Cheyenne or Promontory Point. Notwithstanding the
-high commissions borne by Gen. Butler and Gen. Parsons, the motley
-inhabitants of Louisville flatly refused even to notice them. They
-would probably have sold them a "corner lot" in a swamp, or a "splendid
-business site" in a mud-hole; but for mere civilities there was no time.
-The whole population were so deeply engaged in drinking, card-playing,
-and selling town lots to each other, that they persistently refused to
-pay any attention to three men who were drowning in the river near by,
-although their dismal cries for help were distinctly heard throughout
-the "city."
-
-On the journey out, the Lincolns are said to have endured many hardships
-and encountered all the usual dangers, including several skirmishes with
-the Indians. They settled in Mercer County, but at what particular spot
-is uncertain. Their house was a rough log-cabin, their farm a little
-clearing in the midst of a vast forest. One morning, not long after
-their settlement, the father took Thomas, his youngest son, and went
-to build a fence, a short distance from the house; while the other
-brothers, Mordecai and Josiah, were sent to another field, not far
-away. They were all intent about their work, when a shot from a party
-of Indians in ambush broke the "listening stillness" cf the woods.
-The father fell dead; Josiah ran to a stockade two or three miles off;
-Mordecai, the eldest boy, made his way to the house, and, looking out
-from the loophole in the loft, saw an Indian in the act of raising
-his little brother from the ground. He took deliberate aim at a silver
-ornament on the breast of the Indian, and brought him down. Thomas
-sprang toward the cabin, and was admitted by his mother, while Mordecai
-renewed his fire at several other Indians that rose from the covert of
-the fence or thicket. It was not long until Josiah returned from the
-stockade with a party of settlers; but the Indians had fled, and none
-were found but the dead one, and another who was wounded and had crept
-into the top of a fallen tree.
-
-When this tragedy was enacted, Mordecai, the hero of it, was a
-well-grown boy. He seems to have hated Indians ever after with a hatred
-which was singular for its intensity, even in those times. Many years
-afterwards, his neighbors believed that he was in the habit of following
-peaceable Indians, as they passed through the settlements, in order to
-get surreptitious shots at them; and it was no secret that he had killed
-more than one in that way.
-
-Immediately after the death of her husband, the widow abandoned the
-scene of her misfortunes, and removed to Washington County, near the
-town of Springfield, where she lived until the youngest of her children
-had grown up. Mor-decai and Josiah remained there until late in life,
-and were always numbered among the best people in the neighborhood.
-Mordecai was the eldest son of his father; and under the law of
-primogeniture, which was still a part of the Virginia code, he inherited
-some estate in lands. One of the daughters wedded a Mr. Krume, and the
-other a Mr. Brumfield.
-
-Thomas seems to have been the only member of the family whose character
-was not entirely respectable. He was idle, thriftless, poor, a hunter,
-and a rover. One year he wandered away off to his uncle, on the
-Holston, near the confines of Tennessee. Another year he wandered into
-Breckinridge County, where his easy good-nature was overcome by a huge
-bully, and he performed the only remarkable achievement of his life, by
-whipping him. In 1806, we find him in Hardin County, trying to learn the
-carpenter's trade. Until then, he could neither read nor write; and
-it was only after his marriage that his ambition led him to seek
-accomplishments of this sort.
-
-Thomas Lincoln was not tall and thin, like Abraham, but comparatively
-short and stout, standing about five feet ten inches in his shoes. His
-hair was dark and coarse, his complexion brown, his face round and
-full, his eyes gray, and his nose large and prominent. He weighed,
-at different times, from one hundred and seventy to one hundred and
-ninety-six. He was built so "tight and compact," that Dennis Hanks
-declares he never could find the points of separation between his ribs,
-though he felt for them often. He was a little stoop-shouldered, and
-walked with a slow, halting step. But he was sinewy and brave, and, his
-habitually peaceable disposition once fairly overborne, was a tremendous
-man in a rough-and-tumble fight. He thrashed the monstrous bully of
-Breckinridge County in three minutes, and came off without a scratch.
-
-His vagrant career had supplied him with an inexhaustible fund of
-anecdotes, which he told cleverly and well. He loved to sit about at
-"stores," or under shade-trees, and "spin yarns,"--a propensity which
-atoned for many sins, and made him extremely popular. In politics,
-he was a Democrat,--a Jackson Democrat. In religion he was nothing at
-times, and a member of various denominations by turns,--a Free-Will
-Baptist in Kentucky, a Presbyterian in Indiana, and a Disciple--vulgarly
-called Campbellite--in Illinois. In this latter communion he seems to
-have died.
-
-It ought, perhaps, to be mentioned, that both in Virginia and Kentucky
-his name was commonly pronounced "Linck-horn," and in Indiana,
-"Linckhern." The usage was so general, that Tom Lincoln came very near
-losing his real name altogether. As he never wrote it at all until after
-his marriage, and wrote it then only mechanically, it was never spelled
-one way or the other, unless by a storekeeper here and there, who had
-a small account against him. Whether it was properly "Lincoln,"
-"Linckhorn," or "Linckhern," was not definitely settled until after
-Abraham began to write, when, as one of the neighbors has it, "he
-remodelled the spelling and corrected the pronunciation."
-
-By the middle of 1806, Lincoln had acquired a very limited knowledge
-of the carpenter's trade, and set up on his own account; but his
-achievements in this line were no better than those of his previous
-life. He was employed occasionally to do rough work, that requires
-neither science nor skill; but nobody alleges that he ever built a
-house, or pretended to do more than a few little odd jobs connected with
-such an undertaking. He soon got tired of the business, as he did of
-every thing else that required application and labor. He was no boss,
-not even an average journeyman, nor a steady hand. When he worked at the
-trade at all, he liked to make common benches, cupboards, and bureaus;
-and some specimens of his work of this kind are still extant in Kentucky
-and Indiana, and bear their own testimony to the quality of their
-workmanship.
-
-Some time in the year 1806 he married Nancy Hanks. It was in the shop of
-her uncle, Joseph Hanks, at Elizabethtown, in Hardin County, that he had
-essayed to learn the trade. We have no record of the courtship, but
-any one can readily imagine the numberless occasions that would bring
-together the niece and the apprentice. It is true that Nancy did not
-live with her uncle; but the Hankses were all very clannish, and she was
-doubtless a welcome and frequent guest at his house. It is admitted by
-all the old residents of the place that they were honestly married, but
-precisely when or how no one can tell. Diligent and thorough searches by
-the most competent persons have failed to discover any trace of the fact
-in the public records of Hardin and the adjoining counties. The license
-and the minister's return in the case of Lincoln and Sarah Johnston, his
-second wife, were easily found in the place where the law required them
-to be; but of Nancy Hanks's marriage there exists no evidence but that
-of mutual acknowledgment and cohabitation. At the time of their union,
-Thomas was twenty-eight years of age, and Nancy about twenty-three.
-
-Lincoln had previously courted a girl named Sally Bush, who lived in the
-neighborhood of Elizabethtown; but his suit was unsuccessful, and
-she became the wife of Johnston, the jailer. Her reason for rejecting
-Lincoln comes down to us in no words of her own; but it is clear enough
-that it was his want of character, and the "bad luck," as the Hankses
-have it, which always attended him. Sally Bush was a modest and pious
-girl, in all things pure and decent. She was very neat in her personal
-appearance, and, because she was particular in the selection of her
-gowns and company, had long been accounted a "proud body," who held
-her head above common folks. Even her own relatives seem to have
-participated in this mean accusation; and the decency of her dress
-and behavior appear to have made her an object of common envy and
-backbiting. But she had a will as well as principles of her own, and she
-lived to make them both serviceable to the neglected and destitute son
-of Nancy Hanks. Thomas Lincoln took another wife, but he always loved
-Sally Bush as much as he was capable of loving anybody; and years
-afterwards, when her husband and his wife were both dead, he returned
-suddenly from the wilds of Indiana, and, representing himself as a
-thriving and prosperous farmer, induced her to marry him. It will be
-seen hereafter what value was to be attached to his representations of
-his own prosperity.
-
-Nancy Hanks, who accepted the honor which Sally Bush refused, was a
-slender, symmetrical woman, of medium stature, a brunette, with dark
-hair, regular features, and soft, sparkling hazel eyes. Tenderly bred
-she might have been beautiful; but hard labor and hard usage bent her
-handsome form, and imparted an unnatural coarseness to her features long
-before the period of her death. Toward the close, her life and her face
-were equally sad; and the latter habitually wore the wo-ful expression
-which afterwards distinguished the countenance of her son in repose.
-
-By her family, her understanding was considered something wonderful.
-John Hanks spoke reverently of her "high and intellectual forehead,"
-which he considered but the proper seat of faculties like hers.
-Compared with the mental poverty of her husband and relatives, her
-accomplishments were certainly very great; for it is related by them
-with pride and delight that she could actually read and write. The
-possession of these arts placed her far above her associates, and
-after a little while even Tom began to meditate upon the importance of
-acquiring them. He set to work accordingly, in real earnest, having a
-competent mistress so near at hand; and with much effort she taught him
-what letters composed his name, and how to put them together in a stiff
-and clumsy fashion. Henceforth he signed no more by making his mark; but
-it is nowhere stated that he ever learned to write any thing else, or to
-read either written or printed letters.
-
-Nancy Hanks was the daughter of Lucy Hanks. Her mother was one of four
-sisters,--Lucy, Betsy, Polly, and Nancy. Betsy married Thomas Sparrow;
-Polly married Jesse Friend, and Nancy, Levi Hall. Lucy became the wife
-of Henry Sparrow, and the mother of eight children. Nancy the younger
-was early sent to live with her uncle and aunt, Thomas and Betsy
-Sparrow. Nancy, another of the four sisters, was the mother of that
-Dennis F. Hanks whose name will be frequently met with in the course of
-this history. He also was brought up, or was permitted to come up, in
-the family of Thomas Sparrow, where Nancy found a shelter.
-
-Little Nancy became so completely identified with Thomas and Betsy
-Sparrow that many supposed her to have been their child. They reared her
-to womanhood, followed her to Indiana, dwelt under the same roof, died
-of the same disease, at nearly the same time, and were buried close
-beside her. They were the only parents she ever knew; and she must
-have called them by names appropriate to that relationship, for several
-persons who saw them die, and carried them to their graves, believe to
-this day that they were, in fact, her father and mother. Dennis Hanks
-persists even now in the assertion that her name was Sparrow; but Dennis
-was pitiably weak on the cross-examination: and we shall have to accept
-the testimony of Mr. Lincoln himself, and some dozens of other persons,
-to the contrary.
-
-All that can be learned of that generation of Hankses to which Nancy's
-mother belonged has now been recorded as fully as is compatible with
-circumstances. They claim that their ancestors came from England to
-Virginia, whence they migrated to Kentucky with the Lincolns, and
-settled near them in Mercer County. The same, precisely, is affirmed
-of the Sparrows. Branches of both families maintained a more or less
-intimate connection with the fortunes of Thomas Lincoln, and the early
-life of Abraham was closely interwoven with theirs.
-
-Lincoln took Nancy to live in a shed on one of the alleys of
-Elizabethtown. It was a very sorry building, and nearly bare of
-furniture. It stands yet, or did stand in 1866, to witness for itself
-the wretched poverty of its early inmates. It is about fourteen feet
-square, has been three times removed, twice used as a slaughter-house,
-and once as a stable. Here a daughter was born on the tenth day of
-February, 1807, who was called Nancy during the life of her mother, and
-after her death Sarah.
-
-But Lincoln soon wearied of Elizabethtown and carpenter-work. He thought
-he could do better as a farmer; and, shortly after the birth of Nancy
-(or Sarah), removed to a piece of land on the south fork of Nolin Creek,
-three miles from Hodgensville, within the present county of La Rue,
-and about thirteen miles from Elizabethtown. What estate he had, or
-attempted to get, in this land, is not clear from the papers at hand.
-It is said he bought it, but was unable to pay for it. It was very poor,
-and the landscape of which it formed a part was extremely desolate. It
-was then nearly destitute of timber, though it is now partially covered
-in spots by a young and stunted growth of post-oak and hickory. On every
-side the eye rested only upon weeds and low bushes, and a kind of grass
-which the present owner of the farm describes as "barren grass." It was,
-on the whole, as bad a piece of ground as there was in the neighborhood,
-and would hardly have sold for a dollar an acre. The general appearance
-of the surrounding country was not much better. A few small but pleasant
-streams--Nolin Creek and its tributaries--wandered through the valleys.
-The land was generally what is called "rolling;" that is, dead levels
-interspersed by little hillocks. Nearly all of it was arable; but,
-except the margins of the watercourses, not much of it was sufficiently
-fertile to repay the labor of tillage. It had no grand, un violated
-forests to allure the hunter, and no great bodies of deep and rich soils
-to tempt the husbandman. Here it was only by incessant labor and thrifty
-habits that an ordinary living could be wrung from the earth.
-
-The family took up their residence in a miserable cabin, which stood on
-a little knoll in the midst of a barren glade.
-
-A few stones tumbled down, and lying about loose, still indicate the
-site of the mean and narrow tenement which sheltered the infancy of
-one of the greatest political chieftains of modern times. Near by, a
-"romantic spring" gushed from beneath a rock, and sent forth a slender
-but silvery stream, meandering through those dull and unsightly plains.
-As it furnished almost the only pleasing feature in the melancholy
-desert through which it flowed, the place was called after it, "Rock
-Spring Farm." In addition to this single natural beauty, Lincoln began
-to think, in a little while, that a couple of trees would look well, and
-might even be useful, if judiciously planted in the vicinity of his bare
-house-yard. This enterprise he actually put into execution; and
-three decayed pear-trees, situated on the "edge" of what was lately a
-rye-field, constitute the only memorials of him or his family to be seen
-about the premises. They were his sole permanent improvement.
-
-In that solitary cabin, on this desolate spot, the illustrious Abraham
-Lincoln was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809.
-
-The Lincolns remained on Nolin Creek until Abraham was four years old.
-They then removed to a place much more picturesque, and of far greater
-fertility. It was situated about six miles from Hodgensville, on
-Knob Creek, a very clear stream, which took its rise in the gorges
-of Muldrews Hill, and fell into the Rolling Fork two miles above the
-present town of New Haven. The Rolling Fork emptied into Salt River, and
-Salt River into the Ohio, twenty-four miles below Louisville. This
-farm was well timbered, and more hilly than the one on Nolin Creek. It
-contained some rich valleys, which promised such excellent yields,
-that Lincoln bestirred himself most vigorously, and actually got into
-cultivation the whole of six acres, lying advantageously up and down
-the branch. This, however, was not all the work he did, for he still
-continued to pother occasionally at his trade; but, no matter what
-he turned his hand to, his gains were equally insignificant. He was
-satisfied with indifferent shelter, and a diet of "corn-bread and milk"
-was all he asked. John Hanks naively observes, that "happiness was
-the end of life with him." The land he now lived upon (two hundred and
-thirty-eight acres) he had pretended to buy from a Mr. Slater. The
-deed mentions a consideration of one hundred and eighteen pounds.
-The purchase must have been a mere speculation, with all the payments
-deferred, for the title remained in Lincoln but a single year. The
-deed was made to him Sept. 2, 1813; and Oct. 27, 1814, he conveyed
-two hundred acres to Charles Milton for one hundred pounds, leaving
-thirty-eight acres of the tract unsold. No public record discloses what
-he did with the remainder. If he retained any interest in it for-the
-time, it was probably permitted to be sold for taxes. The last of his
-voluntary transactions, in regard to this land, took place two years
-before his removal to Indiana; after which, he seems to have continued
-in possession as the tenant of Milton.
-
-In the mean time, Dennis Hanks endeavored to initiate young Abraham, now
-approaching his eighth year, in the mysteries of fishing, and led him
-on numerous tramps up and down the picturesque branch,--the branch whose
-waters were so pure that a white pebble could be seen in a depth of
-ten feet. On Nolin he had hunted ground-hogs with an older boy, who has
-since become the Rev. John Duncan, and betrayed a precocious zest in the
-sport. On Knob Creek, he dabbled in the water, or roved the hills
-and climbed the trees, with a little companion named Gallaher. On one
-occasion, when attempting to "coon" across the stream, by swinging
-over on a sycamore-tree, Abraham lost his hold, and, tumbling into deep
-water, was saved only by the utmost exertions of the other boy. But,
-with all this play, the child was often serious and sad. With the
-earliest dawn of reason, he began to suffer and endure; and it was that
-peculiar moral training which developed both his heart and his intellect
-with such singular and astonishing rapidity. It is not likely that Tom
-Lincoln cared a straw about his education. He had none himself, and is
-said to have admired "muscle" more than mind. Nevertheless, as Abraham's
-sister was going to school for a few days at a time, he was sent
-along, as Dennis Hanks remarks, more to bear her company than with
-any expectation or desire that he would learn much himself. One of the
-masters, Zachariah Riney, taught near the Lincoln cabin. The other,
-Caleb Hazel, kept his school nearly four miles away, on the "Friend"
-farm; and the hapless children were compelled to trudge that long and
-weary distance with spelling-book and "dinner,"--the latter a lunch of
-corn-bread, Tom Lincoln's favorite dish. Hazel could teach reading
-and writing, after a fashion, and a little arithmetic. But his great
-qualification for his office lay in the strength of his arm, and his
-power and readiness to "whip the big boys."
-
-But, as time wore on, the infelicities of Lincoln's life in this
-neighborhood became insupportable. He was gaining neither riches nor
-credit; and, being a wanderer by natural inclination, began to long for
-a change. His decision, however, was hastened by certain troubles which
-culminated in a desperate combat between him and one Abraham Enlow.
-They fought like savages; but Lincoln obtained a signal and permanent
-advantage by biting off the nose of his antagonist, so that he went
-bereft all the days of his life, and published his audacity and its
-punishment wherever he showed his face. But the affray, and the fame
-of it, made Lincoln more anxious than ever to escape from Kentucky. He
-resolved, therefore, to leave these scenes forever, and seek a roof-tree
-beyond the Ohio.
-
-It has pleased some of Mr. Lincoln's biographers to represent this
-removal of his father as a flight from the taint of slavery. Nothing
-could be further from the truth. There were not at the time more than
-fifty slaves in all Hardin County, which then composed a vast area of
-territory. It was practically a free community. Lincoln's more fortunate
-relatives in other parts of the State were slaveholders; and there is
-not the slightest evidence that he ever disclosed any conscientious
-scruples concerning the "institution."
-
-The lives of his father and mother, and the history and character of the
-family before their settlement in Indiana, were topics upon which Mr.
-Lincoln never spoke but with great reluctance and significant reserve.
-
-In his family Bible he kept a register of births, marriages, and deaths,
-every entry being carefully made in his own handwriting. It contains the
-date of his sister's birth and his own; of the marriage and death of his
-sister; of the death of his mother; and of the birth and death of
-Thomas Lincoln. The rest of the record is almost wholly devoted to the
-Johnstons and their numerous descendants and connections. It has not a
-word about the Hankses or the Sparrows. It shows the marriage of Sally
-Bush, first with Daniel Johnston, and then with Thomas Lincoln; but it
-is entirely silent as to the marriage of his own mother. It does not
-even give the date of her birth, but barely recognizes her existence
-and demise, to make the vacancy which was speedily filled by Sarah
-Johnston.1
-
- 1 The leaf of the Bible which contains these entries is in
- the possession of Col. Chapman.
-
-An artist was painting his portrait, and asked him for a sketch of his
-early life. He gave him this brief memorandum: "I was born Feb. 12,1809,
-in the then Hardin County, Kentucky, at a point within the now county of
-La Rue, a mile or a mile and a half from where Hodgens Mill now is. My
-parents being dead, and my own memory not serving, I know of no means of
-identifying the precise locality. It was on Nolin Creek."
-
-To the compiler of the "Dictionary of Congress" he gave the following:
-"Born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. Education defective.
-Profession, a lawyer. Have been a captain of volunteers in the
-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."
-
-To a campaign biographer who applied for particulars of his early
-history, he replied that they could be of no interest; that they were
-but
-
- "The short and simple annals of the poor."
-
-"The chief difficulty I had to encounter," writes this latter gentleman,
-"was to induce him to communicate the homely facts and incidents of his
-early life. He seemed to be painfully impressed with the extreme poverty
-of his early surroundings, the utter absence of all romantic and heroic
-elements; and I know he thought poorly of the idea of attempting a
-biographical sketch for campaign purposes.... Mr. Lincoln communicated
-some facts to me about his ancestry, which he did not wish published,
-and which I have never spoken of or alluded to before. I do not think,
-however, that Dennis Hanks, if he knows any thing about these matters,
-would be very likely to say any thing about them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THOMAS LINCOLN was something of a waterman. In the frequent changes of
-occupation, which had hitherto made his life so barren of good results,
-he could not resist the temptation to the career of a flat-boatman. He
-had accordingly made one, or perhaps two trips to New Orleans, in the
-company and employment of Isaac Bush, who was probably a near relative
-of Sally Bush. It was therefore very natural, that when, in the fall of
-1816, he finally determined to emigrate, he should attempt to transport
-his goods by water. He built himself a boat, which seems to have been
-none of the best, and launched it on the Rolling Fork, at the mouth of
-Knob Creek, a half-mile from his cabin. Some of his personal property,
-including carpenter's tools, he put on board, and the rest he traded for
-four hundred gallons of whiskey. With this crazy boat and this singular
-cargo, he put out into the stream alone, and floating with the current
-down the Rolling Fork, and then down Salt River, reached the Ohio
-without any mishap. Here his craft proved somewhat rickety when
-contending with the difficulties of the larger stream, or perhaps there
-was a lack of force in the management of her, or perhaps the single
-navigator had consoled himself during the lonely voyage by too frequent
-applications to a portion of his cargo: at all events, the boat
-capsized, and the lading went to the bottom. He fished up a few of the
-tools "and most of the whiskey," and, righting the little boat, again
-floated down to a landing at Thompson's Ferry, two and a half miles west
-of Troy, in Perry County, Indiana. Here he sold his treacherous boat,
-and, leaving his remaining property in the care of a settler named
-Posey, trudged off on foot to select "a location" in the wilderness. He
-did not go far, but found a place that he thought would suit him only
-sixteen miles distant from the river. He then turned about, and walked
-all the way back to Knob Creek, in Kentucky, where he took a fresh
-start with his wife and her children. Of the latter there were only
-two,--Nancy (or Sarah), nine years of age, and Abraham, seven. Mrs.
-Lincoln had given birth to another son some years before, but he had
-died when only three days old. After leaving Kentucky, she had no more
-children.
-
-This time Lincoln loaded what little he had left upon two horses, and
-"packed through to Posey's." Besides clothing and bedding, they carried
-such cooking utensils as would be needed by the way, and would be
-indispensable when they reached their destination. The stock was not
-large. It consisted of "one oven and lid, one skillet and lid, and some
-tin-ware." They camped out during the nights, and of course cooked their
-own food. Lincoln's skill as a hunter must now have stood him in good
-stead.
-
-Where he got the horses used upon this occasion, it is impossible to
-say; but they were likely borrowed from his brother-in-law, Krume, of
-Breckinridge County, who owned such stock, and subsequently moved Sarah
-Johnston's goods to Indiana, after her marriage with Lincoln.
-
-When they got to Posey's, Lincoln hired a wagon, and, loading on it the
-whiskey and other things he had stored there, went on toward the place
-which has since become famous as the "Lincoln Farm." He was now making
-his way through an almost untrodden wilderness. There was no road,
-and for a part of the distance not even a foot-trail. He was slightly
-assisted by a path of a few miles in length, which had been "blazed out"
-by an earlier settler named Hoskins. But he was obliged to suffer long
-delays, and cut out a passage for the wagon with his axe. At length,
-after many detentions and difficulties he reached the point where he
-intended to make his future home. It was situated between the forks
-of Big Pigeon and Little Pigeon Creeks, a mile and a half east of
-Gentryville, a village which grew up afterwards, and now numbers about
-three hundred inhabitants. The whole country was covered with a dense
-forest of oaks, beeches, walnuts, sugar-maples, and nearly all the
-varieties of trees that flourish in North America. The woods were
-usually open, and devoid of underbrush; the trees were of the largest
-growth, and beneath the deep shades they afforded was spread out a rich
-greensward. The natural grazing was very good, and hogs found abundant
-sustenance in the prodigious quantity of mast. There was occasionally
-a little glade or prairie set down in the midst of this vast expanse
-of forest. One of these, not far from the Lincoln place, was a famous
-resort for the deer, and the hunters knew it well for its numerous
-"licks." Upon this prairie the militia "musters" were had at a later
-day, and from it the south fork of the Pigeon came finally to be known
-as the "Prairie Fork."
-
-Lincoln laid off his curtilage on a gentle hillock having a slope on
-every side. The spot was very beautiful, and the soil was excellent. The
-selection was wise in every respect but one. There was no water near,
-except what was collected in holes in the ground after a rain; but it
-was very foul, and had to be strained before using. At a later period we
-find Abraham and his step-sister carrying water from a spring situated a
-mile away. Dennis Hanks asserts that Tom Lincoln "riddled his land like
-a honeycomb," in search of good water, and was at last sorely tempted to
-employ a Yankee, who came around with a divining-rod, and declared that
-for the small consideration of five dollars in cash, he would make his
-rod point to a cool, flowing spring beneath the surface.
-
-Here Lincoln built "a half-faced camp,"--a cabin enclosed on three sides
-and open on the fourth. It was built, not of logs, but of poles, and was
-therefore denominated a "camp," to distinguish it from a "cabin." It was
-about fourteen feet square, and had no floor. It was no larger than the
-first house he lived in at Elizabethtown, and on the whole not as good
-a shelter. But Lincoln was now under the influence of a transient access
-of ambition, and the camp was merely preliminary to something better.
-He lived in it, however, for a whole year, before he attained to the
-dignity of a residence in a cabin. "In the mean time he cleaned some
-land, and raised a small crop of corn and vegetables."
-
-In the fall of 1817, Thomas and Betsy Sparrow came out from Kentucky,
-and took up their abode in the old camp which the Lincolns had just
-deserted for the cabin. Betsy was the aunt who had raised Nancy Hanks.
-She had done the same in part for our friend Dennis Hanks, who was the
-offspring of another sister, and she now brought him with her. Dennis
-thus became the constant companion of young Abraham; and all the other
-members of that family, as originally settled in Indiana, being dead,
-Dennis remains a most important witness as to this period of Mr.
-Lincoln's life.
-
-Lincoln's second house was a "rough, rough log" one: the timbers were
-not hewed; and until after the arrival of Sally Bush, in 1819, it had
-neither floor, door, nor window. It stood about forty yards from what
-Dennis Hanks calls that "darned little half-faced camp," which was now
-the dwelling of the Sparrows. It was "right in the bush,"--in the heart
-of a virgin wilderness. There were only seven or eight older settlers in
-the neighborhood of the two Pigeon Creeks. Lincoln had had some previous
-acquaintance with one of them,--a Mr. Thomas Carter; and it is highly
-probable that nothing but this trivial circumstance induced him to
-settle here.1
-
- 1 The principal authorities for this part of our narrative
- are necessarily Dennis and John Hanks; but their statements
- have been carefully collated with those of other persons,
- both in Kentucky and Indiana.
-
-The nearest town was Troy, situated on the Ohio, about half a mile
-from the mouth of Anderson Creek. Gentryville had as yet no existence.
-Travelling was on horseback or on foot, and the only resort of commerce
-was to the pack-horse or the canoe. But a prodigious immigration was
-now sweeping into this inviting country. Harrison's victories over
-the Indians had opened it up to the peaceful settler; and Indiana
-was admitted into the Union in 1816, with a population of sixty-five
-thousand. The county in which Thomas Lincoln settled was Perry, with
-the county-seat at Troy; but he soon found himself in the new county of
-Spencer, with the court-house at Rockport, twenty miles south of him,
-and the thriving village of Gentryville within a mile and a half of his
-door.
-
-A post-office was established at Gentryville in 1824 or 1825. Dennis
-Hanks helped to hew the logs used to build the first storeroom. The
-following letter from Mr. David Turnham, now of Dale, Spencer County,
-presents some interesting and perfectly authentic information regarding
-the village and the settlements around it in those early times:--
-
-"Yours of the 5th inst. is at hand. As you wish me to answer several
-questions, I will give you a few items of the early settlement of
-Indiana.
-
-"When my father came here in the spring of 1819, he settled in Spencer
-County, within one mile of Thomas Lincoln, then a widower. The chance
-for schooling was poor; but, such as it was, Abraham and myself attended
-the same schools.
-
-"We first had to go seven miles to mill; and then it was a hand-mill
-that would grind from ten to fifteen bushels of corn in a day. There was
-but little wheat grown at that time; and, when we did have wheat, we had
-to grind it on the mill described, and use it without bolting, as there
-were no bolts in the country. In the course of two or three years, a
-man by the name of Huffman built a mill on Anderson River, about twelve
-miles distant. Abe and I had to do the milling on horseback, frequently
-going twice to get one grist. Then they began building horse-mills of a
-little better quality than the hand-mills.
-
-"The country was very rough, especially in the low lands, so thick with
-bush that a man could scarcely get through on foot. These places were
-called Roughs. The country abounded in game, such as bears, deer,
-turkeys, and the smaller game.
-
-"About the time Huffman built his mill, there was a road laid out from
-Corydon to Evansville, running by Mr. Lincoln's farm, and through what
-is now Gentryville. Corydon was then the State capital.
-
-"About the year 1823, there was another road laid out from Rockport to
-Bloomington, crossing the aforesaid at right angles, where Gentryville
-now stands. James Gentry entered the land; and in about a year Gideon
-Romine brought goods there, and shortly after succeeded in getting a
-post-office, by the name of Gentryville Post-office. Then followed the
-laying out of lots, and the selling of them, and a few were improved.
-But for some cause the lots all fell back to the original owner. The
-lots were sold in 1824 or 1825. Romine kept goods there a short time,
-and sold out to Gentry, but the place kept on increasing slowly. William
-Jones came in with a store, that made it improve a little faster, but
-Gentry bought him out. Jones bought a tract of land one-half mile from
-Gentryville, moved to it, went into business there, and drew nearly all
-the custom. Gentry saw that it was ruining his town: he compromised with
-Jones, and got him back to Gentryville; and about the year 1847 or 1848
-there was another survey of lots, which remains.
-
-"This is as good a history of the rise of Gentryville as I can give,
-after consulting several of the old settlers.
-
-"At that time there were a great many deer-licks; and Abe and myself
-would go to those licks sometimes, and watch of nights to kill deer,
-though Abe was not so fond of a gun as I was. There were ten or twelve
-of these licks in a small prairie on the creek, lying between Mr.
-Lincoln's and Mr. Wood's (the man you call Moore). This gave it the name
-of Prairie Fork of Pigeon Creek.
-
-"The people in the first settling of this country were very sociable,
-kind, and accommodating; but there was more drunkenness and stealing
-on a small scale, more immorality, less religion, less well-placed
-confidence."
-
-The steps taken by Lincoln to complete his title to the land upon which
-he settled are thus recited by the Commissioner of the General Land
-Office:--
-
-"In reply to the letter of Mr. W. H. Herndon, who is writing the
-biography of the late President, dated June 19, 1865, herewith returned,
-I have the honor to state, pursuant to the Secretary's reference, that
-on the 15th of October, 1817, Mr. Thomas Lincoln, then of Perry County,
-Indiana, entered under the old credit system,--
-
-"1. The South-West Quarter of Section 82, in Township 4, South of Range
-5 West, lying in Spencer County, Indiana.
-
-"2. Afterwards the said Thomas Lincoln relinquished to the United States
-the East half of said South-West Quarter; and the amount paid thereon
-was passed to his credit to complete payment of the West half of said
-South-West Quarter of Section 32, in Township 4, South of Range 5 West;
-and accordingly a patent was issued to said Thomas Lincoln for the
-latter tract. The patent was dated June 6, 1827, and was signed by John
-Quincy Adams, then President of the United States, and countersigned by
-George Graham, then Commissioner of the General Land Office." 1
-
- 1 The patent was issued to Thomas Lincoln alias Linckhern
- the other half he never paid, and finally lost the whole of
- the land.
-
-It will be observed, that, although Lincoln squatted upon the land in
-the fall of 1816, he did not enter it until October of the next year;
-and that the patent was not issued to him until June, 1827, but a little
-more than a year before he left it altogether. Beginning by entering a
-full quarter section, he was afterwards content with eighty acres, and
-took eleven years to make the necessary payments upon that. It is very
-probable that the money which finally secured the patent was furnished
-by Gentry or Aaron Grigsby, and the title passed out of Lincoln in the
-course of the transaction. Dennis Hanks says, "He settled on a piece of
-government land,--eighty acres. This land he afterwards bought under
-the Two-Dollar Act; was to pay for it in instalments; one-half he paid."
-
-For two years Lincoln continued to live along in the old way. He did not
-like to farm, and he never got much of his land under cultivation. His
-principal crop was corn; and this, with the game which a rifleman so
-expert would easily take from the woods around him, supplied his table.
-It does not appear that he employed any of his mechanical skill in
-completing and furnishing his own cabin. It has already been stated that
-the latter had no window, door, or floor. But the furniture--if it may
-be called furniture--was even worse than the house. Three-legged stools
-served for chairs. A bedstead was made of poles stuck in the cracks of
-the logs in one corner of the cabin, while the other end rested in the
-crotch of a forked stick sunk in the earthen floor. On these were laid
-some boards, and on the boards a "shake-down" of leaves covered with
-skins and old petticoats. The table was a hewed puncheon, supported by
-four legs. They had a few pewter and tin dishes to eat from, but the
-most minute inventory of their effects makes no mention of knives or
-forks. Their cooking utensils were a Dutch oven and a skillet. Abraham
-slept in the loft, to which he ascended by means of pins driven into
-holes in the wall.
-
-In the summer of 1818, the Pigeon-Creek settlements were visited by a
-fearful disease, called, in common parlance, "the milk-sickness." It
-swept off the cattle which gave the milk, as well as the human beings
-who drank it. It seems to have prevailed in the neighborhood from 1818
-to 1829; for it is given as one of the reasons for Thomas Lincoln's
-removal to Illinois at the latter date. But in the year first mentioned
-its ravages were especially awful. Its most immediate effects were
-severe retchings and vomitings; and, while the deaths from it were
-not necessarily sudden, the proportion of those who finally died
-was uncommonly large.1 Among the number who were attacked by it, and
-lingered on for some time in the midst of great sufferings, were Thomas
-and Betsy Sparrow and Mrs. Nancy Lincoln.
-
- 1 The peculiar disease which carried off so many of
- Abraham's family, and induced the removal of the remainder
- to Illinois, deserves more than a passing allusion. The
- following, regarding its nature and treatment, is from the
- pen of an eminent physician of Danville, Illinois:--
-
- Ward H. Lamon, Esq.
-
- Dear Sir,--Your favor of the 17th inst. has been received.
- You request me to present you with my theory in relation to
- the origin of the disease called "milk-sickness," and also a
- "general statement of the best treatment of the disease,"
- and the proportion of fatal cases.
-
- I have quite a number of cases of the so-called disease in
- Danville, Ill., and its vicinity; but perhaps you are not
- aware, that, between the great majority of the medical
- faculty in this region of country and myself, there is quite
- a discrepancy of opinion. They believe in the existence of
- the disease in Vermilion County; while, on the contrary, I
- am firmly of opinion, that, instead of genuine milk-
- sickness, it is only a modified form of malarial fever with
- which we here have to contend. Though sceptical of its
- existence in this part of the country, we have too much
- evidence from different intelligent sources to doubt, for a
- moment, that, in many parts of the West and South-west,
- there is a distinct malady, witnessed more than fifty years
- ago, and different from every other heretofore recognized in
- any system of Nosology.
-
- In the opinion of medical men, as well as in that of the
- people in general, where milk-sickness prevails, cattle,
- sheep, and horses contract the disease by feeding on wild
- pasture-lands; and, when those pastures have been enclosed
- and cultivated, the cause entirely disappears. This has also
- been the observation of the farmers and physicians of
- Vermilion County, Illinois. From this it might be inferred
- that the disease had a vegetable origin. But it appears that
- it prevails as early in the season as March and April in
- some localities; and I am informed that, in an early day,
- say thirty-five or forty years ago, it showed itself in the
- winter-time in this county. This seems to argue that it may
- be produced by water holding some mineral substance in
- solution. Even in this case, however, some vegetable
- producing the disease may have been gathered and preserved
- with the hay on which the cattle were fed at the time; for
- in that early day the farmers were in the habit of cutting
- wild grass for their stock. On the whole, I am inclined to
- attribute the cause to a vegetable origin.
-
- The symptoms of what is called milk-sickness in this county--
- and they are similar to those described by authors who have
- written on the disease in other sections of the Western
- country--are a whitish coat on the tongue, burning
- sensation of the stomach severe vomiting, obstinate
- constipation of the bowels, coolness of the extremities,
- great restlessness and jactitation, pulse rather small,
- somewhat more frequent than natural, and slightly corded. In
- the course of the disease, the coat on the tongue becomes
- brownish and dark, the countenance dejected, and the
- prostration of the patient is great. A fatal termination may
- take place in sixty hours, or life may be prolonged for a
- period of fourteen days. These are the symptoms of the acute
- form of the disease. Sometimes it runs into the chronic
- form, or it may assume that form from the commencement; and,
- after months or years, the patient may finally die, or
- recover only a partial degree of health.
-
- The treatment which I have found most successful is pills
- composed of calomel and opium, given at intervals of two,
- three, or four hours, so as to bring the patient pretty
- strongly under the influence of opium by the time the second
- or third dose had been administered; some effervescing
- mixture, pro re nata; injections; castor oil, when the
- stomach will retain it; blisters to the stomach; brandy or
- good whiskey freely administered throughout the disease; and
- quinine after the bowels have been moved.
-
- Under the above treatment, modified according to the
- circumstances, I would not expect to lose more than one case
- in eight or ten, as the disease manifests itself in this
- county....
-
- As ever, Theo. Lemon.
-
-It was now found expedient to remove the Sparrows from the wretched
-"half-faced camp," through which the cold autumn winds could sweep
-almost unobstructed, to the cabin of the Lincolns, which in truth was
-then very little better. Many in the neighborhood had already died, and
-Thomas Lincoln had made all their coffins out of "green lumber cut
-with a whip-saw." In the mean time the Sparrows and Nancy were growing
-alarmingly worse. There was no physician in the county,--not even
-a pretender to the science of medicine; and the nearest regular
-practitioner was located at Yellow Banks, Ky., over thirty miles
-distant. It is not probable that they ever secured his services. They
-would have been too costly, and none of the persons who witnessed and
-describe these scenes speak of his having been there. At length, in the
-first days of October, the Sparrows died; and Thomas Lincoln sawed up
-his green lumber, and made rough boxes to enclose the mortal remains of
-his wife's two best and oldest friends. A day or two after, on the 5th
-of October, 1818, Nancy Hanks Lincoln rested from her troubles. Thomas
-Lincoln took to his green wood again, and made a box for Nancy. There
-were about twenty persons at her funeral. They took her to the summit
-of a deeply-wooded knoll, about half a mile south-east of the cabin, and
-laid her beside the Sparrows. If there were any burial ceremonies,
-they were of the briefest. But it happened that a few months later an
-itinerant preacher, named David Elkin, whom the Lincolns had known in
-Kentucky, wandered into the settlement; and he either volunteered or was
-employed to preach a sermon, which should commemorate the many virtues
-and pass in silence the few frailties of the poor woman who slept in
-the forest. Many years later the bodies of Levi Hall and his wife, Nancy
-Hanks, were deposited in the same earth with that of Mrs. Lincoln. The
-graves of two or three children belonging to a neighbor's family are
-also near theirs. They are all crumbled in, sunken, and covered with
-wild vines in deep and tangled mats. The great trees were originally cut
-away to make a small cleared space for this primitive graveyard; but the
-young dogwoods have sprung up unopposed in great luxuriance, and in many
-instances the names of pilgrims to the burial-place of the great Abraham
-Lincoln's mother are carved in their bark. With this exception, the spot
-is wholly unmarked. Her grave never had a stone, nor even a board, at
-its head or its foot; and the neighbors still dispute as to which one of
-those unsightly hollows contains the ashes of Nancy Lincoln.
-
-Thirteen months after the burial of Nancy Hanks, and nine or ten months
-after the solemnities conducted by Elkin, Thomas Lincoln appeared at
-Elizabethtown, Ky., in search of another wife. Sally Bush had married
-Johnston, the jailer, in the spring of the same year in which Lincoln
-had married Nancy Hanks. She had then rejected him for a better match,
-but was now a widow. In 1814 many persons in and about Elizabethtown had
-died of a disease which the people called the "cold plague," and among
-them the jailer. Both parties being free again, Lincoln came back, very
-unexpectedly to Mrs. Johnston, and opened his suit in an exceedingly
-abrupt manner. "Well, Miss Johnston," said he, "I have no wife, and you
-have no husband. I came a purpose to marry you: I knowed you from a gal,
-and you knowed me from a boy. I have no time to lose; and, if you are
-willin', let it be done straight off." To this she replied, "Tommy, I
-know you well, and have no objection to marrying you; but I cannot do
-it straight off, as I owe some debts that must first be paid." "The next
-morning," says Hon. Samuel Haycraft, the clerk of the courts and the
-gentleman who reports this quaint courtship, "I issued his license, and
-they were married _straight_ off on that day, and left, and I never saw
-her or Tom Lincoln since." From the death of her husband to that day,
-she had been living, "an honest, poor widow," "in a round log-cabin,"
-which stood in an "alley" just below Mr. Haycraft's house. Dennis Hanks
-says that it was only "on the earnest solicitation of her friends" that
-Mrs. Johnston consented to marry Lincoln. They all liked Lincoln, and it
-was with a member of her family that he had made several voyages to New
-Orleans. Mr. Helm, who at that time was doing business in his uncle's
-store at Elizabethtown, remarks that "life among the Hankses, the
-Lincolns, and the Enlows was a long ways below life among the Bushes."
-Sally was the best and the proudest of the Bushes; but, nevertheless,
-she appears to have maintained some intercourse with the Lincolns as
-long as they remained in Kentucky. She had a particular kindness for
-little Abe, and had him with her on several occasions at Helm's store,
-where, strange to say, he sat on a nail-keg, and ate a lump of sugar,
-"just like any other boy."
-
-Mrs. Johnston has been denominated a "poor widow;" but she possessed
-goods, which, in the eyes of Tom Lincoln, were of almost unparalleled
-magnificence. Among other things, she had a bureau that cost forty
-dollars; and he informed her, on their arrival in Indiana, that, in his
-deliberate opinion, it was little less than sinful to be the owner of
-such a thing. He demanded that she should turn it into cash, which
-she positively refused to do. She had quite a lot of other articles,
-however, which he thought well enough in their way, and some of which
-were sadly needed in his miserable cabin in the wilds of Indiana. Dennis
-Hanks speaks with great rapture of the "large supply of household goods"
-which she brought out with her. There was "one fine bureau, one table,
-one set of chairs, one large clothes-chest, cooking utensils, knives,
-forks, bedding, and other articles." It was a glorious day for little
-Abe and Sarah and Dennis when this wondrous collection of rich furniture
-arrived in the Pigeon Creek settlement. But all this wealth required
-extraordinary means of transportation; and Lincoln had recourse to
-his brother-in-law, Ralph Krume, who lived just over the line, in
-Breckinridge County. Krume came with a four-horse team, and moved Mrs.
-Johnston, now Mrs. Lincoln, with her family and effects, to the home of
-her new husband in Indiana. When she got there, Mrs. Lincoln was much
-"surprised" at the contrast between the glowing representations which
-her husband had made to her before leaving Kentucky and the real poverty
-and meanness of the place. She had evidently been given to understand
-that the bridegroom had reformed his old Kentucky ways, and was now an
-industrious and prosperous farmer. She was scarcely able to restrain
-the expression of her astonishment and discontent; but, though sadly
-overreached in a bad bargain, her lofty pride and her high sense of
-Christian duty saved her from hopeless and useless repinings.
-
-On the contrary, she set about mending what was amiss with all her
-strength and energy. Her own goods furnished the cabin with tolerable
-decency. She made Lincoln put down a floor, and hang windows and doors.
-It was in the depth of winter; and the children, as they nestled in the
-warm beds she provided them, enjoying the strange luxury of security
-from the cold winds of December, must have thanked her from the bottoms
-of their newly-comforted hearts. She had brought a son and two daughters
-of her own,--John, Sarah, and Matilda; but Abe and his sister Nancy
-(whose name was speedily changed to Sarah), the ragged and hapless
-little strangers to her blood, were given an equal place in her
-affections. They were half naked, and she clad them from the stores of
-clothing she had laid up for her own. They were dirty, and she washed
-them; they had been ill-used, and she treated them with motherly
-tenderness. In her own modest language, she "made them look a little
-more human." "In fact," says Dennis Hanks, "in a few weeks all had
-changed; and where every thing was wanting, now all was snug and
-comfortable. She was a woman of great energy of remarkable good sense,
-very industrious and saving, and also very neat and tidy in her person
-and manners, and knew exactly how to manage children. She took an
-especial liking to young Abe. Her love for him was warmly returned, and
-continued to the day of his death. But few children loved their parents
-as he loved his step-mother. She soon dressed him up in entire new
-clothes, _and from that time on he appeared to lead a new life_. He was
-encouraged by her to study, and any wish on his part was gratified when
-it could be done. The two sets of children got along finely together, as
-if they had all been the children of the same parents. Mrs. Lincoln soon
-discovered that young Abe was a boy of uncommon natural talents, and
-that, if rightly trained, a bright future was before him, and she did
-all in her power to develop those talents." When, in after years, Mr.
-Lincoln spoke of his "saintly mother," and of his "angel of a mother,"
-he referred to this noble woman,1 who first made him feel "like a human
-being,"--whose goodness first touched his childish heart, and taught him
-that blows and taunts and degradation were not to be his only portion in
-the world.2
-
- 1 The author has many times heard him make the application.
- While he seldom, if ever, spoke of his own mother, he loved
- to dwell on the beautiful character of Sally Bush.
-
- 2 The following description of her personal appearance is
- from the pen of her granddaughter, the daughter of Dennis
- Hanks:--
-
- "When I landed in Indiana," says Mrs. Lincoln, "Abe was
- about nine years old, and the country was wild and
- desolate. It is certain enough that her presence took away
- much that was desolate in his lot. She clothed him decently,
- and had him sent to school as soon as there was a school to
- send him to. But, notwithstanding her determination to do
- the best for him, his advantages in this respect were very
- limited. He had already had a few days', or perhaps a few
- weeks' experience, under the discipline of Riney and Hazel,
- in Kentucky; and, as he was naturally quick in the
- acquisition of any sort of knowledge, it is likely that by
- this time he could read and write a little. He was now to
- have the benefit of a few months more of public instruction;
- but the poverty of the family, and the necessity for his
- being made to work at home in the shop and on the farm, or
- abroad as a hired boy, made his attendance at school, for
- any great length of time, a thing impossible. Accordingly,
- all his school-days added together would not make a single
- year in the aggregate.
-
- "His wife, my grandmother, is a very tall woman; straight as
- an Indian, fair complexion, and was, when I first remember
- her, very handsome, sprightly, talkative, and proud; wore
- her hair curled till gray; is kind-hearted and very
- charitable, and also very industrious."--Mrs. H. A, Chapman.
-
-Abraham began his irregular attendance at the nearest school very soon
-after he fell under the care of the second Mrs. Lincoln. It was probably
-in the winter of 1819, she having come out in the December of that year.
-It has been seen that she was as much impressed by his mental precocity
-as by the good qualities of his heart.
-
-Hazel Dorsey was his first master.1 He presided in a small house near
-the Little Pigeon Creek meeting-house, a mile and a half from the
-Lincoln cabin. It was built of unhewn logs, and had "holes for windows,"
-in which "greased paper" served for glass. The roof was just high enough
-for a man to stand erect. Here he was taught reading, writing, and
-ciphering. They spelled in classes, and "trapped" up and down. These
-juvenile contests were very exciting to the participants; and it is said
-by the survivors, that Abe was even then the equal, if not the superior,
-of any scholar in his class.
-
- 1 The account of the schools is taken from the Grigsbys,
- Turnham, and others, who attended them along with Abe, as
- well as from the members of his own family.
-
-The next teacher was Andrew Crawford. Mrs. Gentry says he began
-pedagogue in the neighborhood in the winter of 1822-3, whilst most of
-his other scholars are unable to fix an exact date. He "kept" in the
-same little schoolhouse which had been the scene of Dorsey's labors, and
-the windows were still adorned with the greased leaves of old copybooks
-that had come down from Dorsey's time. Abe was now in his fifteenth
-year, and began to exhibit symptoms of gallantry toward the weaker sex,
-as we shall presently discover. He was growing at a tremendous rate, and
-two years later attained his full height of six feet four inches. He was
-long, wiry, and strong; while his big feet and hands, and the length
-of his legs and arms, were out of all proportion to his small trunk and
-head. His complexion was very swarthy, and Mrs. Gentry says that his
-skin was shrivelled and yellow even then. He wore low shoes, buckskin
-breeches, linsey-woolsey shirt, and a cap made of the skin of an opossum
-or a coon. The breeches clung close to his thighs and legs, but failed
-by a large space to meet the tops of his shoes. Twelve inches remained
-uncovered, and exposed that much of "shinbone, sharp, blue, and
-narrow."1 "He would always come to school thus, good-humoredly and
-laughing," says his old friend, Nat Grigsby. "He was always in good
-health, never was sick, had an excellent constitution, and took care of
-it."
-
- 1 "They had no woollen clothing in the family until about
- the year 1824."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-Crawford taught "manners." This was a feature of backwoods education to
-which Dorsey had not aspired, and Crawford had doubtless introduced
-it as a refinement which would put to shame the humbler efforts of his
-predecessor. One of the scholars was required to retire, and re-enter as
-a polite gentleman is supposed to enter a drawing-room. He was received
-at the door by another scholar, and conducted from bench to bench, until
-he had been introduced to all the "young ladies and gentlemen" in the
-room. Abe went through the ordeal countless times. If he took a serious
-view of the business, it must have put him to exquisite torture; for he
-was conscious that he was not a perfect type of manly beauty, with his
-long legs and blue shins, his small head, his great ears, and shrivelled
-skin. If, however, it struck him as at all funny, it must have filled
-him with unspeakable mirth, and given rise to many antic tricks and sly
-jokes, as he was gravely led about, shamefaced and gawky, under the very
-eye of the precise Crawford, to be introduced to the boys and girls of
-his most ancient acquaintance.
-
-But, though Crawford inculcated manners, he by no means neglected
-spelling. Abe was a good speller, and liked to use his knowledge,
-not only to secure honors for himself, but to help his less fortunate
-schoolmates out of their troubles, and he was exceedingly ingenious
-in the selection of expedients for conveying prohibited hints. One day
-Crawford gave out the difficult word _defied_. A large class was on the
-floor, but they all provokingly failed to spell it. D-e-f-i-d-e, said
-one; d-e-f-y-d-e, said another; d-e-f-y-d,--d-e-f-y-e-d, cried another
-and another. But it was all wrong: it was shameful, that, among all
-these big boys and girls, nobody could spell "_defied_;" Crawford's
-wrath gathered in clouds over his terrible brow. He made the helpless
-culprits shake with fear. He declared he would keep the whole class in
-all day and all night, if "_defied_" was not spelled. There was among
-them a Miss Roby, a girl fifteen years of age, whom we must suppose to
-have been pretty, for Abe was evidently half in love with her. "I saw
-Lincoln at the window," says she: "he had his finger in his _eye_, and
-a smile on his face; I instantly took the hint, that I must change the
-letter _y_ into an _i_. Hence I spelled the word,--the class let out. I
-felt grateful to Lincoln for this simple thing."
-
-Nat Grigsby tells us, with unnecessary particularity, that "essays and
-poetry were not taught in this school." "Abe took it (them) up on
-his own account." He first wrote short sentences against "cruelty to
-animals," and at last came forward with a regular "composition" on the
-subject. He was very much annoyed and pained by the conduct of the boys,
-who were in the habit of catching terrapins, and putting coals of fire
-on their backs. "He would chide us," says Nat, "tell us it was wrong,
-and would write against it."
-
-The third and last school to which Abe went was taught by a Mr. Swaney,
-in 1826. To get there, he had to travel four and a half miles; and this
-going back and forth so great a distance occupied entirely too much
-of his time. His attendance was therefore only at odd times, and was
-speedily broken off altogether. The schoolhouse was much like the other
-one near the Pigeon Creek meeting-house, except that it had two chimneys
-instead of one. The course of instruction was precisely the same as
-under Dorsey and Crawford, save that Swaney, like Dorsey, omitted the
-great department of "manners." "Here," says John Hoskins, the son of the
-settler who had "blazed out" the trail for Tom Lincoln, "we would choose
-up, and spell as in old times every Friday night." Hoskins himself tore
-down "the old schoolhouse" long since, and built a stable with the logs.
-He is now half sorry for his haste, and reverently presented Mr. Herndon
-a piece of the wood as a precious memento of his old friend Abe. An
-oak-tree, blackened and killed by the smoke that issued from the two
-chimneys, spreads its naked arms over the spot where the schoolhouse
-stood. Among its roots is a fine, large spring, over whose limpid waters
-Abe often bent to drink, and laughed at the reflection of his own homely
-face.
-
-Abe never went to school again in Indiana or elsewhere. Mr. Turnham
-tells us, that he had excelled all his masters, and it was "no use"
-for him to attempt to learn any thing from them. But he continued
-his studies at home, or wherever he was hired out to work, with a
-perseverance which showed that he could scarcely live without some
-species of mental excitement. He was by no means fond of the hard manual
-labor to which his own necessities and those of his family
-compelled him. Many of his acquaintances state this fact with strong
-emphasis,--among them Dennis Hanks and Mrs. Lincoln. His neighbor, John
-Romine, declares that Abe was "awful lazy. He worked for me; was always
-reading and thinking; used to get mad at him. He worked for me in 1829,
-pulling fodder. I say Abe was awful lazy: he would laugh and talk and
-crack jokes and tell stories all the time; didn't love work, but did
-dearly love his pay. He worked for me frequently, a few days only at a
-time.... Lincoln said to me one day, that his father taught him to work,
-but never learned him to love it."
-
- 1 Whenever Mrs. Sarah Lincoln speaks, we follow her
- implicitly. Regarding Abe's habits and conduct at home, her
- statement is a very full one. It is, however, confirmed and
- supplemented by all the other members of the family who were
- alive in 1866.
-
-Abe loved to lie under a shade-tree, or up in the loft of the cabin, and
-read, cipher, and scribble. At night he sat by the chimney "jamb," and
-ciphered, by the light of the fire, on the wooden fire-shovel. When
-the shovel was fairly covered, he would shave it off with Tom Lincoln's
-drawing-knife, and begin again. In the daytime he used boards for
-the same purpose, out of doors, and went through the shaving process
-everlastingly. His step-mother1 repeats often, that "he read every book
-he could lay his hand on." She says, "Abe read diligently.... He read
-every book he could lay his hands on; and, when he came across a passage
-that struck him, he would write it down on boards if he had no paper,
-and keep it there until he did get paper. Then he would re-write it,
-look at it, repeat it. He had a copy-book, a kind of scrapbook, in which
-he put down all things, and thus preserved them."
-
-John Hanks came out from Kentucky when Abe was fourteen years of age,
-and lived four years with the Lincolns. We cannot describe some of Abe's
-habits better than John has described them for us: "When Lincoln--Abe
-and I--returned to the house from work, he would go to the cupboard,
-snatch a piece of corn-bread, take down a book, sit down on a chair,
-cock his legs up high as his head, and read. He and I worked barefooted,
-grubbed it, ploughed, mowed, and cradled together; ploughed corn,
-gathered it, and shucked corn. Abraham read constantly when he had an
-opportunity."
-
-Among the books upon which Abe "laid his hands" were "Æsop's Fables,"
-"Robinson Crusoe," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," a "History of the
-United States," and Weems's "Life of Washington." All these he read
-many times, and transferred extracts from them to the boards and the
-scrapbook. He had procured the scrap-book because most of his literature
-was borrowed, and he thought it profitable to take copious notes from
-the books before he returned them. David Turnham had bought a volume of
-"The Revised Statutes of Indiana;" but, as he was "acting constable" at
-the time, he could not lend it to Abe. But Abe was not to be baffled in
-his purpose of going through and through every book in the neighborhood;
-and so, says Mr. Turnham, "he used to come to my house and sit and read
-it." 1 Dennis Hanks would fain have us believe that he himself was
-the purchaser of this book, and that he had stood as a sort of first
-preceptor to Abe in the science of law. "I had like to forgot," writes
-Dennis, with his usual modesty, "How did Abe get his knowledge of law?
-This is the fact about it. I bought the 'Statute of Indiana,' and from
-that he learned the principles of law, and also myself. Every man should
-become acquainted of the principles of law." The Bible, according to
-Mrs. Lincoln, was not one of his studies: "he sought more congenial
-books." At that time he neither talked nor read upon religious subjects.
-If he had any opinions about them, he kept them to himself.
-
- 1 He also read at Turnham's house Scott's Lessons and
- Sindbad the Sailor.
-
-Abraham borrowed Weems's "Life of Washington" from his neighbor, old
-Josiah Crawford,--not Andrew Crawford, the school-teacher, as some of
-his biographers have it. The "Life" was read with great avidity in the
-intervals of work, and, when not in use, was carefully deposited on a
-shelf, made of a clapboard laid on two pins. But just behind the shelf
-there was a great crack between the logs of the wall; and one night,
-while Abe was dreaming in the loft, a storm came up, and the rain,
-blown through the opening, soaked his precious book from cover to cover.
-Crawford was a sour and churlish fellow at best, and flatly refused to
-take the damaged book back again. He said, that, if Abe had no money to
-pay for it, he could work it out. Of course, there was no alternative;
-and Abe was obliged to discharge the debt by "pulling fodder" three
-days, at twenty-five cents a day. Crawford afterwards paid dearly for
-his churlishness.
-
-[Illustration: Mrs. Sarah Lincoln, Mother of the President. 061]
-
-At home, with his step-mother and the children, he was the most
-agreeable fellow in the world. "He was always ready to do every thing
-for everybody." When he was not doing some special act of kindness, he
-told stories or "cracked jokes." "He was as full of his yarns in Indiana
-as ever he was in Illinois." Dennis Hanks was a clever hand at the same
-business, and so was old Tom Lincoln. Among them they must have made
-things very lively, during the long winter evenings, for John Johnston
-and the good old lady and the girls.
-
-Mrs. Lincoln was never able to speak of Abe's conduct to her without
-tears. In her interview with Mr. Herndon, when the sands of her life had
-nearly run out, she spoke with deep emotion of her own son, but said
-she thought that Abe was kinder, better, truer, than the other. Even the
-mother's instinct was lost as she looked back over those long years of
-poverty and privation in the Indiana cabin, when Abe's grateful love
-softened the rigors of her lot, and his great heart and giant frame were
-always at her command. "Abe was a poor boy," said she; "and I can say
-what scarcely one woman--a mother--can say in a thousand. Abe never gave
-me a cross word or look, and never refused, in fact or appearance, to
-do any thing I requested him. I never gave him a cross word in all
-my life.... His mind and mine--what little I had--seemed to run
-together.... He was here after he was elected President." (At this point
-the aged speaker turned away to weep, and then, wiping her eyes with her
-apron, went on with the story). "He was dutiful to me always. I think
-he loved me truly. I had a son, John, who was raised with Abe. Both were
-good boys; but I must say, both now being dead, that Abe was the best
-boy I ever saw, or expect to see. I wish I had died when my husband
-died. I did not want Abe to run for President; did not want him elected;
-was afraid somehow,--felt in my heart; and when he came down to see me,
-after he was elected President, I still felt that something told me that
-something would befall Abe, and that I should see him no more."
-
-Is there any thing in the language we speak more touching than that
-simple plaint of the woman whom we must regard as Abraham Lincoln's
-mother? The apprehension in her "heart" was well grounded. She "saw him
-no more." When Mr. Herndon rose to depart, her eyes again filled with
-tears; and, wringing his hands as if loath to part with one who talked
-so much of her beloved Abe, she said, "Good-by, my good son's friend.
-Farewell."
-
-Abe had a very retentive memory. He frequently amused his young
-companions by repeating to them long passages from the books he had been
-reading. On Monday mornings he would mount a stump, and deliver, with a
-wonderful approach to exactness, the sermon he had heard the day before.
-His taste for public speaking appeared to be natural and irresistible.
-His step-sister, Matilda Johnston, says he was an indefatigable
-"preacher." "When father and mother would go to church, Abe would take
-down the Bible, read a verse, give out a hymn, and we would sing. Abe
-was about fifteen years of age. He preached, and we would do the crying.
-Sometimes he would join in the chorus of tears. One day my brother, John
-Johnston, caught a land terrapin, brought it to the place where Abe was
-preaching, threw it against the tree, and crushed the shell. It suffered
-much,--quivered all over. Abe then preached against cruelty to animals,
-contending that an ant's life was as sweet to it as ours to us."
-
-But this practice of "preaching" and political speaking, into which Abe
-had fallen, at length became a great nuisance to old, Tom. It distracted
-everybody, and sadly interfered with the work. If Abe had confined his
-discourses to Sunday preaching, while the old folks were away, it would
-not have been so objectionable. But he knew his power, liked to please
-everybody, and would be sure to set up as an orator wherever he found
-the greatest number of people together. When it was announced that Abe
-had taken the "stump" in the harvest-field, there was an end of work.
-The hands flocked around him, and listened to his curious speeches with
-infinite delight. "The sight of such a thing amused all," says Mrs.
-Lincoln; though she admits that her husband was compelled to break it
-up with the strong hand; and poor Abe was many times dragged from the
-platform, and hustled off to his work in no gentle manner.1
-
- 1 We are told by Col. Chapman that Abe's father habitually
- treated him with great barbarity. Dennis Hanks insists that
- he loved him sincerely, but admits that he now and then
- knocked him from the fence for merely answering traveller's
- questions about the roads.
-
-Abe worked occasionally with Tom Lincoln in the shop; but he did it
-reluctantly, and never intended to learn even so much of the trade as
-Lincoln was able to teach him. The rough work turned out at that shop
-was far beneath his ambition, and he had made up his mind to lead a life
-as wholly unlike his father's as he could possibly make it. He therefore
-refused to be a carpenter. But he could not afford to be idle; and, as
-soon as he was able to earn wages, he was hired out among the neighbors.
-He worked for many of them a few months at a time, and seemed perfectly
-willing to transfer his services wherever they were wanted, so that his
-father had no excuse for persecuting him with entreaties about learning
-to make tables and cupboards.
-
-Abe was now becoming a man, and was, in fact, already taller than any
-man in the neighborhood. He was a universal favorite, and his wit and
-humor made him heartily welcome at every cabin between the two Pigeon
-Creeks. Any family was glad when "Abe Linkern" was hired to work with
-them; for he did his work well, and made them all merry while he was
-about it. The women were especially pleased, for Abe was not above doing
-any kind of "chores" for them. He was always ready to make a fire, carry
-water, or nurse a baby. But what manner of people were these amongst
-whom he passed the most critical part of his life? We must know them if
-we desire to know him.
-
-There lived in the neighborhood of Gentryville a Mrs. Elizabeth
-Crawford, wife to the now celebrated Josiah with the sour temper and the
-blue nose. Abe was very fond of her, and inclined to "let himself
-out" in her company. She fortunately possessed a rare memory, and Mr.
-Herndon's rich collection of manuscripts was made richer still by her
-contributions. We have from her a great mass of valuable, and sometimes
-extremely amusing, information. Among it is the following graphic,
-although rude, account of the Pigeon Creek people in general:--
-
-"You wish me to tell you how the people used to go to meeting,--how far
-they went. At that time we thought it nothing to go eight or ten miles.
-The old ladies did not stop for the want of a shawl, or cloak, or
-riding-dress, or two horses, in the winter-time; but they would put on
-their husbands' old overcoats, and wrap up their little ones, and take
-one or two of them up on their beasts, and their husbands would walk,
-and they would go to church, and stay in the neighborhood until the next
-day, and then go home. The old men would start out of their fields from
-their work, or out of the woods from hunting, with their guns on their
-shoulders, and go to church. Some of them dressed in deer-skin pants and
-moccasins, hunting-shirts with a rope or leather strap around them. They
-would come in laughing, shake hands all around, sit down and talk about
-their game they had killed, or some other work they had done, and smoke
-their pipes together with the old ladies. If in warm weather, they would
-kindle up a little fire out in the meeting-house yard, to light
-their pipes. If in winter-time, they would hold church in some of the
-neighbors' houses. At such times they were always treated with the
-utmost of kindness: a bottle of whiskey, a pitcher of water, sugar and
-glass, were set out, or a basket of apples, or turnips, or some pies and
-cakes. Apples were scarce them times. Sometimes potatoes were used as a
-treat. (I must tell you that the first treat I ever received in old Mr.
-Linkern's house, that was our President's father's house, was a plate
-of potatoes, washed and pared very nicely, and handed round. It was
-something new to me, for I never had seen a raw potato eaten before. I
-looked to see how they made use of them. They took off a potato, and ate
-them like apples.) Thus they spent the time till time for preaching to
-commence, then they would all take their seats: the preacher would take
-his stand, draw his coat, open his shirt-collar, commence service by
-singing and prayer; take his text and preach till the sweat would roll
-off in great drops. Shaking hands and singing then ended the service.
-The people seemed to enjoy religion more in them days than they do now.
-They were glad to see each other, and enjoyed themselves better than
-they do now."
-
-Society about Gentryville was little different from that of any other
-backwoods settlement of the same day. The houses were scattered far
-apart; but the inhabitants would travel long distances to a log-rolling,
-a house-raising, a wedding, or any thing else that might be turned into
-a fast and furious frolic. On such occasions the young women carried
-their shoes in their hands, and only put them on when about to join the
-company. The ladies drank whiskey-toddy, while the men took it straight;
-and both sexes danced the live-long night, barefooted, on puncheon
-floors.
-
-The fair sex wore "cornfield bonnets, scoop-shaped, flaring in front,
-and long though narrow behind." Shoes were the mode when entering
-the ball-room; but it was not at all fashionable to scuff them out by
-walking or dancing in them. "Four yards of linsey-woolsey, a yard in
-width, made a dress for any woman." The waist was short, and terminated
-just under the arms, whilst the skirt was long and narrow. "Crimps and
-puckering frills" it had none. The coats of the men were home-made;
-the materials, jeans or linsey-woolsey. The waists were short, like the
-frocks of the women, and the long "claw-hammer" tail was split up to the
-waist. This, however, was company dress, and the hunting-shirt did duty
-for every day. The breeches were of buck-skin or jeans; the cap was of
-coon-skin; and the shoes of leather tanned at home. If no member of the
-family could make shoes, the leather was taken to some one who could,
-and the customer paid the maker a fair price in some other sort of
-labor.
-
-The state of agriculture was what it always is where there is no market,
-either to sell or buy; where the implements are few and primitive, and
-where there are no regular mechanics. The Pigeon Creek farmer "tickled"
-two acres of ground in a day with his old shovel-plough, and got but
-half a crop. He cut one acre with his sickle, while the modern machine
-lays down in neat rows ten. With his flail and horse tramping, he
-threshed out fifteen bushels of wheat; while the machine of to-day,
-with a few more hands, would turn out three hundred and fifty. He
-"fanned" and "cleaned with a sheet." When he wanted flour, he took
-his team and went to a "horse-mill," where he spent a whole day in
-converting fifteen bushels of grain.1
-
- 1 "Size of the fields from ten, twelve, sixteen, twenty.
- Raised corn mostly; some wheat,--enough for a cake on
- Sunday morning. Hogs and venison hams were legal tender, and
- coon-skins also. We raised sheep and cattle, but they did
- not fetch much. Cows and calves were only worth six dollars;
- corn, ten cents; wheat, twenty-five cents at that time."--
- Dennis Hanks.
-
-The minds of these people were filled with superstitions, which most
-persons imagine to be, at least, as antiquated as witch-burning. They
-firmly believed in witches and all kind of witch-doings. They sent for
-wizards to cure sick cattle. They shot the image of the witch with a
-silver ball, to break the spell she was supposed to have laid on a human
-being. If a dog ran directly across a man's path whilst he was hunting,
-it was terrible "luck," unless he instantly hooked his two little
-fingers together, and pulled with all his might, until the dog was out
-of sight. There were wizards who took charmed twigs in their hands, and
-made them point to springs of water and all kinds of treasure beneath
-the earth's surface. There were "faith doctors," who cured diseases by
-performing mysterious ceremonies and muttering cabalistic words. If a
-bird alighted in a window, one of the family would speedily die. If
-a horse breathed on a child, the child would have the whooping-cough.
-Every thing must be done at certain "times and seasons," else it would
-be attended with "bad luck." They must cut trees for rails in the early
-part of the day, and in "the light of the moon." They must make fence in
-"the light of the moon;" otherwise, the fence would sink. Potatoes and
-other roots were to be planted in the "dark of the moon," but trees,
-and plants which bore their fruits above ground, must be "put out in the
-light of the moon." The moon exerted a fearful influence, either kindly
-or malignant, as the good old rules were observed or not. It was even
-required to make soap "in the light of the moon," and, moreover, it must
-be stirred only one way, and by one person. Nothing of importance was to
-be begun on Friday. All enterprises inaugurated on that day went fatally
-amiss. A horse-colt could be begotten only "in the dark of the moon,"
-and animals treated otherwise than "according to the signs in the
-almanac" were nearly sure to die.
-
-Such were the people among whom Abe grew to manhood. With their sons and
-daughters he went to school. Upon their farms he earned his daily bread
-by daily toil. From their conversation he formed his earliest opinions
-of men and things, the world over. Many of their peculiarities became
-his; and many of their thoughts and feelings concerning a multitude of
-subjects were assimilated with his own, and helped to create that unique
-character, which, in the eyes of a great host of the American people,
-was only less curious and amusing than it was noble and august.
-
-His most intimate companions were of course, for a long time, the
-members of his own family. The reader already knows something of Thomas
-Lincoln, and that pre-eminently good woman, Sally Bush. The latter, we
-know, washed, clothed, loved, and encouraged Abe in well-doing, from
-the moment he fell in her way. How much he owed to her goodness and
-affection, he was himself never able to estimate. That it was a great
-debt, fondly acknowledged and cheerfully repaid as far as in him lay,
-there can be no doubt. His own sister, the child of Nancy Hanks, was
-warmly attached to him. Her face somewhat resembled his. In repose it
-had the gravity which they both, perhaps, inherited from their mother;
-but it was capable of being lighted almost into beauty by one of Abe's
-ridiculous stories or rapturous sallies of humor. She was a modest,
-plain, industrious girl, and is kindly remembered by all who knew her.
-She was married to Aaron Grigsby at eighteen, and a year after died in
-child-bed. Like Abe, she occasionally worked out at the houses of the
-neighbors, and at one time was employed in Mrs. Crawford's kitchen,
-while her brother was a laborer on the same farm. She lies buried, not
-with her mother, but in the yard of the old Pigeon Creek meeting-house.
-It is especially pleasing to read the encomiums lavished upon her memory
-by the Grigsbys; for between the Grigsbys on one side, and Abe and his
-step-brother on the other, there once subsisted a fierce feud.
-
-[Illustration: Dennis Hanks 070]
-
-As we have already learned from Dennis Hanks, the two families--the
-Johnstons and the Lincolns--"got along finely together." The
-affectionate relations between Abe and his two step-sisters were the
-subject of common remark throughout the neighborhood. One of them
-married Dennis Hanks, and the other Levi Hall, or, as he is better
-known, Squire Hall,--a cousin of Abe. Both these women (the latter now
-Mrs. Moore) furnished Mr. Herndon very valuable memoirs of Abe's life
-whilst he dwelt under the same roof with them; and they have given
-an account of him which shows that the ties between them were of the
-strongest and tenderest kind. But what is most remarkable in their
-statements is, that they never opened their lips without telling how
-worthy of everybody's love their mother was, and how Abe revered her
-as much as they did. They were interesting girls, and became exemplary
-women.
-
-John D. Johnston, the only son of Mrs. Lincoln, was not the best boy,
-and did not grow to be the best man, in all the Pigeon Creek region. He
-had no positive vice, except idleness, and no special virtue but good
-temper. He was not a fortunate man; never made money; was always needy,
-and always clamoring for the aid of his friends. Mr. Lincoln, all
-through John's life, had much trouble to keep him on his legs, and
-succeeded indifferently in all his attempts. In a subsequent chapter
-a letter will be given from him, which indirectly portrays his
-step-brother's character much better than it can be done here. But, as
-youths, the intimacy between them was very close; and in another place
-it will appear that Abe undertook his second voyage to New Orleans only
-on condition that John would go along.
-
-But the most constant of his companions was his jolly cousin, Dennis
-Hanks. Of all the contributors to Mr. Herndon's store of information,
-good, bad, and indifferent, concerning this period of Mr. Lincoln's
-life, Dennis is the most amusing, insinuating, and prolific. He would
-have it distinctly understood that the well of his memory is the only
-proper source whence any thing like truth may be drawn.1 He has covered
-countless sheets of paper devoted to indiscriminate laudations of Abe
-and all his kindred. But in all this he does not neglect to say a word
-for himself.
-
- 1 The following random selections from his writings leave us
- no room to doubt Dennis's opinion of his own value:--
-
- "William, let in, don't keep any thing back, for I am in for
- the whole hog sure; for I know nobody can do any for you
- much, for all they know is from me at last. Every thing you
- see is from my notes,--this you can tell yourself.
-
- "I have in my possession a little book, the private life of
- A. Lincoln, comprising a full life of his early years, and a
- succinct record of his career as statesman and President, by
- O. J. Victor, author of Lives of Garibaldi, Winfield Scott,
- John Paul Jones, &c., New York, Beadle and Company,
- publishers, No. 118 Williams Street. Now, sir, I find a
- great many things pertaining to Abe Lincoln's life that is
- not true. If you would like to have the book, I will mail it
- to you. I will say this much to you: if you don't have my
- name very frequently in your book, it won't go at all; for I
- have been East for two months, have seen a great many
- persons in that time, stating to them that there would be a
- book, 'The Life of A. Lincoln,' published, giving a full
- account of the family, from England to this country. Now,
- William, if there be any thing you want to know, let me
- know: I will give you all the information I can.
-
- "I have seen a letter that you wrote to my daughter, Harriet
- Chapman, of inquiry about some things. I thought you were
- informed all about them. I don't know what she has stated to
- you about your questions; but you had better consult me
- about them.
-
- "Billy, it seems to me, from the letters that you write to
- me asking questions, that you ask the same questions over
- several times. How is this? Do you forget, or are you like
- the lawyer, trying to make me cross my path, or not? Now, I
- will. Look below for the answer."
-
-At one place, "his cousin, Dennis Hanks," is said to have taught Abe
-to read and write. At another, he is represented as the benevolent
-purchaser of the volumes from which Abe (and Dennis too) derived a
-wonderfully clear and accurate conception of the science of law. In all
-studies their minds advanced _pari passu_. Whenever any differences are
-noted (and they are few and slight), Dennis is a step ahead, benignantly
-extending a helping hand to the lagging pupil behind. But Dennis's heart
-is big and kind: he defames no one; he is merely a harmless romancer. In
-the gallery of family portraits painted by Dennis, every face looks down
-upon us with the serenity of innocence and virtue. There is no spot on
-the fame of any one of them. No family could have a more vigorous or
-chivalrous defender than he, or one who repelled with greater scorn any
-rumor to their discredit. That Enlow story! Dennis almost scorned to
-confute it; but, when he did get at it, he settled it by a magnificent
-exercise of inventive genius. He knew "this Abe Enlow" well, he said,
-and he had been dead precisely fifty-five years. But, whenever the truth
-can be told without damage to the character of a Lincoln or a Hanks,
-Dennis will tell it candidly enough, provided there is no temptation
-to magnify himself. His testimony, however, has been sparingly used
-throughout these pages; and no statement has been taken from him unless
-it was more or less directly corroborated by some one else. The
-better part of his evidence Mr. Herndon took the precaution of reading
-carefully to John Hanks, who pronounced it substantially true; and that
-circumstance gives it undeniable value.
-
-When Thomas and Betsy Sparrow died in the fall of 1818, Dennis was taken
-from the "little half-faced camp," and became one of the Lincoln family.
-Until Thomas Lincoln's second marriage, Dennis, Abe, and Sarah were all
-three poor, ragged, and miserable together. After that, Dennis got along
-better, as well as the rest. He was a lively, volatile, sympathetic
-fellow, and Abe liked him well from the beginning. They fished, hunted,
-and worked in company; loafed at the grocery, where Dennis got drunk,
-and Abe told stories; talked politics with Col. Jones; "swapped jokes"
-with Baldwin the blacksmith; and faithfully attended the sittings of the
-nearest justice of the peace, where both had opportunities to correct
-and annotate the law they thought they had learned from the "Statute of
-Indiana." Dennis was kind, genial, lazy, brimming over with humor,
-and full of amusing anecdotes. He revelled in song, from the vulgarest
-ballad to the loftiest hymn of devotion; from "The turbaned Turk, that
-scorns the world," to the holiest lines of Doctor Watts. These qualities
-marked him wherever he went; and in excessive good-nature, and in the
-ease with which he passed from the extreme of rigor to the extreme of
-laxity, he was distinguished above the others of his name.
-
-There was one Hanks, however, who was not like Dennis, or any other
-Hanks we know any thing about: this was "old John," as he is familiarly
-called in Illinois,--a sober, honest, truthful man, with none of the wit
-and none of the questionable accomplishments of Dennis. He was the son
-of Joseph, the carpenter with whom Tom Lincoln learned the trade. He
-went to Indiana to live with the Lincolns when Abe was fourteen years
-of age, and remained there four years. He then returned to Kentucky, and
-subsequently went to Illinois, where he was speedily joined by the old
-friends he had left in Indiana. When Abe separated from the family, and
-went in search of individual fortune, it was in company with "old John."
-Together they split the rails that did so much to make Abe President;
-and "old John" set the ball in motion by carrying a part of them into
-the Decatur Convention on his own broad shoulders. John had no education
-whatever, except that of the muscles and the heart. He could neither
-read nor write; but his character was pure and respectable, and Lincoln
-esteemed him as a man, and loved him as a friend and relative.
-
-About six years after the death of the first Mrs. Lincoln, Levi Hall and
-his wife and family came to Indiana, and settled near the Lincolns. Mrs.
-Hall was Nancy Hanks, the mother of our friend Dennis, and the aunt of
-Nancy Hanks, the mother of Abraham Lincoln. She had numerous children
-by her husband. One of them, Levi, as already mentioned, married one of
-Abe's step-sisters, while Dennis, his half-brother, married the
-other one. The father and mother of the Halls speedily died of the
-milk-sickness, but Levi was for many years a constant companion of Abe
-and Dennis.
-
-In 1825 Abraham was employed by James Taylor, who lived at the mouth of
-Anderson's Creek. He was paid six dollars a month, and remained for nine
-months. His principal business was the management of a ferry-boat which
-Mr. Taylor had plying across the Ohio, as well as Anderson's Creek. But,
-in addition to this, he was required to do all sorts of farm-work, and
-even to perform some menial services about the house. He was hostler,
-ploughman, ferryman, out of doors, and man-of-all-work within doors.
-He ground corn with a hand-mill, or "grated" it when too young to be
-ground; rose early, built fires, put on the water in the kitchen,
-"fixed around generally," and had things prepared for cooking before the
-mistress of the house was stirring. He slept up stairs with young
-Green Taylor, who says that he usually read "till near midnight,"
-notwithstanding the necessity for being out of his bed before day. Green
-was somewhat disposed to ill-use the poor hired boy, and once struck him
-with an ear of hard corn, and cut a deep gash over his eye. He makes no
-comment upon this generous act, except that "Abe got mad," but did not
-thrash him.
-
-Abe was a hand much in demand in "hog-killing time." He butchered not
-only for Mr. Taylor, but for John Woods, John Duthan, Stephen McDaniels,
-and others. At this he earned thirty-one cents a day, as it was
-considered "rough work."
-
-For a long time there was only one person in the neighborhood for whom
-Abe felt a decided dislike; and that was Josiah Crawford, who had made
-him "pull fodder," to pay for the Weems's "Washington." On that score
-he was "hurt" and "mad," and often declared "he would have revenge." But
-being a poor boy,--a circumstance of which Crawford had already taken
-shameful advantage to extort three days' labor,--he was glad to get
-work any place, and frequently "hired to his old adversary." Abe's first
-business in his employ was daubing his cabin, which was built of logs,
-unhewed, and with the bark on. In the loft of this house, thus finished
-by his own hands, he slept for many weeks at a time. He spent his
-evenings as he did at home,--writing on wooden shovels or boards with "a
-coal, or keel, from the branch." This family was rich in the possession
-of several books, which Abe read through time and again, according to
-his usual custom. One of them was the "Kentucky Preceptor," from which
-Mrs. Crawford insists that he "learned his school orations, speeches,
-and pieces to write." She tells us also that "Abe was a sensitive lad,
-never coming where he was not wanted;" that he always lifted his hat,
-and bowed, when he made his appearance; and that "he was tender and
-kind," like his sister, who was at the same time her maid-of-all-work.
-His pay was twenty-five cents a day; "and, when he missed time, he would
-not charge for it." This latter remark of good Mrs. Crawford reveals the
-fact that her husband was in the habit of docking Abe on his miserable
-wages whenever he happened to lose a few minutes from steady work.
-
-The time came, however, when Abe got his "revenge" for all this
-petty brutality. Crawford was as ugly as he was surly. His nose was a
-monstrosity,--long and crooked, with a huge, misshapen "stub" at the
-end, surmounted by a host of pimples, and the whole as "blue" as the
-usual state of Mr. Crawford's spirits. Upon this member Abe levelled his
-attack in rhyme, song, and "chronicle;" and, though he could not reduce
-the nose, he gave it a fame as wide as to the Wabash and the Ohio. It is
-not improbable that he learned the art of making the doggerel rhymes
-in which he celebrated Crawford's nose from the study of Crawford's own
-"Kentucky Preceptor." At all events, his sallies upon this single topic
-achieved him great reputation as a "poet" and a wit, and caused Crawford
-intolerable anguish.
-
-It is likely that Abe was reconciled to his situation in this family by
-the presence of his sister, and the opportunity it gave him of being in
-the company of Mrs. Crawford, for whom he had a genuine attachment; for
-she was nothing that her husband was, and every thing that he was not.
-According to her account, he split rails, ploughed, threshed, and did
-whatever else he was ordered to do; but she distinctly affirms that "Abe
-was no hand to pitch into his work like killing snakes." He went about
-it "calmly," and generally took the opportunity to throw "Crawford"
-down two or three times "before they went to the field." It is fair to
-presume, that, when Abe managed to inveigle his disagreeable employer
-into a tussle, he hoisted him high and threw him hard, for he felt
-that he had no reason to be careful of his bones. After meals Abe "hung
-about," lingered long to gossip and joke with the women; and these
-pleasant, stolen conferences were generally broken up with the
-exclamation, "Well, this won't buy the child a coat!" and the
-long-legged hired boy would stride away to join his master.
-
-In the mean time Abe had become, not only the longest, but the
-strongest, man in the settlement. Some of his feats almost surpass
-belief, and those who beheld them with their own eyes stood literally
-amazed. Richardson, a neighbor, declares that he could carry a load to
-which the strength of "three ordinary men" would scarcely be equal. He
-saw him quietly pick up and walk away with "a chicken-house, made of
-poles pinned together, and covered, that weighed at least six hundred,
-if not much more." At another time the Richardsons were building a
-corn-crib: Abe was there; and, seeing three or four men preparing
-"sticks" upon which to carry some huge posts, he relieved them of all
-further trouble by shouldering the posts, single-handed, and walking
-away with them to the place where they were wanted. "He could strike
-with a mall," says old Mr. Wood, "a heavier blow than any man.... He
-could sink an axe deeper into wood than any man I ever saw."
-
-For hunting purposes, the Pigeon Creek region was one of the most
-inviting on earth. The uplands were all covered with an original growth
-of majestic forest trees,1 whilst on the hillsides, and wherever an
-opening in the woods permitted the access of sunlight, there were beds
-of fragrant and beautiful wild-flowers, presenting, in contrast with the
-dense green around them, the most brilliant and agreeable effects. Here
-the game had vast and secluded ranges, which, until very recently, had
-heard the report of no white man's gun. In Abe's time, the squirrels,
-rabbits, partridges, and other varieties of smaller game, were so
-abundant as to be a nuisance. They devastated grain-fields and gardens;
-and while they were seldom shot for the table, the settlers frequently
-devised the most cunning means of destroying them in great quantities,
-in order to save the growing crops. Wild turkeys and deer were the
-principal reliance for food; but besides these were the bears, the
-wild-cats, and the panthers.1 The scream of the latter, the most
-ferocious and bloodthirsty of the cat kind, hastened Abe's homeward
-steps on many a dark night, as he came late from Dave Turnham's, "Uncle"
-Wood's, or the Gentryville grocery. That terrific cry appeals not only
-to the natural fear of the monster's teeth and claws, but, heard in the
-solitude of night and the forest, it awakens a feeling of superstitious
-horror, that chills the heart of the bravest.
-
- "Now about the timber: it was black walnut and black oak,
- hickory and jack oak, elm and white oak, undergrowth,
- logwood in abundance, grape-vines and shoe-make bushes, and
- milk-sick plenty. All my relations died of that disease on
- Little Pigeon Creek, Spencer County."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-Everybody about Abe made hunting a part of his business.2 Tom Lincoln
-and Dennis Hanks doubtless regaled him continually with wonderful
-stories of their luck and prowess; but he was no hunter himself, and
-did not care to learn. It is true, that, when a mere child, he made a
-fortunate shot at a flock of wild turkeys, through a crack in the wall
-of the "half-faced cabin;"3 and that, when grown up, he went for coons
-occasionally with Richardson, or watched deer-licks with Turnham; but
-a true and hearty sportsman he never was. As practised on this wild
-border, it was a solitary, unsociable way of spending time, which did
-not suit his nature; and, besides, it required more exertion than he was
-willing to make without due compensation. It could not be said that Abe
-was indolent; for he was alert, brisk, active, about every thing that
-he made up his mind to do. His step was very quick; and, when he had
-a sufficient object in view, he strode out on his long, muscular legs,
-swinging his bony arms as he moved along, with an energy that put miles
-behind him before a lazy fellow like Dennis Hanks or John Johnston could
-make up his mind to start. But, when he felt that he had time to spare,
-he preferred to give it to reading or to "talk;" and, of the two, he
-would take the latter, provided he could find a person who had something
-new or racy to say. He liked excessively to hear his own voice, when it
-was promoting fun and good fellowship; but he was also a most rare and
-attentive listener. Hunting was entirely too "still" an occupation for
-him.
-
- 1 "No Indians there when I first went to Indiana: I say, no,
- none. I say this: bear, deer, turkey, and coon, wild-cats,
- and other things, and frogs."--Dennis Hanks.
-
- 2 "You say, What were some of the customs? I suppose you
- mean take us all together. One thing I can tell you about:
- we had to work very hard cleaning ground for to keep body
- and soul together; and every spare time we had we picked up
- our rifle, and brought in a fine deer or turkey; and in the
- winter-time we went a coon-hunting, for coon-skins were at
- that time considered legal tender, and deer-skins' and hams.
- I tell you, Billy, I enjoyed myself better then than I ever
- have since."--Dennis Hanks.
-
- 3 "No doubt about the A. Lincoln's killing the turkey. He
- done it with his father's rifle, made by William Lutes, of
- Bullitt County, Kentucky. I have killed a hundred deer with
- her myself; turkeys too numerous to mention."--Dennis
- Hanks.
-
-All manner of rustic sports were in vogue among the Pigeon Creek boys.
-Abe was especially formidable as a wrestler; and, from about 1828
-onward, there was no man, far or near, that would give him a match.
-"Cat," "throwing the mall," "hopping and half-hammon" (whatsoever that
-may mean), and "four-corner bull-pen" were likewise athletic games in
-high honor.1
-
- 1 "You ask, What sort of plays? What we called them at that
- time were 'bull-pen,' 'corner and cat,' 'hopping and half-
- hammon;' playing at night 'old Sister Feby.' This I know,
- for I took a hand myself; and, wrestling, we could throw
- down anybody."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-All sorts of frolics and all kinds of popular gatherings, whether for
-work or amusement, possessed irresistible attractions for Abe. He
-loved to see and be seen, to make sport and to enjoy it. It was a most
-important part of his education that he got at the corn-shuckings, the
-log-rollings, the shooting-matches, and the gay and jolly weddings
-of those early border times. He was the only man or boy within a wide
-compass who had learning enough to furnish the literature for such
-occasions; and those who failed to employ his talents to grace or
-commemorate the festivities they set on foot were sure to be stung by
-some coarse but humorous lampoon from his pen. In the social way, he
-would not suffer himself to be slighted with impunity; and, if there
-were any who did not enjoy his wit, they might content themselves
-with being the subjects of it. Unless he received some very pointed
-intimation that his presence was not wanted, he was among the first
-and earliest at all the neighborhood routs; and when his tall, singular
-figure was seen towering amongst the hunting-shirts, it was considered
-due notice that the fun was about to commence. "Abe Linkhern," as he
-was generally called, made things lively wherever he went: and, if
-Crawford's blue nose happened to have been carried to the assembly,
-it quickly subsided, on his arrival, into some obscure corner; for the
-implacable "Linkhern" was apt to make it the subject of a jest that
-would set the company in a roar. But when a party was made up, and Abe
-left out, as sometimes happened through the influence of Crawford, he
-sulked, fumed, "got mad," nursed his anger into rage, and then broke out
-in songs or "chronicles," which were frequently very bitter, sometimes
-passably humorous, and invariably vulgar.
-
-At an early age he began to attend the "preachings" roundabout, but
-principally at the Pigeon Creek church, with a view to catching whatever
-might be ludicrous in the preacher's air or matter, and making it the
-subject of mimicry as soon as he could collect an audience of idle boys
-and men to hear him. A pious stranger, passing that way on a Sunday
-morning, was invited to preach for the Pigeon Creek congregation; but
-he banged the boards of the old pulpit, and bellowed and groaned so
-wonderfully, that Abe could hardly contain his mirth. This memorable
-sermon was a great favorite with him; and he frequently reproduced it
-with nasal tones, rolling eyes, and all manner of droll aggravations, to
-the great delight of Nat Grigsby and the wild fellows whom Nat was able
-to assemble. None that heard him, not even Nat himself (who was any
-thing but dull), was ever able to show wherein Abe's absurd version
-really departed from the original.
-
-The importance of Gentryville, as a "centre of business," soon began to
-possess the imaginations of the dwellers between the two Pigeon Creeks.
-Why might it not be a great place of trade? Mr. Gentry was a most
-generous patron; it was advantageously situated where two roads crossed;
-it already had a blacksmith's shop, a grocery, and a store. Jones, it is
-true, had once moved away in a sulk, but Mr. Gentry's fine diplomacy had
-quickly brought him back, with all his goods and talents unreservedly
-devoted to the "improvement of the town;" and now, since there was
-literally nothing left to cloud the prospects of the "point," brisk
-times were expected in the near future.
-
-Dennis Hanks, John Johnston, Abe, and the other boys in the
-neighborhood, loitered much about the store, the grocery, and the
-blacksmith's shop, at Gentryville. Dennis ingenuously remarks,
-"Sometimes we spent a little time at grog, pushing weights, wrestling,
-telling stories." The time that Abe "spent at grog" was, in truth, a
-"little time." He never liked ardent spirits at any period of his life;
-but "he did take his dram as others did."1 He was a natural politician,
-intensely ambitious, and anxious to be popular. For this reason, and
-this alone, he drank with his friends, although very temperately. If he
-could have avoided it without giving offence, he would gladly have done
-so. But he coveted the applause of his pot companions, and, because he
-could not get it otherwise, made a faint pretence of enjoying his liquor
-as they did. The "people" drank, and Abe was always for doing whatever
-the "people" did. All his life he held that whatsoever was popular--the
-habit or the sentiment of the masses--could not be essentially wrong.
-But, although a whiskey-jug was kept in every ordinarily respectable
-household, Abe never tasted it at home. His step-mother thought he
-carried his temperance to extremes.
-
- 1 The fact is proved by his most intimate acquaintances,
- both at Gentryville and New Salem.
-
-Jones, the great Jones, without whom it was generally agreed that
-Gentryville must have gone into eclipse, but with whom, and
-through whom, it was somehow to become a sort of metropolitan
-cross-roads,--Jones was Abe's friend and mentor from the moment of their
-acquaintance. Abe is even said to have "clerked for him;" that is, he
-packed and unpacked boxes, ranged goods on the shelves, drew the liquids
-in the cellar, or exhibited the stone and earthen ware to purchasers;
-but in his service he was never promoted to keeping accounts, or even to
-selling the finer goods across the counter.1 But Mr. Jones was very
-fond of his "clerk,"--enjoyed his company, appreciated his humor, and
-predicted something great for him. As he did not doubt that Abe would
-one day be a man of considerable influence, he took pains to give him
-correct views of the nature of American institutions. An ardent Jackson
-man himself, he imparted to Abe the true faith, as delivered by that
-great democratic apostle; and the traces of this teaching were
-never wholly effaced from Mr. Lincoln's mind. Whilst he remained at
-Gentryville, his politics accorded with Mr. Jones's; and, even after he
-had turned Whig in Illinois, John Hanks tells us that he wanted to
-whip a man for traducing Jackson. He was an eager reader of newspapers
-whenever he could get them, and Mr. Jones carefully put into his hands
-the kind he thought a raw youth should have. But Abe's appetite was not
-to be satisfied by what Mr. Jones supplied; and he frequently borrowed
-others from "Uncle Wood," who lived about a mile from the Lincoln cabin,
-and for whom he sometimes worked.
-
- 1 "Lincoln drove a team, cut up pork, and sold goods for
- Jones. Jones told me that Lincoln read all his books, and I
- remember History of United States as one. Jones often said
- to me, that Lincoln would make a great man one of these
- days,--had said so long before, and to other people,--said
- so as far back as 1828-9.'"--Dougherty.
-
-What manner of man kept the Gentryville grocery, we are not informed.
-Abe was often at his place, however, and would stay so long at nights,
-"telling stories" and "cracking jokes," that Dennis Hanks, who was
-ambitious in the same line, and probably jealous of Abe's overshadowing
-success, "got mad at him," and "cussed him." When Dennis found himself
-thrown in the shade, he immediately became virtuous, and wished to
-retire early.
-
-John Baldwin, the blacksmith, was one of Abe's special friends from
-his boyhood onward. Baldwin was a story-teller and a joker of rare
-accomplishments; and Abe, when a very little fellow, would slip off
-to his shop and sit and listen to him by the hour. As he grew up, the
-practice continued as of old, except that Abe soon began to exchange
-anecdotes with his clever friend at the anvil. Dennis Hanks says Baldwin
-was his "_particular_ friend," and that "Abe spent a great deal of his
-leisure time with him." Statesmen, plenipotentiaries, famous commanders,
-have many times made the White House at Washington ring with their
-laughter over the quaint tales of John Baldwin, the blacksmith,
-delivered second-hand by his inimitable friend Lincoln.
-
-Abe and Dave Turnham had one day been threshing wheat,--probably for
-Turnham's father,--and concluded to spend the evening at Gentryville.
-They lingered there until late in the night, when, wending their way
-along the road toward Lincoln's cabin, they espied something resembling
-a man lying dead or insensible by the side of a mud-puddle. They
-rolled the sleeper over, and found in him an old and quite respectable
-acquaintance, hopelessly drunk. All efforts failed to rouse him to any
-exertion on his own behalf. Abe's companions were disposed to let him
-lie in the bed he had made for himself; but, as the night was cold and
-dreary, he must have frozen to death had this inhuman proposition
-been equally agreeable to everybody present. To Abe it seemed utterly
-monstrous; and, seeing he was to have no help, he bent his mighty frame,
-and, taking the big man in his long arms, carried him a great distance
-to Dennis Hanks's cabin. There he built a fire, warmed, rubbed, and
-nursed him through the entire night,--his companions of the road having
-left him alone in his merciful task. The man often told John Hanks,
-that it was mighty "clever in Abe to tote him to a warm fire that cold
-night," and was very sure that Abe's strength and benevolence had saved
-his life.
-
-Abe was fond of music, but was himself wholly unable to produce three
-harmonious notes together. He made various vain attempts to sing a
-few lines of "Poor old Ned," but they were all equally ludicrous and
-ineffectual. "Religious songs did not appear to suit him at all," says
-Dennis Hanks; but of profane ballads and amorous ditties he knew the
-words of a vast number. When Dennis got happy at the grocery, or passed
-the bounds of propriety at a frolic, he was in the habit of raising a
-charming carol in praise of the joys which enter into the Mussulman's
-estate on earth,--of which he has vouchsafed us only three lines,--
-
- "The turbaned Turk that scorns the world,
- And struts about with his whiskers curled,
- For no other man but himself to see."
-
-It was a prime favorite of Abe's; and Dennis sang it with such
-appropriate zest and feeling, that Abe never forgot a single word of it
-while he lived.
-
-Another was,--
-
- "Hail Columbia, happy land!
- If you ain't drunk, I'll be damned,"--
-
-a song which Dennis thinks should be warbled only in the "fields;" and
-tells us that they knew and enjoyed "all such [songs] as this." Dave
-Turnham was also a musical genius, and had a "piece" beginning,--
-
- "There was a Romish lady Brought up in popery,"
-
-which Abe thought one of the best he ever heard, and insisted upon
-Dave's singing it for the delectation of old Tom Lincoln, who relished
-it quite as much as Abe did.1
-
- 1 "I recollect some more:--
-
- 'Come, thou Fount of every blessing,
- Tune my heart to sing thy praise.'
-
- 'When I can read my title clear
- To mansions in the skies!'
-
- 'How tedious and tasteless the hours.'
-
- 'Oh! to grace how great a debtor!'
-
- Other little songs I won't say any thing about: they would
- not look well in print; but I could give them."--Dennis
- Hanks.
-
-Mrs. Crawford says, that Abe did not attempt to sing much about the
-house: he was probably afraid to indulge in such offensive gayeties in
-the very habitation of the morose Crawford. According to Dennis Hanks,
-his melody was not of the sort that hath power to charm the savage; and
-he was naturally timid about trying it upon Crawford. But, when he was
-freed from those chilling restraints, he put forth his best endeavors
-to render "one [song] that was called 'William Riley,' and one that was
-called 'John Anderson's Lamentations,' and one that was made about
-Gen. Jackson and John Adams, at the time they were nominated for the
-presidency."
-
-The Jackson song indicated clearly enough Abe's steadiness in the
-political views inculcated by Jones. Mrs. Crawford could recollect but a
-single stanza of it:--
-
- "Let auld acquaintance be forgot,
- And never brought to mind,
- And Jackson be our President,
- And Adams left behind."
-
-In the text of "John Anderson's Lamentations,"--a most distressful lyric
-to begin with,--Abe was popularly supposed to have interpolated some
-lines of his own, which conclusively attested his genius for poetic
-composition. At all events, he sang it as follows:--
-
- "O sinners! poor sinners, take warning by me:
- The fruits of transgression behold now, and see;
- My soul is tormented, my body confined,
- My friends and dear children left weeping behind.
-
- "Much intoxication my ruin has been,
- And my dear companion hath barbarously slain:
- In yonder cold graveyard the body doth lie;
- Whilst I am condemned, and shortly must die.
-
- "Remember John Anderson's death, and reform
- Before death overtakes you, and vengeance comes on.
- My grief's overwhelming; in God I must trust:
- I am justly condemned; my sentence is just.
-
- "I am waiting the summons in eternity to be hurled;
- Whilst my poor little orphans are cast on the world.
- I hope my kind neighbors their guardeens will be,
- And Heaven, kind Heaven, protect them and me."
-
-In 1826 Abe's sister Nancy (or Sarah) was married to Aaron Grigsby; and
-the festivities of the occasion were made memorable by a song entitled,
-"Adam and Eve's Wedding Song," which many believed Abe had himself
-composed. The conceits embodied in the doggerel were old before Abe was
-born; but there is some intrinsic as well as extraneous evidence to
-show that the doggerel itself was his. It was sung by the whole Lincoln
-family, before Nancy's marriage and since, but by nobody else in the
-neighborhood.
-
- ADAM AND EVE'S WEDDING SONG.
-
- When Adam was created, he dwelt in Eden's shade,
- As Moses has recorded, and soon an Eve was made.
- Ten thousand times ten thousand
- Of creatures swarmed around
- Before a bride was formed,
- And yet no mate was found.
-
- The Lord then was not willing
- The man should be alone,
- But caused a sleep upon him,
- And took from him a bone,
-
- And closed the flesh in that place of;
- And then he took the same,
- And of it made a woman,
- And brought her to the man.
-
- Then Adam he rejoiced
- To see his loving bride,
- A part of his own body,
- The product of his side.
-
- This woman was not taken
- From Adam's feet, we see;
- So he must not abuse her,
- The meaning seems to be.
-
- This woman was not taken
- From Adam's head, we know;
- To show she must not rule him,
- 'Tis evidently so.
-
- This woman she was taken
- From under Adam's arm;
- So she must be protected
- From injuries and harm.
-
-"It was considered at that time," says Mr. Richardson, "that Abe was the
-best penman in the neighborhood. One day, while he was on a visit at
-my mother's, I asked him to write some copies for me. He very willingly
-consented. He wrote several of them, but one of them I have never
-forgotten, although a boy at the time. It was this:--
-
- 'Good boys who to their books apply
- Will all be great men by and by.'"
-
-Here are two original lines from Abe's own copy-book, probably the first
-he ever had, and which must not be confounded with the famous scrap-book
-in which his step-mother, lost in admiration of its contents, declares
-he "entered all things:"--
-
- "Abraham Lincoln, his hand and pen:
- He will be good, but God knows when."
-
-Again,--
-
- "Abraham Lincoln is my name,
- And with my pen I write the same:
- I will be a good boy, but God knows when."
-
-The same book contains the following, written at a later day, and with
-nothing to indicate that any part of it was borrowed:--
-
- "Time! what an empty vapor'tis!
- And days how swift they are!
- Swift as an Indian arrow,
- Fly on like a shooting-star.
- The present moment just is here,
- Then slides away in haste,
- That we can never say they're ours,
- But only say they are past."
-
-Abe wrote many "satires" and "chronicles," which are only remembered in
-fragments by a few old persons in the neighborhood. Even if we had them
-in full, they were most of them too indecent for publication. Such,
-at least, was the character of "a piece" which is said to have been
-"exceedingly humorous and witty," touching a church trial, wherein
-Brother Harper and Sister Gordon were the parties seeking judgment. It
-was very coarse, but it served admirably to raise a laugh in the grocery
-at the expense of the church.
-
-His chronicles were many, and on a great variety of subjects. They
-were written, as his early admirers love to tell us, "in the scriptural
-style;" but those we have betray a very limited acquaintance with the
-model. In these "chapters" was celebrated every event of importance
-that took place in the neighborhood: weddings, fights, Crawford's nose,
-Sister Gordon's innocence, Brother Harper's wit, were all served up,
-fresh and gross, for the amusement of the groundlings.
-
-Charles and Reuben Grigsby were married about the same time, and, being
-brothers, returned to their father's house with their brides upon the
-same day. The infare, the feast, the dance, the ostentatious retirement
-of the brides and grooms, were conducted in the old-fashioned way of all
-new countries in the United States, but a way which was bad enough to
-shock Squire Western himself. On this occasion Abe was not invited,
-and was very "mad" in consequence. This indignation found vent in a
-highly-spiced piece of descriptive writing, entitled "The Chronicles of
-Reuben," which are still in existence.
-
-But even "The Chronicles," venomous and highly successful as they were,
-were totally insufficient to sate Abe's desire for vengeance on the
-Grigsbys. They were important people about Gentryville, and the social
-slight they had given him stung him bitterly. He therefore began on
-"Billy" in rhyme, after disposing of Charles and Reuben "in scriptural
-style." Mrs. Crawford attempted to repeat these verses to Mr. Herndon;
-but the good old lady had not proceeded far, when she blushed very red,
-and, saying that they were hardly decent, proposed to tell them to her
-daughter, who would tell them to her husband, who would write them down
-and send them to Mr. Herndon. They are probably much curtailed by Mrs.
-Crawford's modesty, but still it is impossible to transcribe them. We
-give what we can to show how the first steps of Abe's fame as a great
-writer were won. It must be admitted that the literary taste of the
-community in which these rhymes were popular could not have been very
-high.
-
- "I will tell you about Joel and Mary:
- it is neither a joke or a story, for
- Reuben and Charles has married two girls,
- but Billy has married a boy."
-
- "The girls he had tried on every side,
- But none could he get to agree:
- All was in vain; he went home again,
- And, since that, he is married to Natty.
-
- "So Billy and Natty agreed very well,
- And mamma's well pleased at the match:
- The egg it is laid, but Natty's afraid
- The shell is so soft it never will hatch;
- But Betsey she said, 'You cursed bald head,
- My suitor you never can be;
- Besides'"----
-
-Abe dropped "The Chronicles" at a point on the road where he was sure
-one of the Grigsbys would find them. The stratagem succeeded, and
-that delicate "satire" produced the desired effect. The Grigsbys were
-infuriated,--wild with a rage which would be satisfied only when Abe's
-face should be pounded into a jelly, and a couple of his ribs cracked by
-some member of the injured family. Honor, according to the Pigeon Creek
-code, demanded that somebody should be "licked" in expiation of an
-outrage so grievous,--if not Abe, then some friend of Abe's, whom he
-would depute to stand the brunt in his stead. "Billy," the eldest of the
-brothers, was selected to challenge him. Abe accepted generally; that
-is, agreed that there should be a fight about the matter in question.
-It was accordingly so ordered: the ground was selected a mile and a
-half from Gentryville, a ring was marked out, and the bullies for twenty
-miles around attended. The friends of both parties were present in
-force, and excitement ran high. When the time arrived for the champions
-to step into the ring, Abe displayed his chivalry in a manner that must
-have struck the bystanders with admiration. He announced, that whereas
-Billy was confessedly his inferior in size, shape, and talents, unable
-to hit with pen or fist with any thing like his power, therefore he
-would forego the advantage which the challenge gave him, and "turn over"
-his stepbrother, John Johnston, to do battle in his behalf. If this near
-relative should be sacrificed, he would abide the issue: he was
-merely anxious to see a fair and honorable fight. This proposition was
-considered highly meritorious, and the battle commenced on those general
-terms. John started out with fine pluck and spirit; but in a little
-while Billy got in some clever hits, and Abe began to exhibit symptoms
-of great uneasiness. Another pass or two, and John flagged quite
-decidedly, and it became evident that Abe was anxiously casting about
-for some pretext to break the ring. At length, when John was fairly
-down, and Billy on top, and all the spectators cheering, swearing,
-and pressing up to the very edge of the ring, Abe cried out that "Bill
-Boland showed foul play," and, bursting out of the crowd, seized Grigsby
-by the heels, and flung him off. Having righted John, and cleared the
-battle-ground of all opponents, "he swung a whiskey-bottle over his
-head, and swore that he was the big buck of the lick." It seems that
-nobody of the Grigsby faction, not one in that large assembly of
-bullies, cared to encounter the sweep of Abe's tremendously long and
-muscular arms; and so he remained master of the "lick." He was not
-content, however, with a naked triumph, but vaunted himself in the most
-offensive manner. He singled out the victorious but cheated Billy, and,
-making sundry hostile demonstrations, declared that he could whip him
-then and there. Billy meekly said "he did not doubt that," but that,
-if Abe would make things even between them by fighting with pistols, he
-would not be slow to grant him a meeting. But Abe replied that he was
-not going "to fool away his life on a single shot;" and so Billy was
-fain to put up with the poor satisfaction he had already received.
-
-At Gentryville "they had exhibitions or speaking meetings." Some of
-the questions they spoke on were, The Bee and the Ant, Water and Fire:
-another was, Which had the most right to complain, the Negro or the
-Indian? Another, "Which was the strongest, Wind or Water?"1 The views
-which Abe then entertained on the Indian and the negro question would
-be intensely interesting now. But just fancy him discoursing on wind and
-water! What treasures of natural science, what sallies of humor, he
-must have wasted upon that audience of bumpkins! A little farther on, we
-shall see that Abe made pretensions to an acquaintance with the laws of
-nature which was considered marvellous in that day and generation.
-
- 1 "Lincoln did write what is called 'The Book of
- Chronicles,'--a satire on the Grigs-bys and Josiah
- Crawford,--not the schoolmaster, but the man who loaned
- Lincoln 'The Life of Washington.' The satire was good,
- sharp, cutting: it hurt us then, but it is all over now.
- There is no family in the land who, after this, loved
- Lincoln so well, and who now look upon him as so great a
- man. We all voted for him,--all that could,--children and
- grandchildren, first, last, and always."--Nat Grigsby.
-
-Dennis Hanks insists that Abe and he became learned men and expert
-disputants, not by a course of judicious reading, but by attending
-"speech-makings, gatherings," &c.
-
-"How did Lincoln and yourself learn so much in Indiana under such
-disadvantages?" said Mr. Herndon to Dennis, on one of his two oral
-examinations. The question was artfully put; for it touched the jaunty
-Dennis on the side of his vanity, and elicited a characteristic reply.
-"We learned," said he, "by sight, scent, and hearing. We heard all that
-was said, and talked over and over the questions heard; wore them
-slick, greasy, and threadbare. Went to political and other speeches and
-gatherings, as you do now: we would hear all sides and opinions, talk
-them over, discuss them, agreeing or disagreeing. Abe, as I said before,
-was originally a Democrat after the order of Jackson, so was his father,
-so we all were.... He preached, made speeches, read for us, explained
-to us, &c.... Abe was a cheerful boy, a witty boy, was humorous always;
-sometimes would get sad, not very often.... Lincoln would frequently
-make political and other speeches to the boys: he was calm, logical, and
-clear always. He attended trials, went to court always, read the Revised
-Statute of Indiana, dated 1824, heard law speeches, and listened to law
-trials, &c. Lincoln was lazy, a very lazy man. He was always reading,
-scribbling, writing, ciphering, writing poetry, and the like.... In
-Gentryville, about one mile west of Thomas Lincoln's farm, Lincoln would
-go and tell his jokes and stories, &c., and was so odd, original, and
-humorous and witty, that all the people in town would gather around him.
-He would keep them there till midnight. I would get tired, want to go
-home, cuss Abe most heartily. Abe was a good talker, a good reader, and
-was a kind of newsboy."
-
-Boonville was the court-house town of Warrick County, and was situated
-about fifteen miles from Gentryville. Thither Abe walked whenever he had
-time to be present at the sittings of the court, where he could learn
-something of public business, amuse himself profitably, and withal pick
-up items of news and gossip, which made him an interesting personage
-when he returned home. During one of these visits he watched, with
-profound attention, the progress of a murder trial, in which a Mr.
-John Breckenridge was counsel for the defence. At the conclusion of the
-latter's speech, Abe, who had listened, literally entranced, accosted
-the man of eloquence, and ventured to compliment him on the success of
-his effort. "Breckenridge looked at the shabby boy" in amazement, and
-passed on his way. But many years afterwards, in 1862, when Abe was
-President, and Breckenridge a resident of Texas, probably needing
-executive clemency, they met a second time; when Abe said, "It was the
-best speech that I up to that time had ever heard. If I could, as I then
-thought, make as good a speech as that, my soul would be satisfied."
-
-It is a curious fact, that through all Abe's childhood and boyhood, when
-he seemed to have as little prospect of the Presidency as any boy that
-ever was born, he was in the habit of saying, and perhaps sincerely
-believing, that that great prize would one day be his. When Mrs.
-Crawford reproved him for "fooling," and bedevilling the girls in her
-kitchen, and asked him "what he supposed would ever become of him," he
-answered that "he was going to be President of the United States."1
-
- 1 He frequently made use of similar expressions to several
- others.
-
-Abe usually did the milling for the family, and had the neighbor
-boy, Dave Turnham, for his companion. At first they had to go a long
-distance, at least twelve or thirteen miles, to Hoffman's, on Anderson's
-Creek; but after a while a Mr. Gordon (the husband of Sister Gordon,
-about whom the "witty piece" was written) built a horse-mill within a
-few miles of the Lincolns. Here Abe had come one day with a grist, and
-Dave probably with him. He had duly hitched his "old mare," and started
-her with great impatience; when, just as he was sounding another
-"cluck," to stir up her imperturbable and lazy spirit, she let out with
-her heels, and laid Abe sprawling and insensible on the ground. He was
-taken up in that condition, and did not recover for many minutes; but
-the first use made of returning sense was to finish the interrupted
-"cluck." He and Mr. Herndon had many learned discussions in their quiet
-little office, at Springfield, respecting this remarkable phenomenon,
-involving so nice a question in "psychology."
-
-Mr. William Wood, already referred to as "Uncle Wood," was a genuine
-friend and even a patron of Abe's. He lived only about a mile and a half
-from the Lincolns, and frequently had both old Tom and Abe to work for
-him,--the one as a rough carpenter, and the other as a common laborer.
-He says that Abe was in the habit of carrying "his pieces" to him for
-criticism and encouragement. Mr. Wood took at least two newspapers,--one
-of them devoted to politics, and one of them to temperance. Abe borrowed
-them both, and, reading them faithfully over and over again, was
-inspired with an ardent desire to write something on the subjects of
-which they treated. He accordingly composed an article on temperance,
-which Mr. Wood thought "excelled, for sound sense, any thing that the
-paper contained." It was forwarded, through the agency of a Baptist
-preacher, to an editor in Ohio, by whom it was published, to the
-infinite gratification of Mr. Wood and his _protégé_. Abe then tried his
-hand on "national politics," saying that "the American Government was
-the best form of government for an intelligent people; that it ought to
-be kept sound, and preserved forever; that general education should be
-fostered and carried all over the country; that the Constitution should
-be saved, the Union perpetuated, and the laws revered, respected, and
-enforced." This article was consigned, like the other, to Mr. Wood, to
-be ushered by him before the public. A lawyer named Pritchard chanced
-to pass that way, and, being favored with a perusal of Abe's "piece,"
-pithily and enthusiastically declared, "The world can't beat it." "He
-begged for it," and it was published in some obscure paper; this new
-success causing the author a most extraordinary access of pride and
-happiness.
-
-But in 1828 Abe had become very tired of his home. He was now nineteen
-years of age, and becoming daily more restive under the restraints of
-servitude which bound him. He was anxious to try the world for himself,
-and make his way according to his own notions. "Abe came to my house one
-day," says Mr. Wood, "and stood round about, timid and shy. I knew
-he wanted _something_, and said to him, 'Abe, what's your case?'
-He replied, 'Uncle, I want you to go to the river, and give me some
-recommendation to some boat.' I remarked, 'Abe, your age is against you:
-you are not twenty yet.' 'I know that, but I want a start,' said Abe. I
-concluded not to go for the boy's good." Poor Abe! old Tom still had a
-claim upon him, which even Uncle Wood would not help him to evade. He
-must wait a few weary months more before he would be of age, and
-could say he was his own man, and go his own way. Old Tom was a hard
-taskmaster to him, and, no doubt, consumed the greater part, if not all,
-of his wages.
-
-In the beginning of March, 1828, Abe went to work for old Mr. Gentry,
-the proprietor of Gentryville. Early in the next month, the old
-gentleman furnished his son Allen with a boat, and a cargo of bacon and
-other produce, with which he was to go on a trading expedition to New
-Orleans, unless the stock was sooner exhausted. Abe, having been found
-faithful and efficient, was employed to accompany the young man as a
-"bow-hand," to work the "front oars." He was paid eight dollars per
-month, and ate and slept on board. Returning, Gentry paid his passage on
-the deck of a steamboat.
-
-While this boat was loading at Gentry's Landing, near Rockport, on the
-Ohio, Abe saw a great deal of the pretty Miss Roby, whom he had saved
-from the wrath of Crawford the schoolmaster, when she failed to spell
-"defied." She says, "Abe was then a long, thin, leggy, gawky boy, dried
-up and shrivelled." This young lady subsequently became the wife of
-Allen Gentry, Abe's companion in the projected voyage. She probably
-felt a deep interest in the enterprise in hand, for the very boat itself
-seems to have had attractions for her. "One evening," says she, "Abe and
-I were sitting on the banks of the Ohio, or rather on the boat spoken
-of: I said to Abe that the sun was going down. He said to me, 'That's
-not so: it don't really go down; it seems so. The earth turns from west
-to east, and the revolution of the earth carries us under as it were:
-we do the sinking as you call it. The sun, as to us, is comparatively
-still; the sun's sinking is only an appearance.' I replied, 'Abe, what
-a fool you are!' I know now that I was the fool, not Lincoln. I am now
-thoroughly satisfied that Abe knew the general laws of astronomy and the
-movements of the heavenly bodies. He was better read then than the world
-knows, or is likely to know exactly. No man could talk to me that
-night as he did, unless he had known something of geography as well as
-astronomy. He often and often commented or talked to me about what he
-had read,--seemed to read it out of the book as he went along,--did
-so to others. He was the learned boy among us unlearned folks. He took
-great pains to explain; could do it so simply. He was diffident then
-too." 1
-
-The trip of Gentry and Lincoln was a very profitable one, and Mr.
-Gentry, senior, was highly gratified by the result. Abe displayed his
-genius for mercantile affairs by handsomely putting off on the innocent
-folks along the river some counterfeit money which a shrewd fellow had
-imposed upon Allen. Allen thought his father would be angry with him
-for suffering himself to be cheated; but Abe consoled him with the
-reflection that the "old man" wouldn't care how much bad money they took
-in the course of business if they only brought the proper amount of good
-money home.2
-
- 1 "When he appeared in company, the boys would gather and
- cluster around him to hear him talk.... Mr. Lincoln was
- figurative in his speeches, talks, and conversations. He
- argued much from analogy, and explained things hard for us
- to understand by stories, maxims, tales, and figures. He
- would almost always point his lesson or idea by some story
- that was plain and near us, that we might instantly see the
- force and bearing of what he said."--Nat Grigsby.
-
- 2 "Gentry (Allen) was a great personal friend of Mr.
- Lincoln. He was a Democrat, but voted for Lincoln,
- sacrificing his party politics to his friendship. He says
- that on that trip they sold some of their produce at a
- certain landing, and by accident or fraud the bill was paid
- in counterfeit money. Gentry was grieving about it; but
- Lincoln said, 'Never mind, Allen: it will accidentally slip
- out of our fingers before we get to New Orleans, and then
- old Jim can't quarrel at us.' Sure enough, it all went off
- like hot cakes. I was told this in Indiana by many people
- about Rockport."--Herndon. It must be remembered that
- counterfeit money was the principal currency along the river
- at this period.
-
-At Madame Bushane's plantation, six miles below Baton Rouge, they had
-an adventure, which reads strangely enough in the life of the great
-emancipator. The boat was tied up to the shore, in the dead hours of the
-night, and Abe and Allen were fast asleep in the "cabin," in the stern,
-when they were startled by footsteps on board. They knew instantly that
-it was a gang of negroes come to rob, and perhaps to murder them. Allen,
-thinking to frighten the intruders, cried out, "Bring the guns, Lincoln;
-shoot them!" Abe came without a gun, but he fell among the negroes
-with a huge bludgeon, and belabored them most cruelly. Not content with
-beating them off the boat, he and Gentry followed them far back into the
-country, and then, running back to their craft, hastily cut loose and
-made rapid time down the river, fearing lest they should return in
-greater numbers to take revenge. The victory was complete; but, in
-winning it, Abe received a scar which he carried with him to his grave.
-
-"When he was eighteen years old, he conceived the project of building a
-little boat, and taking the produce of the Lincoln farm down the river
-to market. He had learned the use of tools, and possessed considerable
-mechanical talent, as will appear in some other acts of his life. Of the
-voyage and its results, we have no knowledge; but an incident occurred
-before starting which he related in later life to his Secretary of
-State, Mr. Seward, that made a very marked and pleasant impression upon
-his memory. As he stood at the landing, a steamer approached, coming
-down the river. At the same time two passengers came to the river's bank
-who wished to be taken out to the packet with their luggage. Looking
-among the boats at the landing, they singled out Abraham's, and asked
-him to scull them to the steamer. This he did; and, after seeing them
-and their trunks on board, he had the pleasure of receiving upon the
-bottom of his boat, before he shoved off, a silver half-dollar from each
-of his passengers. 'I could scarcely believe my eyes,' said Mr. Lincoln,
-in telling the story. 'You may think it was a very little thing,'
-continued he, 'but it was a most important incident in my life. I could
-scarcely believe that I, a poor boy, had earned a dollar in less than a
-day. The world seemed wider and fairer to me. I was a more hopeful
-and confident being from that time.'"1 If Mr. Lincoln ever made the
-statement for which Mr. Seward is given as authority, he drew upon his
-imagination for the facts. He may have sculled passengers to a steamer
-when he was ferryman for Taylor, but he never made a trip like the one
-described; never built a boat until he went to Illinois; nor did he
-ever sell produce on his father's account, for the good reason that his
-father had none to sell.
-
- 1 Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 33.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-ABE and Gentry returned from New Orleans some time in June, 1828, having
-been gone not quite three months. How much longer he remained in the
-service of Gentry, or whether he remained at all, we are unable to say;
-but he soon took up his old habits, and began to work around among his
-neighbors, or for his father, precisely as he had done before he got his
-partial glimpse of the great world down the river.
-
-In the fall of 1829, Mr. Wood saw him cutting down a large tree in the
-woods, and whip-sawing it into planks. Abe said the lumber was for a new
-house his father was about to build; but Tom Lincoln changed his
-mind before the house was half done, and Abe sold his plank to Josiah
-Crawford, "the book man," who worked them into the south-east room of
-his house, where relic-seekers have since cut pieces from them to make
-canes.
-
-In truth, the continued prevalence of that dreadful disease, the
-milk-sickness, with which Nancy Hanks and the Sparrows and the Halls had
-all died, was more than a sufficient reason for a new removal, now in
-contemplation by Thomas Lincoln. Every member of his family, from
-the first settlement in Indiana, except perhaps Abe and himself,
-had suffered with it. The cattle, which, it is true, were of little
-pecuniary value, and raised with great ease and little cost, were swept
-away by it in great numbers throughout the whole neighborhood. It was
-an awful scourge, and common prudence suggested flight. It is wonderful
-that it took a constitutional mover thirteen years to make up his mind
-to escape from it.1
-
- 1 "What made Thomas Lincoln leave? The reason is this: we
- were perplexed by a disease called milk-sick. I myself being
- the oldest, I was determined to leave, and hunt a country
- where the milk-sick was not. I married his eldest daughter.
- I sold out, and they concluded to go with me. Billy, I was
- tolerably popular at that time, for I had some money. My
- wife's mother could not think of parting with her, and we
- ripped up stakes, and started to Illinois, and landed at
- Decatur. This is the reason for leaving Indiana. I am to
- blame for it, if any. As for getting more land, this was not
- the case, for we could have entered ten thousand acres of
- the best land. When we left, it was on account of the milk.
- Billy, I had four good milch cows, too, with it in one week,
- and eleven young calves. This was enough to run me. Besides,
- liked to have lossed my own life with it. This reason was
- enough (ain't it?) for leaving."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-In the spring of 1830, before the winter had fairly broken up, he and
-Abe, and Dennis Hanks and Levi Hall, with their respective families,
-thirteen in all, took the road for Illinois. Dennis and Levi, as already
-stated, were married to the daughters of Mrs. Lincoln. Hall had one son,
-and Dennis a considerable family of sons and daughters. Sarah (or Nancy)
-Lincoln, who had married Aaron Grigsby, was now dead.
-
-John Hanks had gone to the new country from Kentucky in the fall of
-1828, and settled near Decatur, whence he wrote Thomas Lincoln all
-about it, and advised him to come there. Dennis, whether because of the
-persuasions of John, or some observations made in a flying trip on his
-own account, was very full of the move, and would hear to no delay.
-Lincoln sold his farm to Gentry, senior, if, indeed, he had not done so
-before, and his corn and hogs to Dave Turnham. The corn brought only
-ten cents a bushel, and, according to the pricelist furnished by Dennis
-Hanks, the stock must have gone at figures equally mean.
-
-Lincoln took with him to Illinois "some stock-cattle, one horse,
-one bureau, one table, one clothes-chest, one set of chairs, cooking
-utensils, clothing," &c. The goods of the three families--Hanks, Hall,
-and Lincoln--were loaded on a wagon belonging to Lincoln. This wagon was
-"ironed," a noticeable fact in those primitive days, and "was positively
-the first one that he (Lincoln) ever owned." It was drawn by four yoke
-of oxen,--two of them Lincoln's, and two of them Hanks's.
-
-We have no particulars of the journey, except that Abe held the "gad,"
-and drove the team; that the mud was very deep, that the spring freshets
-were abroad, and that in crossing the swollen and tumultuous Kaskaskia,
-the wagon and oxen were nearly swept away. On the first day of March,
-1830, after fifteen days' tedious and heavy travel, they arrived at John
-Hanks's house, four miles north-west of Decatur. Lincoln settled (if
-any thing he did may be called settling) at a point ten miles west of
-Decatur. Here John Hanks had cut some logs in 1829, which he now gave
-to Lincoln to build a house with. With the aid of John, Dennis, Abe,
-and Hall, a house was erected on a small bluff, on the north bank of the
-north fork of the Sangamon. Abe and John took the four yoke of oxen and
-"broke up" fifteen acres of land, and then split rails enough to fence
-it in.
-
-Abe was now over twenty-one. There was no "Uncle Wood to tell him that
-his age was against him:" he had done something more than his duty by
-his father; and, as that worthy was now again placed in a situation
-where he might do well if he chose, Abe came to the conclusion that it
-was time for him to begin life on his own account. It must have cost him
-some pain to leave his good step-mother; but, beyond that, all the old
-ties were probably broken without a single regret. From the moment
-he was a free man, foot-loose, able to go where, and to do what, he
-pleased, his success in those things which lay nearest his heart--that
-is, public and social preferment--was astonishing to himself, as well as
-to others.
-
-It is with great pleasure that we dismiss Tom Lincoln, with his family
-and fortunes, from further consideration in these pages. After Abraham
-left him, he moved at least three times in search of a "healthy"
-location, and finally got himself fixed near Goose Nest Prairie, in
-Coles County, where he died of a disease of the kidneys, in 1851, at the
-ripe old age of seventy-three. The little farm (forty acres) upon which
-his days were ended, he had, with his usual improvidence, mortgaged
-to the School Commissioners for two hundred dollars,--its full value.
-Induced by love for his step-mother, Abraham had paid the debt, and
-taken a deed for the land, "with a reservation of a life-estate therein,
-to them, or the survivor of them." At the same time (1841), he gave a
-helping hand to John Johnston, binding himself to convey the land to
-him, or his heirs, after the death of "Thomas Lincoln and his wife,"
-upon payment of the two hundred dollars, which was really advanced to
-save John's mother from utter penury. No matter how much the land
-might appreciate in value, John was to have it upon these terms, and no
-interest was to be paid by him, "except after the death of the survivor,
-as aforesaid." This, to be sure, was a great bargain for John, but he
-made haste to assign his bond to another person for "fifty dollars paid
-in hand."
-
-As soon as Abraham got a little up in the world, he began to send his
-step-mother money, and continued to do so until his own death; but it
-is said to have "done her no good," for it only served to tempt certain
-persons about her, and with whom she shared it, to continue in a life
-of idleness. At the close of the Black Hawk War, Mr. Lincoln went to see
-them for a few days, and afterwards, when a lawyer, making the circuits
-with the courts, he visited them whenever the necessities of his
-practice brought him to their neighborhood. He did his best to serve
-Mrs. Lincoln and her son John, but took little notice of his father,
-although he wrote him an exhortation to believe in God when he thought
-he was on his death-bed.
-
-But in regard to the relations between the family and Abe, after the
-latter began to achieve fame and power, nobody can tell the truth more
-clearly, or tell it in a more interesting and suggestive style, than our
-friend Dennis, with whom we are now about to part forever. It will be
-seen, that, when information reached the "Goose Nest Prairie" that Abe
-was actually chosen President of the United States, a general itching
-for public employment broke out among the Hankses, and that an equally
-general disappointment was the result. Doubtless all of them had
-expectations somewhat like Sancho Panza's, when he went to take the
-government of his island, and John Hanks, at least, would not have been
-disappointed but for the little disability which Dennis mentions in the
-following extract:--
-
-"Did Abraham Lincoln treat John D. Johnston well?" "I will say this much
-about it. I think Abe done more for John than he deserved. John thought
-that Abe did not do enough for the old people. They became enemies a
-while on this ground. I don't want to tell all the things that I know:
-it would not look well in history. I say this: Abe treated John well."
-
-"What kind of a man was Johnston?"--"I say this much: A kinder-hearted
-man never was in Coles County, Illinois, nor an honester man. I don't
-say this because he was my brother-in-law: I say it, knowing it. John
-did not love to work any the best. I flogged him for not working."
-
-"Did Thomas Lincoln treat Abe cruelly?"--"He loved him. I never could
-tell whether Abe loved his father very well or not. I don't think he
-did, for Abe was one of those forward boys. I have seen his father
-knock him down off the fence when a stranger would, ask the way to a
-neighbor's house. Abe always would have the first word. The old man
-loved his children."
-
-"Did any of the Johnston family ask for office?"--"No! Thomas Johnston
-went to Abe: he got this permit to take daguerrotypes in the army; this
-is all, for they are all dead except John's boys. They did not ask for
-any."
-
-"Did you or John Hanks ask Lincoln for any office?"--"I say this: that
-John Hanks, of Decatur, did solicit him for an Indian Agency; and John
-told me that Abe as good as told him he should have one. But John could
-not read or write. I think this was the reason that Abe did not give
-John the place.
-
-"As for myself, I did not ask Abe right out for an office, only this: I
-would like to have the post-office in Charleston; this was my wife that
-asked him. He told her that much was understood,--as much as to say that
-I would get it. I did not care much about it."
-
-"Do you think Lincoln cared much for his relations?"--"I will say this
-much: when he was with us, he seemed to think a great deal of us; but I
-thought sometimes it was hypocritical, but I am not sure."
-
-Abe left the Lincoln family late in March, or early in April. He did not
-go far away, but took jobs wherever he could get them, showing that he
-had separated himself from the family, not merely to rove, but to
-labor, and be an independent man. He made no engagement of a permanent
-character during this summer: his work was all done "by the job." If he
-ever split rails for Kirkpatrick, over whom he was subsequently elected
-captain of a volunteer company about to enter the Black Hawk War, it
-must have been at this time; but the story of his work for Kirkpatrick,
-like that of his making "a crap of corn" for Mr. Brown, is probably
-apocryphal.1 All this while he clung close to John Hanks, and either
-worked where he did, or not far away. In the winter following, he was
-employed by a Major Warrick to make rails, and walked daily three miles
-to his work, and three miles back again.
-
- 1 See Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 40.
-
-"After Abe got to Decatur," says John Hanks, "or rather to Macon (my
-country), a man by the name of Posey came into our neighborhood, and
-made a speech: it was a bad one, and I said Abe could beat it. I
-turned down a box, or keg, and Abe made his speech. The other man was
-a candidate. Abe wasn't. Abe beat him to death, his subject being the
-navigation of the Sangamon River. The man, after the speech was through,
-took Abe aside, and asked him where he had learned so much, and how he
-did so well. Abe replied, stating his manner and method of reading, and
-what he had read. The man encouraged Lincoln to persevere."
-
-In February, 1831, a Mr. Denton Offutt wanted to engage John Hanks
-to take a flatboat to New Orleans. John was not well disposed to the
-business; but Offutt came to the house, and would take no denial; made
-much of John's fame as a river-man, and at length persuaded him to
-present the matter to Abe and John Johnston. He did so. The three
-friends discussed the question with great earnestness: it was no slight
-affair to them, for they were all young and poor. At length they agreed
-to Offutt's proposition, and that agreement was the turning-point in
-Abe's career. They were each to receive fifty cents a day, and the round
-sum of sixty dollars divided amongst them for making the trip. These
-were wages such as Abe had never received before, and might have tempted
-him to a much more difficult enterprise. When he went with Gentry, the
-pay was only eight dollars a month, and no such company and assistance
-as he was to have now. But Offutt was lavish with his money, and
-generous bargains like this ruined him a little while after.
-
-In March, Hanks, Johnston, and Lincoln went down the Sangamon in a canoe
-to Jamestown (then Judy's Ferry), five miles east of Springfield. Thence
-they walked to Springfield, and found Mr. Offutt comforting himself at
-"Elliott's tavern in Old Town." He had contracted to have a boat ready
-at the mouth of Spring Creek, but, not looking after it himself, was, of
-course, "disappointed." There was only one way out of the trouble: the
-three hands must build a boat. They went to the mouth of Spring Creek,
-five miles north of Springfield, and there consumed two weeks cutting
-the timber from "Congress land." In the mean time, Abe walked back to
-Judy's Ferry, by way of Springfield, and brought down the canoe which
-they had left at the former place. The timber was hewed and scored, and
-then "rafted down to Saugamon-town." At the mouth of Spring Creek
-they had been compelled to walk a full mile for their meals; but at
-Sangamon-town they built a shanty, and boarded themselves. "Abe was
-elected cook," and performed the duties of the office much to the
-satisfaction of the party. The lumber was sawed at Kirkpatrick's mill, a
-mile and a half from the shanty. Laboring under many disadvantages like
-this, they managed to complete and launch the boat in about four weeks
-from the time of beginning.
-
-Offutt was with the party at this point. He "was a Whig, and so was Abe;
-but he (Abe) could not hear Jackson wrongfully abused, especially where
-a lie and malice did the abuse." Out of this difference arose some
-disputes, which served to enliven the camp, as well as to arouse Abe's
-ire, and keep him in practice in the way of debate.
-
-In those days Abe, as usual, is described as being "funny, jokey,
-full of yarns, stories, and rigs;" as being "long, tall, and green,"
-"frequently quoting poetry," and "reciting proselike orations." They
-had their own amusements. Abe extracted a good deal of fun out of the
-cooking; took his "dram" when asked to, and played "seven up" at night,
-at which he made "a good game."
-
-A juggler gave an exhibition at Sangamontown, in the upper room of Jacob
-Carman's house. Abe went to it, dressed in a suit of rough blue jeans.
-He had on shoes, but the trousers did not reach them by about twelve
-inches; and the naked shin, which had excited John Romine's laughter
-years ago in Indiana, was still exposed. Between the roundabout and
-the waist of the trousers, there was another wide space uncovered;
-and, considering these defects, Mr. Lincoln's attire was thought to be
-somewhat inelegant, even in those times. His hat, however, was a great
-improvement on coon-skins and opossum. It was woollen, broad-brimmed,
-and low-crowned. In this hat the "showman cooked eggs." Whilst Abe was
-handing it up to him, after the man had long solicited a similar favor
-from the rest of the audience, he remarked, "Mister, the reason I didn't
-give you my hat before was out of respect to your eggs, not care for my
-hat."
-
-Loaded with barrel-pork, hogs, and corn, the boat set out from
-Sangamontown as soon as finished. Mr. Offutt was on board to act as
-his own merchant, intending to pick up additions to his cargo along the
-banks of the two Illinois rivers down which he was about to pass. On the
-19th of April they arrived at New Salem, a little village destined to
-be the scene of the seven eventful years of Mr. Lincoln's life, which
-immediately followed the conclusion of the present trip. Just below New
-Salem the boat "stuck," for one night and the better part of a day on
-Rutledge's mill-dam,--one end of it hanging over the dam, and the other
-sunk deep in the water behind. Here was a case for Abe's ingenuity, and
-he exercised it with effect. Quantities of water were being taken in at
-the stern, the lading was sliding backwards, and every thing indicated
-that the rude craft was in momentary danger of breaking in two, or
-sinking outright. But Abe suggested some unheard-of expedient for
-keeping it in place while the cargo was shifted to a borrowed boat, and
-then, boring a hole in that part of the bottom extending over the dam,
-he "rigged up" an equally strange piece of machinery for tilting and
-holding it while the water ran out. All New Salem was assembled on
-shore, watching the progress of this singular experiment,--and with one
-voice affirm that Abe saved the boat; although nobody is able to tell
-us precisely how.1 The adventure turned Abe's thoughts to the class of
-difficulties, one of which he had just surmounted; and the result of his
-reflections was "an improved method for lifting vessels over shoals."2
-Offutt declared that when he got back from New Orleans, he would build a
-steamboat for the navigation of the Sangamon, and make Abe the captain;
-he would build it with runners for ice, and rollers for shoals and dams,
-for with "Abe in command, by thunder, she'd have to go."
-
- 1 Many persons at New Salem describe in full Abe's conduct
- on this occasion.
-
- 2 "Occupying an ordinary and commonplace position in one of
- the show-cases in the targe hall of the Patent Office, is
- one little model which, in ages to come, will be prized as
- at once one of the most curious and one of the most sacred
- relics in that vast museum of unique and priceless things.
- This is a plain and simple model of a steamboat, roughly
- fashioned in wood, by the hand of Abraham Lincoln. It bears
- date in 1849, when the inventor was known simply as a
- successful lawyer and rising politician of Central Illinois.
- Neither his practice nor his politics took up so much of his
- time as to prevent him from giving much attention to
- contrivances which he hoped might be of benefit to the
- world, and of profit to himself.
-
- "The design of this invention is suggestive of one phase of
- Abraham Lincoln's early life, when he went up and down the
- Mississippi as a flat-boatman, and became familiar with some
- of the dangers and inconveniences attending the navigation
- of the Western rivers. It is an attempt to make it an easy
- matter to transport vessels over shoals and snags, and
- sawyers. The main idea is that of an apparatus resembling a
- noiseless bellows, placed on each side of the hull of the
- craft, just below the water-line, and worked by an odd but
- not complicated system of ropes, valves, and pulleys. When
- the keel of the vessel grates against the sand or
- obstruction, these bellows are to be filled with air; and,
- thus buoyed up, the ship is expected to float lightly and
- gayly over the shoal, which would otherwise have proved a
- serious interruption to her voyage.
-
- "The model, which is about eighteen or twenty inches long,
- and has the air of having been whittled with a knife out of
- a shingle and a cigar-box, is built without any elaboration
- or ornament, or any extra apparatus beyond that necessary to
- show the operation of buoying the steamer over the
- obstructions. Herein it differs from very many of the models
- which share with it the shelter of the immense halls of the
- Patent Office, and which are fashioned with wonderful nicety
- and exquisite finish, as if much of the labor and thought
- and affection of a lifetime had been devoted to their
- construction. This is a model of a different kind; carved as
- one might imagine a retired rail-splitter would whittle,
- strongly, but not smoothly, and evidently made with a view
- solely to convey, by the simplest possible means, to the
- minds of the patent authorities, an idea of the purpose and
- plan of the simple invention. The label on the steamer's
- deck informs us that the patent was obtained; but we do not
- learn that the navigation of the Western rivers was
- revolutionized by this quaint conception. The modest little
- model has reposed here sixteen years; and, since it found
- its resting-place here on the shelf, the shrewd inventor has
- found it his task to guide the Ship of State over shoals
- more perilous, and obstructions more obstinate, than any
- prophet dreamed of when Abraham Lincoln wrote his bold
- autograph on the prow of this miniature steamer."--
- Correspondent Boston Advertiser.
-
-Over the dam, and in the deep pool beyond, they reloaded, and floated
-down to Blue Bank, a mile above the mouth of Salt Creek, where Offutt
-bought some more hogs. But the hogs were wild, and refused to be driven.
-Abe again came to the rescue; and, by his advice, their eyes were sewed
-up with a needle and thread, so that, if the animals fought any more,
-they should do it in the dark. Abe held their heads, and John Hanks
-their tails, while Offutt did the surgery. They were then thrown into a
-cart, whence Abe took them, one by one, in his great arms, and deposited
-them on board.
-
-[Illustration: Mr. Lincoln as a Flatboatman 108]
-
-From this point they sped very rapidly down the Sangamon and the
-Illinois. Having constructed curious-looking sails of plank, "and
-sometimes cloth," they were a "sight to see," as they "rushed through
-Beardstown," where "the people came out and laughed at them." They swept
-by Alton and Cairo, and other considerable places, without tying up, but
-stopped at Memphis, Vicksburg, and Natchez.
-
-In due time they arrived at New Orleans. "There it was," says John
-Hanks, "we saw negroes chained, maltreated, whipped, and scourged.
-Lincoln saw it; his heart bled, said nothing much, was silent from
-feeling, was sad, looked bad, felt bad, was thoughtful and abstracted.
-I can say, knowing it, that it was on this trip that he formed his
-opinions of slavery. It run its iron in him then and there,--May, 1831.
-I have heard him say so often and often."
-
-Some time in June the party took passage on a steamboat going up the
-river, and remained together until they reached St. Louis, where Offutt
-left them, and Abe, Hanks, and Johnston started on foot for the interior
-of Illinois. At Edwardsville, twenty-five miles out, Hanks took the road
-to Springfield, and Abe and Johnston took that to Coles County, where
-Tom Lincoln had moved since Abraham's departure from home.
-
-Abe never worked again in company with his friend and relative, good
-old John Hanks. Here their paths separated: Abe's began to ascend the
-heights, while John's continued along the common level. They were in the
-Black Hawk War during the same campaign, but not in the same division.
-But they corresponded, and, from 1833, met at least once a year, until
-Abe was elected President. Then Abe, delighting to honor those of his
-relatives who were worthy of it, invited John to go with him to see
-his step-mother. John also went to the inauguration at Washington, and
-tells, with pardonable pride, how he "was in his [Abe's] rooms several
-times." He then retired to his old home in Macon County, until the
-assassination and the great funeral, when he came to Springfield to look
-in the blackened face of his old friend, and witness the last ceremonies
-of his splendid burial.
-
-Scarcely had Abe reached Coles County, and begun to think what next to
-turn his hand to, when he received a visit from a famous wrestler, one
-Daniel Needham, who regarded him as a growing rival, and had a fancy
-to try him a fall or two. He considered himself "the best man" in the
-country, and the report of Abe's achievements filled his big breast with
-envious pains. His greeting was friendly and hearty, but his challenge
-was rough and peremptory. Abe valued his popularity among "the boys"
-too highly to decline it, and met him by public appointment in the
-"greenwood," at Wabash Point, where he threw him twice with so much ease
-that Needham's pride was more hurt than his body. "Lincoln," said he,
-"you have thrown me twice, but you can't whip me."--"Needham," replied
-Abe, "are you satisfied that I can throw you? If you are not, and must
-be convinced through a threshing, I will do that, too, for your sake."
-Needham had hoped that the youngster would shrink from the extremity
-of a fight with the acknowledged "bully of the patch;" but finding him
-willing, and at the same time magnanimously inclined to whip him solely
-for his _own good_, he concluded that a bloody nose and a black
-eye would be the reverse of soothing to his feelings, and therefore
-surrendered the field with such grace as he could command.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-ON the west bank of the Sangamon River, twenty miles north-west of
-Springfield, a traveller on his way to Havana will ascend a bluff one
-hundred feet higher than the low-water mark of the stream. On the summit
-he Will find a solitary log-hut. The back-bone of the ridge is about two
-hundred and fifty feet broad where it overlooks the river; but it widens
-gradually as it extends westerly toward the remains of an old forest,
-until it terminates in a broad expanse of meadow. On either side of this
-hill, and skirting its feet north and south, run streams of water in
-very deep channels, and tumble into the Sangamon almost within hearing.
-The hill, or more properly the bluff, rises from the river in an almost
-perpendicular ascent. "There is an old mill at the foot of the bluff,
-driven by water-power. The river washes the base of the bluff for about
-four hundred yards, the hill breaking off almost abruptly at the north.
-The river along this line runs about due north: it strikes the bluff
-coming around a sudden bend from the south-east, the river being checked
-and turned by the rocky hill. The mill-dam running across the Sangamon
-River just at the mill checks the rapidity of the water. It was here,
-and on this dam, that Mr. Lincoln's flatboat 'stuck on the 19th of
-April, 1831.' The dam is about eight feet high, and two hundred and
-twenty feet long, and, as the old Sangamon rolls her turbid waters over
-the dam, plunging them into the whirl and eddy beneath, the roar and
-hiss of waters, like the low, continuous, distant thunder, can be
-distinctly heard through the whole village, day and night, week-day and
-Sunday, spring and fall, or other high-water time. The river, at the
-base of the bluff, is about two hundred and fifty feet wide, the mill
-using up thirty feet, leaving the dam only about two hundred and twenty
-feet long."
-
-In every direction but the West, the country is broken into hills or
-bluffs, like the one we are attempting to describe, which are washed by
-the river, and the several streams that empty into it in the immediate
-vicinity. Looking across the river from bluff to bluff, the distance is
-about a thousand yards; while here and there, on both banks, are patches
-of rich alluvial bottom-lands, eight or nine hundred yards in width,
-enclosed on one side by the hills, and on the other by the river.
-The uplands of the eastern bank are covered with original forests of
-immemorial age; and, viewed from "Salem Hill," the eye ranges over a
-vast expanse of green foliage, the monotony of which is relieved by the
-alternating swells and depressions of the landscape.
-
-On the ridge of that hill, where the solitary cabin now stands, there
-was a few years ago a pleasant village. How it vanished like a mist of
-the morning, to what distant places its inhabitants dispersed, and what
-became of the dwellings they left behind, shall be questions for the
-local antiquarian. We have no concern with any part of the history,
-except that part which began in the summer of 1831 and ended in
-1837,--the period during which it had the honor of sheltering a man
-whose enduring fame contrasts strangely with the evanescence of the
-village itself.
-
-[Illustration: Map of New Salem 115]
-
-In 1829 James Rutledge and John Cameron built the mill on the Sangamon,
-and laid off the town on the hill. The place was then called Cameron's
-Mill; but in process of time, as cabins, stores, and groceries were
-added, it was dignified by the name of New Salem. "I claim," says one of
-the gentlemen who established the first store, "to be the explorer and
-discoverer of New Salem as a business point. Mr. Hill (now dead) and
-myself purchased some goods at Cincinnati, and shipped them to St.
-Louis, whence I set out on a voyage of discovery on the prairies of
-Illinois.... I, however, soon came across a noted character who lives in
-this vicinity, by the name of Thomas Wadkins, who set forth the beauties
-and other advantages of Cameron's Mill, as it was then called. I
-accordingly came home with him, visited the locality, contracted for
-the erection of a magnificent storehouse for the sum of fifteen dollars;
-and, after passing a night in the prairie, reached St. Louis in safety.
-Others soon followed."
-
-In 1836 New Salem contained about twenty houses, inhabited by nearly
-a hundred people; but in 1831 there could not have been more than
-two-thirds or three-fourths that number. Many of the houses cost not
-more than ten dollars, and none of them more than one hundred dollars.
-
-When the news flew through the country that the mill-dam was broken, the
-people assembled from far and near, and made a grand frolic of mending
-it. In like manner, when a new settler arrived, and the word passed
-around that he wanted to put up a house, everybody came in to the
-"raising;" and, after behaving like the best of good Samaritans to the
-new neighbor, they drank whiskey, ran foot-races, wrestled, fought, and
-went home.
-
-"I first knew this hill, or bluff," says Mr. Herndon, in his remarkable
-lecture on Ann Rutledge, "as early as 1829. I have seen it in
-spring-time and winter, in summer-time and fall. I have seen it in
-daylight and night-time; have seen it when the sward was green, living,
-and vital; and I have seen it wrapped in snow, frost, and sleet. I have
-closely studied it for more than five long years....
-
-"As I sat on the verge of the town, in presence of its ruins, I called
-to mind the street running east and west through the village, the river
-eastward; Green's Rocky Branch, with its hills, southward; Clary's
-Grove, westerly about three miles; Petersburg northward, and Springfield
-south-east; and now I cannot exclude from my memory or imagination the
-forms, faces, voices, and features of those I once knew so well. In my
-imagination the village perched on the hill is astir with the hum of
-busy men, and the sharp, quick buzz of women; and from the country come
-men and women on foot or on horseback, to see and be seen, to hear and
-to be heard, to barter and exchange what they have with the merchant and
-the laborer. There are Jack Armstrong and William Green, Kelso and
-Jason Duncan, Alley and Carman, Hill and McNamar, Herndon and Rutledge,
-Warburton and Sincho, Bale and Ellis, Abraham and Ann. Oh, what a
-history!"
-
-In those days, which in the progressive West would be called ancient
-days, New Salem was in Sangamon County, with Springfield as the
-county-seat. Springfield itself was still a mere village, having a
-population of one thousand, or perhaps eleven hundred. The capital of
-the State was yet at Vandalia, and waited for the parliamentary tact of
-Abraham Lincoln and the "long nine" to bring it to Springfield. The
-same influence, which, after long struggles, succeeded in removing the
-capital, caused the new County of Menard to be erected out of Sangamon
-in 1839, of which Petersburg was made the county-seat, and within which
-is included the barren site of New Salem.
-
-In July or August, 1831, Mr. Lincoln made his second appearance at New
-Salem. He was again in company with Denton Offutt, who had collected
-some goods at Beardstown, and now proposed to bring them to this place.
-Mr. Lincoln undoubtedly came there in the service of Offutt, but whilst
-the goods were being transported from Beardstown he seemed to be idling
-about without any special object in view. Many persons who saw him then
-for the first time speak of him as "doing nothing." He has given some
-encouragement to this idea himself by the manner in which he habitually
-spoke of his advent there,--describing himself as coming down the river
-after the winter of the deep snow, like a piece of "floating driftwood"
-borne along by the freshet, and accidentally lodged at New Salem.
-
-On the day of the election, in the month of August, as Minter Graham,
-the school-teacher, tells us, Abe was seen loitering about the
-polling-place. It must have been but a few days after his arrival in the
-town, for nobody knew that he could write. They were "short of a clerk"
-at the polls; and, after casting about in vain for some one competent to
-fill the office, it occurred to one of the judges that perhaps the tall
-stranger possessed the needful qualifications. He thereupon accosted
-him, and asked if he could write. He replied, "Yes, a little."--"Will
-you act as clerk of the election today?" said the judge. "I will try,"
-returned Abe, "and do the best I can, if you so request." He did try
-accordingly, and, in the language of the schoolmaster, "performed the
-duties with great facility, much fairness and honesty and impartiality.
-This was the first public official act of his life. I clerked with him,"
-says Mr. Graham, swelling with his theme, "on the same day and at the
-same polls. The election-books are now in the city of Springfield, Ill.,
-where they can be seen and inspected any day."
-
-Whilst Abe was "doing nothing," or, in other words, waiting for Offutt's
-goods, one Dr. Nelson, a resident of New Salem, built a flatboat, and,
-placing his family and effects upon it, started for Texas. But as the
-Sangamon was a turbulent and treacherous stream at best, and its banks
-were now full to overflowing, Nelson needed a pilot, at least as far as
-Beardstown.
-
-His choice fell upon Abe, who took him to the mouth of the doubtful
-river in safety, although Abe often declared that he occasionally ran
-out into the prairie at least three miles from the channel. Arriving at
-Beardstown, Nelson pushed on down the Illinois, and Abe walked back to
-New Salem.
-
-The second storekeeper at New Salem was a Mr. George Warburton; but,
-"the country not having improved his morals in the estimation of his
-friends," George thought it advisable to transfer his storeroom and the
-remnant of his stock to Offutt. In the mean time, Offutt's long-expected
-goods were received from Beardstown. Abe unpacked them, ranged them on
-the shelves, rolled the barrels and kegs into their places, and,
-being provided with a brand-new book, pen, and ink, found himself duly
-installed as "first clerk" of the principal mercantile house in
-New Salem. A country store is an indescribable collection of
-miscellanies,--groceries, drygoods, hardware, earthenware, and
-stoneware, cups and saucers, plates and dishes, coffee and tea, sugar
-and molasses, boots and shoes, whiskey and lead, butter and eggs,
-tobacco and gunpowder, with an endless list of things unimaginable
-except by a housewife or a "merchant." Such was the store to the charge
-of which Abe was now promoted,--promoted from the rank of a common
-laborer to be a sort of brevet clerk.
-
-But Offutt's ideas of commerce were very comprehensive; and, as "his
-business was already considerably scattered about the country," he
-thought he would scatter a little more. He therefore rented the mill
-at the foot of the hill, from Cameron and Rutledge, and set Abe to
-overlooking that as well as the store. This increase of business,
-however, required another clerk, and in a few days Abe was given a
-companion in the person of W. G. Green. They slept together on the same
-cot in the store; and as Mr. Green observes, by way of indicating the
-great intimacy that subsisted between them, "when one turned over, the
-other had to do so likewise." To complete his domestic arrangements, Abe
-followed the example of Mr. Offutt, and took boarding at John Cameron's,
-one of the owners of the mill.
-
-Mr. Offutt is variously, though not differently, described as a "wild,
-harum-scarum, reckless fellow;" a "gusty, windy, brain-rattling man;"
-a "noisy, unsteady, fussy, rattlebrained man, wild and improvident."
-If anybody can imagine the character indicated by these terms, he can
-imagine Mr. Offutt,--Abe's employer, friend, and patron. Since the trip
-on the flatboat, his admiration for Abe had grown to be boundless. He
-now declared that "Abe knew more than any man in the United States;"
-that "he would some day be President of the United States," and that he
-could, at that present moment, outrun, whip, or throw down any man in
-Sangamon County. These loud boasts were not wasted on the desert air:
-they were bad seed sown in a rank soil, and speedily raised up a crop
-of sharp thorns for both Abe and Offutt. At New Salem, honors such as
-Offutt accorded to Abe were to be won before they were worn.
-
-Bill Clary made light of Offutt's opinion respecting Abe's prowess;
-and one day, when the dispute between them had been running high in the
-store, it ended by a bet of ten dollars on the part of Clary that
-Jack Armstrong was "a better man." Now, "Jack was a powerful twister,"
-"square built, and strong as an ox." He had, besides, a great backing;
-for he was the chief of the "Clary's Grove boys," and the Clary's Grove
-boys were the terror of the countryside. Although there never was under
-the sun a more generous parcel of ruffians than those over whom
-Jack held sway, a stranger's introduction was likely to be the most
-unpleasant part of his acquaintance with them. In fact, one of the
-objects of their association was to "initiate or naturalize new-comers,"
-as they termed the amiable proceedings which they took by way of
-welcoming any one ambitious of admittance to the society of New Salem.
-They first bantered the gentleman to run a foot-race, jump, pitch the
-mall, or wrestle; and, if none of these propositions seemed agreeable
-to him, they would request to know what he would do in case another
-gentleman should pull his nose, or squirt tobacco-juice in his face. If
-he did not seem entirely decided in his views as to what should properly
-be done in such a contingency, perhaps he would be nailed in a hogshead,
-and rolled down New-Salem hill; perhaps his ideas would be brightened by
-a brief ducking in the Sangamon; or perhaps he would be scoffed, kicked,
-and cuffed by a great number of persons in concert, until he reached the
-confines of the village, and then turned adrift as being unfit company
-for the people of that settlement. If, however, the stranger consented
-to engage in a tussle with one of his persecutors, it was usually
-arranged that there should be "foul play," with nameless impositions
-and insults, which would inevitably change the affair into a fight; and
-then, if the subject of all these practices proved indeed to be a man
-of mettle, he would be promptly received into "good society," and in all
-probability would never have better friends on earth than the roystering
-fellows who had contrived his torments.
-
-Thus far Abe had managed to escape "initiation" at the hands of Jack
-and his associates. They were disposed to like him, and to take him on
-faith, or at least to require no further evidence of his manhood than
-that which rumor had already brought them. Offutt, with his busy tongue,
-had spread wide the report of his wondrous doings on the river; and,
-better still, all New Salem, including many of the "Clary's Grove boys,"
-had witnessed his extraordinary feats of strength and ingenuity
-at Rutledge's mill-dam. It was clear that no particular person was
-"spoiling" for a collision with him; and an exception to the rule might
-have been made in his favor, but for the offensive zeal and confidence
-of his employer.
-
-The example of Offutt and Clary was followed by all the "boys;" and
-money, knives, whiskey, and all manner of things, were staked on the
-result of the wrestle. The little community was excited throughout, and
-Jack's partisans were present in great numbers; while Offutt and Bill
-Green were about the only persons upon whom Abe could rely if the
-contest should take the usual turn, and end in a fight. For these, and
-many other reasons, he longed to be safely and honorably out of the
-scrape; but Offutt's folly had made it impossible for him to evade the
-conflict without incurring the imputation, and suffering the penalties,
-of cowardice. He said, "I never tussle and scuffle, and I will not: I
-don't like this wooling and pulling." But these scruples only served
-to aggravate his case; and he was at last forced to take hold of Jack,
-which he did with a will and power that amazed the fellows who had at
-last baited him to the point of indignation. They took "side holds," and
-stood struggling, each with tremendous but equal strength, for several
-minutes, without any perceptible advantage to either. New trips
-or unexpected twists were of no avail between two such experienced
-wrestlers as these. Presently Abe profited by his height and the length
-of his arms to lift Jack clear off the ground, and, swinging him about,
-thought to land him on his back; but this feat was as futile as the
-rest, and left Jack standing as square and as firm as ever. "Now, Jack,"
-said Abe, "let's quit: you can't throw me, and I can't throw you." But
-Jack's partisans, regarding this overture as a signal of the enemy's
-distress, and being covetous of jack-knives, whiskey, and "smooth
-quarters," cheered him on to greater exertions. Rendered desperate by
-these expectations of his friends, and now enraged at meeting more than
-his match, Jack resolved on "a foul," and, breaking holds, he essayed
-the unfair and disreputable expedient of "legging." But at this Abe's
-prudence deserted him, and righteous wrath rose to the ascendent. The
-astonished spectators saw him take their great bully by the throat, and,
-holding him out at arm's-length, shake him like a child. Then a score
-or two of the boys cried "Fight!" Bill Clary claimed the stakes, and
-Offutt, in the fright and confusion, was about to yield them; but
-"Lincoln said they had not won the money, and they should not have it;
-and, although he was opposed to fighting, if nothing else would do
-them, he would fight Armstrong, Clary, or any of the set." Just at this
-juncture James Rutledge, the original proprietor of New Salem, and a
-man of some authority, "rushed into the crowd," and exerted himself to
-maintain the peace. He succeeded; but for a few moments a general fight
-was impending, and Abe was seen with his back against Offutt's store
-"undismayed" and "resolute," although surrounded by enemies.1
-
- 1 Of the fight and what followed, we have the particulars
- from many persons who were witnesses.
-
-Jack Armstrong was no bad fellow, after all. A sort of Western John
-Browdie, stout and rough, but great-hearted, honest, and true: his big
-hand, his cabin, his table, and his purse were all at the disposal of
-a friend in need. He possessed a rude sense of justice, and felt an
-incredible respect for a man who would stand single-handed, stanch, and
-defiant, in the midst of persecutors and foes. He had never disliked
-Abe, and had, in fact, looked for very clever things from him, even
-before his title to respectability had been made so incontestably clear;
-but his exhibition of pluck and muscle on this occasion excited Jack to
-a degree of admiration far beyond his power to conceal it. Abe's hand
-was hardly removed from his throat, when he was ready to grasp it in
-friendship, and swear brotherhood and peace between them. He declared
-him, on the spot, "the best fellow that ever broke into their
-settlement;" and henceforth the empire was divided, and Jack and Abe
-reigned like two friendly Cæsars over the roughs and bullies of New
-Salem. If there were ever any dissensions between them, it was because
-Jack, in the abundance of his animal spirits, was sometimes inclined
-to be an oppressor, whilst Abe was ever merciful and kind; because Jack
-would occasionally incite the "boys" to handle a stranger, a witless
-braggart, or a poor drunkard with a harshness that shocked the just and
-humane temper of his friend, who was always found on the side of the
-weak and the unfortunate. On the whole, however, the harmony that
-subsisted between them was wonderful. Wherever Lincoln worked, Jack "did
-his loafing;" and, when Lincoln was out of work, he spent days and weeks
-together at Jack's cabin, where Jack's jolly wife, "old Hannah," stuffed
-him with bread and honey, laughed at his ugliness, and loved him for his
-goodness.
-
-Abe rapidly grew in favor with the people in and around New Salem, until
-nearly everybody thought quite as much of him as Mr. Offutt did. He was
-decidedly the most popular man that ever lived there. He could do more
-to quell a riot, compromise a feud; and keep peace among the neighbors
-generally, than any one else; and these were of the class of duties
-which it appears to have been the most agreeable for him to perform. One
-day a strange man came into the settlement, and was straightway beset
-by the same fellows who had meditated a drubbing for Abe himself. Jack
-Armstrong, of course, "had a difficulty with him;" "called him a liar,
-coward," and various other names not proper for print; but the man,
-finding himself taken at a disadvantage, "backed up to a woodpile," got
-a stick, and "struck Jack a blow that brought him to the ground." Being
-"as strong as two men, Jack wanted to whip the man badly," but Abe
-interfered, and, managing to have himself made "arbitrator," compromised
-the difficulty by a practical application of the golden rule. "Well,
-Jack," said he, "what did you say to the man?" Whereupon Jack repeated
-his words. "Well, Jack," replied Abe, "if you were a stranger in a
-strange place, as this man is, and you were called a d--d liar, &c.,
-what would you do?"--"Whip him, by God!"--"Then this man has done no
-more to you than you would have done to him."--"Well, Abe," said the
-honest bruiser, "it's all right," and, taking his opponent by the hand,
-forgave him heartily, and "treated." Jack always treated his victim when
-he thought he had been too hard upon him.
-
-Abe's duties in Offutt's store were not of a character to monopolize
-the whole of his time,1 and he soon began to think that here was a fine
-opportunity to remedy some of the defects in his education.
-
- 1 "During the time he was working for Offutt, and hands
- being scarce, Lincoln turned In and cut down trees, and
- split enough rails for Offutt to make a pen sufficiently
- large to contain a thousand hogs. The pen was built under
- New Salem hill, close to the mill.... I know where those
- rails are now; are sound to-day."--Minter Graham
-
-He could read, write, and cipher as well as most men; but as his
-popularity was growing daily, and his ambition keeping pace, he feared
-that he might shortly be called to act in some public capacity which
-would require him to speak his own language with some regard to the
-rules of the grammar,--of which, according to his own confession,
-he knew nothing at all. He carried his troubles to the schoolmaster,
-saying, "I have a notion to study English grammar."--"If you expect to
-go before the public in any capacity," replied Mr. Graham, "I think it
-the best thing you can do."--"If I had a grammar," replied Abe, "I would
-commence now." There was no grammar to be had about New Salem; but the
-schoolmaster, having kept the run of that species of property, gladdened
-Abe's heart by telling him that he knew where there was one. Abe rose
-from the breakfast at which he was sitting, and learning that the book
-was at Vaner's, only six miles distant, set off after it as hard as
-he could tramp. It seemed to Mr. Graham a very little while until he
-returned and announced, with great pleasure, that he had it. "He then
-turned his immediate and most undivided attention" to the study of it.
-Sometimes, when business was not particularly brisk, he would lie under
-a shade-tree in front of the store, and pore over the book; at other
-times a customer would find him stretched on the counter intently
-engaged in the same way. But the store was a bad place for study; and he
-was often seen quietly slipping out of the village, as if he wished to
-avoid observation, when, if successful in getting off alone, he would
-spend hours in the woods, "mastering a book," or in a state of profound
-abstraction. He kept up his old habit of sitting up late at night; but,
-as lights were as necessary to his purpose as they were expensive, the
-village cooper permitted him to sit in his shop, where he burnt the
-shavings, and kept a blazing fire to read by, when every one else was in
-bed. The Greens lent him books; the schoolmaster gave him instructions
-in the store, on the road, or in the meadows: every visitor to New Salem
-who made the least pretension to scholarship was waylaid by Abe, and
-required to explain something which he could not understand. The result
-of it all was, that the village and the surrounding country wondered at
-his growth in knowledge, and he soon became as famous for the goodness
-of his understanding as for the muscular power of his body, and the
-unfailing humor of his talk.
-
-Early in the spring of 1832, some enterprising gentlemen at Springfield
-determined to try whether the Sangamon was a navigable stream or not. It
-was a momentous question to the dwellers along the banks; and, when the
-steamboat "Talisman" was chartered to make the experiment, the popular
-excitement was intense, and her passage up and down was witnessed by
-great concourses of people on either bank. It was thought that Abe's
-experience on this particular river would render his assistance
-very valuable; and, in company with some others, he was sent down to
-Beardstown, to meet the "Talisman," and pilot her up. With Abe at the
-helm, she ran with comparative ease and safety as far as the New-Salem
-dam, a part of which they were compelled to tear away in order to let
-the steamer through. Thence she went on as high as Bogue's mill; but,
-having reached that point, the rapidly-falling water admonished her
-captain and pilots, that, unless they wished her to be left there for
-the season, they must promptly turn her prow down stream. For some time,
-on the return trip, she made not more than three or four miles a day,
-"on account of the high wind from the prairie." "I was sent for, being
-an old boatman," says J. R. Herndon, "and I met her some twelve or
-thirteen miles above New Salem.... We got to Salem the second day after
-I went on board. When we struck the dam, she hung. We then backed off,
-and threw the anchor over the dam, and tore away a part of the dam, and,
-raising steam, ran her over the first trial. As soon as she was over,
-the company that chartered her was done with her. I think the captain
-gave Mr. Lincoln forty dollars to run her down to Beardstown. I am sure
-I got forty dollars to continue on her until we landed at Beardstown. We
-that went down with her walked back to New Salem."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-IN the spring of 1832, Mr. Offutt's business had gone to ruin: the store
-was sold out, the mill was handed over to its owners, Mr. Offutt himself
-departed for parts unknown, and his "head clerk" was again out of work.
-Just about that time a governor's proclamation arrived, calling for
-volunteers to meet the famous chief Black Hawk and his warriors, who
-were preparing for a grand, and, in all likelihood, a bloody foray, into
-their old hunting-grounds in the Rock-river country.
-
-[Illustration: Black Hawk, Indian Chief 128]
-
-Black Hawk was a large Indian, of powerful frame and commanding
-presence. He was a soldier and a statesman. The history of his diplomacy
-with the tribes he sought to confederate shows that he expected to
-realize on a smaller scale the splendid plans of Pontiac and Tecumseh.
-In his own tongue he was eloquent, and dreamed dreams which, amongst the
-Indians, passed for prophecy. The prophet is an indispensable personage
-in any comprehensive scheme of Indian politics, and no chief has ever
-effected a combination of formidable strength without his aid. In the
-person of Black Hawk, the chief and the prophet were one. His power in
-both capacities was bent toward a single end,--the great purpose of his
-life,--the recovery of his birthplace and the ancient home of his people
-from the possession of the stranger.
-
-Black Hawk was born on the Rock River in Wisconsin, in the year 1767.
-His grandfather lived near Montreal, whence his father Pyesa had
-emigrated, but not until he had become thoroughly British in his views
-and feelings. All his life long he made annual journeys to the councils
-of the tribes at Malden, where the gifts and persuasions of British
-agents confirmed him in his inclination to the British interests. When
-Pyesa was gathered to his fathers, his son took his place as the chief
-of the Sacs, hated the Americans, loved the friendly English, and went
-yearly to Malden, precisely as he thought Pyesa would have had him do.
-But Black Hawk's mind was infinitely superior to Pyesa's: his sentiments
-were loftier, his heart more susceptible; he had the gift of the seer,
-the power of the orator, with the high courage and the profound policy
-of a born warrior and a natural ruler. He "had brooded over the early
-history of his tribe; and to his views, as he looked down the vista of
-years, the former times seemed so much better than the present, that the
-vision wrought upon his susceptible imagination, which pictured it to be
-the Indian golden age. He had some remembrance of a treaty made by Gen.
-Harrison in 1804, to which his people had given their assent; and his
-feelings were with difficulty controlled, when he was required to leave
-the Rock-river Valley, in compliance with a treaty made with Gen. Scott.
-That valley, however, he peacefully abandoned with his tribe, on being
-notified, and went to the west of the Mississippi; but he had spent
-his youth in that locality, and the more he thought of it, the more
-determined he was to return thither. He readily enlisted the sympathies
-of the Indians, who are ever prone to ponder on their real or imaginary
-wrongs; and it may be readily conjectured that what Indian counsel could
-not accomplish, Indian prophecy would."1 He had moved when summoned to
-move, because he was then unprepared to fight; but he utterly denied
-that the chiefs who seemed to have ceded the lands long years before had
-any right to cede them, or that the tribe had ever willingly given up
-the country to the stranger and the aggressor. It was a fraud upon the
-simple Indians: the old treaty was a great lie, and the signatures
-it purported to have, made with marks and primitive devices, were not
-attached in good faith, and were not the names of honest Sacs. No: he
-would go over the river, he would have his own; the voice of the Great
-Spirit was in the air wherever he went; it was in his lodge through all
-the night-time, and it said "Go;" and Black Hawk must needs rise up and
-tell the people what the voice said.
-
- 1 Schoolcraft's History of the Indian Tribes.
-
-It was by such arguments as these that Black Hawk easily persuaded the
-Sacs. But hostilities by the Sacs alone would be a hopeless adventure.
-He must find allies. He looked first to their kindred, the Foxes, who
-had precisely the same cause of war with the Sacs, and after them to the
-Winnebagoes, Sioux, Kickapoos, and many others. That Black Hawk was
-a wise and valiant leader, all the Indians conceded; and his proposals
-were heard by some of the tribes with eagerness, and by all of them with
-respect. At one time his confederacy embraced nine tribes,--the most
-formidable in the North-west, if we exclude the Sioux and the Chippewas,
-who were themselves inclined to accede. Early in 1831, the first chief
-of the Chippewas exhibited a miniature tomahawk, red with vermilion,
-which, having been accepted from Black Hawk, signified an alliance
-between them; and away up at Leech. Lake, an obscure but numerous band
-showed some whites a few British medals painted in imitation of blood,
-which meant that they were to follow the war-paths of Black Hawk.
-
-In 1831 Black Hawk had crossed the river in small force, but had retired
-before the advance of Gen. Gaines, commanding the United States post at
-Rock Island. He then promised to remain on the other side, and to keep
-quiet for the future. But early in the spring of 1832 he re-appeared
-with greater numbers, pushed straight into the Rock-river Valley, and
-said he had "come to plant corn." He was now sixty-seven years of age:
-he thought his great plots were all ripe, and his allies fast and true.
-They would fight a few bloody battles, and then he would sit down in his
-old age and see the corn grow where he had seen it in his youth. But the
-old chief reckoned too much upon Indian fidelity: he committed the fatal
-error of trusting to their patriotism instead of their interests. Gen.
-Atkinson, now in command at Rock Island, set the troops in motion: the
-governor issued his call for volunteers; and, as the Indians by this
-time had committed some frightful barbarities, the blood of the settlers
-was boiling, and the regiments were almost instantly filled with the
-best possible material. So soon as these facts became known, the allies
-of Black Hawk, both the secret and the open, fell away from him, and
-left him, with the Sacs and the Foxes, to meet his fate.
-
-In the mean time Lincoln had enlisted in a company from Sangamon. He had
-not been out in the campaign of the previous year, but told his friend
-Row Herndon, that, if he had not been down the river with Offutt,
-he would certainly have been with the boys in the field. But,
-notwithstanding his want of military experience, his popularity was
-so great, that he had been elected captain of a militia company on the
-occasion of a muster at Clary's Grove the fall before. He was absent at
-the time, but thankfully accepted and served. Very much to his surprise,
-his friends put him up for the captaincy of this company about to enter
-active service. They did not organize at home, however, but marched
-first to Beardstown, and then to Rushville in Schuyler County, where the
-election took place. Bill Kirkpatrick was a candidate against Lincoln,
-but made a very sorry showing. It has been said that Lincoln once worked
-for Kirkpatrick as a common laborer, and suffered some indignities
-at his hands; but the story as a whole is supported by no credible
-testimony. It is certain, however, that the planks for the boat built by
-Abe and his friends at the mouth of Spring Creek were sawed at the mill
-of a Mr. Kirkpatrick. It was then, likely enough, that Abe fell in the
-way of this man, and learned to dislike him. At all events, when he had
-distanced Kirkpatrick, and was chosen his captain by the suffrages of
-men who had been intimate with Kirkpatrick long before they had ever
-heard of Abe, he spoke of him spitefully, and referred in no gentle
-terms to some old dispute. "Damn him," said he to Green, "I've beat him:
-he used me badly in our settlement for my toil."
-
-Capt. Lincoln now made a very modest speech to his comrades, reciting
-the exceeding gratification their partiality afforded him, how
-undeserved he thought it, and how wholly unexpected it was. In
-conclusion, "he promised very plainly that he would do the best he could
-to prove himself worthy of that confidence."
-
-The troops rendezvoused at Beardstown and Rushville were formed into
-four regiments and a spy battalion. Capt. Lincoln's company was attached
-to the regiment of Col. Samuel Thompson. The whole force was placed
-under the command of Gen. Whiteside, who was accompanied throughout the
-campaign by the governor in person.
-
-On the 27th of April, the army marched toward the mouth of Rock River,
-by way of Oquaka on the Mississippi. The route was one of difficulty and
-danger, a great part of it lying through a country largely occupied
-by the enemy. The men were raw, and restive under discipline. In the
-beginning they had no more respect for the "rules and regulations" than
-for Solomon's Proverbs, or the Westminster Confession. Capt. Lincoln's
-company is said to have been a particularly "hard set of men," who
-recognized no power but his. They were fighting men, and but for his
-personal authority would have kept the camp in a perpetual uproar.
-
-At the crossing of Henderson River,--a stream about fifty yards wide,
-and eight or ten feet deep, with very precipitous banks,--they were
-compelled to make a bridge or causeway with timbers cut by the troops,
-and a filling-in of bushes, earth, or any other available material. This
-was the work of a day and night. Upon its completion, the horses and
-oxen were taken from the wagons, and the latter taken over by hand. But,
-when the horses came to cross, many of them were killed in sliding down
-the steep banks. "While in camp here," says a private in Capt. Lincoln's
-company, "a general order was issued prohibiting the discharge of
-fire-arms within fifty steps of the camp. Capt. Lincoln disobeyed the
-order by firing his pistol within ten steps of the camp, and for this
-violation of orders was put under arrest for that day, and his sword
-taken from him; but the next day his sword was restored, and nothing
-more was done in the matter."
-
-From Henderson River the troops marched to Yellow Banks, on the
-Mississippi. "While at this place," Mr. Ben F. Irwin says, "a
-considerable body of Indians of the Cherokee tribe came across the river
-from the Iowa side, with the white flag hoisted. These were the
-first Indians we saw. They were very friendly, and gave us a general
-war-dance. We, in return, gave them a Sucker ho-down. All enjoyed the
-sport, and it is safe to say no man enjoyed it more than Capt. Lincoln."
-
-From Yellow Banks, a rapid and exhaustive march of a few days brought
-the volunteers to the mouth of Rock River, where "it was agreed between
-Gen. Whiteside and Gen. Atkinson of the regulars, that the volunteers
-should march up Rock River, about fifty miles, to the Prophet's Town,
-and there encamp, to feed and rest their horses, and await the arrival
-of the regular troops, in keel-boats, with provisions. Judge William
-Thomas, who again acted as quartermaster to the volunteers, made an
-estimate of the amount of provisions required until the boats could
-arrive, which was supplied; and then Gen. Whiteside took up his line
-of march." 1 But Capt. Lincoln's company did not march on the present
-occasion with the alacrity which distinguished their comrades of other
-corps. The orderly sergeant attempted to "form company," but the company
-declined to be formed; the men, oblivious of wars and rumors of wars,
-mocked at the word of command, and remained between their blankets in
-a state of serene repose. For an explanation of these signs of passive
-mutiny, we must resort again to the manuscript of the private who gave
-the story of Capt. Lincoln's first arrest. "About the--of April, we
-reached the mouth of Rock River. About three or four nights afterwards,
-a man named Rial P. Green, commonly called 'Pot Green,' belonging to
-a Green-county company, came to oar company, and waked up the men, and
-proposed to them, that, if they would furnish him with a tomahawk and
-four buckets, he would get into the officers' liquors, and supply the
-men with wines and brandies. The desired articles were furnished him;
-and, with the assistance of one of our company, he procured the liquors.
-All this was entirely unknown to Capt. Lincoln. In the morning. Capt.
-Lincoln ordered his orderly to form company for parade; but when the
-orderly called the men to 'parade,' they called 'parade,' too, but
-couldn't fall into line. The most of the men were unmistakably drunk.
-The rest of the forces marched off, and left Capt. Lincoln's company
-behind. The company didn't make a start until about ten o'clock, and
-then, after marching about two miles, the drunken ones lay down and
-slept their drunk off. They overtook the forces that night. Capt.
-Lincoln was again put under arrest, and was obliged to carry a wooden
-sword for two days, and this although Capt. Lincoln was entirely
-blameless in the matter."
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois, chap. iv.
-
-When Gen. Whiteside reached Prophetstown, where he was to rest until
-the arrival of the regulars and the supplies, he disregarded the plan of
-operations concerted between him and Atkinson, and, burning the village
-to the ground, pushed on towards Dixon's Ferry, forty miles farther up
-the river. Nearing that place, he left his baggage-wagons behind: the
-men threw away their allotments of provisions, or left them with the
-wagons; and in that condition a forced march was made to Dixon. There
-Whiteside found two battalions of mounted men under Majors Stillman and
-Bailey, who clamored to be thrown forward, where they might get up an
-independent but glorious "brush" with the enemy on comparatively private
-account. The general had it not in his heart to deny these adventurous
-spirits, and they were promptly advanced to feel and disclose the Indian
-force supposed to be near at hand. Stillman accordingly moved up the
-bank of "Old Man's Creek" (since called "Stillman's Run"), to a point
-about twenty miles from Dixon, where, just before nightfall, he went
-into camp, or was about to do so, when several Indians were seen
-hovering along some raised ground nearly a mile distant. Straightway
-Stillman's gallant fellows remounted, one by one, or two and two, and,
-without officers or orders, galloped away in pursuit. The Indians first
-shook a red flag, and then dashed off at the top of their speed. Three
-of them were overtaken and killed: but the rest performed with perfect
-skill the errand upon which they were sent; they led Stillman's command
-into an ambuscade, where lay Black Hawk himself with seven hundred of
-his warriors. The pursuers recoiled, and rode for their lives: Black
-Hawk bore down upon Stillman's camp; the fugitives, streaming back with
-fearful cries respecting the numbers and ferocity of the enemy, spread
-consternation through the entire force. Stillman gave a hasty order
-to fall back; and the men fell back much faster and farther than he
-intended, for they never faced about, or so much as stopped, until they
-reached Whiteside's camp at Dixon. The first of them reached Dixon about
-twelve o'clock; and others came straggling in all night long and part of
-the next day, each party announcing themselves as the sole survivors
-of that stricken field, escaped solely by the exercise of miraculous
-valor.1
-
- 1 "It is said that a big, tall Kentuckian, with a very loud
- voice, who was a colonel of the militia, but a private with
- Stillman, upon his arrival in camp, gave to Gen. Whiteside
- and the wondering multitude the following glowing and
- bombastic account of the battle. 'Sirs,' said he, 'our
- detachment was encamped amongst some scattering timber on
- the north side of Old Man's Creek, with the prairie from the
- north gently sloping down to our encampment. It was just
- after twilight, in the gloaming of the evening, when we
- discovered Black Hawk's army coming down upon us in solid
- column: they displayed in the form of a crescent upon the
- brow of the prairie, and such accuracy and precision of
- military movements were never witnessed by man; they were
- equal to the best troops of Wellington in Spain. I have said
- that the Indians came down in solid column, and displayed in
- the form of a crescent; and, what was most wonderful, there
- were large squares of cavalry resting upon the points of the
- curve, which squares were supported again by other columns
- fifteen deep, extending back through the woods, and over a
- swamp three-quarters of a mile, which again rested upon the
- main body of Black Hawk's army bivouacked upon the banks of
- the Kishwakee. It was a terrible and a glorious sight to see
- the tawny warriors as they rode along our flanks attempting
- to outflank us with the glittering moonbeams glistening from
- their polished blades and burnished spears. It was a sight
- well calculated to strike consternation into the stoutest
- and boldest heart; and accordingly our men soon began to
- break in small squads for tall timber. In a very little time
- the rout became general. The Indians were on our flanks, and
- threatened the destruction of the entire detachment. About
- this time Major Stillman, Col. Stephenson, Major Perkins,
- Capt. Adams, Mr. Hackelton, and myself, with some others,
- threw ourselves into the rear to rally the fugitives and
- protect the retreat. But in A short time all my companions
- fell, bravely fighting hand to hand with the savage enemy,
- and I alone was left upon the field of battle. About this
- time I discovered not far to the left, a corps of horsemen
- which seemed to be in tolerable order. I immediately
- deployed to the left, when, leaning down and placing my body
- in a recumbent posture upon the mane of my horse, so as to
- bring the heads of the horsemen between my eye and the
- horizon, I discovered by the light of the moon that they
- were gentlemen who did not wear hats, by which token I knew
- they were no friends of mine. I therefore made a retrograde
- movement, and recovered my former position, where I remained
- some time, meditating what further I could do in the service
- of my country, when a random ball came whistling by my ear,
- and plainly whispered to me, "Stranger, you have no further
- business here." Upon hearing this, I followed the example of
- my companions in arms, and broke for tall timber, and the
- way I run was not a little, and quit.'
-
- "This colonel was a lawyer just returning from the circuit,
- with a slight wardrobe and 'Chitty's Pleadings' packed in
- his saddle-bags, all of which were captured by the Indians.
- He afterwards related, with much vexation, that Black Hawk
- had decked himself out in his finery, appearing in the woods
- amongst his savage companions dressed in one of the
- colonel's ruffled shirts drawn over his deer-skin leggings,
- with a volume of 'Chitty's Pleadings' under each arm."--
- Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-The affair is known to history as "Stillman's Defeat." "Old John Hanks"
-was in it, and speaks of it with shame and indignation, attributing the
-disaster to "drunken men, cowardice, and folly," though in this case
-we should be slow to adopt his opinion. Of folly, there was, no doubt,
-enough, both on the part of Whiteside and Stillman; but of drunkenness
-no public account makes any mention, and individual cowardice is never
-to be imputed to American troops. These men were as brave as any that
-ever wore a uniform, and some of them performed good service afterwards;
-but when they went into this action, they were "raw militia,"--a mere
-mob; and no mob can stand against discipline, even though it be but the
-discipline of the savage.
-
-The next day Whiteside moved with all possible celerity to the field
-of Stillman's disaster, and, finding no enemy, was forced to content
-himself with the melancholy duty of burying the mutilated and unsightly
-remains of the dead. All of them were scalped; some had their heads cut
-off, others had their throats cut, and others still were mangled and
-dishonored in ways too shocking to be told.
-
-The army was now suffering for want of provisions. The folly of the
-commander in casting off his baggage-train for the forced march on
-Dixon, the extravagance and improvidence of the men with their scanty
-rations, had exhausted the resources of the quartermasters, and, "except
-in the messes of the most careful and experienced," the camp was nearly
-destitute of food. "The majority had been living on parched corn and
-coffee for two or three days;" but, on the morning of the last march
-from Dixon, Quartermaster Thomas had succeeded in getting a little fresh
-beef from the only white inhabitant of that country, and this the men
-were glad to eat without bread. "I can truly say I was often hungry,"
-said Capt. Lincoln, reviewing the events of this campaign. He was,
-doubtless, as destitute and wretched as the rest, but he was patient,
-quiet, and resolute. Hunger brought with it a discontented and mutinous
-spirit. The men complained bitterly of all they had been made to endure,
-and clamored loudly for a general discharge. But Capt. Lincoln kept
-the "even tenor of his way;" and, when his regiment was disbanded,
-immediately enlisted as a private soldier in another company.
-
-From the battle-field Whiteside returned to his old camp at Dixon, but
-determined, before doing so, to make one more attempt to retrieve his
-ill-fortune. Black Hawk's pirogues were supposed to be lying a few miles
-distant, in a bend of the Rock River; and the capture of these would
-serve as some relief to the dreary series of errors and miscarriages
-which had hitherto marked the campaign. But Black Hawk had just been
-teaching him strategy in the most effective mode, and the present
-movement was undertaken with an excess of caution almost as ludicrous as
-Stillman's bravado. "To provide as well as might be against danger, one
-man was started at a time in the direction of the point. When he would
-get a certain distance, keeping in sight, a second would start, and so
-on, until a string of men extending five miles from the main army was
-made, each to look out for Indians, and give the sign to right, left, or
-front, by hanging a hat on a bayonet,--erect for the front, and right or
-left, as the case might be. To raise men to go ahead was with difficulty
-done, and some tried hard to drop back; but we got through safe, and
-found the place deserted, leaving plenty of Indian signs,--a dead dog
-and several scalps taken in Stillman's defeat, as we supposed them
-to have been taken." After this, the last of Gen. Whiteside's futile
-attempts, he returned to the battle-field, and thence to Dixon, where
-he was joined by Atkinson with the regulars and the long-coveted and
-much-needed supplies.
-
-One day, during these many marches and countermarches, an old Indian
-found his way into the camp, weary, hungry, and helpless. He professed
-to be a friend of the whites; and, although it was an exceedingly
-perilous experiment for one of his color, he ventured to throw himself
-upon the mercy of the soldiers. But the men first murmured, and then
-broke out into fierce cries for his blood. "We have come out to fight
-the Indians," said they, "and by God we intend to do it!" The poor
-Indian, now, in the extremity of his distress and peril, did what he
-ought to have done before: he threw down before his assailants a soiled
-and crumpled paper, which he implored them to read before his life was
-taken. It was a letter of character and safe-conduct from Gen. Cass,
-pronouncing him a faithful man, who had done good service in the cause
-for which this army was enlisted. But it was too late: the men refused
-to read it, or thought it a forgery, and were rushing with fury upon
-the defenceless old savage, when Capt. Lincoln bounded between them
-and their appointed victim. "Men," said he, and his voice for a moment
-stilled the agitation around him, "_this must not be done: he must not
-be shot and killed by us._"--"But," said some of them, "the Indian is a
-damned spy." Lincoln knew that his own life was now in only less danger
-than that of the poor creature that crouched behind him. During the
-whole of this scene Capt. Lincoln seemed to "rise to an unusual height"
-of stature. The towering form, the passion and resolution in his face,
-the physical power and terrible will exhibited in every motion of his
-body, every gesture of his arm, produced an effect upon the furious mob
-as unexpected perhaps to him as to any one else. They paused, listened,
-fell back, and then sullenly obeyed what seemed to be the voice of
-reason, as well as authority. But there were still some murmurs of
-disappointed rage, and half-suppressed exclamations, which looked
-towards vengeance of some kind. At length one of the men, a little
-bolder than the rest, but evidently feeling that he spoke for the whole,
-cried out, "This is cowardly on your part, Lincoln!" Whereupon the tall
-captain's figure stretched a few inches higher again. He looked down
-upon these varlets who would have murdered a defenceless old Indian, and
-now quailed before his single hand, with lofty contempt. The oldest of
-his acquaintances, even Bill Green, who saw him grapple Jack Armstrong
-and defy the bullies at his back, never saw him so much "aroused"
-before. "If any man thinks I am a coward, let him test it," said he.
-"Lincoln," responded a new voice, "you are larger and heavier than we
-are."--"This you can guard against: choose your weapons," returned the
-rigid captain. Whatever may be said of Mr. Lincoln's choice of means for
-the preservation of military discipline, it was certainly very effectual
-in this case. There was no more disaffection in his camp, and the word
-"coward" was never coupled with his name again. Mr. Lincoln understood
-his men better than those who would be disposed to criticise his
-conduct. He has often declared himself, that his life and character were
-both at stake, and would probably have been lost, had he not at that
-supremely critical moment forgotten the officer and asserted the man. To
-have ordered the offenders under arrest would have created a formidable
-mutiny; to have tried and punished them would have been impossible. They
-could scarcely be called soldiers: they were merely armed citizens, with
-a nominal military organization. They were but recently enlisted, and
-their term of service was just about to expire. Had he preferred charges
-against them, and offered to submit their differences to a court of any
-sort, it would have been regarded as an act of personal pusillanimity,
-and his efficiency would have been gone forever.
-
-Lincoln was believed to be the strongest man in his regiment, and no
-doubt was. He was certainly the best wrestler in it, and after they left
-Beardstown nobody ever disputed the fact. He is said to have "done the
-wrestling for the company;" and one man insists that he _always_ had a
-handkerchief tied around his person, in readiness for the sport. For a
-while it was firmly believed that no man in the _army_ could throw him
-down. His company confidently pitted him "against the field," and were
-willing to bet all they had on the result. At length, one Mr. Thompson
-came forward and accepted the challenge. He was, in fact, the most
-famous wrestler in the Western country. It is not certain that the
-report of his achievements had ever reached the ears of Mr. Lincoln or
-his friends; but at any rate they eagerly made a match with him as a
-champion not unworthy of their own. Thompson's power and skill, however,
-were as well known to certain persons in the army as Mr. Lincoln's were
-to others. Each side was absolutely certain of the victory, and bet
-according to their faith. Lincoln's company and their sympathizers
-put up all their portable property, and some perhaps not their own,
-including "knives, blankets, tomahawks," and all the most necessary
-articles of a soldier's outfit.
-
-When the men first met, Lincoln was convinced that he could throw
-Thompson; but, after tussling with him a brief space in presence of the
-anxious assemblage, he turned to his friends and said, "This is the most
-powerful man I ever had hold of. He will throw me, and you will lose
-your all, unless I act on the defensive." He managed, nevertheless, "to
-hold him off for some time;" but at last Thompson got the "crotch hoist"
-on him, and, although Lincoln attempted with all his wonderful strength
-to break the hold by "sliding" away, a few moments decided his fate: he
-was fairly thrown. As it required two out of three falls to decide the
-bets, Thompson and he immediately came together again, and with very
-nearly the same result. Lincoln fell under, but the other man fell too.
-There was just enough of uncertainty about it to furnish a pretext for
-a hot dispute and a general fight. Accordingly, Lincoln's men instantly
-began the proper preliminaries to a fracas. "We were taken by surprise,"
-says Mr. Green, "and, being unwilling to give up our property and lose
-our bets, got up an excuse as to the result. We declared the fall a kind
-of dog-fall; did so apparently angrily." The fight was coming on apace,
-and bade fair to be a big and bloody one, when Lincoln rose up and said,
-"Boys, the man actually threw me once fair, broadly so; and the second
-time, this very fall, he threw me fairly, though not so apparently so."
-He would countenance no disturbance, and his unexpected and somewhat
-astonishing magnanimity ended all attempts to raise one.
-
-Mr. Lincoln's good friend, Mr. Green, the principal, though not the
-sole authority for the present account of his adventure in behalf of the
-Indian and his wrestle with Thompson, mentions one important incident
-which is found in no other manuscript, and which gives us a glimpse of
-Mr. Lincoln in a scene of another sort. "One other word in reference to
-Mr. Lincoln's care for the health, welfare, and justice to his men. Some
-officers of the United States had claimed that the regular army had a
-preference in the rations and pay. Mr. Lincoln was ordered to do some
-act which he deemed unauthorized. He, however, obeyed, but went to the
-officer and said to him, 'Sir, you forget that we are not under the
-rules and regulations of the War Department at Washington; are only
-volunteers under the orders and regulations of Illinois. Keep in
-your own sphere, and there will be no difficulty; but resistance will
-hereafter be made to your unjust orders: and, further, my men must be
-equal in all particulars, in rations, arms, camps, &c., to the regular
-army. The man saw that Mr. Lincoln was right, and determined to have
-justice done. Always after this we were treated equally well, and just
-as the regular army was, in every particular. This brave, just, and
-humane act in behalf of the volunteers at once attached officers and
-rank to him, as with hooks of steel."
-
-When the army reached Dixon, the almost universal discontent of the men
-had grown so manifest and so ominous, that it could no longer be safely
-disregarded. They longed "for the flesh-pots of Egypt," and fiercely
-demanded their discharge. Although their time had not expired, it was
-determined to march them by way of Paw-Paw Grove to Ottawa, and there
-concede what the governor feared he had no power to withhold.
-
-"While on our march from Dixon to Fox River," says Mr. Irwin, "one night
-while in camp, which was formed in a square enclosing about forty acres,
-our horses, outside grazing, got scared about nine o'clock; and a grand
-stampede took place. They ran right through our lines in spite of us,
-and ran over many of us. No man knows what noise a thousand horses
-make running, unless he had been there: it beats a young earthquake,
-especially among scared men, and certain they were scared then. We
-expected the Indians to be on us that night. Fire was thrown, drums
-beat, fifes played, which added additional fright to the horses. We saw
-no real enemy that night, but a line of battle was formed. There were
-no eyes for sleep that night: we stood to our posts in line; and what
-frightened the horses is yet unknown."
-
-"During this short Indian campaign," continues the same gentleman, "we
-had some hard times,--often hungry; but we had a great deal of sport,
-especially of nights,---foot-racing, some horse-racing, jumping, telling
-anecdotes, in which Lincoln beat all, keeping up a constant laughter
-and good-humor all the time; among the soldiers some card-playing, and
-wrestling, in which Lincoln took a prominent part. I think it safe
-to say he was never thrown in a wrestle. [Mr. Irwin, it seems, still
-regards the Thompson affair as "a dog-fall."] While in the army, he kept
-a handkerchief tied around him near all the time for wrestling purposes,
-and loved the sport as well as any one could. He was seldom ever beat
-jumping. During the campaign, Lincoln himself was always ready for
-an emergency. He endured hardships like a good soldier: he never
-complained, nor did he fear danger. When fighting was expected, or
-danger apprehended, Lincoln was the first to say, 'Let's go.' He had
-the confidence of every man of his company, and they strictly obeyed his
-orders at a word. His company was all young men, and full of sport.
-
-"One night in Warren County, a white hog--a young sow--came into our
-lines, which showed more good sense, to my mind, than any hog I ever
-saw. This hog swam creeks and rivers, and went with us clear through
-to, I think, the mouth of Fox River; and there the boys killed it, or it
-would doubtless have come home with us. If it got behind in daylight as
-we were marching, which it did sometimes, it would follow on the
-track, and come to us at night. It was naturally the cleverest,
-friendly-disposed hog any man ever saw, and its untimely death was by
-many of us greatly deplored, for we all liked the hog for its friendly
-disposition and good manners; for it never molested any thing, and kept
-in its proper place."
-
-On the 28th of May the volunteers were discharged. The governor had
-already called for two thousand more men to take their places; but, in
-the mean time, he made the most strenuous efforts to organize a small
-force out of the recently discharged, to protect the frontiers until the
-new levies were ready for service. He succeeded in raising one regiment
-and a spy company. Many officers of distinction, among them Gen.
-Whiteside himself, enlisted as private soldiers, and served in that
-capacity to the end of the war. Capt. Lincoln became Private Lincoln of
-the "Independent Spy Company," Capt. Early commanding; and, although
-he was never in an engagement, he saw some hard service in scouting and
-trailing, as well as in carrying messages and reports.
-
-About the middle of June the new troops were ready for the field, and
-soon after moved up to Rock River. Meanwhile the Indians had overrun the
-country. "They had scattered their war-parties all over the North from
-Chicago to Galena, and from the Illinois River into the Territory of
-Wisconsin; they occupied every grove, waylaid every road, hung around
-every settlement, and attacked every party of white men that attempted
-to penetrate the country." There had been some desultory fighting at
-various points. Capt. Snyder, in whose company Gen. Whiteside was
-a private, had met the Indians at Burr Oak. Grove, and had a sharp
-engagement; Mr. St. Vrain, an Indian agent, with a small party of
-assistants, had been treacherously murdered near Fort Armstrong; several
-men had been killed at the lead mines, and the Wisconsin volunteers
-under Dodge had signally punished the Indians that killed them; Galena
-had been threatened and Fort Apple, twelve miles from Galena, had
-sustained a bloody siege of fifteen hours; Capt. Stephenson of Galena
-had performed an act which "equalled any thing in modern warfare in
-daring and desperate courage," by driving a party of Indians larger
-than his own detachment into a dense thicket, and there charging them
-repeatedly until he was compelled to retire, wounded himself, and
-leaving three of his men dead on the ground.
-
-Thenceforward the tide was fairly turned against Black Hawk. Twenty-four
-hundred men, under experienced officers, were now in the field against
-him; and, although he succeeded in eluding his pursuers for a brief
-time, every retreat was equivalent to a reverse in battle, and all his
-manoeuvres were retreats. In the latter part of July he was finally
-overtaken by the volunteers under Henry, along the bluffs of the
-Wisconsin River, and defeated in a decisive battle. His ruin was
-complete: he abandoned all hope of conquest, and pressed in disorderly
-and disastrous retreat toward the Mississippi, in vain expectation of
-placing that barrier between him and his enemy.
-
-On the fourth day, after crossing the Wisconsin, Gen. Atkinson's advance
-reached the high grounds near the Mississippi. Henry and his brigade,
-having won the previous victory, were placed at the rear in the order
-of march, with the ungenerous purpose of preventing them from winning
-another. But Black Hawk here resorted to a stratagem which very nearly
-saved the remnant of his people, and in the end completely foiled the
-intentions of Atkinson regarding Henry and his men. The old chief,
-with the high heart which even such a succession of reverses could not
-subdue, took twenty warriors and deliberately posted himself, determined
-to hold the army in check or lead it away on a false trail, while his
-main body was being transferred to the other bank of the river. He
-accordingly made his attack in a place where he was favored by trees,
-logs, and tall grass, which prevented the discovery of his numbers.
-Finding his advance engaged, Atkinson formed a line of battle, and
-ordered a charge; but Black Hawk conducted his retreat with such
-consummate skill that Atkinson believed he was just at the heels of the
-whole Indian army, and under this impression continued the pursuit far
-up the river.
-
-When Henry came up to the spot where the fight had taken place, he
-readily detected the trick by various evidences about the ground.
-Finding the main trail in the immediate vicinity, he boldly fell upon it
-without orders, and followed it until he came up with the Indians in
-a swamp on the margin of the river, where he easily surprised and
-scattered them. Atkinson, hearing the firing in the swamp, turned back,
-and arrived just in time to assist in the completion of the massacre. A
-few of the Indians had already crossed the river: a few had taken refuge
-on a little willow island in the middle of the stream. The island was
-charged,--the men wading to it in water up to their arm-pits,--the
-Indians were dislodged and killed on the spot, or shot in the water
-while attempting to swim to the western shore. Fifty prisoners only were
-taken, and the greater part of these were squaws and children. This
-was the battle of the Bad Axe,--a terrific slaughter, considering the
-numbers engaged, and the final ruin of Black Hawk's fortunes.
-
-Black Hawk and his twenty warriors, among whom was his own son, made
-the best of their way to the Dalles on the Wisconsin, where they seem to
-have awaited passively whatever fate their enemies should contrive for
-them. There were some Sioux and Winnebagoes in Atkinson's camp,--men who
-secretly pretended to sympathize with Black Hawk, and, while acting
-as guides to the army, had really led it astray on many painful and
-perilous marches. It is certain that Black Hawk had counted on the
-assistance of those tribes; but after the fight on the Wisconsin, even
-those who had consented to act as his emissaries about the person of
-the hostile commander not only deserted him, but volunteered to hunt him
-down. They now offered to find him, take him, and bring him in, provided
-that base and cowardly service should be suitably acknowledged. They
-were duly employed. Black Hawk became their prisoner, and was presented
-by them to the Indian agent with two or three shameless and disgusting
-speeches from his captors. He and his son were carried to Washington
-City, and then through the principal cities of the country, after which
-President Jackson released him from captivity, and sent him back to his
-own people. He lived to be eighty years old, honored and beloved by his
-tribe, and after his death was buried on an eminence overlooking
-the Mississippi, with such rites as are accorded only to the most
-distinguished of native captains,--sitting upright in war dress and
-paint, covered by a conspicuous mound of earth.
-
-We have given a rapid and perhaps an unsatisfactory sketch of the
-comparatively great events which brought the Black Hawk War to a close.
-So much at least was necessary, that the reader might understand the
-several situations in which Mr. Lincoln found himself during the short
-term of his second enlistment. We fortunately possess a narrative of his
-individual experience, covering the whole of that period, from the pen
-of George W. Harrison, his friend, companion, and messmate. It is given
-in full; for there is no part of it that would not be injured by the
-touch of another hand. It is an extremely interesting story, founded
-upon accurate personal knowledge, and told in a perspicuous and graphic
-style, admirably suited to the subject.
-
-"The new company thus formed was called the 'Independent Spy Company;'
-not being under the control of any regiment or brigade, but receiving
-orders directly from the commander-in-chief, and always, when with the
-army, camping within the lines, and having many other privileges, such
-as never having camp-duties to perform, drawing rations as much and as
-often as we pleased, &c, Dr. Early (deceased) of Springfield was elected
-captain. Five members constituted a tent, or 'messed' together. Qur mess
-consisted of Mr. Lincoln, Johnston (a half-brother of his), Fanchier,
-Wyatt, and myself. The 'Independent Spy Company' was used chiefly to
-carry messages, to send an express, to spy the enemy, and to ascertain
-facts. I suppose the nearest we were to doing battle was at Gratiot's
-Grove, near Galena. The spy company of Posey's brigade was many miles
-in advance of the brigade, when it stopped in the grove at noon for
-refreshments. Some of the men had turned loose their horses, and others
-still had theirs in hand, when five or six Sac and Fox Indians came near
-them. Many of the white men broke after them, some on horseback, some on
-foot, in great disorder and confusion, thinking to have much sport with
-their prisoners immediately. The Indians thus decoyed them about two
-miles from the little cabins in the grove, keeping just out of danger,
-when suddenly up sprang from the tall prairie grass two hundred and
-fifty painted warriors, with long spears in hand, and tomahawks and
-butcher-knives in their belts of deer-skin and buffalo, and raised such
-a yell that our friends supposed them to be more numerous than Black
-Hawk's whole clan, and, instantly filled with consternation, commenced
-to retreat. But the savages soon began to spear them, making it
-necessary to halt in the flight, and give them a fire, at which
-time they killed two Indians, one of them being a young chief gayly
-apparelled. Again, in the utmost horror, such as savage yells alone can
-produce, they fled for the little fort in the grove. Having arrived,
-they found the balance of their company, terrified by the screams of
-the whites and the yells of the savages, closely shut up in the double
-cabin, into which _they_ quickly plunged, and found the much-needed
-respite. The Indians then prowled around the grove, shooting nearly
-all the company's horses, and stealing the balance of them. There, from
-cracks between the logs of the cabin, three Indians were shot and
-killed in the act of reaching for the reins of bridles on horses.
-They endeavored to conceal their bodies by trees in an old field which
-surrounded the fort; but, reaching with sticks for bridles, they exposed
-their heads and necks, and all of them were shot with two balls each
-through the neck. These three, and the two killed where our men wheeled
-and fired, make five Indians known to be killed; and on their retreat
-from the prairie to the grove, five white men were cut into small
-pieces. The field of this action is the greatest battle-ground we saw.
-The dead still lay unburied until after we arrived at sunrise the next
-day. The forted men, fifty strong, had not ventured to go out until they
-saw us, when they rejoiced greatly that friends and not dreaded enemies
-had come. They looked like men just out of cholera,--having passed
-through the cramping stage. The only part we could then act was to seek
-the lost men, and with hatchets and hands to bury them. We buried the
-white men, and trailed the dead young chief where he had been drawn on
-the grass a half-mile, and concealed in the thicket. Those who trailed
-this once noble warrior, and found him, were Lincoln, I think, Wyatt,
-and myself. By order of Gen. Atkinson, our company started on this
-expedition one evening, travelled all night, and reached Gratiot's at
-sunrise. A few hours after, Gen. Posey came up to the fort with his
-brigade of nearly a thousand men, when he positively refused to pursue
-the Indians,--being strongly solicited by Capt. Early, Lincoln, and
-others,--squads of Indians still showing themselves in a menacing manner
-one and a half miles distant.
-
-"Our company was disbanded at Whitewater, Wis., a short time before the
-massacre at Bad Axe by Gen. Henry; and most of our men started for home
-on the following morning; but it so happened that the night previous
-to starting on this long trip, Lincoln's horse and mine were stolen,
-probably by soldiers of our own army, and we were thus compelled to
-start outside the cavalcade; but I laughed at our fate, and he joked at
-it, and we all started off merrily. But the generous men of our company
-walked and rode by turns with us; and we fared about equal with the
-rest. But for this generosity, our legs would have had to do the better
-work; for in that day, this then dreary route furnished no horses to buy
-or to steal; and, whether on horse or afoot, we always had company, for
-many of the horses' backs were too sore for riding.
-
-"Thus we came to Peoria: here we bought a canoe, in which we two paddled
-our way to Pekin. The other members of our company, separating in
-various directions, stimulated by the proximity of home, could never
-have consented to travel at our usual tardy mode. At Pekin, Lincoln made
-an oar with which to row our little boat, while I went through the town
-in order to buy provisions for the trip. One of us pulled away at the
-one oar, while the other sat astern to steer, or prevent circling. The
-river being very low was without current, so that we had to pull hard
-to make half the speed of legs on land,--in fact, we let her float all
-night, and on the next morning always found the objects still visible
-that were beside us the previous evening. The water was remarkably
-clear, for this river of plants, and the fish appeared to be sporting
-with us as we moved over or near them.
-
-"On the next day after we left Pekin, we overhauled a raft of saw-logs,
-with two men afloat on it to urge it on with poles and to guide it in
-the channel. We immediately pulled up to them and went on the raft,
-where we were made welcome by various demonstrations, especially by
-that of an invitation to a feast on fish, corn-bread, eggs, butter,
-and coffee, just prepared for our benefit. Of these good things we
-ate almost immoderately, for it was the only warm meal we had made for
-several days. While preparing it, and after dinner, Lincoln entertained
-them, and they entertained us for a couple of hours very amusingly.
-
-"This slow mode of travel was, at the time, a new mode, and the novelty
-made it for a short time agreeable. We descended the Illinois to
-Havana, where we sold our boat, and again set out the old way, over the
-sand-ridges for Petersburg. As we drew near home, the impulse became
-stronger, and urged us on amazingly. The long strides of Lincoln, often
-slipping back in the loose sand six inches every step, were just right
-for me; and he was greatly diverted when he noticed me behind him
-stepping along in his tracks to keep from slipping.
-
-"About three days after leaving the army at Whitewater, we saw a battle
-in full operation about two miles in advance of us. Lincoln was riding
-a young horse, the property of L. D. Matheny. I was riding a sprightly
-animal belonging to John T. Stuart. At the time we came in sight of the
-scene, our two voluntary footmen were about three-fourths of a mile in
-advance of us, and we about half a mile behind most of our company, and
-three or four on foot still behind us, leading some sore-backed horses.
-But the owners of our horses came running back, and, meeting us all in
-full speed, rightfully ordered us to dismount. We obeyed: they mounted,
-and all pressed on toward the conflict,--they on horseback, we on foot.
-In a few moments of hard walking and terribly close observation, Lincoln
-said to me, 'George, this can't be a very dangerous battle.' Reply:
-'Much shooting, nothing falls.' It was at once decided to be a sham for
-the purpose of training cavalry, instead of Indians having attacked a
-few white soldiers, and a few of our own men, on their way home, for the
-purpose of killing them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE volunteers from Sangamon returned to their homes shortly before the
-State election, at which, among other officers, assembly-men were to be
-chosen. Lincoln's popularity had been greatly enhanced by his service
-in the war, and some of his friends urged him with warm solicitations
-to become a candidate at the coming election. He prudently resisted, and
-declined to consent, alleging in excuse his limited acquaintance in the
-county at large, until Mr. James Rutledge, the founder of New Salem,
-added the weight of his advice to the nearly unanimous desire of the
-neighborhood. It is quite likely that his recent military career was
-thought to furnish high promise of usefulness in civil affairs; but Mr.
-Rutledge was sure that he saw another proof of his great abilities in a
-speech which Abe was induced to make, just about this time, before the
-New-Salem Literary Society. The following is an account of this speech
-by R. B. Rutledge, the son of James:--
-
-"About the year 1832 or 1833, Mr. Lincoln made his first effort
-at public speaking. A debating club, of which James Rutledge was
-president, was organized, and held regular meetings. As he arose to
-speak, his tall form towered above the little assembly. Both hands were
-thrust down deep in the pockets of his pantaloons. A perceptible smile
-at once lit up the faces of the audience, for all anticipated the
-relation of some humorous story. But he opened up the discussion in
-splendid style, to the infinite astonishment of his friends. As he
-warmed with his subject, his hands would forsake his pockets and would
-enforce his ideas by awkward gestures, but would very soon seek their
-easy resting-places. He pursued the question with reason and argument so
-pithy and forcible that all were amazed. The president at his fireside,
-after the meeting, remarked to his wife, that there was more in Abe's
-head than wit and fun; that he was already a fine speaker; that all he
-lacked was culture to enable him to reach the high destiny which he knew
-was in store for him. From that time Mr. Rutledge took a deeper interest
-in him.
-
-"Soon after Mr. Rutledge urged him to announce himself as a candidate
-for the Legislature. This he at first declined to do, averring that it
-was impossible to be elected. It was suggested that a canvass of the
-county would bring him prominently before the people, and in time would
-do him good. He reluctantly yielded to the solicitations of his friends,
-and made a partial canvass."
-
-In those days political animosities were fierce enough; but, owing to
-the absence of nominating conventions, party lines were not, as yet,
-very distinctly drawn in Illinois. Candidates announced themselves; but,
-usually, it was done after full consultation with influential friends,
-or persons of considerable power in the neighborhood of the candidate's
-residence. We have already seen the process by which Mr. Lincoln was
-induced to come forward. There were often secret combinations among a
-number of candidates, securing a mutual support; but in the present case
-there is no trace of such an understanding.
-
-This (1832) was the year of Gen. Jackson's election. The Democrats
-stigmatized their opponents as "Federalists," while the latter were
-steadily struggling to shuffle off the odious name. For the present they
-called themselves Democratic Republicans; and it was not until 1833 or
-1834, that they formally took to themselves the designation of Whig. The
-Democrats were known better as Jackson men than as Democrats, and were
-inexpressibly proud of either name. Four or five years afterward their
-enemies invented for their benefit the meaningless and hideous word
-"Locofoco."
-
-Since 1826 every general election in the State had resulted in a
-Democratic victory. The young men were mostly Democrats; and the most
-promising talents in the State were devoted to the cause, which seemed
-destined to achieve success wherever there was a contest. In a new
-country largely peopled by adventurers from older States, there were
-necessarily found great numbers who would attach themselves to the
-winning side merely because it was the winning side.
-
-It is unnecessary to restate here the prevailing questions in national
-politics,--Jackson's stupendous struggle with the bank, "hard money,"
-"no monopoly," internal improvements, the tariff, and nullification, or
-the personal and political relations of the chieftains,--Jackson, Clay,
-and Calhoun. Mr. Lincoln will shortly disclose in one of his speeches
-from the stump which of those questions were of special interest to the
-people of Illinois, and consequently which of them principally occupied
-his own attention.
-
-The Democrats were divided into "whole-hog men" and "nominal Jackson
-men;" the former being thoroughly devoted to the fortunes and principles
-of their leader, while the latter were willing to trim a little for the
-sake of popular support. It is probable that Mr. Lincoln might be fairly
-classed as a "nominal Jackson man," although the precise character of
-some of the views he then held, or is supposed to have held, on
-national questions, is involved in considerable doubt. He had not wholly
-forgotten Jones, or Jones's teachings. He still remembered his high
-disputes with Offutt in the shanty at Spring Creek, when he effectually
-defended Jackson against the "abuse" of his employer. He was not Whig,
-but "Whiggish," as Dennis Hanks expresses it. It is not likely that a
-man who deferred so habitually to the popular sentiment around him would
-have selected the occasion of his settlement in a new place to go over
-bodily to a hopeless political minority. At all events, we have at least
-three undisputed facts, which make it plain that he then occupied an
-intermediate position between the extremes of all parties. First, he
-received the votes of all parties at New Salem; second, he was the next
-year appointed postmaster by Gen. Jackson; and, third, the Democrats ran
-him for the legislature two years afterwards; and he was elected by a
-larger majority than any other candidate.
-
-"Our old way of conducting elections," says Gov. Ford, "required each
-aspirant to announce himself as a candidate. The most prudent, however,
-always consulted a little caucus of select, influential friends. The
-candidates then travelled around the county, or State, in proper
-person, making speeches, conversing with the people, soliciting votes,
-whispering slanders against their opponents, and defending themselves
-against the attacks of their adversaries; but it was not always best
-to defend against such attacks. A candidate in a fair way to be elected
-should never deny any charge made against him; for, if he does, his
-adversaries will prove all that they have said, and much more. As a
-candidate did not offer himself as the champion of any party, he usually
-agreed with all opinions, and promised every thing demanded by the
-people, and most usually promised, either directly or indirectly, his
-support to all the other candidates at the same election. One of the
-arts was to raise a quarrel with unpopular men who were odious to the
-people, and then try to be elected upon the unpopularity of others, as
-well as upon his own popularity. These modes of electioneering were not
-true of all the candidates, nor perhaps of half of them, very many of
-them being gentlemen of first-class integrity."
-
-That portion of the people whose influence lay in their fighting
-qualities, and who were prone to carry a huge knife in the belt of
-the hunting-shirt, were sometimes called the "butcher-knife boys," and
-sometimes "the half-horse and half-alligator men." This class, according
-to Gov. Ford, "made a kind of balance-of-power party." Their favorite
-was sure of success; and nearly all political contests were decided by
-"butcher-knife influence." "In all elections and in all enactments of
-the Legislature, great pains were taken by all candidates, and all
-men in office, to make their course and measures acceptable" to these
-knights of steel and muscle.
-
-At a later date they enjoyed a succession of titles, such as "barefoot
-boys," "the flat-footed boys," and "the big-pawed boys."
-
-In those times, Gov. Ford avers that he has seen all the rum-shops and
-groceries of the principal places of a county chartered by candidates,
-and kept open for the gratuitous accommodation of the free and
-independent electors for several weeks before the vote. Every Saturday
-afternoon the people flocked to the county-seat, to see the candidates,
-to hear speeches, to discuss prospects, to get drunk and fight.
-
-"Toward evening they would mount their ponies, go reeling from side
-to side, galloping through town, and throwing up their caps and hats,
-screeching like so many infernal spirits broke loose from their nether
-prison; and thus they separated for their homes." These observations
-occur in Ford's account of the campaign of 1830, which resulted in the
-choice of Gov. Reynolds,--two years before Mr. Lincoln first became a
-candidate,--and lead us to suppose that the body of electors before whom
-that gentleman presented himself were none too cultivated or refined.
-
-Mr. Lincoln's first appearance on the stump, in the course of the
-canvass, was at Pappsville, about eleven miles west of Springfield, upon
-the occasion of a public sale by the firm of Poog & Knap. The sale
-over, speech-making was about to begin, when Mr. Lincoln observed strong
-symptoms of inattention in his audience, who had taken that particular
-moment to engage in what Mr. James A. Herndon pronounces "a general
-fight." Lincoln saw that one of his friends was suffering more than he
-liked in the _mêlée_; and, stepping into the crowd, he shouldered them
-sternly away from his man, until he met a fellow who refused to
-fall back: him he seized by the nape of the neck and the seat of
-his breeches, and tossed him "ten or twelve feet easily." After this
-episode,--as characteristic of him as of the times,--he mounted the
-platform, and delivered, with awkward modesty, the following speech:--
-
-"Gentlemen and Fellow-Citizens, I presume you all know who I am. I am
-humble Abraham Lincoln. I have been solicited by many friends to become
-a candidate for the Legislature. My politics are short and sweet, like
-the old woman's dance. I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor
-of the internal-improvement system and a high protective tariff. These
-are my sentiments and political principles. If elected, I shall be
-thankful; if not, it will be all the same."
-
-In these few sentences Mr. Lincoln adopted the leading principles of the
-Whig party,--Clay's "American System" in full. In his view, as we
-shall see by another paper from him when again a candidate in 1834, the
-internal-improvement system required the distribution of the proceeds
-of the sales of the public lands amongst the States. He says nothing of
-South Carolina, of nullification, of disunion; and on these subjects it
-is quite probable his views were like Mr. Webster's, and his sympathies
-with Jackson. The opinions announced in this speech, on all the subjects
-touched by the speaker, were as emphatically Whig as they could be
-made in words; yet as far as they related to internal improvements, and
-indirectly favored the increase of bank issues, they were such as most
-of the "nominal Jackson men" in Illinois professed to hold, and such as
-they united with the Whigs to enforce, then and afterwards, in the State
-Legislature. The "whole-hog men" would have none of them, and therein
-lay the distinction. Although the Democratic party continued to have a
-numerical majority for many years in the Legislature, the nominal men
-and the Whigs coalesced to control legislation in accordance with Whig
-doctrines. Even with such a record made and making by them, the "nominal
-men" persisted in calling themselves Democrats, while Jackson was
-vetoing the Maysville Road Bill, grappling with the National Bank, and
-exposing the oppressive character of the Tariff Act then in force, which
-imposed the highest scale of duties since the first enactment for
-"protection" in 1816. It was their practice to run men like themselves
-for the State offices where the chances of a plain-spoken Whig were
-hopeless; and, by means of the "nominal" character of the candidate,
-secure enough Democratic votes, united with the Whigs, to elect him. In
-the very next canvass Mr. Lincoln himself was taken up by such a
-combination and triumphantly elected. Such things were made feasible by
-the prevalent mode of making nominations without the salutary
-intervention of regular party conventions and committees. We repeat that
-Mr. Lincoln's position was midway between the extremes in local
-politics.
-
-His friend, Mr. A. Y. Ellis, who was with him during a part of this
-campaign, says, "He wore a mixed jeans coat, claw-hammer style, short in
-the sleeves, and bobtail,--in fact, it was so short in the tail he could
-not sit on it,--flax and tow linen pantaloons, and a straw hat. I
-think he wore a vest, but do not remember how it looked. He then wore
-pot-metal boots.
-
-"I accompanied him on one of his electioneering trips to Island Grove;
-and he made a speech which pleased his party friends very well indeed,
-though some of the Jackson men tried to make sport of it. He told
-several anecdotes in his speech, and applied them, as I thought, very
-well. He also told the boys several stories which drew them after him. I
-remember them; but modesty and my veneration for his memory forbid me to
-relate them."
-
-Mr. J. R. Herndon, his friend and landlord, heard him make several
-speeches about this time, and gives us the following extract from one,
-which seems to have made a special impression upon the minds of his
-auditors: "Fellow-citizens, I have been told that some of my opponents
-have said that it was a disgrace to the county of Sangamon to have such
-a looking man as I am stuck up for the Legislature. Now, I thought this
-was a free country: that is the reason I address you today. Had I have
-known to the contrary, I should not have consented to run; but I will
-say one thing, let the shoe pinch where it may: when I have been a
-candidate before you some five or six times, and have been beaten every
-time, I will consider it a disgrace, and will be sure never to try it
-again; but I am bound to beat that man if I am beat myself."
-
-These were not the only speeches he made in furtherance of his present
-claims, but they are all of which we have any intelligible account.
-There was one subject upon which he felt himself peculiarly competent to
-speak,--the practical application of the "internal-improvement system"
-to the river which flowed by the doors of the constituency he addressed.
-He firmly believed in the right of the Legislature of the State or the
-Congress of the United States to appropriate the public money to local
-improvements for the sole advantage of limited districts; and that he
-believed it good policy to exercise the right, his subsequent conduct
-in the Legislature, and an elaborate speech in Congress, are sufficient
-proof. In this doctrine he had the almost unanimous support of the
-people of Illinois. Almost every man in the State was a speculator in
-town lots or lands. Even the farmers had taken up or held the very lands
-they tilled with a view to a speculation in the near future. Long after
-the Democratic party in the South and East, leaving Mr. Calhoun in
-a state of isolation, had begun to inculcate different views of
-constitutional power and duty, it was a dangerous thing for a politician
-in Illinois to intimate his agreement with them. Mr. Lincoln knew well
-that the policy of local improvement at the general expense was at that
-moment decidedly the most popular platform he could mount; but he felt
-that this was not enough for his individual purposes, since it was no
-invention of his, and belonged to nearly everybody else as much as to
-him. He therefore prudently ingrafted upon it a hobby of his own: "The
-Improvement of the Sangamon River,"--a plan to straighten it by means of
-cuts, to clear out its obstructions, and make it a commercial highway
-at the cost of the State. That the idea was nearly, if not quite
-impracticable, the trip of "The Talisman" under Mr. Lincoln's piloting,
-and the fact that the river remained unimproved during all the years
-of the "internal-improvement" mania, would seem to be pretty clear
-evidence. But the theme was agreeable to the popular ear, and had been
-dear to Lincoln from the moment he laid his eyes on the Sangamon. It was
-the great topic of his speech against Posey and Ewing in Macon County,
-when, under the auspices of John Hanks, he "beat" those professional
-politicians so completely that they applauded him themselves. His
-experience in navigating the river was not calculated to make him forget
-it, and it had occupied his thoughts more or less from that day forward.
-Now that it might be turned to good use, where he was personally
-interested, he set about preparing a written address on it, and on
-some other questions of local interest, upon which he bestowed infinite
-pains. The "grammatical errors" in the first draft were corrected by Mr.
-McNamar, the pioneer of New Salem as a business point, and the gentleman
-who was destined to be Mr. Lincoln's rival in the most important
-love-affair of his life. He may have consulted the schoolmaster
-also; but, if he had done so, it is hardly to be surmised that the
-schoolmaster would have left so important a fact out of his written
-reminiscences. It is more probable that Mr. Lincoln confined his
-applications for assistance on this most important matter to the quarter
-where he could get light on politics as well as grammar. However that
-may have been, the following is the finished paper:--
-
-To the People of Sangamon County.
-
-Fellow-Citizens,--Having become a candidate for the honorable office of
-one of your Representatives in the next General Assembly of this State,
-in accordance with an established custom and the principles of true
-republicanism, it becomes my duty to make known to you, the people, whom
-I propose to represent, my sentiments with regard to local affairs.
-
-Time and experience have verified to a demonstration the public utility
-of internal improvements. That the poorest and most thinly-populated
-countries would be greatly benefited by the opening of good roads, and
-in the clearing of navigable streams within their limits, is what no
-person will deny. Yet it is folly to undertake works of this or any
-other kind, without first knowing that we are able to finish them,--as
-half-finished work generally proves to be labor lost. There cannot justly
-be any objection to having railroads and canals, any more than to other
-good things, provided they cost nothing. The only objection is to paying
-for them; and the objection arises from the want of ability to pay.
-
-With respect to the County of Sangamon, some more easy means of
-communication than it now possesses, for the purpose of facilitating
-the task of exporting the surplus products of its fertile soil, and
-importing necessary articles from abroad, are indispensably necessary.
-A meeting has been held of the citizens of Jacksonville and the
-adjacent country, for the purpose of deliberating and inquiring into the
-expediency of constructing a railroad from some eligible point on the
-Illinois River, through the town of Jacksonville, in Morgan County, to
-the town of Springfield, in Sangamon County. This is, indeed, a very
-desirable object. No other improvement that reason will justify us in
-hoping for can equal in utility the railroad. It is a never-failing
-source of communication between places of business remotely situated
-from each other. Upon the railroad the regular progress of commercial
-intercourse is not interrupted by either high or low water, or freezing
-weather, which are the principal difficulties that render our future
-hopes of water communication precarious and uncertain.
-
-Yet however desirable an object the construction of a railroad through
-our country may be; however high our imaginations may be heated at
-thoughts of it,--there is always a heart-appalling shock accompanying
-the account of its cost, which forces us to shrink from our pleasing
-anticipations. The probable cost of this contemplated railroad is
-estimated at $290,000; the bare statement of which, in my opinion, is
-sufficient to justify the belief that the improvement of the Sangamon
-River is an object much better suited to our infant resources.
-
-Respecting this view, I think I may say, without the fear of being
-contradicted, that its navigation may be rendered completely practicable
-as high as the mouth of the South Fork, or probably higher, to vessels
-of from twenty-five to thirty tons' burden, for at least one-half of all
-common years, and to vessels of much greater burden a part of the time.
-From my peculiar circumstances, it is probable, that for the last twelve
-months I have given as particular attention to the stage of the water in
-this river as any other person in the country. In the month of March,
-1831, in company with others, I commenced the building of a flatboat on
-the Sangamon, and finished and took her out in the course of the spring.
-Since that time I have been concerned in the mill at New Salem. These
-circumstances are sufficient evidence that I have not been very
-inattentive to the stages of the water. The time at which we crossed the
-mill-dam being in the last days of April, the water was lower than it
-had been since the breaking of winter in February, or than it was for
-several weeks after. The principal difficulties we encountered in
-descending the river were from the drifted timber, which obstructions
-all know are not difficult to be removed. Knowing almost precisely the
-height of water at that time, I believe I am safe in saying that it has
-as often been higher as lower since.
-
-From this view of the subject, it appears that my calculations with
-regard to the navigation of the Sangamon cannot but be founded in
-reason; but, whatever may be its natural advantages, certain it is, that
-it never can be practically useful to any great extent, without being
-greatly improved by art. The drifted timber, as I have before mentioned,
-is the most formidable barrier to this object. Of all parts of this
-river, none will require so much labor in proportion to make it
-navigable, as the last thirty or thirty-five miles; and going with the
-meanderings of the channel, when we are this distance above its mouth
-we are only between twelve and eighteen miles above Beardstown, in
-something near a straight direction; and this route is upon such low
-ground as to retain water in many places during the season, and in all
-parts such as to draw two-thirds or three-fourths of the river-water at
-all high stages.
-
-This route is on prairie land the whole distance; so that it appears
-to me, by removing the turf a sufficient width, and damming up the old
-channel, the whole river in a short time would wash its way through,
-thereby curtailing the distance, and increasing the velocity of the
-current, very considerably: while there would be no timber on the banks
-to obstruct its navigation in future; and, being nearly straight,
-the timber which might float in at the head would be apt to go clear
-through. There are also many places above this where the river, in its
-zigzag course, forms such complete peninsulas, as to be easier to cut
-at the necks than to remove the obstructions from the bends, which, if
-done, would also lessen the distance.
-
-What the cost of this work would be, I am unable to say. It is probable,
-however, that it would not be greater than is common to streams of the
-same length. Finally, I believe the improvement of the Sangamon River
-to be vastly important and highly desirable to the people of the county;
-and, if elected, any measure in the Legislature having this for its
-object, which may appear judicious, will meet my approbation and shall
-receive my support.
-
-It appears that the practice of drawing money at exorbitant rates of
-interest has already been opened as a field for discussion; so I suppose
-I may enter upon it without claiming the honor, or risking the danger,
-which may await its first explorer. It seems as though we are never
-to have an end to this baneful and corroding system, acting almost as
-prejudicial to the general interests of the community as a direct tax of
-several thousand dollars annually laid on each county, for the benefit
-of a few individuals only, unless there be a law made fixing the limits
-of usury. A law for this purpose, I am of opinion, may be made, without
-materially injuring any class of people. In cases of extreme necessity,
-there could always be means found to cheat the law; while in all other
-cases it would have its intended effect. I would favor the passage of
-a law on this subject which might not be very easily evaded. Let it be
-such that the labor and difficulty of evading it could only be justified
-in cases of greatest necessity.1
-
- 1 Until the year 1833 there had been no legal limit to the
- rate of interest to be fixed by contract. But usury had been
- carried to such an unprecedented degree of extortion and
- oppression as to cause the Legislature to enact severe usury
- laws, by which all interest above twelve per cent was
- condemned. It had been no uncommon thing before this to
- charge one hundred and one hundred and fifty per cent, and
- sometimes two and three hundred per cent. But the common
- rate of interest, by contract, had been about fifty per
- cent.--Ford's History, page 233.
-
-Upon the subject of education, not presuming to dictate any plan
-or system respecting it, I can only say that I view it as the most
-important subject which we as a people can be engaged in. That every
-man may receive at least a moderate education, and thereby be enabled to
-read the histories of his own and other countries, by which he may duly
-appreciate the value of our free institutions, appears to be an object
-of vital importance, even on this account alone, to say nothing of the
-advantages and satisfaction to be derived from all being able to read
-the Scriptures and other works, both of a religious and moral nature,
-for themselves.
-
-For my part, I desire to see the time when education--and, by its means,
-morality, sobriety, enterprise, and industry--shall become much more
-general than at present, and should be gratified to have it in my power
-to contribute something to the advancement of any measure which might
-have a tendency to accelerate the happy period.
-
-With regard to existing laws, some alterations are thought to be
-necessary. Many respectable men have suggested that our estray laws--the
-law respecting the issuing of executions, the road-law, and some
-others--are deficient in their present form, and require alterations.
-But, considering the great probability that the framers of those laws
-were wiser than myself, I should prefer not meddling with them, unless
-they were first attacked by others; in which case I should feel it both
-a privilege and a duty to take that stand, which, in my view, might tend
-most to the advancement of justice.
-
-But, fellow-citizens, I shall conclude. Considering the great degree of
-modesty which should always attend youth, it is probable I have already
-been more presuming than becomes me. However, upon the subjects of
-which I have treated, I have spoken as I have thought. I may be wrong in
-regard to any or all of them; but, holding it a sound maxim, that it is
-better only sometimes to be right than at all times wrong, so soon as I
-discover my opinions to be erroneous, I shall be ready to renounce them.
-
-Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be true or
-not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as that of being
-truly esteemed of my fellow-men, by rendering myself worthy of their
-esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this ambition is yet to be
-developed. I am young, and unknown to many of you. I was born, and have
-ever remained, in the most humble walks of life. I have no wealthy or
-popular relations or friends to recommend. My case is thrown exclusively
-upon the independent voters of the county; and, if elected, they will
-have conferred a favor upon me, for which I shall be unremitting in my
-labors to compensate. But, if the good people in their wisdom shall
-see fit to keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with
-disappointments to be very much chagrined.
-
-Your Friend and Fellow-Citizen,
-
-A. LINCOLN.
-
-New Salem, March 9, 1832.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was defeated at the election, having four hundred and
-seventy votes less than the candidate who had the highest number.
-But his disappointment was softened by the action of his immediate
-neighbors, who gave him an almost unanimous support. With three solitary
-exceptions, he received the whole vote of his precinct,--two hundred and
-seventy-seven,--being one more than the whole number cast for both the
-candidates for Congress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE results of the canvass for the Legislature were precisely such as
-had been predicted, both by Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Rutledge: he had been
-defeated, as he expected himself; and it had done "him much good," in
-the politician's sense, as promised by Mr. Rutledge. He was now somewhat
-acquainted with the people outside of the New Salem district, and
-generally marked as a young man of good parts and popular manners. The
-vote given him at home demonstrated his local strength, and made his
-favor a thing of value to the politicians of all parties.
-
-Soon after his return from the army, he had taken quarters at the house
-of J. R. Herndon, who loved him then, and always, with as much sincerity
-as one man can love another. Mr. Herndon's family likewise "became
-much attached to him." He "nearly always had one" of Herndon's children
-"around with him." Mr. Herndon says of him further, that he was "at home
-wherever he went;" making himself wonderfully agreeable to the people he
-lived with, or whom he happened to be visiting. Among other things, "he
-was very kind to the widow and orphan, and chopped their wood."
-
-Lincoln, as we have seen already, was not enamored of the life of a
-common laborer,--mere hewing and drawing. He preferred to clerk, to go
-to war, to enter politics,--any thing but that dreary round of daily
-toil and poor pay. But he was now, as he would say, "in a fix:" clerks
-were not wanted every day in New Salem and he began to cast about for
-some independent business of his own, by which he could earn enough to
-pay board and buy books. In every community where he had lived, "the
-merchant" had been the principal man. He felt that, in view of his
-apprenticeship under those great masters, Jones and Offutt, he was fully
-competent to "run a store," and was impatient to find an opening in that
-line.
-
-Unfortunately for him, the circumstances of the business men of New
-Salem were just then peculiarly favorable to his views. At least three
-of them were as anxious to sell out as Lincoln was to buy.
-
-Lincoln, as already stated, was at this time living with "Row" Herndon.
-Row and his brother "Jim" had taken "a store down to New Salem early in
-that year." But Jim "didn't like the place," and sold out his interests
-to an idle, convivial fellow, named Berry. Six weeks later Row Herndon
-grew tired of his new partner, and sold his interest to Lincoln. The
-store was a mixed one,--dry goods and groceries.
-
-About the same time Mr. Radford, who kept one of the New Salem
-groceries, fell into disfavor with the "Clary's Grove Boys," who
-generously determined that he should keep a grocery no longer. They
-accordingly selected a convenient night for breaking in his windows,
-and, in their own elegant phrase, "gutting his establishment." Convinced
-that these neighborly fellows were inclined to honor him with further
-attentions, and that his bones might share the fate of his windows,
-Radford determined to sell out with the earliest dawn of the coming day.
-The next day he was standing disconsolate in the midst of his wreck,
-when Bill Green rode up. Green thought he saw a speculation in Radford's
-distress, and offered him four hundred dollars for the whole concern.
-Radford eagerly closed with him; and in a few minutes Green owned
-the grocery, and Radford was ready for the road to a more congenial
-settlement. It is said that Green employed Lincoln to make an inventory
-of the stock. At all events, Lincoln was satisfied that Green's bargain
-was a very good one, and proposed that he and Berry should take it off
-his hands at a premium of two hundred and fifty dollars. Radford had
-Green's note for four hundred dollars; but he now surrendered, it and
-took Lincoln & Berry's for the same amount, indorsed by Green; while
-Lincoln & Berry gave Green a note for two hundred and fifty dollars, the
-latter's profit in the trade.
-
-Mr. Rutledge "also owned a small grocery in the village;" and this was
-speedily absorbed by the enterprising firm of Lincoln & Berry, who now
-had the field to themselves, being sole proprietors "of the only store
-of the kind in New Salem."
-
-Whether Mr. Lincoln sold liquor by the dram over the counter of this
-shop remains, and will forever remain, an undetermined question. Many
-of his friends aver that he did, and as many more aver that he did not.
-When Douglas, with that courtesy for which he distinguished himself in
-the debates with Lincoln, revived the story, Lincoln replied, that,
-even if it were true, there was but little difference between them;
-for, while he figured on one side of the counter, Douglas figured on
-the other. It is certain liquors were a part of the stock of all the
-purchases of Lincoln & Berry. Of course they sold them by the quantity,
-and probably by the drink. Some of it they _gave_ away, for no man could
-keep store without setting out the customary dram to the patrons of the
-place.1
-
- 1 Here is the evidence of James Davis, a Democrat, "aged
- sixty," who is willing to "give the Devil his due:"--
-
- "Came to Clary's Grove in 1829; knew Lincoln well; knew Jim
- and Row Herndon: they sold out to Berry,--one of them did;
- afterwards the other sold out to Lincoln. The store was a
- mixed one,--dry goods, a few groceries, such as sugar,
- salt, &c., and whiskey solely kept for their customers, or
- to sell by the gallon, quart, or pint,--not otherwise. The
- Herndons probably had the Blankenship goods. Radford had a
- grocery-store,--salt, pepper, and suchlike things, with
- whiskey. It is said Green bought this out, and instantly
- sold to Berry & Lincoln. Lincoln & Berry broke. Berry
- subsequently kept a doggery, a whiskey saloon, as I do now,
- or did. Am a Democrat; never agreed in politics with Abe. He
- was an honest man. Give the Devil his due; he never sold
- whiskey by the dram in New Salem! I was in town every week
- for years; knew, I think, all about it. I always drank my
- dram, and drank at Berry's often; ought to know. Lincoln got
- involved, I think, in the first operation. Salem Hill was a
- barren."
-
-The difficulty of gathering authentic evidence on this subject is
-well illustrated in the following extract from Mr. George Spears of
-Petersburg:--
-
-"I took my horse this morning, and went over to New Salem, among the
-P----s and A----s, and made all the inquiries I could, but could learn
-nothing. The old ladies would begin to count up what had happened in New
-Salem when such a one of their children was born, and such a one had
-a bastard; but it all amounted to nothing. I could arrive at no dates,
-only when those children were born. Old Mrs. Potter affirms that Lincoln
-did sell liquors in a grocery. I can't tell whether he did or not."
-
-All that winter (1832-3) Lincoln struggled along with a bad partner,
-and a business which began wrong, and grew worse every day. Berry had no
-qualities which atoned for his evil habits.. He preferred to consume
-the liquors on hand rather than to sell them, and exerted himself so
-successfully, that in a few months he had ruined the credit of the firm,
-squandered its assets, and destroyed his own health. The "store" was a
-dead failure; and the partners were weighed down with a parcel of debts,
-against which Lincoln could scarcely have borne up, even with a better
-man to help him. At last they sold out to two brothers named Trent. The
-Trents continued the business for a few months, when they broke up and
-ran away. Then Berry, encouraged by the example of the Trents, "cleared
-out" also, and, dying soon after, left poor Lincoln the melancholy task
-of settling up the affairs of their ill-starred partnership.
-
-In all the preceding transactions, the absence of any cash consideration
-is the one thing very striking. It is a fair illustration of the
-speculative spirit pervading the whole people. Green bought from Radford
-on credit; Lincoln & Berry bought from Green on credit; they bought from
-the Herndons on credit; they bought from Rutledge on credit; and they
-sold to the Trents on credit. Those that did not die or run away had a
-sad time enough in managing the debts resulting from their connection
-with this unlucky grocery. Radford assigned Lincoln & Berry's note to
-a Mr. Van Bergen, who got judgment on it, and swept away all Lincoln's
-little personal property, including his surveying instruments,--his very
-means of livelihood, as we shall see at another place. The Herndons
-owed E. C. Blankenship for the goods they sold, and assigned Lincoln &
-Berry's note in payment. Mr. Lincoln struggled to pay, by slow degrees,
-this harassing debt to Blankenship, through many long and weary years.
-It was not until his return from Congress, in 1849, that he got the last
-dollar of it discharged. He paid Green _his_ note of two hundred and
-fifty dollars, in small instalments, beginning in 1839, and ending in
-1840. The history of his debt to Rutledge is not so well known. It was
-probably insignificant as compared with the others; and Mr. Rutledge
-proved a generous creditor, as he had always been a kind and considerate
-friend.
-
-Certain that he had no abilities for trade, Mr. Lincoln took the best
-resolution he could have formed under the circumstances. He sat down to
-his books just where he was, believing that knowledge would be power,
-and power profit. He had no reason to shun his creditors, for these were
-the men of all others who most applauded the honesty of his conduct
-at the period of his greatest pecuniary misfortune. He talked to them
-constantly of the "old debt," "the national debt," as he sometimes
-called it,--promised to pay when he could, and they devoutly relied upon
-every word he said.
-
-Row Herndon moved to the country, and Lincoln was compelled to change
-his boarding-place. He now began to live at a tavern for the first time
-in his life. It was kept by various persons during his stay,--first, it
-seems, by Mr. Rutledge, then by Henry Onstatt, and last by Nelson Alley.
-It was a small log-house, covered with clapboards, and contained four
-rooms.
-
-Lincoln began to read law while he lived with Herndon. Some of his
-acquaintances insist that he began even earlier than this, and assert,
-by way of proof, that he was known to borrow a well-worn copy of
-Blackstone from A. T. Bogue, a pork-dealer at Beardstown. At all events,
-he now went to work in earnest, and studied law as faithfully as if he
-had never dreamed of any other business in life. As a matter of course,
-his slender purse was unequal to the purchase of the needful books: but
-this circumstance gave him little trouble; for, although he was short of
-funds, he was long in the legs, and had nothing to do but to walk off to
-Springfield, where his friend, John T. Stuart, cheerfully supplied
-his wants. Mr. Stuart's partner, H. C. Dummer, says, "He was an
-uncouth-looking lad, did not say much, but what he did say he said
-straight and sharp."
-
-"He used to read law," says Henry McHenry, "in 1832 or 1833, barefooted,
-seated in the shade of a tree, and would grind around with the shade,
-just opposite Berry's grocery-store, a few feet south of the door."
-He occasionally varied the attitude by lying flat on his back, and
-"_putting his feet up the tree_"--a situation which might have been
-unfavorable to mental application in the case of a man with shorter
-extremities.
-
-"The first time I ever saw Abe with a law-book in his hand," says Squire
-Godbey, "he was sitting astride of Jake Bales's woodpile in New Salem.
-Says I, 'Abe, what are you studying?'--'Law,' says Abe. 'Great God
-Almighty!' responded I." It was too much for Godbey: he could not
-suppress the blasphemy at seeing such a figure acquiring science in such
-an odd situation.
-
-Minter Graham asserts that Abe did a little "of what we call sitting up
-to the fine gals of Illinois;" but, according to other authorities, he
-always had his book with him "when in company," and would read and
-talk alternately. He carried it along in his walks to the woods and the
-river; read it in daylight under the shade-tree by the grocery, and at
-night by any friendly light he could find,--most frequently the one he
-kindled himself in the shop of his old benefactor, the cooper.
-
-Abe's progress in the law was as surprising as the intensity of his
-application to study. He never lost a moment that might be improved. It
-is even said that he read and recited to himself on the road and by the
-wayside as he came down from Springfield with the books he had borrowed
-from Stuart. The first time he went up he had "mastered" forty pages of
-Blackstone before he got back. It was not long until, with his
-restless desire to be doing something practical, he began to turn his
-acquisitions to account in forwarding the business of his neighbors. He
-wrote deeds, contracts, notes, and other legal papers, for them, "using
-a small dictionary and an old form-book;" "petifogged" incessantly
-before the justice of the peace, and probably assisted that functionary
-in the administration of justice as much as he benefited his own
-clients. This species of country "student's" practice was entered upon
-very early, and kept up until long after he was quite a distinguished
-man in the Legislature. But in all this he was only trying himself:
-as he was not admitted to the bar until 1837, he did not regard it
-as legitimate practice, and never charged a penny for his services.
-Although this fact is mentioned by a great number of persons, and the
-generosity of his conduct much enlarged upon, it is seriously to be
-regretted that no one has furnished us with a circumstantial account of
-any of his numerous cases before the magistrate.
-
-But Mr. Lincoln did not confine himself entirely to the law. He was not
-yet quite through with Kirkham nor the schoolmaster. The "valuable copy"
-of the grammar "he delighted to peruse" is still in the possession of R.
-B. Rutledge, with the thumb-marks of the President all over it. "He also
-studied natural philosophy, chemistry, astronomy, &c. He had no regular
-teacher, but perhaps received more assistance from Minter Graham than
-from any other person."
-
-He read with avidity all the newspapers that came to New Salem,--chiefly
-"The Sangamon Journal," "The Missouri Republican," and "The Louisville
-Journal." 1 The latter was his favorite: its wit and anecdotes were
-after his own heart; and he was a regular subscriber for it through
-several years when he could ill afford a luxury so costly.
-
- 1 According to Mr. McNamar, Lincoln took "The Sangamon
- Journal" and "The Louisville Journal" from 1832 to 1837; and
- Hill and Bale took "The Missouri Republican" and "The
- Cincinnati Gazette." "The Missouri Republican" was first
- issued as a daily in September, 1836. Its size was then
- twenty-five by thirty-six inches.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was never a profound historical student: if he happened
-to need historical facts for the purposes of a political or legal
-discussion, he read them on the spur of the occasion. For this reason
-his opinions of current affairs all through his life were based
-more upon individual observation and reflection than upon scientific
-deductions from the experience of the world. Yet at this time, when he
-probably felt more keenly than ever after the want of a little learning
-to embellish the letters and speeches he was ambitious to compose, he is
-said to have read Rollin's "Ancient History," Gibbon's "Rise and Fall of
-the Roman Empire," and similar works, with great diligence and care. The
-books were borrowed from William Green, Bowlin Greene, and other parties
-in and about New Salem.
-
-But he greatly preferred literature of another sort, such as Mrs. Lee
-Hentz's novels; some of which he found among the effects of Mr. Ellis,
-at the time his companion and occasional bedfellow. "He was very fond,"
-Mr. Ellis declares, "of short stories, one and two columns long,--like
-'Cousin Sally Dillard,' 'Becky Wilson's Courtship,' The Down-easter and
-the Bull,' 'How a bashful man became a married man, with five little
-bashful boys, and how he and his red-headed wife became Millerites, and
-before they were to ascend agreed to make a clean breast of it to
-each other;' and how, when the old lady was through, the Down-easter
-earnestly wished that Gabriel might blow his horn without delay." One
-New Salemite insists that Mr. Lincoln told this latter story "with
-embezzlements" (embellishments), and therefore he is firmly convinced
-that Mr. Lincoln "had a hand" in originating it. The catalogue of
-literature in which he particularly delighted at New Salem is completed
-by the statement of Mr. Rutledge, that he took great pleasure in "Jack
-Downing's Letters."
-
-Mr. Lincoln still relished a popular song with a broad "point" or a
-palpable moral in it as much as he had ever enjoyed the vocal efforts of
-Dennis Hanks and his rollicking compeers of the Gentryville grocery. He
-even continued his own unhappy attempts, although with as little success
-as before, and quite as much to the amusement of his friends. To the
-choice collection of miscellaneous ballads acquired in Indiana, he
-now added several new favorites, like "Old Sukey Blue Skin," and some
-selections from the "Missouri Harmony," with variations by himself. He
-was also singularly fond of an Irish song, "which tells how St. Patrick
-came to be born on the 17th day of March."
-
-"You ask me," says Mr. Ellis, "if I remember the first time I saw Mr.
-Lincoln. Yes, I do.... I was out collecting back tax for Gen. James D.
-Henry. I went from the tavern down to Jacob Bales's old mill, and then
-I first saw Mr. Lincoln. He was sitting on a saw-log talking to Jack and
-Rial Armstrong and a man by the name of Hohammer. I shook hands with
-the Armstrongs and Hohammer, and was conversing with them a few minutes,
-when we were joined by my old friend and former townsman, George
-Warburton, pretty tight as usual; and he soon asked me to tell him the
-old story about Ben Johnson and Mrs. Dale's blue dye, &c., which I did.
-And then Jack Armstrong said, 'Lincoln, tell Ellis the story about Gov.
-J. Sichner, his city-bred son, and his nigger Bob;' which he did,
-with several others, by Jack's calling for them. I found out then that
-Lincoln was a cousin to Charley Hanks of Island Grove. I told him I knew
-three of the boys,--Joe, Charley, and John,--and his uncle, old Billy
-Hanks, who lived up on the North Fork of the Sangamon River, afterwards
-near Decatur."1
-
- 1 "I myself knew old Billy Hanks, his mother's brother, and
- he was a very sensible old man. He was father to Mrs.
- Dillon, on Spring Creek; and Charley, Billy, jr., and John
- were his sons: they were all low-flung,--could neither read
- nor write. Some of them used to live in Island Grove,
- Sangamon County.... I remember the time that Lincoln and E.
- D. Baker ran in convention, to decide who should run for
- Congress in old Sangamon; that some of Baker's friends
- accused Mr. Lincoln of belonging to a proud and an
- aristocratic family,--meaning the Edwardses and Todds, I
- suppose; and, when it came to Mr. Lincoln's ears, he laughed
- heartily, and remarked, 'Well, that sounds strange to me: I
- do not remember of but one that ever came to see me, and
- while he was in town he was accused of stealing a jew's-
- harp.' Josh Speed remembers his saying this. I think you
- ought to remember it. Beverly Powell and myself lived with
- Bell and Speed, and I think he said so in their store. After
- that a Miss Hanks came to spend the winter with Mrs.
- Lincoln."--A. Y. Ellis.
-
-This interview took place shortly after the Black Hawk War; but it was
-not until the next year (1833), the period at which we have now arrived,
-that Lincoln and Ellis became "intimate." At that time Ellis went there
-to keep a store, and boarded "at the same log-tavern" where Lincoln was.
-Lincoln, being "engaged in no particular business," merely endeavoring
-to make a lawyer, a surveyor, and a politician of himself, gave a great
-deal of his time to Ellis and Ellis's business. "He also used to assist
-me in the store," says this new friend, "on busy days, but he always
-disliked to wait on the ladies: he preferred trading with the men and
-boys, as he used to say. I also remember that he used to sleep in the
-store, on the counter, when they had too much company at the tavern.
-
-"I well remember how he was dressed: he wore flax and tow linen
-pantaloons,--I thought about five inches too short in the legs,--and
-frequently he had but one suspender, no vest or coat. He wore a calico
-shirt, such as he had in the Black Hawk War; coarse brogans, tan color;
-blue yarn socks, and straw hat, old style, and without a band.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was in those days a very shy man of ladies. On one
-occasion, while we boarded at this tavern, there came a family,
-containing an old lady and her son and three stylish daughters, from the
-State of Virginia, and stopped there for two or three weeks; and, during
-their stay, I do not remember of Mr. Lincoln ever eating at the same
-table when they did. I then thought it was on account of his awkward
-appearance and his wearing apparel."
-
-There lived at New Salem at this time, and for some years afterward,
-a festive gentleman named Kelso, a school-teacher, a merchant, or a
-vagabond, according to the run of his somewhat variable "luck." When
-other people got drunk at New Salem, it was the usual custom to tussle
-and fight, and tramp each other's toes, and pull each other's noses;
-but, when Kelso got drunk, he astonished the rustic community with
-copious quotations from Robert Burns and William Shakspeare,--authors
-little known to fame among the literary men of New Salem. Besides
-Shakspeare and Burns, Mr. Kelso was likewise very fond of fishing, and
-could catch his game "when no other man could get a bite." Mr. Lincoln
-hated fishing with all his heart. But it is the testimony of the
-country-side, from Petersburg to Island Grove, that Kelso "drew Lincoln
-after him by his talk;" that they became exceedingly intimate; that they
-loitered away whole days together, along the banks of the quiet streams;
-that Lincoln learned to love inordinately our "divine William" and
-"Scotia's Bard," whom his friend mouthed in his cups, or expounded more
-soberly in the intervals of fixing bait and dropping line. Finally he
-and Kelso boarded at the same place; and with another "merchant," named
-Sincho, of tastes congenial and wits as keen as Kelso's, they were
-"always found together, battling and arguing." Bill Green ventures the
-opinion, that Lincoln's incessant reading of Shakspeare and Burns had
-much to do in giving to his mind the "sceptical" tendency so
-fully developed by the labors of his pen in 1834-5, and in social
-conversations during many years of his residence at Springfield.
-
-Like Offutt, Kelso disappeared suddenly from New Salem, and apparently
-from the recollection of men. Each with a peculiar talent of his own,
-kind-hearted, eccentric creatures, no man's enemy and everybody's prey,
-they strolled out into the great world, and left this little village
-to perish behind them. Of Kelso a few faint traces have been found in
-Missouri; but if he ever had a lodging more permanent than the wayside
-tavern, a haystack, or a hedge, no man was able to tell where it was.
-Of Offutt not a word was ever heard: the most searching and cunning
-inquiries have failed to discover any spot where he lingered for a
-single hour; and but for the humble boy, to whom he was once a gentle
-master, no human being that knew him then would bestow a thought upon
-his name. In short, to use the expressive language of Mr. Lincoln
-himself, he literally "petered out."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was often annoyed by "company." His quarters at the tavern
-afforded him little privacy, and the shade of the tree in front of the
-grocery was scarcely a sufficiently secluded situation for the purposes
-of an ardent student. There were too many people to wonder and laugh at
-a man studying law with "his feet up a tree;" too many to worry him for
-the stories and jokes which it was supposed he could furnish on demand.
-For these reasons it became necessary that he should "retire to the
-country occasionally to rest and study." Sometimes he went to James
-Short's on the Sand Ridge; sometimes to Minter Graham's; sometimes to
-Bowlin Greenes; sometimes to Jack Armstrong's, and as often, perhaps,
-to Able's or Row Herndon's. All of these men served him faithfully and
-signally at one time and another, and to all of them he was sincerely
-attached. When Bowlin Greene died, in 1842, Mr. Lincoln, then in the
-enjoyment of great local reputation, undertook to deliver a funeral
-oration over the remains of his beloved friend; but, when he rose to
-speak, his voice was choked with deep emotion: he stood a few moments,
-while his lips quivered in the effort to form the words of fervent
-praise he sought to utter, and the tears ran down his yellow and
-shrivelled cheeks. Some of those who came to hear him, and saw his tall
-form thus sway in silence over the body of Bowlin Greene, say he looked
-so helpless, so utterly bereft and pitiable, that every heart in the
-audience was hushed at the spectacle. After repeated efforts, he found
-it impossible to speak, and strode away, openly and bitterly sobbing,
-to the widow's carriage, in which he was driven from the scene. Mr.
-Herndon's papers disclose less than we should like to know concerning
-this excellent man: they give us only this burial scene, with the fact
-that Bowlin Greene had loaned Mr. Lincoln books from their earliest
-acquaintance, and on one occasion had taken him to his home, and cared
-for him with the solicitude of a devoted friend through several weeks of
-great suffering and peril. The circumstances of the attempted eulogy are
-mentioned here to show the relations which subsisted between Mr. Lincoln
-and some of the benefactors we have enumerated.
-
-But all this time Mr. Lincoln had a living to make, a running board-bill
-to pay, and nothing to pay it with. He was, it is true, in the hands of
-excellent friends, so far as the greater part of his indebtedness was
-concerned; but he was industrious by nature, and wanted to be working,
-and paying as he went. He would not have forfeited the good opinion
-of those confiding neighbors for a lifetime of ease and luxury. It was
-therefore a most happy thing for him, and he felt it to be so, when
-he attracted the attention of John Calhoun, the surveyor of Sangamon
-County.
-
-Calhoun was the type of a perfect gentleman,--brave, courteous, able,
-and cultivated. He was a Democrat then, and a Democrat when he died. All
-the world knows how he was president of the Lecompton Convention; how
-he administered the trust in accordance with his well-known convictions;
-and how, after a life of devotion to Douglas, he was adroitly betrayed
-by that facile politician, and left to die in the midst of obloquy and
-disaster. At the time we speak of, he was one of the most popular men
-in the State of Illinois, and was one of the foremost chieftains of the
-political party which invariably carried the county and the district in
-which Mr. Lincoln lived. He knew Lincoln, and admired him. He was well
-assured that Lincoln knew nothing of surveying; but he was equally
-certain that he could soon acquire it. The speculative fever was at
-its height; he was overrun with business: the country was alive with
-strangers seeking land; and every citizen was buying and selling with a
-view to a great fortune in the "flush times" coming. He wanted a deputy
-with common sense and common honesty: he chose Lincoln, because nobody
-else possessed these qualities in a more eminent degree. He hunted him
-up; gave him a book; told him to study it, and said, that, as soon as he
-was ready, he should have as much work as he could do.
-
-Lincoln took the book, and "retired to the country;" that is, he went
-out to Minter Graham's for about six weeks, in which time, by the aid of
-that good master, he became an expert surveyor, and was duly appointed
-Calhoun's deputy. Of course he made some money, merely his pay for work;
-but it is a remarkable fact, that, with his vast knowledge of the lands
-in Sangamon and adjacent counties, he never made a single speculation
-on his own account. It was not long until he acquired a considerable
-private business. The accuracy of his surveys were seldom, if ever,
-questioned. Disputes regarding "corners" and "lines" were frequently
-submitted to his arbitration; and the decision was invariably accepted
-as final. It often happened that his business kept him away from New
-Salem, and his other studies, for weeks at a time; but all this while he
-was gathering friends against the day of election.
-
-In after years--from 1844 onward--it was his good or bad fortune
-frequently to meet Calhoun on the stump; but he never forgot his
-benefaction to him, and always regarded him as the ablest and best man
-with whom he ever had crossed steel. To the day of Calhoun's death
-they were warmly attached to each other. In the times when it was
-most fashionable and profitable to denounce Calhoun and the Le-compton
-Constitution, when even Douglas turned to revile his old friend and
-coadjutor, Mr. Lincoln was never known to breathe a word of censure on
-his personal character.
-
-On the 7th of May, 1833, Mr. Lincoln was appointed postmaster at
-New Salem. His political opinions were not extreme; and the Jackson
-administration could find no man who was at the same time more orthodox
-and equally competent to perform the duties of the office. He was not
-able to rent a room, for the business is said to have been carried on in
-his hat; but, from the evidence before us, we imagine that he kept the
-office in Mr. Hill's store, Mr. Hill's partner, McNamar, having been
-absent since 1832. He held the place until late in 1836, when New Salem
-partially disappeared, and the office was removed to Petersburg. For
-a little while before his own appointment, he is said to have acted as
-"deputy-postmaster" under Mr. Hill.
-
-The mail arrived duly once a week; and the labors of distributing and
-delivering it were by no means great. But Mr. Lincoln was determined
-that the dignity of the place should not suffer while he was the
-incumbent. He therefore made up for the lack of real business by
-deciphering the letters of the uneducated portion of the community, and
-by reading the newspapers aloud to the assembled inhabitants in front of
-Hill's store.
-
-But his easy good-nature was sometimes imposed upon by inconsiderate
-acquaintances; and Mr. Hill relates one of the devices by which
-he sought to stop the abuse. "One Elmore Johnson, an ignorant but
-ostentatious, proud man, used to go to Lincoln's post-office every
-day,--sometimes three or four times a day, if in town,--and inquire,
-'Any thing for me?' This bored Lincoln, yet it amused him. Lincoln fixed
-a plan,--wrote a letter to Johnson as coming from a negress in Kentucky,
-saying many good things about opossum, dances, corn-shuckings, &c.;
-'John's! come and see me; and old master won't kick you out of the
-kitchen any more!' Elmore took it out; opened it; couldn't read a word;
-pretended to read it; went away; got some friends to read it: they read
-it correctly; he thought the reader was fooling him, and went to others
-with the same result. At last he said he would get _Lincoln_ to read it,
-and presented it to Lincoln. It was almost too much for Lincoln, but he
-read it. The man never asked afterwards, 'Any thing here for me?"
-
-It was in the latter part of 1834 that Mr. Lincoln's personal property
-was sold under the hammer, and by due process of law, to meet the
-judgment obtained by Van Bergen on the note assigned to him by Radford.
-Every thing he had was taken; but it was the surveyor's instruments
-which it hurt him most to part with, for by their use he was making a
-tolerable living, and building up a respectable business. This time,
-however, rescue came from an unexpected quarter.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln first came to New Salem, he employed a woman to make
-him a pair of pantaloons, which, probably from the scarcity of material,
-were cut entirely too short, as his garments usually were. Soon
-afterwards the woman's brother came to town, and she pointed Abe out to
-him as he walked along the street. The brother's name was James Short.
-"Without the necessity of a formal introduction," says Short, "we fell
-in together, and struck up a conversation, the purport of which I
-have now forgotten. He made a favorable impression upon me by his
-conversation on first acquaintance through his intelligence and
-sprightliness, which impression was deepened from time to time, as I
-became better acquainted with him." This was a lucky "impression" for
-Abe. Short was a fast friend, and in the day of trouble a sure and able
-one. At the time the judgment was obtained, Short lived on the Sand
-Ridge, four miles from New Salem; and Lincoln was in the habit of
-walking out there almost daily. Short was then unconscious of the main
-reason of Mr. Lincoln's remarkable devotion to him: there was a lady in
-the house whom Lincoln secretly but earnestly loved, and of whom there
-is much to be said at another place. If the host had known every thing,
-however, poor Abe would have been equally welcome; for he made himself a
-strangely agreeable guest here, as he did everywhere else. In busy times
-he pulled off his roundabout, and helped Short in the field with more
-energy than any hired man would have displayed. "He was," said Short,
-"the best hand at husking corn on the stalk I ever saw. I used to
-consider myself very good; but he would gather two loads to my one."
-
-These visits increased Short's disposition to serve him; and it touched
-him sorely when he heard Lincoln moaning about the catastrophe that
-hung over him in the form of Van Bergen's judgment. "An execution
-was issued," says he, "and levied on Lincoln's horse, saddle, bridle,
-compass, chain, and other surveyor's instruments. He was then very much
-discouraged, and said he would let the whole thing go by the board. He
-was at my house very much,--half the time. I did all I could to put him
-in better spirits. I went on the delivery-bond with him; and when the
-sale came off, which Mr. Lincoln did not attend, I bid in the above
-property at a hundred and twenty dollars, and immediately gave it up
-again to him. Mr. Lincoln afterwards repaid me when he had moved to
-Springfield. Greene also turned in on this judgment his horse, saddle,
-and bridle at a hundred and twenty-five dollars; and Lincoln afterwards
-repaid him."
-
-But, after all, Mr. Lincoln had no friend more intimate than Jack
-Armstrong, and none that valued him more highly. Until he finally
-left New Salem for Springfield, he "rusticated" occasionally at Jack's
-hospitable cabin, situated "four miles in the country," as the polished
-metropolitans of New Salem would say. Jack's wife, Hannah, before
-alluded to, liked Abe, and enjoyed his visits not less than Jack did.
-"Abe would come out to our house," she says, "drink milk, eat mush,
-corn-bread, and butter, bring the children candy, and rock the cradle
-while I got him something to eat.... I foxed his pants; made his
-shirts... He has gone with us to father's; he would tell stories, joke
-people, girls and boys, at parties. He would nurse babies,--do any thing
-to accommodate anybody.... I had no books about my house; loaned him
-none. We didn't think about books and papers. We worked; had to live.
-Lincoln has staid at our house two or three weeks at a time."
-
-If Jack had "to work to live," as his wife has it, he was likewise
-constrained to fight and wrestle and tumble about with his unhappy
-fellow-citizens, in order to enjoy the life he earned by labor. He
-frequently came "to town," where his sportive inclinations ran riot,
-except as they were checked and regulated by the amicable interposition
-of Abe,--the prince of his affections, and the only man who was
-competent to restrain him.
-
-"The children at school had made a wide sliding walk," from the top
-of Salem Hill to the river-bank, down which they rode on sleds and
-boards,--a distance of two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards.
-Now, it was one of the suggestions of Jack's passion for innocent
-diversion to nail up in hogsheads such of the population as incurred
-his displeasure, and send them adrift along this frightful descent. Sol.
-Spears and one Scanlon were treated to an adventure of this kind; but
-the hogshead in which the two were caged "leaped over an embankment,
-and came near killing Scanlon." After that the sport was considered less
-amusing, and was very much discouraged by that portion of the community
-who feared, that, in the absence of more convenient victims, "the boys"
-might light on them. Under these circumstances, Jack, for once in his
-life, thought it best to abandon coercion, and negotiate for subjects.
-He selected an elderly person of bibulous proclivities, and tempted him
-with a great temptation. "Old man Jordan _agreed_ to be rolled down the
-hill for a gallon of whiskey;" but Lincoln, fully impressed with the
-brutality of the pastime, and the danger to the old sot, "stopped it."
-Whether he did it by persuasion or force, we know not, but probably by a
-judicious employment of both.
-
-"I remember once," says Mr. Ellis, "of seeing Mr. Lincoln out of temper,
-and laughing at the same time. It was at New Salem. The boys were
-having a jollification after an election. They had a large fire made of
-shavings and hemp-stalks; and some of the boys made a bet with a fellow
-that I shall call 'Ike,' that he couldn't run his little bob-tail pony
-through the fire. Ike took them up, and trotted his pony back about one
-hundred yards, to give him a good start, as he said. The boys all formed
-a line on either side, to make way for Ike and his pony. Presently
-here he come, full tilt, with his hat off; and, just as he reached the
-blazing fire, Ike raised in his saddle for the jump straight ahead; but
-pony was not of the same opinion, so he flew the track, and pitched
-poor Ike into the devouring element. Mr. Lincoln saw it, and ran to his
-assistance, saying, 'You have carried this thing far enough.' I could
-see he was mad, though he could not help laughing himself. The poor
-fellow was considerably scorched about the head and face. Jack Armstrong
-took him to the doctor, who shaved his head to fix him up, and put salve
-on the burn. I think Mr. Lincoln was a little mad at Armstrong, and Jack
-himself was very sorry for it. Jack gave Ike next morning a dram, his
-breakfast, and a seal-skin cap, and sent him home."
-
-"One cold winter day, Lincoln saw a poor fellow named "Ab Trent" hard at
-work chopping up "a house," which Mr. Hill had employed him to convert
-into firewood. Ab was barefooted, and shivered pitifully while he
-worked. Lincoln watched him a few moments, and asked him what he was to
-get for the job. Ab answered, 'One dollar;' and, pointing to his naked
-and suffering feet, said that he wished to buy a pair of shoes. Lincoln
-seized the axe, and, ordering the boy to comfort himself at the nearest
-fire, chopped up 'the house' so fast that Ab and the owner were both
-amazed when they saw it done." According to Mr. Rutledge, "Ab remembered
-this act with the liveliest gratitude. Once he, being a cast-iron
-Democrat, determined to vote against his party and for Mr. Lincoln;
-but the friends, as he afterwards said with tears in his eyes, made
-him drunk, and he had voted against Abe. Thus he did not even have an
-opportunity to return the noble conduct of Mr. Lincoln by this small
-measure of thanks."
-
-We have given some instances of Mr. Lincoln's unfailing disposition to
-succor the weak and the unfortunate. He never seems to have hesitated on
-account of actual or fancied danger to himself, but boldly espoused the
-side of the oppressed against the oppressor, whoever and whatever the
-latter might be. In a fisticuff or a rough-and-tumble fight, he was one
-of the most formidable men of the region in which he lived. It took a
-big bully, and a persevering one, to force him into a collision; but,
-being in, his enemy found good reason to beware of him. He was cool,
-calculating, but swift in action, and terribly strong. Nevertheless, he
-never promoted a quarrel, and would be at infinite trouble any time to
-compose one. An unnecessary broil gave him pain; and whenever there was
-the slightest hope of successful mediation, whether by soft speech or by
-the strong hand, he was instant and fearless for peace. His good-nature,
-his humor, his fertility in expedients, and his alliance, offensive
-and defensive, with Jack Armstrong, made him almost irresistible in
-his benevolent efforts to keep the ordinary ruffian of New Salem within
-decent bounds. If he was talking to Squire Godbey or Row Herndon (each
-of them give incidents of the kind), and he heard the sounds or saw
-the signs which betoken a row in the street, he would jump up, saying,
-"Let's go and stop it." He would push through the "ring" which was
-generally formed around the combatants, and, after separating the
-latter, would demand a truce and "a talk;" and so soon as he got them
-to talking, the victory was his. If it happened to be rough Jack himself
-who was at the bottom of the disturbance, he usually became very much
-ashamed of his conduct, and offered to "treat," or do any thing else
-that would atone for his brutality.
-
-Lincoln has often been seen in the old mill on the river-bank to lift
-a box of stones weighing from a thousand to twelve hundred pounds.
-Of course it was not done by a straight lift of the hands: he "was
-harnessed to the box with ropes and straps." It was even said he could
-easily raise a barrel of whiskey to his mouth when standing upright, and
-take a drink out of the bung-hole; but of course one cannot believe it.
-Frequent exhibitions of such strength doubtless had much to do with his
-unbounded influence over the rougher class of men.
-
-He possessed the judicial quality of mind in a degree so eminent, and it
-was so universally recognized, that he never could attend a horse-race
-without being importuned to act as a judge, or witness a bet without
-assuming the responsibility of a stakeholder. "In the spring or
-summer of 1832," says Henry McHenry, "I had a horse-race with George
-Warbur-ton. I got Lincoln, who was at the race, to be a judge of the
-race, much against his will and after hard persuasion. Lincoln decided
-correctly; and the other judge said, 'Lincoln is the fairest man I ever
-bad to deal with: if Lincoln is in this county when I die, I want him
-to be my administrator, for he is the only man I ever met with that was
-wholly and unselfishly honest.'" His ineffable purity in determining the
-result of a scrub-race had actually set his colleague to thinking of his
-latter end.
-
-But Lincoln endured another annoyance much worse than this. He was
-so generally esteemed, and so highly admired, that, when any of his
-neighbors had a fight in prospect, one of the parties was sure to insist
-upon his acting as his second. Lincoln was opposed to fights, but there
-were some fights that had to be fought; and these were "set," a day
-fixed, and the neighborhood notified. In these cases there was no room
-for the offices of a mediator; and when the affair was pre-ordained,
-"and must come off," Mr. Lincoln had no excuse for denying the request
-of a friend.
-
-"Two neighbors, Harry Clark and Ben Wilcox," says Mr. Rutledge, "had had
-a lawsuit. The defeated declared, that, although he was beaten in the
-suit, he could whip his opponent. This was a formal challenge, and was
-at once carried to the ears of the victor (Wilcox), and as promptly
-accepted. The time, place, and seconds were chosen with due regularity;
-Mr. Lincoln being Clark's, and John Brewer, Wilcox's second. The parties
-met, stripped themselves all but their breeches, went in, and Mr.
-Lincoln's principal was beautifully whipped. These combats were
-conducted with as much ceremony and punctiliousness as ever graced
-the duelling-ground. After the conflict, the seconds conducted their
-respective principals to the river, washed off the blood, and assisted
-them to dress. During this performance, the second of the party opposed
-to Mr. Lincoln remarked, 'Well, Abe, my man has whipped yours, and I
-can whip you.' Now, this challenge came from a man who was very small in
-size. Mr. Lincoln agreed to fight, provided he would chalk out his size
-on Mr. Lincoln's person, and every blow struck outside of that mark
-should be counted foul. After this sally, there was the best possible
-humor, and all parties were as orderly as if they had been engaged in
-the most harmless amusement."
-
-In 1834 Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature, and this time
-was elected by a larger majority than any other man on the ticket. By
-this time the party with which he acted in the future was "discriminated
-as Whig;" and he did not hesitate to call himself a Whig, although he
-sought and received the votes of a great many Democrats. Just before the
-time had arrived for candidates to announce themselves, he went to John
-T. Stuart, and told him "the Democrats wanted to run him." He made the
-same statement to Ninian W. Edwards. Edwards and Stuart were both his
-personal and political friends, and they both advised him to let
-the Democrats have their way. Major Stuart's advice was certainly
-disinterested; for, in pursuance of it, two of the Whig candidates,
-Lincoln and Dawson, made a bargain with the Democrats which very
-nearly proved fatal to Stuart himself. He was at that time the favorite
-candidate of the Whigs for the Legislature; but the conduct of Lincoln
-and Dawson so demoralized the party, that his vote was seriously
-diminished. Up to this time Sangamon had been stanchly Democratic;
-but even in this election of 1834 we perceive slight evidences of that
-party's decay, and so early as 1836 the county became thoroughly Whig.
-
-We shall give no details of this campaign, since we should only be
-repeating what is written of the campaign of 1832. But we cannot
-withhold one extract from the reminiscences of Mr. Row Herndon:--
-
-"He (Lincoln) came to my house, near Island Grove, during harvest. There
-were some thirty men in the field. He got his dinner, and went out in
-the field where the men were at work. I gave him an introduction, and
-the boys said that they could not vote for a man unless he could make a
-hand. 'Well, boys,' said he, 'if that is all, I am sure of your votes.'
-He took hold of the cradle, and led the way all the round with perfect
-ease. The boys were satisfied, and I don't think he lost a vote in the
-crowd.
-
-"The next day was speaking at Berlin. He went from my house with Dr.
-Barnett, the man that had asked me who this man Lincoln was. I told him
-that he was a candidate for the Legislature. He laughed and said, 'Can't
-the party raise no better material than that?' I said, 'Go to-morrow,
-and hear all before you pronounce judgment.' When he came back, I
-said, 'Doctor, what say you now?' 'Why, sir,' said he, 'he is a perfect
-take-in: he knows more than all of them put together.'"
-
-Lincoln got 1,376 votes, Dawson 1,370, Carpenter 1,170, Stuart 1,164.
-Lincoln was at last duly elected a Representative by a very flattering
-majority, and began to look about for the pecuniary means necessary to
-maintain his new dignity. In this extremity he had recourse to an old
-friend named Coleman Smoot.
-
-One day in 1832, while he was clerking for Offutt, a stranger came into
-the store, and soon disclosed the fact that his name was Smoot. Abe was
-behind the counter at the moment; but, hearing the name, he sprang over
-and introduced himself. Abe had often heard of Smoot, and Smoot had
-often heard of Abe. They had been as anxious to meet as ever two
-celebrities were; but hitherto they had never been able to manage it.
-"Smoot," said Lincoln, after a steady survey of his person, "I am very
-much disappointed in you: I expected to see an old Probst of a fellow."
-(Probst, it appears, was the most hideous specimen of humanity in all
-that country.) "Yes," replied Smoot; "and I am equally disappointed,
-for I expected to see a good-looking man when I saw you." A few neat
-compliments like the foregoing laid the foundation of a lasting intimacy
-between the two men, and in his present distress Lincoln knew no one who
-would be more likely than Smoot to respond favorably to an application
-for money.
-
-"After he was elected to the Legislature," says Mr. Smoot, "he came to
-my house one day in company with Hugh Armstrong. Says he, 'Smoot, did
-you vote for me?' I told him I did. 'Well,' says he, 'you must loan me
-money to buy suitable clothing, for I want to make a decent appearance
-in the Legislature.' I then loaned him two hundred dollars, which he
-returned to me according to promise."
-
-The interval between the election and his departure for the seat of
-government was employed by Mr. Lincoln partly in reading, partly in
-writing.
-
-The community in which he lived was pre-eminently a community of
-free-thinkers in matters of religion; and it was then no secret, nor has
-it been a secret since, that Mr. Lincoln agreed with the majority of his
-associates in denying to the Bible the authority of divine revelation.
-It was his honest belief,--a belief which it was no reproach to hold
-at New Salem, Anno Domini 1834, and one which he never thought of
-concealing. It was no distinction, either good or bad, no honor, and no
-shame. But he had made himself thoroughly familiar with the writings
-of Paine and Volney,--"The Ruins" by one and "The Age of Reason" by
-the other. His mind was full of the subject, and he felt an itching to
-write. He did write, and the result was a "little book." It was probably
-merely an extended essay; but it is ambitiously spoken of as "a book" by
-himself and by the persons who were made acquainted with its contents.
-In this work he intended to demonstrate,--
-
-<b>"First, that the Bible was not God's revelation; and,
-
-"Secondly, that Jesus was not the Son of God."</b>
-
-These were his leading propositions, and surely they were comprehensive
-enough; but the reader will be better able to guess at the arguments
-by which they were sustained, when he has examined some of the evidence
-recorded in Chapter XIX.
-
-No leaf of this little volume has survived. Mr. Lincoln carried it
-in manuscript to the store of Mr. Samuel Hill, where it was read and
-discussed. Hill was himself an unbeliever, but his son considered
-this book "infamous." It is more than probable that Hill, being a warm
-personal friend of Lincoln, feared that the publication of the essay
-would some day interfere with the political advancement of his favorite.
-At all events, he snatched it out of his hand, and thrust it into the
-fire, from which not a shred escaped. The sequel will show that even Mr.
-Hill's provident forethought was not altogether equal to the prevention
-of the injury he dreaded.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE reader is already familiar with the name of James Rutledge, the
-founder of New Salem, and the owner in part of the famous mill on the
-Sangamon. He was born in South Carolina, and was of the illustrious
-Rutledge family of that State. From South Carolina he emigrated to
-Kentucky, and thence to Illinois. In 1828 he settled at New Salem, built
-the mill and laid out the village in conjunction with Mr. Cameron,
-a retired minister of the Cumberland Presbyterians. Mr. Rutledge's
-character seems to have been pure and high; for wherever his name occurs
-in the voluminous records before us,--in the long talks and the numerous
-epistles of his neighbors,--it is almost invariably coupled with some
-expression of genuine esteem and respect.
-
-At one time, and along with his other business,--which appears to have
-been quite extensive and various,--Mr. Rutledge kept the tavern, the
-small house with four rooms on the main street of New Salem, just
-opposite Lincoln's grocery. There Mr. Lincoln came to board late in
-1832, or early in 1833. The family consisted of the father, mother,
-and nine children,--three of them born in Kentucky and six in Illinois;
-three grown up, and the rest quite young. Ann, the principal subject of
-this chapter, was the third child. She was born on the 7th of January,
-1813, and was about nineteen years of age when Mr. Lincoln came to live
-in the house.
-
-When Ann was a little maiden just turned of seventeen, and still
-attending the school of that redoubtable pedagogue Min-ter Graham, there
-came to New Salem a young gentleman of singular enterprise, tact, and
-capacity for business. He is identical with the man whom we have already
-quoted as "the pioneer of New Salem as a business point," and who built
-the first storehouse there at the extravagant cost of fifteen dollars.
-He took boarding with Mr. Rutledge's friend and partner, James Cameron,
-and gave out his name as John McNeil. He came to New Salem with no other
-capital than good sense and an active and plucky spirit; but somehow
-fortune smiled indiscriminately on all his endeavors, and very soon--as
-early as the latter part of 1832--he found himself a well-to-do and
-prosperous man, owning a snug farm seven miles north of New Salem, and
-a half-interest in the largest store of the place. This latter property
-his partner, Samuel Hill, bought from him at a good round sum; for
-McNeil now announced his intention of being absent for a brief period,
-and his purpose was such that he might need all his available capital.
-
-In the mean time the partners, Hill and McNeil, had both fallen in love
-with Ann Rutledge, and both courted her with devoted assiduity. But the
-contest had long since been decided in favor of McNeil, and Ann loved
-him with all her susceptible and sensitive heart. When the time drew
-near for McNeil to depart, he confided to Ann a strange story,--and, in
-the eyes of a person less fond, a very startling story. His name was
-not John McNeil at all, but John McNamar. His family was a highly
-respectable one in the State of New York; but a few years before his
-father had failed in business, and there was great distress at home. He
-(John) then conceived the romantic plan of running away, and, at some
-undefined place in the far West, making a sudden fortune with which to
-retrieve the family disaster. He fled accordingly, changed his name to
-avoid the pursuit of his father, found his way to New Salem, and--she
-knew the rest. He was now able to perform that great act of filial piety
-which he set out to accomplish, would return at once to the relief of
-his parents, and, in all human probability, bring them back with him to
-his new home in Illinois. At all events, she might look for his return
-as speedily as the journey could be made with ordinary diligence; and
-thenceforward there should be no more partings between him and his fair
-Ann. She believed this tale, because she loved the man that told it;
-and she would have believed it all the same if it had been ten times as
-incredible. A wise man would have rejected it with scorn, but the girl's
-instinct was a better guide; and McNamar proved to be all that he said
-he was, although poor Ann never saw the proof which others got of it.
-
-McNamar rode away "on old Charley," an antiquated steed that had seen
-hard usage in the Black Hawk War. Charley was slow, stumbled dreadfully,
-and caused his rider much annoyance and some hard swearing. On this
-provoking animal McNamar jogged through the long journey from New Salem
-to New York, and arrived there after many delays, only to find that his
-broken and dispirited father was fast sinking into the grave. After
-all his efforts, he was too late: the father could never enjoy the
-prosperity which the long-absent and long-silent son had brought him.
-McNamar wrote to Ann that there was sickness in the family, and he could
-not return at the time appointed. Then there were other and still other
-postponements; "circumstances over which he had no control" prevented
-his departure from time to time, until years had rolled away, and Ann's
-heart had grown sick with hope deferred. She never quite gave him up,
-but continued to expect him until death terminated her melancholy watch.
-His inexplicable delay, however, the infrequency of his letters, and
-their unsatisfactory character,--these and something else had broken her
-attachment, and toward the last she waited for him only to ask a release
-from her engagement, and to say that she preferred another and a more
-urgent suitor. But without his knowledge and formal renunciation of his
-claim upon her, she did not like to marry; and, in obedience to this
-refinement of honor, she postponed her union with the more pressing
-lover until Aug. 25, 1835, when, as many persons believe, she died of a
-broken heart.
-
-Lincoln's friend Short was in some way related to the Rutledges, and
-for a while Lincoln visited Ann two or three times a week at his house.
-According to him, "Miss Rutledge was a good-looking, smart, lively girl,
-a good housekeeper, with a moderate education, and without any of the
-so-called accomplishments." L. M. Greene, who knew her well, talks about
-her as "a beautiful and very amiable young woman;" and "Nult" Greene is
-even more enthusiastic. "This young lady," in the language of the latter
-gentleman, "was a woman of exquisite beauty; but her intellect was
-quick, sharp, deep, and philosophic, as well as brilliant. She had
-as gentle and kind a heart as an angel, full of love, kindliness, and
-sympathy. She was beloved by everybody, and everybody respected and
-loved her, so sweet and angelic was she. Her character was more than
-good: it was positively noted throughout the county. She was a woman
-worthy of Lincoln's love." McNamar, her unfortunate lover, says, "Miss
-Ann was a gentle, amiable maiden, without any of the airs of your city
-belles, but winsome and comely withal; a blonde in complexion, with
-golden hair, cherry-red lips, and a bonny blue eye." Even the women
-of the neighborhood united with the men to praise the name of this
-beautiful but unhappy girl. Mrs. Hardin Bale "knew her well. She had
-auburn hair, blue eyes, fair complexion; was a slim, pretty, kind,
-tender, good-hearted woman; in height about five feet three inches, and
-weighed about a hundred and twenty pounds. She was beloved by all who
-knew her. McNamar, Hill, and Lincoln all courted her near the same time.
-She died as it were of grief. Miss Rutledge was beautiful." Such was
-Ann Rutledge, the girl in whose grave Mr. Lincoln said, "My heart lies
-buried." When Mr. Lincoln first saw Ann, she was probably the most
-refined woman with whom he had then ever spoken,--a modest, delicate
-creature, fascinating by reason of the mere contrast with the rude
-people by whom they were both surrounded. She had a secret, too, and a
-sorrow,--the unexplained and painful absence of McNamar,--which no doubt
-made her all the more interesting to him whose spirit was often even
-more melancholy than her own. It would be hard to trace the growth of
-such an attachment at a time and place so distant; but that it actually
-grew, and became an intense and mutual passion, the evidence before us
-is painfully abundant.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was always welcome at the little tavern, at Short's on
-the Sand Ridge, or at the farm, half a mile from Short's, where the
-Rutledges finally abode. Ann's father was his devoted friend, and the
-mother he called affectionately "Aunt Polly." It is probable that the
-family looked upon McNamar's delay with more suspicion than Ann did
-herself. At all events, all her adult relatives encouraged the suit
-which Lincoln early began to press; and as time, absence, and apparent
-neglect, gradually told against McNamar, she listened to him with
-augmenting interest, until, in 1835, we find them formally and solemnly
-betrothed. Ann now waited only for the return of McNamar to marry
-Lincoln. David Rutledge urged her to marry immediately, without regard
-to any thing but her own happiness; but she said she could not consent
-to it until McNamar came back and released her from her pledge. At
-length, however, as McNamar's re-appearance became more and more
-hopeless, she took a different view of it, and then thought she would
-become Abe's wife as soon as he found the means of a decent livelihood.
-"Ann told me once," says James M. in a letter to R. B. Rutledge, in
-coming from camp-meeting on Rock Creek, "that engagements made too far
-ahead sometimes failed; that one _had_ failed (meaning her engagement
-with McNamar), and gave me to understand, that, as soon as certain
-studies were completed, she and Lincoln would be married."
-
-In the summer of 1835 Ann showed unmistakable symptoms of failing
-health, attributable, as most of the neighborhood believed, to the
-distressing attitude she felt bound to maintain between her two lovers.
-On the 25th of August, in that year, she died of what the doctors chose
-to call "brain-fever." In a letter to Mr. Herndon, her brother
-says, "You suggest that the probable cause of Ann's sickness was her
-conflicts, emotions, &c. As to this I cannot say. I, however, have my
-own private convictions. The character of her sickness was brain-fever."
-A few days before her death Lincoln was summoned to her bedside. What
-happened in that solemn conference was known only to him and the dying
-girl. But when he left her, and stopped at the house of John Jones, on
-his way home, Jones saw signs of the most terrible distress in his
-face and his conduct. When Ann actually died, and was buried, his grief
-became frantic: he lost all self-control, even the consciousness of
-identity, and every friend he had in New Salem pronounced him insane,
-mad, crazy. "He was watched with especial vigilance," as William Green
-tells us, "during storms, fogs, damp, gloomy weather, for fear of an
-accident." "At such times he raved piteously, declaring, among other wild
-expressions of his woe, 'I can never be reconciled to have the snow,
-rains, and storms to beat upon her grave!'"
-
-About three-quarters of a mile below New Salem, at the foot of the main
-bluff, and in a hollow between two lateral bluffs, stood the house of
-Bowlin Greene, built of logs and weather-boarded. Thither the friends
-of Lincoln, who apprehended a total abdication of reason, determined
-to transport him, partly for the benefit of a mere change of scene, and
-partly to keep him within constant reach of his near and noble
-friend, Bowlin Greene. During this period of his darkened and wavering
-intellect, when "accidents" were momentarily expected, it was discovered
-that Bowlin Greene possessed a power to persuade and guide him
-proportioned to the affection that had subsisted between them in former
-and better times. Bowlin Greene came for him, but Lincoln was cunning
-and obstinate: it required the most artful practices of a general
-conspiracy of all his friends to "disarm his suspicions," and induce
-him to go and stay with his most anxious and devoted friend. But at last
-they succeeded; and Lincoln remained down under the bluff for two or
-three weeks, the object of undisguised solicitude and of the strictest
-surveillance. At the end of that time his mind seemed to be restored,
-and it was thought safe to let him go back to his old haunts,--to the
-study of law, to the writing of legal papers for his neighbors, to
-pettifogging before the justice of the peace, and perhaps to a little
-surveying. But Mr. Lincoln was never precisely the same man again. At
-the time of his release he was thin, haggard, and careworn,--like one
-risen from the verge of the grave. He had always been subject to fits
-of great mental depression, but after this they were more frequent and
-alarming. It was then that he began to repeat, with a feeling which
-seemed to inspire every listener with awe, and to carry him to the fresh
-grave of Ann at every one of his solemn periods, the lines entitled,
-"Immortality; or, Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?"
-None heard him but knew that he selected these curiously empty, yet
-wonderfully sad, impressive lines, to celebrate a grief which lay
-with continual heaviness on his heart, but to which he could not with
-becoming delicacy directly allude. He muttered them as he rambled
-through the woods, or walked by the roaring Sangamon. He was heard to
-murmur them to himself as he slipped into the village at nightfall,
-after a long walk of six miles, and an evening visit to the Concord
-graveyard; and he would suddenly break out with them in little social
-assemblies after noticeable periods of silent gloom. They came unbidden
-to his lips, while the air of affliction in face and gesture, the moving
-tones and touching modulations of his voice, made it evident that every
-syllable of the recitation was meant to commemorate the mournful fate of
-Ann. The poem is now his: the name of the obscure author is forgotten,
-and his work is imperishably associated with the memory of a great man,
-and interwoven with the history of his greatest Sorrow. Mr. Lincoln's
-adoption of it has saved it from merited oblivion, and translated it
-from the "poet's corner" of the country newspaper to a place in the
-story of his own life,--a story that will continue to be written, or
-written about, as long as our language exists.
-
-Many years afterwards, when Mr. Lincoln, the best lawyer of his section,
-with one exception, travelled the circuit with the court and a crowd
-of his jolly brethren, he always rose early, be fore any one else was
-stirring, and, raking together a few glowing coals on the hearth, he
-would sit looking into them, musing and talking with himself, for hours
-together. One morning, in the year of his nomination, his companions
-found him in this attitude, when "Mr. Lincoln repeated aloud, and at
-length, the poem 'Immortality,'" indicating his preference for the two
-last stanzas, but insisting that the entire composition "sounded to him
-as much like true poetry as any thing that he had ever heard."
-
-In Carpenter's "Anecdotes and Reminiscences of President Lincoln,"
-occurs the following passage:--?
-
-"The evening of March 22, 1864, was a most interesting one to me. I was
-with the President alone in his office for several hours. Busy with pen
-and papers when I went in, he presently threw them aside, and commenced
-talking to me of Shakspeare, of whom he was very fond. Little 'Tad,' his
-son, coming in, he sent him to the library for a copy of the plays,
-and then read to me several of his favorite passages. Relapsing into a
-sadder strain, he laid the book aside, and, leaning back in his chair,
-said,--
-
-"'There is a poem which has been a great favorite with me for years,
-which was first shown to me when a young man by a friend, and which I
-afterwards saw and cut from a newspaper, and learned by heart. I would,'
-he continued, 'give a great deal to know who wrote it; but I have never
-been able to ascertain.'
-
-"Then, half closing his eyes, he repeated the verses to me:--
-
- "'Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
- Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud,
- A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,
- He passeth from life to his rest in the grave.
-
- The leaves of the oak and the willow shall fade,
- Be scattered around, and together be laid;
- And the young and the old, and the low and the high,
- Shall moulder to dust, and together shall lie.
-
- The infant a mother attended and loved;
- The mother that infant's affection who proved;
- The husband that mother and infant who blest,--
- Each, all, are away to their dwellings of rest.
-
- [The maid on whose cheek, on whose brow, in whose eye,
- Shone beauty and pleasure, her triumphs are by;
- And the memory of those who loved her and praised,
- Are alike from the minds of the living erased.]
-
- The hand of the king that the sceptre hath borne,
- The brow of the priest that the mitre hath worn,
- The eye of the sage, and the heart of the brave,
- Are hidden and lost in the depths of the grave.
-
- The peasant whose lot was to sow and to reap,
- The herdsman who climbed with his goats up the steep,
- The beggar who wandered in search of his bread,
- Have faded away like the grass that we tread.
-
- [The saint who enjoyed the communion of Heaven,
- The sinner who dared to remain unforgiven,
- The wise and the foolish, the guilty and just,
- Have quietly mingled their bones in the dust.]
-
- So the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed,
- That withers away to let others succeed;
- So the multitude comes, even those we behold,
- To repeat every tale that has often been told.
-
- For we are the same our fathers have been;
- We see the same sights our fathers have seen;
- We drink the same stream, we view the same sun,
- And run the same course our fathers have run.
-
- The thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think;
- From the death we are shrinking our fathers would shrink;
- To the life we are clinging they also would cling;
- But it speeds from us all like a bird on the wing.
-
- They loved, but the story we cannot unfold;
- They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold;
- They grieved, but no wail from their slumber will come;
- They joyed, but the tongue of their gladness is dumb.
-
- They died, ay, they died: we things that are now,
- That walk on the turf that lies over their brow,
- And make in their dwellings a transient abode,
- Meet the things that they met on their pilgrimage road.
-
- Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain,
- Are mingled together in sunshine and rain;
- And the smile and the tear, the song and the dirge,
- Still follow each other like surge upon surge.
-
- 'Tis the wink of an eye,'tis the draught of a breath,
- From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
- From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,--
- Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?'"
-
-It was only a year or two after the death of Ann Rutledge that Mr.
-Lincoln told Robert L. Wilson, a distinguished colleague in the
-Legislature, parts of whose letter will be printed in another place,
-that, although "he appeared to enjoy life rapturously," it was a
-mistake; that, "when alone, he was so overcome by mental depression,
-that he never dared to carry a pocket-knife." And during all Mr.
-Wilson's extended acquaintance with him he never did own a knife,
-notwithstanding he was inordinately fond of whittling.
-
-Mr. Herndon says, "He never addressed another woman, in my opinion,
-'Yours affectionately,' and generally and characteristically abstained
-from the use of the word '_love._' That word cannot be found more than
-a half-dozen times, if that often, in all his letters and speeches since
-that time. I have seen some of his letters to other ladies, but he never
-says 'love.' He never ended his letters with 'Yours affectionately,'
-but signed his name, 'Your friend, A. Lincoln.'" After Mr. Lincoln's
-election to the Presidency, he one day met an old friend, Isaac Cogdale,
-who had known him intimately in the better days of the Rutledges at New
-Salem. "Ike," said he, "call at my office at the State House about
-an hour by sundown. The company will then all be gone." Cogdale went
-according to request; "and sure enough," as he expressed it, "the
-company dropped off one by one, including Lincoln's clerk."
-
-"'I want to inquire about old times and old acquaintances,' began Mr.
-Lincoln. 'When we lived in Salem, there were the Greenes, Potters,
-Armstrongs, and Rutledges. These folks have got scattered all over the
-world,--some are dead. Where are the Rutledges, Greenes, &c.?'
-
-"After we had spoken over old times," continues Cogdale,--"persons,
-circumstances,--in which he showed a wonderful memory, I then dared to
-ask him this question:--
-
-"'May I now, in turn, ask you one question, Lincoln?'
-
-"'Assuredly. I will answer your question, if a fair one, with all my
-heart.'
-
-"'Well, Abe, is it true that you fell in love and courted Ann Rutledge?'
-
-"'It is true,--true: indeed I did. I have loved the name of Rutledge to
-this day. I have kept my mind on their movements ever since, and love
-them dearly.'
-
-"'Abe, is it true,'" still urged Cogdale, "that you ran a little wild
-about the matter?'
-
-"'I did really. I ran off the track. It was my first. I loved the woman
-dearly. She was a handsome girl; would have made a good, loving wife;
-was natural and quite intellectual, though not highly educated. I did
-honestly and truly love the girl, and think often, often, of her now.'"
-
-A few weeks after the burial of Ann, McNamar returned to New Salem.
-He saw Lincoln at the post-office, and was struck with the deplorable
-change in his appearance. A short time afterwards Lincoln wrote him
-a deed, which he still has, and prizes highly, in memory of his great
-friend and rival. His father was at last dead; but he brought back with
-him his mother and her family. In December of the same year his mother
-died, and was buried in the same graveyard with Ann. During his absence,
-Col. Rutledge had occupied his farm, and there Ann died; but "the
-Rutledge farm" proper adjoined this one to the south. "Some of Mr.
-Lincoln's corners, as a surveyor, are still visible on lines traced by
-him on both farms."
-
-On Sunday, the fourteenth day of October, 1866, William H. Herndon
-knocked at the door of John McNamar, at his residence, but a few feet
-distant from the spot where Ann Rutledge breathed her last. After some
-preliminaries not necessary to be related, Mr. Herndon says, "I asked
-him the question:--
-
-"'Did you know Miss Rutledge? If so, where did she die?'
-
-"He sat by his open window, looking westerly; and, pulling me closer to
-himself, looked through the window and said, 'There, by that,'--choking
-up with emotion, pointing his long forefinger, nervous and trembling,
-to the spot,--'there, by that currant-bush, she died. The old house in
-which she and her father died is gone.'
-
-"After further conversation, leaving the sadness to momentarily pass
-away, I asked this additional question:--
-
-"'Where was she buried?'
-
-"'In Concord burying-ground, one mile south-east of this place.'"
-
-Mr. Herndon sought the grave. "S. C. Berry," says he, "James Short (the
-gentleman who purchased in Mr. Lincoln's compass and chain in 1834,
-under an execution against Lincoln, or Lincoln & Berry, and gratuitously
-gave them back to Mr. Lincoln), James Miles, and myself were together.
-
-"I asked Mr. Berry if he knew where Miss Rutledge was buried,--the place
-and exact surroundings. He replied, 'I do. The grave of Miss Rutledge
-lies just north of her brother's, David Rutledge, a young lawyer of
-great promise, who died in 1842, in his twenty-seventh year.'
-
-"The cemetery contains but an acre of ground, in a beautiful and
-secluded situation. A thin skirt of timber lies on the east, commencing
-at the fence of the cemetery. The ribbon of timber, some fifty yards
-wide, hides the sun's early rise. At nine o'clock the sun pours all
-his rays into the cemetery. An extensive prairie lies west, the forest
-north, a field on the east, and timber and prairie on the south. In this
-lonely ground lie the Berrys, the Rutledges, the Clarys, the Armstrongs,
-and the Joneses, old and respected citizens,--pioneers of an early day.
-I write, or rather did write, the original draught of this description
-in the immediate presence of the ashes of Miss Ann Rutledge, the
-beautiful and tender dead. The village of the dead is a sad, solemn
-place. Its very presence imposes truth on the mind of the living writer.
-Ann Rutledge lies buried north of lier brother, and rests sweetly on
-his left arm, angels to guard her. The cemetery is fast filling with
-the hazel and the dead."
-
-A lecture delivered by William H. Herndon at Springfield, in 1866,
-contained the main outline, without the minuter details, of the
-story here related. It was spoken, printed, and circulated without
-contradiction from any quarter. It was sent to the Rutledges, McNeeleys,
-Greenes, Short, and many other of the old residents of New Salem and
-Petersburg, with particular requests that they should correct any
-error they might find in it. It was pronounced by them all truthful
-and accurate; but their replies, together with a mass of additional
-evidence, have been carefully collated with the lecture, and the result
-is the present chapter. The story of Ann Rutledge, Lincoln, and McNamar,
-as told here, is as well proved as the fact of Mr. Lincoln's election to
-the Presidency.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-FOLLOWING strictly the chronological order hitherto observed in the
-course of this narrative, we should be compelled to break off the story
-of Mr. Lincoln's love-affairs at New Salem, and enter upon his public
-career in the Legislature and before the people. But, while by that
-means we should preserve continuity in one respect, we should lose it in
-another; and the reader would perhaps prefer to take in at one view
-all of Mr. Lincoln's courtships, save only that one which resulted in
-marriage.
-
-Three-quarters of a mile, or nearly so, north of Bowlin Greene's, and
-on the summit of a hill, stood the house of Bennett Able, a small frame
-building eighteen by twenty feet. Able and his wife were warm friends
-of Mr. Lincoln; and many of his rambles through the surrounding country,
-reading and talking to himself, terminated at their door, where he
-always found the latch-string on the outside, and a hearty welcome
-within. In October, 1833, Mr. Lincoln met there Miss Mary Owens, a
-sister of Mrs. Able, and, as we shall presently learn from his own
-words, admired her, although not extravagantly. She remained but four
-weeks, and then went back to her home in Kentucky.
-
-Miss Owens's mother being dead, her father married again; and Miss
-Owens, for good reasons of her own, thought she would rather live with
-her sister than with her stepmother. Accordingly, in the fall of 1836,
-she re-appeared at Able's, passing through New Salem on the day of the
-presidential election, where the men standing about the polls stared and
-wondered at her "beauty." Twenty eight or nine years of age, "she was,"
-in the language of Mr. L. M. Greene, "tall and portly; weighed about
-one hundred and twenty pounds, and had large blue eyes, with the finest
-trimmings I ever saw. She was jovial, social, loved wit and humor, had a
-liberal English education, and was considered wealthy. Bill," continues
-our excellent friend, "I am getting old; have seen too much trouble to
-give a lifelike picture of this woman. I won't try it. None of the
-poets or romance-writers has ever given to us a picture of a heroine so
-beautiful as a good description of Miss Owens in 1836 would be."
-
-Mrs. Hardin Bale, a cousin to Miss Owens, says "she was blue-eyed,
-dark-haired, handsome,--not pretty,--was rather large and tall,
-handsome, truly handsome, matronly looking, over ordinary size in height
-and weight.... Miss Owens was handsome, that is to say, noble-looking,
-matronly seeming."
-
-Respecting her age and looks, Miss. Owens herself makes the following
-note, Aug. 6, 1866:---
-
-"Born in the year eight; fair skin, deep-blue eyes, with dark curling
-hair; height five feet five inches, weighing about one hundred and fifty
-pounds."
-
-Johnson G. Greene is Miss Owens's cousin; and, whilst on a visit to her
-in 1866, he contrived to get her version of the Lincoln courtship at
-great length. It does not vary in any material part from the account
-currently received in the neighborhood, and given by various persons,
-whose oral or written testimony is preserved in Mr. Herndon's collection
-of manuscripts. Greene (J. G.) described her in terms about the same
-as those used by Mrs. Bale, adding that "she was a nervous and muscular
-woman," very "intellectual,"--"the most intellectual woman he ever
-saw,"--"with a forehead massive and angular, square, prominent, and
-broad."
-
-After Miss Owens's return to New Salem, in the fall of 1813, Mr. Lincoln
-was unremitting in his attentions; and wherever she went he was at
-her side. She had many relatives in the neighborhood,--the Bales, the
-Greenes, the Grahams: and, if she went to spend an afternoon or an
-evening with any of these, Abe was very likely to be on hand to conduct
-her home. He asked her to marry him; but she prudently evaded a positive
-answer until she could make up her mind about questionable points of his
-character. She did not think him coarse or cruel; but she did think
-him thoughtless, careless, not altogether as polite as he might be,--in
-short, "deficient," as she expresses it, "in those little links which
-make up the great chain of woman's happiness." His heart was good, his
-principles were high, his honor sensitive; but still, in the eyes of
-this refined, young lady, he did not seem to be quite the gentleman. "He
-was lacking in the smaller attentions;" and, in fact, the whole affair
-is explained when she tells us that "_his education was different from"
-hers_.
-
-One day Miss Owens and Mrs. Bowlin Greene were making their way slowly
-and tediously up the hill to Able's house, when they were joined by
-Lincoln. Mrs. Bowlin Greene was carrying "a great big fat child, heavy,
-and crossly disposed." Although the woman bent pitiably under her
-burden, Lincoln offered her no assistance, but, dropping behind with
-Miss Owens, beguiled the way according to his wishes. When they reached
-the summit, "Miss Owens said to Lincoln laughingly, 'You would not make
-a good husband. Abe.' They sat on the fence; and one word brought on
-another, till a split or breach ensued."
-
-Immediately after this misunderstanding, Lincoln went off toward Havana
-on a surveying expedition, and was absent about three weeks. On the
-first day of his return, one of Able's boys was sent up "to town" for
-the mail. Lincoln saw him at the post-office, and "asked if Miss Owens
-was at Mr. Able's." The boy said "Yes."--"Tell her," said Lin-join,
-"that I'll be down to see her in a few minutes." Now, Miss Owens had
-determined to spend that evening at Minter Graham's; and when the boy
-gave in the report, "she thought a moment, and said to herself, 'If
-I can draw Lincoln up there to Graham's, it will be all right.'" This
-scheme was to operate as a test of Abe's love; but it shared the fate of
-some of "the best-laid schemes of mice and men," and went "all agley."
-
-Lincoln, according to promise, went down to Able's, and asked if Miss
-Owens was in. Mrs. Able replied that she had gone to Graham's, about one
-and a half miles from Able's due south-west. Lincoln said, "Didn't she
-know I was coming?" Mrs. Able answered, "No;" but one of the children
-said, "Yes, ma, she did, for I heard Sam tell her so." Lincoln sat a
-while, and then went about his business. "The fat was now in the fire.
-Lincoln thought, as he was extremely poor, and Miss Owens very rich, it
-was a fling on him on that account. Abe was mistaken in his guesses,
-for wealth cut no figure in Miss Owens's eyes. Miss Owens regretted her
-course. Abe would not bend; and Miss Owens wouldn't. She said, if she
-had it to do over again she would play the cards differently.... She had
-two sons in the Southern army. She said that if either of them had got
-into difficulty, she would willingly have gone to old Abe for relief."
-
-In Miss Owens's letter of July 22, 1866, it will be observed! that she
-tacitly admitted to Mr. Gaines Greene "the circumstances in connection
-with Mrs. Greene and child." Although she here denies the precise words
-alleged to have been used by her in the little quarrel at the top of the
-hill, she does not deny the impression his conduct left upon her mind,
-but presents additional evidence of it by the relation of another
-incident of similar character, from which her inferences were the same.
-
-Fortunately we are not compelled, to rely upon tradition, however
-authentic, for the facts concerning this interesting episode in Mr.
-Lincoln's life. Miss Owens is still alive to tell her own tale, and
-we have besides his letters to the lady herself. Mr. Lincoln wrote his
-account of it as early as 1838. As in duty bound, we shall permit the
-lady to speak first. At her particular request, her present name and
-residence are suppressed.
-
-
-------, May 1, 1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-Dear Sir,--After quite a struggle with my feelings, I have at last
-decided to send you the letters in my possession written by Mr.
-Lincoln, believing, as I do, that you are a gentleman of honor, and will
-faithfully abide by all you have said.
-
-My associations with your lamented friend were in Menard County, whilst
-visiting a sister, who then resided near Petersburg. I have learned
-that my maiden name is now in your possession; and you have ere this, no
-doubt, been informed that I am a native Kentuckian.
-
-As regards Miss Rutledge, I cannot tell you any thing, she having died
-previous to my acquaintance with Mr. Lincoln; and I do not now recollect
-of ever hearing him mention her name. Please return the letters at your
-earliest convenience.
-
-Very respectfully yours,
-
-Mary S.------.
-
-
-------, May 22,1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-My dear Sir,--Really you catechise me in true lawyer style; but I feel
-you will have the goodness to excuse me if I decline answering all your
-questions in detail, being well assured that few women would have ceded
-as much as I have under all the circumstances.
-
-You say you have heard why our acquaintance terminated as it did. I,
-too, have heard the same bit of gossip; but I never used the remark
-which Madam Rumor says I did to Mr. Lincoln. I think I did on one
-occasion say to my sister, who was very anxious for us to be married,
-that I thought Mr. Lincoln was deficient in those little links which
-make up the chain of woman's happiness,--at least, it was so in my case.
-Not that I believed it proceeded from a lack of goodness of heart: but
-his training had been different from mine; hence there was not that
-congeniality which would otherwise have existed.
-
-From his own showing, you perceive that his heart and hand were at my
-disposal; and I suppose that my feelings were not sufficiently enlisted
-to have the matter consummated. About the beginning of the year 1833 I
-left Illinois, at which time our acquaintance and correspondence ceased
-without ever again being renewed.
-
-My father, who resided in Green County, Kentucky, was a gentleman of
-considerable means; and I am persuaded that few persons placed a higher
-estimate on education than he did.
-
-Respectfully yours,
-
-Mart S.------.
-
-
-------, July 22, 1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-Dear Sir,--I do not think that you are pertinacious in asking the
-question relative to old Mrs. Bowlin Greene, because I wish to set you
-right on that question. Your information, no doubt, came through my
-cousin, Mr. Gaines Greene, who visited us last winter. Whilst here, he
-was laughing at me about Mr. Lincoln, and among other things spoke about
-the circumstance in connection with Mrs. Greene and child. My impression
-is now that I tacitly admitted it, for it was a season of trouble with
-me, and I gave but little heed to the matter. We never had any hard
-feelings toward each other that I know of. On no occasion did I say to
-Mr. Lincoln that I did not believe he would make a kind husband, because
-he did not tender his services to Mrs. Greene in helping of her carry
-her babe. As I said to you in a former letter, I thought him lacking
-in smaller attentions. One circumstance presents itself just now to my
-mind's eye. There was a company of us going to Uncle Billy Greene's. Mr.
-Lincoln was riding with me; and we had a very bad branch to cross. The
-other gentlemen were very officious in seeing that their partners got
-over safely. We were behind, he riding in, never looking back to see
-how I got along. When I rode up beside him, I remarked, "You are a nice
-fellow! I suppose you did not care whether my neck was broken or not."
-He laughingly replied (I suppose by way of compliment) that he knew I
-was plenty smart to take care of myself.
-
-In many things he was sensitive, almost to a fault. He told me of an
-incident: that he was crossing a prairie one day, and saw before him "a
-hog mired down," to use his own language. He was rather "fixed up;" and
-he resolved that he would pass on without looking towards the shoat.
-After he had gone by, he said the feeling was irresistible; and he had
-to look back, and the poor thing seemed to say wistfully, "There, now,
-my last hope is gone;" that he deliberately got down, and relieved it
-from its difficulty.
-
-In many things we were congenial spirits. In politics we saw eye to eye,
-though since then we differed as widely as the South is from the North.
-But methinks I hear you say, "Save me from a political woman!" So say I.
-
-The last message I ever received from him was about a year after we
-parted in Illinois. Mrs. Able visited Kentucky; and he said to her
-in Springfield, "Tell your sister that I think she was a great fool,
-because she did not stay here, and marry me." Characteristic of the man.
-
-Respectfully yours,
-
-Mary S.------.
-
-Vandalia, Dec. 13, 1836.
-
-Mary,--I have been sick ever since my arrival, or I should have written
-sooner. It is but little difference, however, as I have very little
-even yet to write. And more, the longer I can avoid the mortification
-of looking in the post-office for your letter, and not finding it, the
-better. You see I am mad about that _old letter_ yet. I don't like very
-well to risk you again. I'll try you once more, anyhow.
-
-The new State House is not yet finished, and consequently the
-Legislature is doing little or nothing. The Governor delivered an
-inflammatory political message, and it is expected there will be some
-sparring between the parties about it as soon as the two Houses get to
-business. Taylor delivered up his petitions for the new county to one
-of our members this morning. I am told he despairs of its success, on
-account of all the members from Morgan County opposing it. There are
-names enough on the petition, I think, to justify the members from our
-county in going for it; but if the members from Morgan oppose it, which
-they say they will, the chance will be bad.
-
-Our chance to take the seat of government to Springfield is better than
-I expected. An internal-improvement convention was held here since we
-met, which recommended a loan of several million of dollars, on the
-faith of the State, to construct railroads. Some of the Legislature are
-for it, and some against it: which has the majority I cannot tell.
-There is great strife and struggling for the office of the United States
-Senator here at this time. It is probable we shall ease their pains in
-a few days. The opposition men have no candidate of their own; and
-consequently they will smile as complacently at the angry snarl of the
-contending Van-Buren candidates and their respective friends, as the
-Christian does at Satan's rage. You recollect that I mentioned at the
-outset of this letter that I had been unwell. That is the fact, though
-I believe I am about well now; but that, with other things I cannot
-account for, have conspired, and have gotten my spirits so low that I
-feel that I would rather be any place in the world than here. I really
-cannot endure the thought of staying here ten weeks. Write back as soon
-as you get this, and, if possible, say something that will please me;
-for really I have not been pleased since I left you. This letter is
-so dry and stupid that I am ashamed to send it, but with my present
-feelings I cannot do any better.
-
-Give my best respects to Mr. and Mrs. Able and family.
-
-Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, May 7, 1837.
-
-Miss Mary S. Owens.
-
-Friend Mary,--I have commenced two letters to send you before this, both
-of which displeased me before I got half done, and so I tore them up.
-The first I thought was not serious enough, and the second was on the
-other extreme. I shall send this, turn out as it may.
-
-This thing of living in Springfield is rather a dull business, after
-all; at least, it is so to me. I am quite as lonesome here as I ever was
-anywhere in my life. I have been spoken to by but one woman since I've
-been here, and should not have been by her, if she could have avoided
-it. I've never been to church yet, nor probably shall not be soon. I
-stay away because I am conscious I should not know how to behave myself.
-
-I am often thinking about what we said of your coming to live at
-Springfield. I am afraid you would not be satisfied. There is a great
-deal of flourishing about in carriages here, which it would be your doom
-to see without sharing it. You would have to be poor, without the means
-of hiding your poverty. Do you believe you could bear that patiently?
-Whatever woman may cast her lot with mine, should any ever do so, it is
-my intention to do all in my power to make her happy and contented; and
-there is nothing I can imagine that would make me more unhappy than to
-fail in the effort. I know I should be much happier with you than the
-way I am, provided I saw no signs of discontent in you. What you have
-said to me may have been in the way of jest, or I may have misunderstood
-it. If so, then let it be forgotten; if otherwise, I much wish you would
-think seriously before you decide. For my part, I have already decided.
-What I have said I will most positively abide by, provided you wish
-it. My opinion is, that you had better not do it. You have not been
-accustomed to hardship, and it may be more severe than you now imagine.
-I know you are capable of thinking correctly on any subject; and, if you
-deliberate maturely upon this before you decide, then I am willing to
-abide your decision.
-
-You must write me a good long letter after you get this. You have
-nothing else to do; and, though it might not seem interesting to you
-after you have written it, it would be a good deal of company to me in
-this "busy wilderness." Tell your sister, I don't want to hear any more
-about selling out and moving, That gives me the hypo whenever I think of
-it.
-
-Yours, &c.,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Aug. 16, 1837.
-
-Friend Mary,--You will no doubt think it rather strange that I should
-write you a letter on the same day on which we parted; and I can only
-account for it by supposing that seeing you lately makes me think of you
-more than usual; while at our late meeting we had but few expressions
-of thoughts. You must know that I cannot see you, or think of you, with
-entire indifference; and yet it may be that you are mistaken in regard
-to what my real feelings toward you are. If I knew you were not, I
-should not trouble you with this letter. Perhaps any other man would
-know enough without further information; but I consider it my peculiar
-right to plead ignorance, and your bounden duty to allow the plea. I
-want in all cases to do right; and most particularly so in all cases
-with women. I want, at this particular time, more than any thing else,
-to do right with you: and if I knew it would be doing right, as I rather
-suspect it would, to let you alone, I would do it. And, for the purpose
-of making the matter as plain as possible, I now say that you can now
-drop the subject, dismiss your thoughts (if you ever had any) from me
-forever, and leave this letter unanswered, without calling forth one
-accusing murmur from me. And I will even go further, and say, that, if
-it will add any thing to your comfort or peace of mind to do so, it is
-my sincere wish that you should. Do not understand by this that I wish
-to cut your acquaintance. I mean no such thing. What I do wish is, that
-our further acquaintance shall depend upon yourself. If such further
-acquaintance would constitute nothing to your happiness, I am sure it
-would not to mine. If you feel yourself in any degree bound to me, I am
-now willing to release you, provided you wish it; while, on the other
-hand, I am willing, and even anxious, to bind you faster, if I can
-be convinced that it will, in any considerable degree, add to your
-happiness. This, indeed, is the whole question with me. Nothing would
-make me more miserable than to believe you miserable,--nothing more
-happy than to know you were so.
-
-In what I have now said, I think I cannot be misunderstood; and to make
-myself understood is the only object of this letter.
-
-If it suits you best to not answer this, farewell. A long life and
-a merry one attend you. But, if you conclude to write back, speak as
-plainly as I do. There can be neither harm nor danger in saying to me
-any thing you think, just in the manner you think it.
-
-My respects to your sister. Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-After his second meeting with Mary, Mr. Lincoln had little time to
-prosecute his addresses in person; for early in December he was called
-away to his seat in the Legislature; but, if his tongue was silent in
-the cause, his pen was busy.
-
-During the session of the Legislature of 1886-7, Mr. Lincoln made the
-acquaintance of Mrs. O. H. Browning, whose husband was also a member.
-The acquaintance ripened into friendship, and that winter and the next
-Mr. Lincoln spent a great deal of time in social intercourse with the
-Brownings. Mrs. Browning knew nothing as yet of the affair with Miss
-Owens; but as the latter progressed, and Lincoln became more and more
-involved, she noticed the ebb of his spirits, and often rallied him
-as the victim of some secret but consuming passion. With this for his
-excuse, Lincoln wrote her, after the adjournment of the Legislature, a
-full and connected account of the manner in which he had latterly been
-making "a fool of" himself. For many reasons the publication of this
-letter is an extremely painful duty. If it could be withheld, and the
-act decently reconciled to the conscience of a biographer professing to
-be honest and candid, it should never see the light in these pages. Its
-grotesque humor, its coarse exaggerations in describing the person of a
-lady whom the writer was willing to marry, its imputation of toothless
-and weatherbeaten old age to a woman really young and handsome, its
-utter lack of that delicacy of tone and sentiment which one naturally
-expects a gentleman to adopt when he thinks proper to discuss the merits
-of his late mistress,--all these, and its defective orthography, it
-would certainly be more agreeable to suppress than to publish. But, if
-we begin by omitting or mutilating a document which sheds so broad a
-light upon one part of his life and one phase of his character, why may
-we not do the like as fast and as often as the temptations arise? and
-where shall the process cease? A biography worth writing at all is worth
-writing fully and honestly; and the writer who suppresses or mangles
-the truth is no better than he who bears false witness in any other
-capacity. In April, 1838, Miss Owens finally departed from Illinois;
-and in that same month Mr. Lincoln wrote Mrs. Browning:--
-
-Springfield, April 1, 1838.
-
-Dear Madam,--Without appologising for being egotistical, I shall make
-the history of so much of my life as has elapsed since I saw you the
-subject of this letter. And, by the way, I now discover, that, in order
-to give a full and inteligible account of the things I have done and
-suffered since I saw you, I shall necessarily have to relate some that
-happened before.
-
-It was, then, in the autumn of 1836, that a married lady of my
-acquaintance, and who was a great friend of mine, being about to pay a
-visit to her father & other relatives residing in Kentucky, proposed
-to me that on her return she would bring a sister of hers with her on
-condition that I would engage to become her brother-in-law with all
-convenient despatch. I, of course, accepted the proposal, for you know
-I could not have done otherwise, had I really been averse to it; but
-privately, between you and me, I was most confoundedly well pleased with
-the project. I had seen the said sister some three years before, thought
-her inteligent and agreeable, and saw no good objection to plodding
-life through hand in hand with her. Time passed on, the lady took her
-journey, and in due time returned, sister in company, sure enough. This
-astonished me a little; for it appeared to me that her coming so
-readily showed that she was a trifle too willing; but, on reflection,
-it occurred to me that she might have been prevailed on by her married
-sister to come, without any thing concerning me ever having been
-mentioned to her; and so I concluded, that, if no other objection
-presented itself, I would consent to wave this. All this occurred to me
-on _hearing_ of her arrival in the neighborhood; for, be it remembered,
-I had not yet _seen_ her, except about three years previous, as above
-mentioned. In a few days we had an interview; and, although I had seen
-her before, she did not look as my imagination had pictured her. I knew
-she was oversize, but she now appeared a fair match for Falstaff. I knew
-she was called an "old maid," and I felt no doubt of the truth of at
-least half of the appelation; but now, when I beheld her, I could not
-for my life avoid thinking of my mother; and this, not from withered
-features, for her skin was too full of fat 'to permit of its contracting
-into wrinkles, but from her want of teeth, weather-beaten appearance
-in general, and from a kind of notion that ran in my head that nothing
-could have commenced at the size of infancy and reached her present bulk
-in less than thirty-five or forty years; and, in short, I was not at
-all pleased with her. But what could I do? I had told her sister that I
-would take her for better or for worse; and I made a point of honor and
-conscience in all things to stick to my word, especially if others had
-been induced to act on it, which in this case I had no doubt they had;
-for I was now fairly convinced that no other man on earth would have
-her, and hence the conclusion that they were bent on holding me to my
-bargain. "Well," thought I, "I have said it, and, be the consequences
-what they may, it shall not be my fault if I fail to do it." At once
-I determined to consider her my wife; and, this done, all my powers of
-discovery were put to work in search of perfections in her which might
-be fairly sett off against her defects. I tried to imagine her handsome,
-which, but for her unfortunate corpulency, was actually true. Exclusive
-of this, no woman that I have ever seen has a finer face. I also tried
-to convince myself that the mind was much more to be valued than the
-person; and in this she was not inferior, as I could discover, to any
-with whom I had been acquainted.
-
-Shortly after this, without attempting to come to any positive
-understanding with her, I sat out for Vandalia, when and where you first
-saw me. During my stay there I had letters from her which did not change
-my opinion of either her intelect or intention, but, on the contrary,
-confirmed it in both.
-
-All this while, although I was fixed, "firm as the surge-repelling
-rock," in my resolution, I found I was continually repenting the
-rashness which had led me to make it. Through life, I have been in no
-bondage, either real or imaginary, from the thraldom of which I so much
-desired to be free. After my return home, I saw nothing to change my
-opinions of her in any particular. She was the same, and so was I. I
-now spent my time in planing how I might get along through life after my
-contemplated change of circumstances should have taken place, and how I
-might procrastinate the evil day for a time, which I really dreaded as
-much, perhaps more, than an Irishman does the halter.
-
-After all my suffering upon this deeply-interesting subject, here I am,
-wholly, unexpectedly, completely, out of the "scrape;" and I now want to
-know if you can guess how I got out of it,--out, clear, in every sense
-of the term; no violation of word, honor, or conscience. I don't believe
-you can guess, and so I might as well tell you at once. As the lawyer
-says, it was done in the manner following, to wit: After I had delayed
-the matter as long as I thought I could in honor do (which, by the way,
-had brought me round into the last fall), I concluded I might as well
-bring it to a consumation without further delay; and so I mustered
-my resolution, and made the proposal to her direct: but, shocking to
-relate, she answered, No, At first I supposed she did it through an
-affectation of modesty, which I thought but ill became her under the
-peculiar circumstances of her case; but, on my renewal of the charge, I
-found she repeled it with greater firmness than before. I tried it again
-and again, but with the same success, or rather with the same want of
-success.
-
-I finally was forced to give it up; at which I verry unexpectedly found
-myself mortified almost beyond endurance. I was mortified, it seemed
-to me, in a hundred different ways. My vanity was deeply wounded by
-the reflection that I had so long been too stupid to discover her
-intentions, and at the same time never doubting that I understood them
-perfectly; and also that she, whom I had taught myself to believe nobody
-else would have, had actually rejected me with all my fancied greatness.
-And, to cap the whole, I then, for the first time, began to suspect that
-I was really a little in love with her. But let it all go. I'll try and
-outlive it. Others have been made fools of by the girls; but this can
-never with truth be said of me. I most emphatically, in this instance,
-made a fool of myself. I have now come to the conclusion never again to
-think of marrying, and for this reason: I can never be satisfied with
-any one who would be blockhead enough to have me.
-
-When you receive this, write me a long yarn about something to amuse me.
-Give my respects to Mr. Browning.
-
-Your sincere friend,
-
-A. Lincoln,
-
-Mrs. O. H. Browning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE majority of Mr. Lincoln's biographers--and they are many and
-credulous--tell us that he _walked_ from New Salem to Vandalia, a
-distance of one hundred miles, to take his seat, for the first time, in
-the Legislature of the State. But that is an innocent mistake; for he
-was resolved to appear with as much of the dignity of the senator as
-his circumstances would permit. It was for this very purpose that he
-had borrowed the two hundred dollars from Coleman Smoot; and, when the
-choice between riding and walking presented itself, he sensibly enough
-got into the stage, with his new clothes on, and rode to the scene of
-his labors.
-
-When he arrived there, he found a singular state of affairs. Duncan had
-been chosen Governor at the recent August election by "the whole-hog
-Jackson men;" but he was absent in Congress during the whole of the
-campaign; and, now that he came to the duties of his office, it was
-discovered that he had been all the while an anti-Jackson man, and was
-quite willing to aid the Whigs in furtherance of some of their worst
-schemes. These schemes were then just beginning to be hatched in great
-numbers; but in due time they were enacted into laws, and prepared
-Illinois with the proper weights of public debt and "rag" currency, to
-sink her deeper than her neighbors into the miseries of financial ruin
-in 1837. The speculating fever was just reaching Illinois; the land and
-town-lot business had barely taken shape at Chicago; and State banks and
-multitudinous internal improvements were yet to be invented. But this
-Legislature was a very wise one in its own conceit, and was not slow
-to launch out with the first of a series of magnificent experiments. It
-contented itself, however, with chartering a State bank, with a capital
-of one million five hundred thousand dollars; rechartering, with a
-capital of three hundred thousand dollars, the Shawneetown Bank, which
-had broken twelve years before; and providing for a loan of five hundred
-thousand dollars, on the credit of the State, wherewith to make a
-beginning on the Illinois and Michigan Canal. The bill for the latter
-project was drawn and introduced by Senator James M. Strode, the
-gentleman who described with such moving eloquence the horrors of
-Stillman's defeat. These measures Gov. Ford considers "the beginning of
-all the bad legislation which followed in a few years, and which, as is
-well known, resulted in general ruin." Mr. Lincoln favored them all, and
-faithfully followed out the policy of which they were the inauguration
-at subsequent sessions of the same body. For the present, nevertheless,
-he was a silent member, although he was assigned a prominent place on
-the Committee on Public Accounts and Expenditures. The bank-charters
-were drawn by a Democrat who hoped to find his account in the issue; all
-the bills were passed by a Legislature "nominally" Democratic; but the
-Board of Canal Commissioners was composed exclusively of Whigs, and the
-Whigs straightway assumed control of the banks.
-
-It was at a special session of this Legislature that Lincoln first saw
-Stephen A. Douglas, and, viewing his active little person with immense
-amusement, pronounced him "the _least_ man he ever saw." Douglas had
-come into the State (from Vermont) only the previous year, but, having
-studied law for several months, considered himself eminently qualified
-to be State's attorney for the district in which he lived, and was now
-come to Vandalia for that purpose. The place was already filled by a
-man of considerable distinction; but the incumbent remaining at home,
-possibly in blissful ignorance of his neighbor's design, was easily
-supplanted by the supple Vermonter.
-
-It is the misfortune of legislatures in general, as it was in those days
-the peculiar misfortune of the Legislature of Illinois, to be beset by
-a multitude of gentlemen engaged in the exclusive business of
-"log-rolling." Chief among the "rollers" were some of the most
-"distinguished" members, each assisted by an influential delegation from
-the district, bank, or "institution" to be benefited by the legislation
-proposed. An expert "log-roller," an especially wily and persuasive
-person, who could depict the merits of his scheme with roseate but
-delusive eloquence, was said to carry "a gourd of possum fat," and the
-unhappy victim of his art was said to be "_greased and swallowed_."
-
-It is not to be supposed that anybody ever succeeded in anointing a
-single square inch of Mr. Lincoln's person with the "fat" that deluded;
-but historians aver that "the Long Nine," of whom he was the longest
-and cleverest, possessed "gourds" of extraordinary dimensions, and
-distributed "grease" of marvellous virtues. But of that at another
-place.
-
-In 1836 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature; his
-colleagues on the Whig ticket in Sangamon being, for Representatives,
-John Dawson, William F. Elkin, N. W. Edwards, Andrew McCormick, Dan
-Stone, and R. L. Wilson; and for Senators, A. G. Herndon and Job
-Fletcher. They were all elected but one, and he was beaten by John
-Calhoun.
-
-Mr. Lincoln opened the campaign by the following manifesto:--
-
-New Salem, June 13, 1836.
-
-To the Editor of "The Journal."
-
-In your paper of last Saturday, I see a communication over the signature
-of "Many Voters," in which the candidates who are announced in the
-"Journal" are called upon to "show their hands." Agreed. Here's mine.
-
-I go for all sharing the privileges of the government who assist in
-bearing its burdens. Consequently, I go for admitting all _whites_ to
-the right of suffrage who pay taxes or bear arms (_by no means excluding
-females_).
-
-If elected, I shall consider the whole people of Sangamon my
-constituents, as well those that oppose as those that support me.
-
-While acting as their Representative, I shall be governed by their will
-on all subjects upon which I have the means of knowing what their will
-is; and upon all others I shall do what my own judgment teaches me
-will best advance their interests. Whether elected or not, I go for
-distributing the proceeds of the sales of the public lands to the
-several States, to enable our State, in common with others, to dig
-canals and construct railroads without borrowing money and paying the
-interest on it.
-
-_If alive on the first Monday in November, I shall vote for Hugh L.
-White for President._
-
-Very respectfully,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The elections were held on the first Monday in August, and the campaign
-began about six weeks or two months before. Popular meetings were
-advertised in "The Sangamon Journal" and "The State Register,"--organs
-of the respective parties. Not unfrequently the meetings were joint,
---composed of both parties,--when, as Lincoln would say, the candidates
-"put in their best licks," while the audience "rose to the height of
-the great argument" with cheers, taunts, cat-calls, fights, and other
-exercises appropriate to the free and untrammelled enjoyment of the
-freeman's boon.
-
-The candidates travelled from one grove to another on horseback; and,
-when the "Long Nine" (all over six feet in height) took the road, it
-must have been a goodly sight to see.
-
-"I heard Lincoln make a speech," says James Gourly, "in Mechanicsburg,
-Sangamon County, in 1836. John Neal had a fight at the time: the roughs
-got on him, and Lincoln jumped in and saw fair play. We staid for dinner
-at Green's, close to Mechanicsburg,--drank whiskey sweetened with
-honey. There the questions discussed were internal improvements, Whig
-principles." (Gourly was a great friend of Lincoln's, for Gourly had had
-a foot-race "with H. B. Truett, now of California," and Lincoln had been
-his "judge;" and it was a remarkable circumstance, that nearly everybody
-for whom Lincoln "judged" came out ahead.)
-
-"I heard Mr. Lincoln during the same canvass," continues Gourly. "It
-was at the Court House, where the State House now stands. The Whigs and
-Democrats had a general quarrel then and there. N. W. Edwards drew a
-pistol on Achilles Morris." But Gourly's account of this last scene
-is unsatisfactory, although the witness is willing; and we turn to
-Lincoln's colleague, Mr. Wilson, for a better one. "The Saturday evening
-preceding the election the candidates were addressing the people in
-the Court House at Springfield. Dr. Early, one of the candidates on
-the Democratic side, made some charge that N. W. Edwards, one of the
-candidates on the Whig side, deemed untrue. Edwards climbed on a table,
-so as to be seen by Early, and by every one in the house, and at the top
-of his voice told Early that the charge was false. The excitement that
-followed was intense,--so much so, that fighting men thought that a
-duel must settle the difficulty. Mr. Lincoln, by the programme, followed
-Early. He took up the subject in dispute, and handled it fairly, and
-with such ability that every one was astonished and pleased. So that
-difficulty ended there. Then, for the first time, developed by the
-excitement of the occasion, he spoke in that tenor intonation of voice
-that ultimately settled down into that clear, shrill monotone style of
-speaking that enabled his audience, however large, to hear distinctly
-the lowest sound of his voice."
-
-It was during this campaign, possibly at the same meeting, that Mr.
-Speed heard him reply to George Forquer. Forquer had been a leading
-Whig, one of their foremost men in the Legislature of 1834, but had then
-recently changed sides, and thereupon was appointed Register of the Land
-Office at Springfield. Mr. Forquer was an astonishing man: he not
-only astonished the people by "changing his coat in politics," but by
-building the best frame-house in Springfield, and erecting over it the
-only lightning-rod the entire region could boast of. At this meeting he
-listened attentively to Mr. Lincoln's first speech, and was much annoyed
-by the transcendent power with which the awkward young man defended the
-principles he had himself so lately abandoned. "The speech" produced
-a profound impression, "especially upon a large number of Lincoln's
-friends and admirers, who had come in from the country" expressly to
-hear and applaud him.
-
-"At the conclusion of Lincoln's speech" (we quote from Mr. Speed),
-"the crowd was dispersing, when Forquer rose and asked to be heard. He
-commenced by saying that the young man would have to be taken down, and
-was sorry that the task devolved upon him. He then proceeded to answer
-Lincoln's speech in a style, which, while it was able and fair, yet, in
-his whole manner, asserted and claimed superiority. Lincoln stood
-near him, and watched him during the whole of his speech. When Forquer
-concluded, he took the stand again. I have often heard him since, in
-court and before the people, but never saw him appear so well as upon
-that occasion. He replied to Mr. Forquer with great dignity and force;
-but I shall never forget the conclusion of that speech. Turning to Mr.
-Forquer, he said, that he had commenced his speech by announcing that
-'this young man would have to be taken down.' Turning then to the crowd,
-he said, 'It is for you, not for me, to say whether I am up or down. The
-gentleman has alluded to my being a young man: I am older in years than
-I am in the tricks and trades of politicians. I desire to live, and I
-desire place and distinction as a politician; but I would rather die
-now, than, like the gentleman, live to see the day that I would have to
-erect a lightning-rod to protect a guilty conscience from an offended
-God.'"
-
-He afterwards told Speed that the sight of that same rod "had led him to
-the study of the properties of electricity and the utility of the rod as
-a conductor."
-
-Among the Democratic orators stumping the county at this time was Dick
-Taylor, a pompous gentleman, who went abroad in superb attire, ruffled
-shirts, rich vest, and immense watch-chains, with shining and splendid
-pendants. But Dick was a severe Democrat in theory, made much of
-"the hard-handed yeomanry," and flung many biting sarcasms upon the
-aristocratic pretensions of the Whigs,--the "rag barons" and the
-manufacturing "lords." He was one day in the midst of a particularly
-aggravating declamation of this sort, "when Abe began to feel devilish,
-and thought he would take the wind out of Dick's sails by a little
-sport." He therefore "edged" slyly up to the speaker, and suddenly
-catching his vest by the lower corner, and giving it a sharp pull
-upward, it opened wide, and out fell upon the platform, in full view of
-the astonished audience, a mass of ruffled shirt, gold watch, chains,
-seals, and glittering jewels. Jim Matheny was there, and nearly
-broke his heart with mirth. "The crowd couldn't stand it, but shouted
-uproariously." It must have been then that Abe delivered the following
-speech, although Ninian W. Edwards places it in 1840:--
-
-"While he [Col. Taylor] was making these charges against the Whigs
-over the country, riding in fine carriages, wearing ruffled shirts,
-kid gloves, massive gold watch-chains, with large gold seals, and
-flourishing a heavy gold-headed cane, he [Lincoln] was a poor boy,
-hired on a flatboat at eight dollars a month, and had only one pair of
-breeches to his back, and they were buckskin,--'and,' said Lincoln, 'if
-you know the nature of buckskin, when wet and dried by the sun, they
-will shrink,--and mine kept shrinking, until they left several inches
-of my legs bare between the tops of my socks and the lower part of my
-breeches; and, whilst I was growing taller, they were becoming shorter,
-and so much tighter, that they left a blue streak around my legs that
-can be seen to this day. If you call this aristocracy, I plead guilty
-to the charge.'" Hitherto Sangamon County had been uniformly Democratic;
-but at this election the Whigs carried it by an average majority of
-about four hundred, Mr. Lincoln receiving a larger vote than any other
-candidate. The result was in part due to a transitory and abortive
-attempt of the anti-Jackson and anti-Van-Buren men to build up a third
-party, with Judge White of Tennessee as its leader. This party was not
-supposed to be wedded to the "specie circular," was thought to be open
-to conviction on the bank question, clamored loudly about the business
-interests and general distress of the country, and was actually in favor
-of the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands.
-In the nomenclature of Illinois, its members might have been called
-"nominal Jackson men;" that is to say, men who continued to act with the
-Democratic party, while disavowing its cardinal principles,--traders,
-trimmers, cautious schismatics who argued the cause of Democracy from a
-brief furnished by the enemy. The diversion in favor of White was just
-to the hand of the Whigs, and they aided it in every practicable way.
-Always for an expedient when an expedient would answer, a compromise
-when a compromise would do, the "hand" Mr. Lincoln "showed" at the
-opening of the campaign contained the "White" card among the highest of
-its trumps. "If alive on the first Monday in November, I shall vote for
-Hugh L. White for President." A number of local Democratic politicians
-assisting him to play it, it won the game in 1836, and Sangamon County
-went over to the Whigs.
-
-At this election Mr. Douglas was made a Representative from Morgan
-County, along with Col. Hardin, from whom he had the year before taken
-the State's attorneyship. The event is notable principally because Mr.
-Douglas was nominated by a convention, and not by the old system of
-self-announcement, which, under the influence of Eastern immigrants, like
-himself, full of party zeal, and attached to the customs of the places
-whence they came, was gradually but surely falling into disfavor. Mr.
-Douglas served only one session, and then became Register of the Land
-Office at Springfield. The next year he was nominated for Congress in
-the Peoria District, under the convention system, and in the same year
-Col. Stephenson was nominated for Governor in the same way. The Whigs
-were soon compelled to adopt the device which they saw marshalling the
-Democrats in a state of complete discipline; whilst they themselves were
-disorganized by a host of volunteer candidates and the operations of
-innumerable cliques and factions. At first "it was considered a Yankee
-contrivance," intended to abridge the liberties of the people; but
-the Whig "people" were as fond of victory, offices, and power as their
-enemies were, and in due time they took very kindly to this effectual
-means of gaining them. A speech of Ebenezer Peck of Chicago, "before
-a great meeting of the lobby, during the special session of 1835-6
-at Vandalia," being a production of special ingenuity and power,
-is supposed to have contributed largely to the introduction of the
-convention system into the middle and southern parts of the State. Mr.
-Peck was then a fervent Democrat, whom the Whigs delighted to malign
-as a Canadian monarchist; but in after times he was the fast and able
-friend of their great leader, Abraham Lincoln.
-
-One of the first and worst effects of the stricter organization
-of parties in Illinois, as well as in other States, was the strong
-diversion of public attention from State to Federal affairs. Individual
-candidates were no longer required to "show their hands:" they accepted
-"platforms" when they accepted nominations; and without a nomination
-it was mere quixotism to stand at all. District, State, and national
-conventions, acting and re-acting upon one another, produced a concert
-of sentiment and conduct which overlaid local issues, and repressed
-independent proceedings. This improved party machinery supplied the
-readiest and most effective means of distributing the rapidly-increasing
-patronage of the Federal Executive; and those who did not wish to be
-cut off from its enjoyment could do no less than re-affirm with becoming
-fervor, in their local assemblages, the latest deliverance of the faith
-by the central authority. The promoters of heresies and schisms, the
-blind leaders who misled a county or a State convention, and seduced it
-into the declaration of principles of its own, had their seats contested
-in the next general council of the party, were solemnly sat upon,
-condemned, "delivered over to Satan to be buffeted," and cast out of the
-household of faith, to wander in the wilderness and to live upon husks.
-It was like a feeble African bishop imputing heresy to the Christian
-world, with Rome at its head. A man like Mr. Lincoln, who earnestly
-"desired place and distinction as a politician," labored without hope
-while his party affinities remained the subject of a reasonable doubt.
-He must be "a whole-hog man" or nothing, a Whig or a Democrat. Mr.
-Lincoln chose his company with commendable decision, and wasted no
-tender regrets upon his "nominal" Democratic friends. For White against
-Harrison, in November, 1836, he led the Whigs into action when the
-Legislature met in December; and when the hard-cider campaign of 1840
-commenced, with its endless meetings and processions, its coon-skins
-and log-cabins, its intrigue, trickery, and fun, his musical voice
-rose loudest above the din for "Old Tippecanoe;" and no man did better
-service, or enjoyed those memorable scenes more, than he who was to be
-the beneficiary of a similar revival in 1860.
-
-When this legislature met in the winter of 1836-7, the bank and
-internal-improvement infatuation had taken full possession of a majority
-of the people, as well as of the politicians. To be sure, "Old Hickory"
-had given a temporary check to the wild speculations in Western land by
-the specie circular, about the close of his administration, whereby gold
-and silver were made "land-office money;" and the Government declined
-to exchange any more of the public domain for the depreciated paper of
-rotten and explosive banks. Millions of notes loaned by the banks on
-insufficient security or no security at all were by this timely
-measure turned back into the banks, or converted to the uses of a more
-legitimate and less dangerous business. But, even if the specie circular
-had not been repealed, it would probably have proved impotent against
-the evils it was designed to prevent, after the passage of the Act
-distributing among the States the surplus (or supposed surplus) revenues
-of the Federal Government.
-
-The last dollar of the old debt was paid in 1833. There were from time
-to time large unexpended and unappropriated balances in the treasury.
-What should be done with them? There was no sub-treasury as yet, and
-questions concerning the mere safe-keeping of these moneys excited the
-most tremendous political contests. The United States Bank had always
-had the use of the cash in the treasury in the form of deposits; but the
-bank abused its trust,--used its enormous power over the currency
-and exchanges of the country to achieve political results in its own
-interest, and, by its manifold sins and iniquities, compelled Gen.
-Jackson to remove the deposits. Ultimately the bank took shelter in
-Pennsylvania, where it began a new fraudulent life under a surreptitious
-clause tacked to the end of a road law on its passage through the
-General Assembly. In due time the "beast," as Col. Benton loved to call
-it, died in its chosen lair a shameful and ignominious death, cheating
-the public with a show of solvency to the end, and leaving a fine array
-of bill-holders and depositors to mourn one of the most remarkable
-delusions of modern times.
-
-Withdrawn, or rather withheld (for they were never withdrawn), from the
-Bank of the United States, the revenues of the Federal Government were
-deposited as fast as they accrued in specie-paying State banks.
-They were paid in the notes of the thousand banks, good, bad, and
-indifferent, whose promises to pay constituted the paper currency of the
-day. It was this money which the Whigs, aided by Democratic recusants,
-proposed to give away to the States. They passed an Act requiring it
-to be _deposited_ with the States,--ostensibly as a safe and convenient
-method of keeping it; but nobody believed that it would ever be called
-for, or paid if it was. It was simply an extraordinary largess; and
-pending the very embarrassment caused by itself, when the government
-had not a dollar wherewith to pay even a pension, and the temporary
-expedient was an issue of treasury notes against the better judgment of
-the party in power, the possibility of withdrawing these deposits was
-never taken into the account. The Act went into effect on the 1st of
-January, 1837, and was one of the immediate causes of the suspension
-and disasters of that year. "The condition of our deposit banks was
-desperate,--wholly inadequate to the slightest pressure on their vaults
-in the ordinary course of business, much less that of meeting the daily
-government drafts and the approaching deposit of near forty millions
-with the States." Nevertheless, the deposits began at the rate of
-ten millions to the quarter. The deposit banks "blew up;" and all the
-others, including that of the United States, closed their doors to
-customers and bill-holders, which gave them more time to hold public
-meetings, imputing the distress of the country to the hard-money policy
-of Jackson and Van Buren, and agitating for the re-charter of Mr.
-Biddle's profligate concern as the only remedy human ingenuity could
-devise.
-
-It was in the month previous to the first deposit with the
-States,--about the time when Gov. Ford says, "lands and town-lots were
-the only articles of export" from Illinois; when the counters of Western
-land-offices were piled high with illusory bank-notes in exchange for
-public lands, and when it was believed that the West was now at last
-about to bound forward in a career of unexampled prosperity, under the
-forcing process of public improvements by the States, with the aid and
-countenance of the Federal Government,--that Mr. Lincoln went up to
-attend the first session of the new Legislature at Vandalia. He was big
-with projects: his real public service was just now about to begin. In
-the previous Legislature he had been silent, observant, studious. He had
-improved the opportunity so well, that of all men in this new body, of
-equal age in the service, he was the smartest parliamentarian and the
-cunningest "log-roller." He was fully determined to identify himself
-conspicuously with the "liberal" legislation in contemplation, and
-dreamed of a fame very different from that which he actually obtained as
-an antislavery leader. It was about this time that he told his friend,
-Mr. Speed, that he aimed at the great distinction of being called "the
-De Witt Clinton of Illinois."
-
-Meetings with a view to this sort of legislation had been held in all,
-or nearly all, the counties in the State during the preceding summer
-and fall. Hard-money, strict-construction, no-monopoly, anti-progressive
-Democrats were in a sad minority. In truth, there was little division
-of parties about these matters which were deemed so essential to the
-prosperity of a new State. There was Mr. Lincoln, and there was Mr.
-Douglas, in perfect unison as to the grand object to be accomplished,
-but mortally jealous as to which should take the lead in accomplishing
-it. A few days before the Legislature assembled, "a mass convention" of
-the people of Sangamon County "instructed" their members "to vote for a
-_general system of internal improvements_." The House of Representatives
-organized in the morning; and in the evening its hall was surrendered
-to a convention of delegates from all parts of the State, which "devised
-and recommended to the Legislature a system of internal improvements,
-the chief feature of which was, that it should be commensurate with
-the wants of the people." This result was arrived at after two days of
-debate, with "Col. Thomas Mather, of the State Bank, as president."
-
-Mr. Lincoln served on the Committee on Finance, and was a most laborious
-member, instant in season and out of season, for the great measures of
-the Whig party. It was to his individual exertion that the Whigs were
-indebted in no small degree for the complete success of their favorite
-schemes at this session. A railroad from Galena to the mouth of the Ohio
-was provided for; another from Alton to Shawneetown; another from Alton
-to Mount Carmel; another from Alton to the eastern boundary of the State
-towards Terre Haute; another from Quincy by way of Springfield to
-the Wabash; another from Bloomington to Pekin; another from Peoria to
-Warsaw,--in all about thirteen hundred miles. But in this comprehensive
-"system," "commensurate with the wants of the people," the rivers were
-not to be overlooked; and accordingly the Kaskaskia, the Illinois, the
-Great Wabash, the Little Wabash, and the Rock rivers were to be duly
-improved. To set these little matters in motion, a loan of eight
-millions of dollars was authorized; and, to complete the canal from
-Chicago to Peru, another loan of four millions of dollars was voted
-at the same session,--two hundred thousand dollars being given as a
-gratuity to those counties which seemed to have no special interest in
-any of the foregoing projects. Work on all these roads was to commence,
-not only at the same time, but at both ends of each road, and at all
-the river-crossings. There were as yet no surveys of any route, no
-estimates, no reports of engineers, or even unprofessional viewers.
-"Progress" was not to wait on trifles; capitalists were supposed to be
-lying in wait to catch these precious bonds; the money would be raised
-in a twinkling, and being applied with all the skill of "a hundred De
-Witt Clintons,"--a class of gentlemen at that time extremely numerous
-and obtrusive,--the loan would build the railroads, the railroads would
-build cities, cities would create farms, foreign capital would rush
-to so inviting a field, the lands would be taken up with marvellous
-celerity, and the "land-tax" going into a sinking fund, _that_, with
-some tolls and certain sly speculations to be made by the State, would
-pay principal and interest of the debt without ever a cent of taxation
-upon the people. In short, everybody was to be enriched, while the
-munificence of the State in selling its credit and spending the proceeds
-would make its empty coffers overflow with ready money. It was a dark
-stroke of statesmanship, a mysterious device in finance, which, whether
-from being misunderstood, or from being mismanaged, bore from the
-beginning fruits the very reverse of those it had promised.
-
-A Board of Canal Commissioners was already in existence; but now were
-established, as necessary parts of the new "system," a Board of Fund
-Commissioners and a Board of Commissioners of Public Works.
-
-The capital stock of the Shawneetown Bank was increased to one million
-seven hundred thousand dollars, and that of the State Bank to three
-million one hundred thousand dollars. The State took the new stock, and
-proposed to pay for it "with the surplus revenues of the United States,
-and the residue by a sale of State bonds." The banks were likewise
-made fiscal agencies, to place the loans, and generally to manage the
-railroad and canal funds. The career of these banks is an extremely
-interesting chapter in the history of Illinois,--little less so than the
-rise and collapse of the great internal-improvement system. But, as it
-has already a place in a chronicle of wider scope and greater merit than
-this, it is enough to say that in due time they went the way of their
-kind,--the State lost by them, and they lost by the State, in morals as
-well as in money.
-
-The means used in the Legislature to pass the "system" deserve some
-notice for the instruction of posterity. "First, a large portion of
-the people were interested in the success of the canal, which was
-threatened, if other sections of the State were denied the improvements
-demanded by them; and thus the friends of the canal were forced to
-log-roll for that work by supporting others which were to be ruinous to
-the country. Roads and improvements were proposed everywhere, to enlist
-every section of the State. Three or four efforts were made to pass a
-smaller system; and, when defeated, the bill would be amended by the
-addition of other roads, until a majority was obtained for it. Those
-counties which could not be thus accommodated were to share in the fund
-of two hundred thousand dollars. Three roads were appointed to terminate
-at Alton, before the Alton interest would agree to the system. The seat
-of government was to be removed to Springfield. Sangamon County, in
-which Springfield is situated, was then represented by two Senators
-and seven Representatives, called the 'Long Nine,' all Whigs but one.
-Amongst them were some dexterous jugglers and managers in politics,
-whose whole object was to obtain the seat of government for Springfield.
-This delegation, from the beginning of the session, threw itself as
-a unit in support of, or in opposition to, every local measure of
-interest, but never without a bargain for votes in return on the
-seat-of-government question. Most of the other counties were small,
-having but one Representative and many of them with but one for a
-whole representative district; and this gave Sangamon County a decided
-preponderance in the log-rolling system of those days. It is worthy of
-examination whether any just and equal legislation can ever be sustained
-where some of the counties are great and powerful, and others feeble.
-But by such means 'The Long-Nine' rolled along like a snowball,
-gathering accessions of strength at every turn, until they swelled up
-a considerable party for Springfield, which party they managed to take
-almost as a unit in favor of the internal-improvement system, in
-return for which the active supporters of that system were to vote for
-Springfield to be the seat of government. Thus it was made to cost the
-State about six millions of dollars to remove the seat of government
-from Vandalia to Springfield, half of which sum would have purchased all
-the real estate in that town at three prices; and thus by log-rolling
-on the canal measure; by multiplying railroads; by terminating three
-railroads at Alton, that Alton might become a great city in opposition
-to St. Louis; by distributing money to some of the counties to be wasted
-by the county commissioners; and by giving the seat of government to
-Springfield,--was the whole State bought up, and bribed to approve the
-most senseless and disastrous policy which ever crippled the energies of
-a growing country." 1
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-Enumerating the gentlemen who voted for this combination of
-evils,--among them Stephen A. Douglas, John A. McClernand, James
-Shields, and Abraham Lincoln,--and reciting the high places of honor and
-trust to which most of them have since attained, Gov. Ford pronounces
-"all of them spared monuments of popular wrath, evincing how safe it is
-to a politician, but how disastrous it may be to the country, to keep
-along with the present fervor of the people."
-
-"It was a maxim with many politicians just to keep along even with the
-humor of the people, right or wrong;" and this maxim Mr. Lincoln held
-then, as ever since, in very high estimation. But the "humor" of his
-constituents was not only intensely favorable to the new scheme of
-internal improvements: it was most decidedly their "humor" to have the
-capital at Springfield, and to make a great man of the legislator who
-should take it there. Mr. Lincoln was doubtless thoroughly convinced
-that the popular view of all these matters was the right one; but, even
-if he had been unhappily afflicted with individual scruples of his own,
-he would have deemed it but simple duty to obey the almost unanimous
-voice of his constituency. He thought he never could serve them better
-than by giving them just what they wanted; and that to collect the
-will of his people, and register it by his own vote, was the first
-and leading obligation of a representative. It happened that on this
-occasion the popular feeling fell in very pleasantly with his young
-dream of rivalling the fame of Clinton; and here, also, was a fine
-opportunity of repeating, in a higher strain and on a loftier stage, the
-ingenious arguments, which, in the very outset of his career, had proved
-so hard for "Posey and Ewing," when he overthrew those worthies in the
-great debate respecting the improvement of the Sangamon River.
-
-"The Internal-Improvement Bill," says Mr. Wilson (one of the "Long
-Nine"), "and a bill to permanently locate the seat of government of the
-State, were the great measures of the session of 1836-7. Vandalia was
-then the seat of government, and had been for a number of years. A new
-state house had just been built. Alton, Decatur, Peoria, Jacksonville,
-Illiapolis, and Springfield were the points seeking the location, if
-removed from Vandalia. The delegation from Sangamon were a unit, acting
-in concert in favor of the permanent location at Springfield. The bill
-was introduced at an early day in the session, to locate, by a joint
-vote of both Houses of the Legislature. The friends of the other points
-united to defeat the bill, as each point thought the postponement of the
-location to some future period would give strength to their location.
-The contest on this bill was long and severe. Its enemies laid it on
-the table twice,--once on the table to the fourth day of July, and
-once indefinitely postponed it. To take a bill from the table is always
-attended with difficulty; but when laid on the table to a day beyond
-the session, or when indefinitely postponed, it requires a vote of
-reconsideration, which always is an intense struggle. In these dark
-hours, when our bill to all appearances was beyond resuscitation, and
-all our opponents were jubilant over our defeat, and when friends could
-see no hope, Mr. Lincoln never for one moment despaired; but, collecting
-his colleagues to his room for consultation, his practical common sense,
-his thorough knowledge of human nature, then made him an overmatch for
-his compeers, and for any man that I have ever known."
-
-"We surmounted all obstacles, passed the bill, and, by a joint vote of
-both Houses, located the seat of government of the State of Illinois at
-Springfield, just before the adjournment of the Legislature, which took
-place on the fourth day of March, 1837. The delegation acting during
-the whole session upon all questions as a unit, gave them strength and
-influence, that enabled them to carry through their measures and give
-efficient aid to their friends. The delegation was not only remarkable
-for their numbers, but for their length, most of them measuring six
-feet and over. It was said at the time that that delegation measured
-fifty-four feet high. Hence they were known as 'The Long Nine.' So that
-during that session, and for a number of years afterwards, all the bad
-laws passed at that session of the Legislature were chargeable to the
-management and influence of 'The Long Nine.'
-
-"He (Mr. Lincoln) was on the stump and in the halls of the Legislature a
-ready debater, manifesting extraordinary ability in his peculiar manner
-of presenting his subject. He did not follow the beaten track of other
-speakers and thinkers, but appeared to comprehend the whole situation
-of the subject, and take hold of its principles. He had a remarkable
-faculty for concentration, enabling him to present his subject in such a
-manner, as nothing but conclusions were presented."
-
-It was at this session of the Legislature, March 3, 1837, that Mr.
-Lincoln began that antislavery record upon which his fame through all
-time must chiefly rest. It was a very mild beginning; but even that
-required uncommon courage and candor in the day and generation in which
-it was done.
-
-The whole country was excited concerning the doctrines and the practices
-of the Abolitionists. These agitators were as yet but few in numbers:
-but in New England they comprised some of the best citizens, and the
-leaders were persons of high character, of culture and social influence;
-while, in the Middle States, they were, for the most part, confined
-to the Society of Friends, or Quakers. All were earnest, active, and
-uncompromising in the propagation of their opinions; and, believing
-slavery to be the "sum of all villanies," with the utmost pertinacity
-they claimed the unrestricted right to disseminate their convictions in
-any manner they saw fit, regardless of all consequences. They paid not
-the slightest heed to the wishes or the opinions of their opponents.
-They denounced all compromises with an unsparing tongue, and would allow
-no law of man to stand, in their eyes, above the law of God.
-
-George Thompson, identified with emancipation in the British West
-Indies, had come and gone. For more than a year he addressed public
-meetings in New England, the Central States, and Ohio, and contributed
-not a little to the growing excitement by his fierce denunciations of
-the slave-holding class, in language with which his long agitation in
-England had made him familiar. He was denounced, insulted, and
-mobbed; and even in Boston he was once posted as an "infamous foreign
-scoundrel," and an offer was made of a hundred dollars to "snake him
-out" of a public meeting. In fact, Boston was not at all behind other
-cities and towns in its condemnation of the Abolitionists. A
-great meeting in Faneuil Hall, called by eighteen hundred leading
-citizens,--Whigs and Democrats,--condemned their proceedings in language
-as strong and significant as Richard Fletcher, Peleg Sprague, and
-Harrison Gray Otis could write it. But Garrison still continued
-to publish "The Liberator," filling it with all the uncompromising
-aggressiveness of his sect, and distributing it throughout the Southern
-States. It excited great alarm in the slaveholding communities where its
-secret circulation, in the minds of the slaveholders, tended to incite
-the slaves to insurrections, assassinations, and running away; but
-in the place where it was published it was looked upon with general
-contempt and disgust. When the Mayor of Baltimore wrote to the Mayor of
-Boston to have it suppressed, the latter (the eloquent Otis) replied,
-"that his officers had ferreted out the paper and its editor, whose
-office was an obscure hole; his only visible auxiliary a negro boy; his
-supporters a few insignificant persons of all colors."
-
-At the close of the year 1835, President Jackson had called the
-attention of Congress to the doings of these people in language
-corresponding to the natural wrath with which he viewed the character of
-their proceedings. "I must also," said he, "invite your attention to the
-painful excitements in the South by attempts to circulate through the
-mails inflammatory appeals addressed to the passions of slaves, in
-prints and various sorts of publications calculated to stimulate them
-to insurrection, and to produce all the horrors of civil war. It is
-fortunate for the country that the good sense, the generous feeling, and
-deep-rooted attachment of the people of the non-slaveholding States to
-the Union and their fellow-citizens of the same blood in the South have
-given so strong and impressive a tone to the sentiments entertained
-against the proceedings of the misguided persons who have engaged in
-these unconstitutional and wicked attempts, and especially against
-the emissaries from foreign parts, who have dared to interfere in this
-matter, as to authorize the hope that these attempts will no longer
-be persisted in.... I would therefore call the special attention of
-Congress to the subject, and respectfully suggest the propriety of
-passing such a law as will prohibit, under severe penalties, the
-circulation in the Southern States, through the mail, of incendiary
-publications, intended to instigate the slaves to insurrection."
-
-Mr. Clay said the sole purpose of the Abolitionists was to array one
-portion of the Union against the other. "With that in view, in all their
-leading prints and publications, the alleged horrors of slavery are
-depicted in the most glowing and exaggerated colors, to excite the
-imaginations and stimulate the rage of the people of the Free States
-against the people of the slaveholding States.... Why are the Slave
-States wantonly and cruelly assailed? Why does the abolition press teem
-with publications tending to excite hatred and animosity on the part of
-the Free States against the Slave States?... Why is Congress petitioned?
-Is their purpose to appeal to our understanding, and actuate our
-humanity? And do they expect to accomplish that purpose by holding us
-up to the scorn and contempt and detestation of the people of the Free
-States and the whole civilized world?... Union on the one side will
-beget union on the other.... One section will stand in menacing, hostile
-array against another; the collision of opinion will be quickly followed
-by the clash of arms."
-
-Mr. Everett, then (1836) Governor of Massachusetts, informed the
-Legislature, for the admonition of these unsparing agitators against
-the peace of the South, that "every thing that tends to disturb the
-relations created by this compact [the Constitution] is at war with its
-spirit; and whatever, by direct and necessary operation, is calculated
-to excite an insurrection among the slaves, has been held by highly
-respectable legal authority an offence against the peace of this
-Commonwealth, which may be prosecuted as a misdemeanor at common law."
-It was proposed in the Legislature to pass an act defining the offence
-with more certainty, and attaching to it a severer penalty. The
-Abolitionists asked to be heard before the committee; and Rev. S. J.
-May, Ellis Gray Loring, Prof. Charles Follen, Samuel E. Sewell, and
-others of equal ability and character, spoke in their behalf. They
-objected to the passage of such an act in the strongest terms, and
-derided the value of a Union which could not protect its citizens in
-one of their most cherished rights. During the hearing, several bitter
-altercations took place between them and the chairman.
-
-In New York, Gov. Marcy called upon the Legislature "to do what may be
-done consistently with the great principles of civil liberty, to put an
-end to the evils which the Abolitionists are bringing upon us and the
-whole country." The "character" and the "interests" of the State were
-equally at stake, and both would be sacrificed unless these furious and
-cruel fanatics were effectually suppressed.
-
-In May, 1836, the Federal House of Representatives resolved, by
-overwhelming votes, that Congress had no right to interfere with slavery
-in the States, or in the District of Columbia, and that henceforth all
-abolition petitions should be laid on the table without being printed or
-referred. And, one day later than the date of Mr. Lincoln's protest, Mr.
-Van Buren declared in his inaugural, that no bill abolishing slavery
-in the District of Columbia, or meddling with it in the States where it
-existed, should ever receive his signature. "There was no other form,"
-says Benton, "at that time, in which slavery agitation could manifest
-itself, or place it could find a point to operate; the ordinance of 1787
-and the compromise of 1820 having closed up the Territories against
-it. Danger to slave property in the States, either by direct action,
-or indirectly through the District of Columbia, were the only points of
-expressed apprehension."
-
-Abolition agitations fared little better in the twenty-fifth Congress
-than in the twenty-fourth. At the extra session in September of 1837,
-Mr. Slade of Vermont introduced two petitions for the abolition of
-slavery in the District of Columbia; but, after a furious debate and a
-stormy scene, they were disposed of by the adoption of the following:--
-
-"Resolved, That all petitions, memorials, and papers, touching the
-abolition of slavery, or the buying, selling, or transferring of slaves,
-in any State, District, or Territory, of the United States, be laid on
-the table, without being debated, printed, read, or referred; and that
-no further action whatever shall be had thereon."
-
-In Illinois, at the time we speak of (March, 1837), an Abolitionist was
-rarely seen, and scarcely ever heard of. In many parts of the State such
-a person would have been treated as a criminal. It is true, there were
-a few Covenanters, with whom hatred of slavery in any form and wherever
-found was an essential part of their religion. Up to 1824 they had
-steadily refused to vote, or in any other way to acknowledge the State
-government, regarding it as "an heathen and unbaptized institution,"
-because the Constitution failed to recognize "Jesus Christ as the head
-of the government, and the Holy Scriptures as the only rule of faith and
-practice." It was only when it was proposed to introduce slavery into
-Illinois by an alteration of that "heathen" Constitution, that the
-Covenanters consented to take part in public affairs. The movement which
-drew them out proved to be a long and unusually bitter campaign, lasting
-full eighteen months, and ending in the fall of 1824, with a popular
-majority of several thousand against calling a convention for the
-purpose of making Illinois a Slave State. Many of the antislavery
-leaders in _this_ contest--conspicuous among whom was Gov. Coles--were
-gentlemen from Slave States, who had emancipated their slaves before
-removal, and were opposed to slavery, not upon religious or moral
-grounds, but because they believed it would be a material injury to the
-new country. Practically no other view of the question was discussed;
-and a person who should have undertaken to discuss it from the "man and
-brother" stand-point of more modern times would have been set down as a
-lunatic. A clear majority of the people were against the introduction of
-slavery into their own State; but that majority were fully agreed with
-their brethren of the minority, that those who went about to interfere
-with slavery in the most distant manner in the places where it already
-existed were deserving of the severest punishment, as the common enemies
-of society. It was in those days a mortal offence to call a man an
-Abolitionist, for Abolitionist was synonymous with thief. Between a band
-of men who stole horses and a band of men who stole negroes, the popular
-mind made small distinctions in the degrees of guilt. They were regarded
-as robbers, disturbers of the peace, the instigators of arson,
-murder, poisoning, rape; and, in addition to all this, traitors to the
-government under which they lived, and enemies to the Union which gave
-us as a people liberty and strength. In testimony of these sentiments,
-Illinois enacted a "black code" of most preposterous and cruel
-severity,--a code that would have been a disgrace to a Slave State, and
-was simply an infamy in a free one. It borrowed the provisions of the
-most revolting laws known among men, for exiling, selling, beating,
-bedevilling, and torturing negroes, whether bond or free. Under this law
-Gov. Coles, the leader of the antislavery party, who had emancipated his
-slaves, and settled them around him in his new home, but had neglected
-to file a bond with the condition that his freedmen should behave well
-and never become a charge upon the public, was fined two hundred dollars
-in each case; and, so late as 1852, the writer of these pages very
-narrowly escaped the same penalty for the same offence.
-
-In 1835-36 Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy had been publishing a moderately
-antislavery paper at St. Louis. But the people of that city did not look
-with favor upon his enterprise; and, after meeting with considerable
-opposition, in the summer of 1836 he moved his types and press across
-the river to Alton, Ill. Here he found an opposition more violent than
-that from which he had fled. His press was thrown into the river the
-night after its arrival; and he was informed that no abolition paper
-would be allowed in the town. The better class of citizens, however,
-deprecated the outrage, and pledged themselves to reimburse Mr. Lovejoy,
-in case he would agree not to make his paper an abolition journal. Mr.
-Lovejoy assured them it was not his purpose to establish such a paper in
-Alton, but one of a religious character: at the same time he would not
-give up his right as an American citizen to publish whatever he pleased
-on any subject, holding himself answerable to the laws of his country
-in so doing. With this general understanding, he was permitted to go
-forward. He continued about a year, discussing in his paper the slavery
-question occasionally; not, however, in a violent manner, but with a
-tone of moderation. This policy, however, was not satisfactory: it was
-regarded as a violation of his pledge; and the contents of his
-office were again destroyed. Mr. Lovejoy issued an appeal for aid to
-re-establish his paper, which met with a prompt and generous response.
-He proposed to bring up another press, and announced that armed
-men would protect it: meantime, a committee presented him with some
-resolutions adopted at a large meeting of the citizens of Alton,
-reminding him that he had previously given a pledge that in his paper he
-would refrain from advocating abolitionism) and also censuring him for
-not having kept his promise, and desiring to know if he intended to
-continue the publication of such doctrines in the future. His response
-consisted of a denial of the right of any portion of the people of
-Acton to prescribe what questions he should or should not discuss in his
-paper. Great excitement followed: another press was brought up on
-the 21st of September, which shortly after followed the fate of its
-predecessors. Another arrived Nov. 7, 1837, and was conveyed to a stone
-warehouse by the riverside, where Mr. Lovejoy and a few friends (some
-of them not Abolitionists) resolved to defend it to the last. That night
-they were attacked. First there was a brief parley, then a volley
-of stones, then an attempt to carry the building by assault. At this
-juncture a shot was fired out of a second-story window, which killed a
-young man in the crowd. It was said to have been fired by Lovejoy; and,
-as the corpse was borne away, the wrath of the populace knew no bounds.
-It was proposed to get powder from the magazine, and blow the warehouse
-up. Others thought the torch would be a better agent; and, finally, a
-man ran up a ladder to fire the roof. Lovejoy came out of the door, and,
-firing one shot, retreated within, where he rallied the garrison for a
-sortie. In the mean time many shots were fired both by the assailants
-and the assailed. The house was once actually set on fire by one person
-from the mob, and saved by another. But the courage of Mr. Lovejoy's
-friends was gradually sinking, and they responded but faintly to his
-strong appeals for action. As a last resource, he rushed to the
-door with a single companion, gun in hand, and was shot dead on the
-threshold. The other man was wounded in the leg, the warehouse was in
-flames, the mob grew more ferocious over the blood that had been
-shed, and riddled the doors and windows with volleys from all sorts of
-fire-arms. The Abolitionists had fought a good fight; but seeing now
-nothing but death before them, in that dismal, bloody, and burning
-house, they escaped down the river-bank, by twos and threes, as best
-they could, and their press was tumbled after them, into the river.
-And thus ended the first attempt to establish an abolition paper in
-Illinois. The result was certainly any thing but encouraging, and
-indicated pretty clearly what must have been the general state of public
-feeling throughout the State in regard to slavery agitation.
-
-In fact, no State was more alive to the necessity of repressing the
-Abolitionists than Illinois; and accordingly it was proposed in the
-Legislature to take some action similar to that which had been
-already taken, or was actually pending, in the legislatures of sister
-Commonwealths, from Massachusetts through the list. A number of
-resolutions were reported, and passed with no serious opposition. The
-record does not disclose the precise form in which they passed; but
-that is of little consequence now. That they were extreme enough may be
-gathered from the considerate language of the protest, and from the fact
-that _such a protest_ was considered necessary at all. The protest was
-undoubtedly the product of Mr. Lincoln's pen, for his adroit directness
-is seen in every word of it. He could get but one man--his colleague,
-Dan Stone--to sign with him.
-
-March 3,1837.
-
-The following protest was presented to the House, which was read, and
-ordered to be spread on the journals, to wit:--
-
-Resolutions upon the subject of domestic slavery having passed both
-branches of the General Assembly at its present session, the undersigned
-hereby protest against the passage of the same.
-
-They believe that the institution of slavery is founded on both
-injustice and bad policy; but that the promulgation of abolition
-doctrines tends rather to increase than abate its evils.
-
-They believe that the Congress of the United States has no power, under
-the Constitution, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the
-different States.
-
-They believe that the Congress of the United States has the power, under
-the Constitution, to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, but
-that the power ought not to be exercised, unless at the request of the
-people of the District.
-
-The difference between these opinions and those contained in the said
-resolutions is their reason for entering this protest.
-
-(Signed) Dan Stone,
-
-A. Lincoln, Representatives from the County of Sanqamon.
-
-Mr. Lincoln says nothing here about slavery in the Territories. The
-Missouri Compromise being in full force, and regarded as sacred by
-all parties, it was one of its chief effects that both sections were
-deprived of any pretext for the agitation of that question, from
-which every statesman, Federalist or Republican, Whig or Democratic,
-apprehended certain disaster to the Union. Neither would Mr. Lincoln
-suffer himself to be classed with the few despised Quakers, Covenanters,
-and Puritans, who were so frequently disturbing the peace of the country
-by abolition-memorials to Congress and other public bodies. Slavery,
-says the protest, is wrong in principle, besides being bad in economy;
-but "the promulgation of abolition doctrines" is still worse. In the
-States which choose to have it, it enjoys a constitutional immunity
-beyond the reach of any "higher law;" and Congress must not touch
-it, otherwise than to shield and protect it. Even in the District of
-Columbia, Mr. Lincoln and Dan Stone would leave it entirely to the will
-of the people. In fact, the whole paper, plain and simple as it is,
-seems to have been drawn with no object but to avoid the imputation
-of extreme views on either side. And from that day to the day of his
-inauguration, Mr. Lincoln never saw the time when he would have altered
-a word of it. He never sided with the Lovejoys. In his eyes their work
-tended "rather to increase than to abate" the evils of slavery, and was
-therefore unjust, as well as futile. Years afterwards he was the steady
-though quiet opponent of Owen Lovejoy, and declared that Lovejoy's
-nomination for Congress over Leonard Swett "almost turned him blind."
-When, in 1860, the Democrats called Mr. Lincoln an Abolitionist, and
-cited the protest of 1837 to support the charge, friends pointed to
-the exact language of the document as his complete and overwhelming
-refutation.
-
-On the 10th of May, the New York banks suspended specie payments, and
-two days afterwards the Bank of the United States and the Philadelphia
-banks did likewise. From these the stoppage and the general ruin, among
-business men and speculators alike, spread throughout the country.
-Nevertheless, the Fund Commissioners of Illinois succeeded in placing a
-loan during the summer, and before the end of the year work had begun
-on many railroads. "Money was as plenty as dirt. Industry, in place of
-being stimulated, actually languished. We exported nothing, and every
-thing was paid for by the borrowed money expended among us." And this
-money was bank-paper, such as a pensioner upon the Government of the
-United States scorned to take in payment of his gratuity, after the
-deposit banks had suspended or broken, with thirty-two millions of
-Government money in their possession.
-
-The banks which had received such generous legislation from the
-Legislature that devised the internal-improvement system were not
-disposed to see that batch of remarkable enterprises languish for want
-of their support. One of them took at par and sold nine hundred thousand
-dollars of bonds; while the other took one million seven hundred and
-sixty-five thousand dollars, which it used as capital, and expanded its
-business accordingly. But the banks were themselves in greater danger
-than the internal-improvement system. If the State Bank refused specie
-payments for sixty days, its charter was forfeited under the Act of
-Assembly. But they were the main-stay of all the current speculations,
-public and private; and having besides large sums of public money in
-their hands, the governor was induced to call a special session of the
-Legislature in July, 1837, to save them from impending dissolution. This
-was done by an act authorizing or condoning the suspension of specie
-payments. The governor had not directly recommended this, but he
-had most earnestly recommended the repeal or modification of the
-internal-improvement system; and _that_ the Legislature positively
-refused. This wise body might be eaten by its own dogs, but it was
-determined not to eat _them_; and in this direction there was no
-prospect of relief for two years more. According to Gov. Ford, the cool,
-reflecting men of the State anxiously hoped that their rulers might
-be able to borrow no more money, but in this they were immediately and
-bitterly disappointed. The United States Bank took some of their bonds.
-Some were sold at par in this country, and others at nine per cent
-discount in Europe.
-
-In 1838, a governor (Carlin) was elected who was thought by many to be
-secretly hostile to the "system;" and a new Legislature was chosen, from
-which it was thought something might be hoped. Mr. Lincoln was again
-elected, with a reputation so much enhanced by his activity and address
-in the last Legislature, that this time he was the candidate of his
-party for speaker. The nomination, however, was a barren honor, and
-known to be such when given. Col. Ewing was chosen by a plurality of
-one,--two Whigs and two Democrats scattering their votes. Mr. Lincoln
-kept his old place on the Finance Committee. At the first session the
-governor held his peace regarding the "system;" and, far from repealing
-it, the Legislature added a new feature to it, and voted another
-$800,000.
-
-But the Fund Commissioners were in deep water and muddy water: they had
-reached the end of their string. The credit of the State was gone,
-and already were heard murmurs of repudiation. Bond County had in the
-beginning pronounced the system a swindle upon the people; and Bond
-County began to have admirers. Some of the bonds had been lent to New
-York State banks to start upon; and the banks had presently failed. Some
-had been sold on credit. Some were scattered about in various places on
-special deposit. Others had been sent to London for sale, where the firm
-that was selling them broke with the proceeds of a part of them in their
-hands. No expedients sufficed any longer. There was no more money to be
-got, and nothing left to do, but to "wind up the system," and begin the
-work of common sense by providing for the interest on the sums already
-expended. A special session of the Legislature in 1838-9 did the
-"winding up," and thenceforth, for some years, there was no other
-question so important in Illinois State politics as how to pay the
-interest on the vast debt outstanding for this account. Many gentlemen
-discovered that De Witt Clintons were rare, and in certain contingencies
-very precious. Among these must have been Mr. Lincoln. But being again,
-elected to the Legislature in 1840, again the acknowledged leader and
-candidate of his party for speaker, he ventured in December of that year
-to offer an expedient for paying the interest on the debt; but it was
-only an expedient, and a very poor one, to avoid the obvious but
-unpopular resort of direct taxation.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln moved to strike out the bill and amendment, and insert the
-following:--
-
-"An Act providing for the payment of interest on the State debt.
-
-"Section 1.--Be it enacted by the people of the State of Illinois
-represented in the General Assembly, that the governor be authorized and
-required to issue, from time to time, such an amount of State bonds, to
-be called the 'Illinois Interest Bonds,' as may be absolutely necessary
-for the payment of the interest upon the lawful debt of the State,
-contracted before the passage of this Act.
-
-"Section 2.--Said bonds shall bear interest at the rate of----per cent
-per annum, payable half-yearly at----, and be reimbursable in years from
-their respective issuings.
-
-"Section 3.--That the State's portion of the tax hereafter arising from
-all lands which were not taxable in the year one thousand eight hundred
-and forty is hereby set apart as an exclusive fund for the payment of
-interest on the said 'Illinois Interest Bonds;' and the faith of the
-State is hereby pledged that said fund shall be applied to that object,
-and no other, except at any time there should be a surplus; in which
-case such surplus shall became a part of the general funds of the
-treasury.
-
-"Section 4.--That hereafter the sum of thirty cents for each hundred
-dollars' worth of all taxable property shall be paid into the State
-treasury; and no more than forty cents for each hundred dollars' worth
-of such taxable property shall be levied and collected for county
-purposes."
-
-It was a loose document. The governor was to determine the "amount"
-of bonds "necessary," and the sums for which they should be issued.
-Interest was to be paid only upon the "lawful" debt; and the governor
-was left to determine what part of it _was_ lawful, and what unlawful.
-The last section lays a specific tax; but the proceeds are in no way
-connected with the "interest bonds."
-
-"Mr. Lincoln said he submitted this proposition with great diffidence.
-He had felt his share of the responsibility devolving upon us in the
-present crisis; and, after revolving in his mind every scheme which
-seemed to afford the least prospect of relief, he submitted this as the
-result of his own deliberations.
-
-"The details of the bill might be imperfect; but he relied upon the
-correctness of its general features.
-
-"By the plan proposed in the original bill of hypothecating our bonds,
-he was satisfied we could not get along more than two or three months
-before some other step would be necessary: another session would have to
-be called, and new provisions made.
-
-"It might be objected that these bonds would not be salable, and the
-money could not be raised in time. He was no financier; but he believed
-these bonds thus secured would be equal to the best in market. A perfect
-security was provided for the interest; and it was this characteristic
-that inspired confidence, and made bonds salable. If there was any
-distrust, it could not be because our means of fulfilling promises were
-distrusted. He believed it would have the effect to raise our other
-bonds in market.
-
-"There was another objection to this plan, which applied to the original
-bill; and that was as to the impropriety of borrowing money to pay
-interest on borrowed money,--that we are hereby paying compound
-interest. To this he would reply, that, if it were a fact that our
-population and wealth were increasing in a ratio greater than the
-increased interest hereby incurred, then this was not a good objection.
-If our increasing means would justify us in deferring to a future time
-the resort to taxation, then we had better pay compound interest than
-resort to taxation now. He was satisfied, that, by a direct tax now,
-money enough could not be collected to pay the accruing interest. The
-bill proposed to provide in this way for interest not otherwise provided
-for. It was not intended to apply to those bonds for the interest on
-which a security had already been provided.
-
-"He hoped the House would seriously consider the proposition. He had no
-pride in its success as a measure of his own, but submitted it to
-the wisdom of the House, with the hope, that, if there was any thing
-objectionable in it, it would be pointed out and amended."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's measure did not pass. There was a large party in favor,
-not only of passing the interest on the State debt, which fell due in
-the coming January and July, but of repudiating the whole debt outright.
-Others thought the State ought to pay, not the full face of its bonds,
-but only the amount received for them; while others still contended
-that, whereas, many of the bonds had been irregularly, illegally,
-and even fraudulently disposed of, there ought to be a particular
-discrimination made against _these_, and these only. "At last Mr.
-Cavarly, a member from Green, introduced a bill of two sections,
-authorizing the Fund Commissioners to hypothecate internal-improvement
-bonds to the amount of three hundred thousand dollars, and which
-contained the remarkable provision, that the proceeds were to be applied
-by that officer to the payment of all interest _legally_ due on the
-public debt; thus shifting from the General Assembly, and devolving on
-the Fund Commissioner, the duty of deciding on the legality of the debt.
-Thus, by this happy expedient, conflicting opinions were reconciled
-without direct action on the matter in controversy, and thus the two
-Houses were enabled to agree upon a measure to provide temporarily for
-the interest on the public debt. The Legislature further provided, at
-this session, for the issue of interest bonds, to be sold in the market
-at what they would bring; and an additional tax of ten cents on the
-hundred dollars' worth of property was imposed and pledged, to pay the
-interest on these bonds. By these contrivances, the interest for
-January and July, 1841, was paid. The Fund Commissioner hypothecated
-internal-improvement bonds for the money first due; and his successor in
-office, finding no sale for Illinois stocks, so much had the credit of
-the State fallen, was compelled to hypothecate eight hundred and four
-thousand dollars of interest bonds for the July interest. On this
-hypothecation he was to have received three hundred and twenty-one
-thousand six hundred dollars, but was never paid more than two hundred
-and sixty-one thousand five hundred dollars. These bonds have never
-been redeemed from the holders, though eighty of them were afterwards
-repurchased, and three hundred and fifteen thousand dollars of them
-were received from the Shawneetown Bank for State stock in that
-institution."1
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-This session (the session of 1840-1) had been called two weeks earlier
-than usual, to provide for the January interest on the debt. But the
-banks had important business of their own in view, and proceeded to
-improve the occasion. In 1837, and every year since then, the banks
-had succeeded in getting acts of the Legislature which condoned their
-suspension of specie payments. But, by the terms of the last act, their
-charters were forfeited unless they resumed before the adjournment of
-the next session. The Democrats, however, maintained that the present
-special session was _a session_ in the sense of the law, and that,
-before its adjournment, the banks must hand out "the hard," or die. On
-the other hand, the Whigs held this session, and the regular session
-which began on the first Monday in December, to be one and the same, and
-proposed to give the banks another winter's lease upon life and rags.
-But the banks were a power in the land, and knew how to make themselves
-felt. They were the depositories of the State revenues. The auditor's
-warrants were drawn upon them, and the members of the Legislature paid
-in their money. The warrants were at a discount of fifty per cent; and,
-if the banks refused to cash them, the members would be compelled to go
-home more impecunious than they came. The banks, moreover, knew how
-to make "opportune loans to Democrats;" and, with all these aids, they
-organized a brilliant and eventually a successful campaign. In the
-eyes of the Whigs they were "the institutions of the country," and the
-Democrats were guilty of incivism in attacking them. But the Democrats
-retorted with a string of overwhelming slang about rag barons, rags,
-printed lies, bank vassals, ragocracy, and the "British-bought, bank,
-blue-light, Federal, Whig party." It was a fierce and bitter contest;
-and, witnessing it, one might have supposed that the very existence
-of the State, with the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
-happiness, depended upon the result. The Democrats were bent upon
-carrying an adjournment _sine die_; which, according to their theory,
-killed the banks. To defeat this, the Whigs resorted to every expedient
-of parliamentary tactics, and at length hit upon one entirely unknown
-to any of the standard manuals: they tried to absent themselves in
-sufficient numbers to leave no quorum behind. "If the Whigs absented
-themselves," says Mr. Gillespie, a Whig member, "there would not be a
-quorum left, even with the two who should be deputed to call the ayes
-and noes. The Whigs immediately held a meeting, and resolved that they
-would all stay out, except Lincoln and me, who were to call the ayes
-and noes. We appeared in the afternoon: motion to adjourn _sine die_
-was made, and we called the ayes and noes. The Democrats discovered the
-game, and the sergeant-at-arms was sent out to gather up the absentees.
-There was great excitement in the House, which was then held in a church
-at Springfield. We soon discovered that several Whigs had been caught
-and brought in, and that the plan had been spoiled; and we--Lincoln
-and I--determined to leave the hall, and, going to the door, found
-it locked, and then raised a window and jumped out, but not until
-the Democrats had succeeded in adjourning. Mr. Grid-ley of McLean
-accompanied us in our exit.... I think Mr. Lincoln always regretted
-that he entered into that arrangement, as he deprecated every thing that
-savored of the revolutionary."
-
-In the course of the debate on the Apportionment Bill, Mr. Lincoln had
-occasion to address the House in defence of "The Long Nine," who were
-especially obnoxious to the Democrats. The speech concluded with the
-following characteristic passage:--
-
-"The gentleman had accused old women of being partial to the number
-nine; but this, he presumed, was without foundation. A few years since,
-it would be recollected by the House, that the delegation from this
-county were dubbed by way of eminence 'The Long Nine,' and, by way of
-further distinction, he had been called 'The Longest of the Nine.'
-Now," said Mr. Lincoln, "I desire to say to my friend from Monroe (Mr.
-Bissell), that if any woman, old or young, ever thought there was any
-peculiar charm in this distinguished specimen of number nine, I have as
-yet been so unfortunate as not to have discovered it." (Loud applause.)
-
-But this Legislature was full of excitements. Besides the questions
-about the public debt and the bank-charters, the Democrats proposed to
-legislate the Circuit judges out of office, and reconstruct the Supreme
-Court to suit themselves. They did this because the Supreme judges had
-already decided one question of some political interest against them,
-and were now about to decide another in the same way. The latter was a
-question of great importance; and, in order to avoid the consequences of
-such a decision, the Democrats were eager for the extremest measures.
-
-The Constitution provided that all free white male _inhabitants_ should
-vote upon six months' residence. This, the Democrats held, included
-aliens; while the Whigs held the reverse. On this grave judicial
-question, parties were divided precisely upon the line of their
-respective interests. The aliens numbered about ten thousand, and
-nine-tenths of them voted steadily with the Democracy. Whilst a great
-outcry concerning it was being made from both sides, and fierce disputes
-raged in the newspapers and on the stump, two Whigs at Galena got up an
-amicable case, to try it in a quiet way before a Whig judge, who held
-the Circuit Courts in their neighborhood. The judge decided for his
-friends, like a man that he was. The Democrats found it out, and raised
-a popular tumult about it that would have put Demetrius the silversmith
-to shame. They carried the case to the Supreme Court, where it was
-argued before the Whig majority, in December, 1889, by able and
-distinguished counsellors,--Judge Douglas being one of them; but the
-only result was a continuance to the next June. In the mean time Judge
-Smith, the only Democrat on the bench, was seeking favor with his party
-friends by betraying to Douglas the secrets of the consultation-room.
-
-With his aid, the Democrats found a defect in the record, which sent the
-case over to December, 1840, and adroitly secured the alien vote for the
-great elections of that memorable year. The Legislature elected then was
-overwhelmingly Democratic; and, having good reason to believe that
-the aliens had small favor to expect from this court, they determined
-forthwith to make a new one that would be more reasonable. There were
-now nine Circuit judges in the State, and four Supreme judges, under the
-Act of 1835. The offices of the Circuit judges the Democrats concluded
-to abolish, and to create instead nine Supreme judges, who should
-perform circuit duties. This they called "reforming the judiciary;" and
-"thirsting for vengeance," as Gov. Ford says, they went about the work
-with all the zeal, but with very little of the disinterested devotion,
-which reformers are generally supposed to have. Douglas, counsel for one
-of the litigants, made a furious speech "in the lobby," demanding the
-destruction of the court that was to try his cause; and for sundry grave
-sins which he imputed to the judges he gave Smith--his friend Smith--as
-authority. It was useless to oppose it: this "reform" was a foregone
-conclusion. It was called the "Douglas Bill;" and Mr. Douglas was
-appointed to one of the new offices created by it. But Mr. Lincoln, E.
-D. Baker, and other Whig members, entered upon the journal the following
-protest:--
-
-"For the reasons thus presented, and for others no less apparent, the
-undersigned cannot assent to the passage of the bill, or permit it to
-become a law without this evidence of their disapprobation; and they now
-protest against the re-organization of the judiciary: Because,
-
-"1st. It violates the great principles of free government by subjecting
-the judiciary to the Legislature.
-
-"2d. It is a fatal blow at the independence of the judges and the
-constitutional term of their offices.
-
-"3d. It is a measure not asked for, or wished for, by the people.
-
-"4th. It will greatly increase the expense of our courts, or else
-greatly diminish their utility.
-
-"5th. It will give our courts a political and partisan character,
-thereby impairing public confidence in their decisions.
-
-"6th. It will impair our standing with other States and the world.
-
-"7th. It is a party measure for party purposes, from which no practical
-good to the people can possibly arise, but which may be the source of
-immeasurable evils.
-
-"The undersigned are well aware that this protest will be altogether
-unavailing with the majority of this body. The blow has already fallen;
-and we are compelled to stand by, the mournful spectators of the ruin it
-will cause."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was elected in 1840, to serve, of course, until the next
-election in August, 1842; but for reasons of a private nature, to be
-explained hereafter, he did not appear during the session of 1841-2.
-
-In concluding this chapter, taking leave of New Salem, Vandalia, and
-the Legislature, we cannot forbear another quotation from Mr. Wilson,
-Lincoln's colleague from Sangamon, to whom we are already so largely in
-debt:--
-
-"In 1838 many of the Long Nines were candidates for re-election to the
-Legislature. A question of the division of the county was one of the
-local issues. Mr. Lincoln and myself, among others, residing in the
-portion of the county sought to be organized into a new county, and
-opposing the division, it became necessary that I should make a special
-canvass through the north-west part of the county, then known as Sand
-Ridge. I made the canvass; Mr. Lincoln accompanied me; and, being
-personally well acquainted with every one, we called at nearly every
-house. At that time it was the universal custom to keep some whiskey in
-the house, for private use and to treat friends. The subject was always
-mentioned as a matter of etiquette, but with the remark to Mr. Lincoln,
-'You never drink, but maybe your friend would like to take a little.'
-I never saw Mr. Lincoln drink. He often told me he never drank; had
-no desire for drink, nor the companionship of drinking men. Candidates
-never treated anybody in those times unless they wanted to do so.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln remained in New Salem until the spring of 1837, when he
-went to Springfield, and went into the law-office of John T. Stuart as a
-partner in the practice of law, and boarded with William Butler.
-
-"During his stay in New Salem he had no property other than what was
-necessary to do his business, until after he stopped in Springfield. He
-was not avaricious to accumulate property, neither was he a spendthrift.
-He was almost always during those times hard up. He never owned land.
-
-"The first trip he made around the circuit after he commenced the
-practice of law, I had a horse, saddle, and bridle, and he had none.
-I let him have mine. I think he must have been careless, as the saddle
-skinned the horse's back.
-
-"While he lived in New Salem he visited me often. He would stay a day or
-two at a time: we generally spent the time at the stores in Athens. He
-was very fond of company: telling or hearing stories told was a
-source of great amusement to him. He was not in the habit of reading
-much,--never read novels. Whittling pine boards and shingles, talking
-and laughing, constituted the entertainment of the days and evenings.
-
-"In a conversation with him about that time, he told me, that, although
-he appeared to enjoy life rapturously, still he was the victim of
-terrible melancholy. He sought company, and indulged in fun and hilarity
-without restraint, or stint as to time; but when by himself, he told me
-that he was so overcome by mental depression that he never dared carry
-a knife in his pocket; and as long as I was intimately acquainted with
-him, previous to his commencement of the practice of the law, he never
-carried a pocket-knife. Still he was not misanthropic: he was kind and
-tender-hearted in his treatment to others.
-
-"In the summer of 1837 the citizens of Athens and vicinity gave the
-delegation then called the 'Long Nine' a public dinner, at which Mr.
-Lincoln and all the others were present. He was called out by the toast,
-'Abraham Lincoln, one of Nature's noblemen.' I have often thought, that,
-if any man was entitled to that compliment, it was he."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-UNDER the Act of Assembly, due in great part to Mr. Lincoln's exertions,
-the removal of the archives and other public property of the State from
-Vandalia to Springfield began on the fourth day of July, 1839, and was
-speedily completed. At the time of the passage of the Act, in the winter
-of 1836-7, Mr. Lincoln determined to follow the capital, and establish
-his own residence at Springfield. The resolution was natural and
-necessary; for he had been studying law in all his intervals of leisure,
-and wanted a wider field than the justice's court at New Salem to begin
-the practice. Henceforth Mr. Lincoln might serve in the Legislature,
-attend to his private business, and live snugly at home. In addition to
-the State courts, the Circuit and District Courts of the United States
-sat here. The eminent John McLean of Ohio was the justice of the Supreme
-Court who sat in this circuit, with Judge Pope of the District Court,
-from 1839 to 1849, and after that with Judge Drummond. The first
-terms of these courts, and the first session of the Legislature at
-Springfield, were held in December, 1839. The Senate sat in one church,
-and the House in another.
-
-Mr. Lincoln got his license as an attorney early in 1837, "and commenced
-practice regularly as a lawyer in the town of Springfield in March"
-of that year. His first case was that of Hawthorne vs. Wooldridge,
-dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff, for whom Mr. Lincoln's name was
-entered. There were then on the list of attorneys at the Springfield bar
-many names of subsequent renown. Judge Stephen T. Logan was on the bench
-of the Circuit Court under the Act of 1835. Stephen A. Douglas had made
-his appearance as the public prosecutor at the March term of 1836; and
-at the same term E. D. Baker had been admitted to practice. Among the
-rest were John T. Stuart, Cyrus Walker, S. H. Treat, Jesse B. Thomas,
-George Forquer, Dan Stone, Ninian W. Edwards, John J. Hardin, Schuyler
-Strong, A. T. Bledsoe, and Josiah Lamborn.
-
-By this time Mr. Lincoln enjoyed considerable local fame as a
-politician, but none, of course, as a lawyer. He therefore needed
-a partner, and got one in the person of John T. Stuart, an able and
-distinguished Whig, who had relieved his poverty years before by the
-timely loan of books with which to study law, and who had from the first
-promoted his political fortunes with zeal as disinterested as it was
-effective. The connection promised well for Mr. Lincoln, and no doubt
-did well during the short period of its existence. The courtroom was
-in Hoffman's Row; and the office of Stuart & Lincoln was in the second
-story above the court-room. It was a "little room," and generally a
-"dirty one." It contained "a small dirty bed,"--on which Lincoln lounged
-and slept,--a buffalo-robe, a chair, and a bench. Here the junior
-partner, when disengaged from the cares of politics and the Legislature,
-was to be found pretty much all the time, "reading, abstracted and
-gloomy." Springfield was a small village, containing between one and two
-thousand inhabitants. There were no pavements: the street-crossings were
-made of "chunks," stones, and sticks. Lincoln boarded with Hon. William
-Butler, a gentleman who possessed in an eminent degree that mysterious
-power which guides the deliberations of party conventions and
-legislative bodies to a foregone conclusion. Lincoln was very poor,
-worth nothing, and in debt,--circumstances which are not often alleged
-in behalf of the modern legislator; but "Bill Butler" was his friend,
-and took him in with little reference to board-bills and the settlement
-of accounts. According to Dr. Jayne, he "fed and clothed him for years;"
-and this signal service, rendered at a very critical time, Mr. Lincoln
-forgot wholly when he was in Congress, and Butler wanted to be Register
-of the Land Office, as well as when he was President of the United
-States, and opportunities of repayment were multitudinous. It is
-doubtless all true; but the inference of personal ingratitude on the
-part of Mr. Lincoln will not bear examination. It will be shown at
-another place that Mr. Lincoln regarded all public offices within his
-gift as a sacred trust, to be administered solely for the people, and as
-in no sense a fund upon which he could draw for the payment of private
-accounts. He _never_ preferred his friends to his enemies, but rather
-the reverse, as if fearful that he might by bare possibility be
-influenced by some unworthy motive. He was singularly cautious to
-avoid the imputation of fidelity to his friends at the expense of his
-opponents.
-
-In Coke's and Blackstone's time the law was supposed to be "a jealous
-mistress;" but in Lincoln's time, and at Springfield, she was any
-thing but exacting. Politicians courted her only to make her favor the
-stepping-stone to success in other employments. Various members of that
-bar have left great reputations to posterity, but none of them were
-earned solely by the legitimate practice of the law. Douglas is
-remembered as a statesman, Baker as a political orator, Hardin as a
-soldier, and some now living, like Logan and Stuart, although eminent
-in the law, will be no less known to the history of the times as
-politicians than as lawyers. Among those who went to the law for a
-living, and to the people for fame and power, was Mr. Lincoln. He was
-still a member of the Legislature when he settled at Springfield, and
-would probably have continued to run for a seat in that body as often
-as his time expired, but for the unfortunate results of the
-"internal-improvement system," the hopeless condition of the State
-finances, and a certain gloominess of mind, which arose from private
-misfortunes that befell him about the time of his retirement. We do
-not say positively that these were the reasons why Mr. Lincoln made no
-effort to be re-elected to the Legislature of 1840; but a careful study
-of all the circumstances will lead any reasonable man to believe that
-they were. He was intensely ambitious, longed ardently for place and
-distinction, and never gave up a prospect which seemed to him good when
-he was in a condition to pursue it with honor to himself and fairness
-to others. Moreover State politics were then rapidly ceasing to be
-the high-road to fame and fortune. Although the State of Illinois was
-insolvent, unable to pay the interest on her public debt, and many were
-talking about repudiating the principal, the great campaign of 1840 went
-off upon national issues, and little or nothing was said about questions
-of State policy. Mr. Lincoln felt and obeyed this tendency of the public
-mind, and from 1837 onward his speeches--those that were printed and
-those that were not--were devoted chiefly, if not exclusively, to
-Federal affairs.
-
-In January, 1837, he delivered a lecture before the Springfield Lyceum
-on the subject of the "_Perpetuation of our Free Institutions_." As a
-mere declamation, it is unsurpassed in the annals of the West. Although
-delivered in mid-winter, it is instinct with the peculiar eloquence of
-the most fervid Fourth of July.
-
-"In the great journal of things," began the orator, "happening under the
-sun, we, the American People, find our account running under date of
-the nineteenth century of the Christian era. We find ourselves in the
-peaceful possession of the fairest portion of the earth, as regards
-extent of territory, fertility of soil, and salubrity of climate.
-We find ourselves under the government of a system of political
-institutions conducing more essentially to the ends of civil and
-religious liberty than any of which the history of former times tells
-us. We, when mounting the stage of existence, found ourselves the
-legal inheritors of these fundamental blessings. We toiled not in the
-acquisition or establishment of them: they are a legacy bequeathed us
-by a _once_ hardy, brave, and patriotic, but _now_ lamented and departed
-race of ancestors. Theirs was the task (and nobly they performed it) to
-possess themselves, and, through themselves, us, of this goodly land,
-and to uprear upon its hills and valleys a political edifice of
-liberty and equal rights: 'tis ours only to transmit these--the former
-unprofaned by the foot of an invader, the latter undecayed by the lapse
-of time and untorn by usurpation--to the latest generation that fate
-shall permit the world to know. This task, gratitude to our fathers,
-justice to ourselves, duty to posterity,--all imperatively require us
-faithfully to perform.
-
-"How, then, shall we perform it? At what point shall we expect the
-approach of danger? Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to
-step the ocean and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe,
-Asia, and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth (our own
-excepted) in their military chest, with a Bonaparte for a commander,
-could not, by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the
-Blue Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years!
-
-"At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected? I
-answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot
-come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its
-author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all
-time, or die by suicide.
-
-"I hope I am not over-wary; but, if I am not, there is even now
-something of ill-omen amongst us. I mean the increasing disregard for
-law which pervades the country, the growing disposition to substitute
-the wild and furious passions in lieu of the sober judgment of courts,
-and the worse than savage mobs for the executive ministers of justice.
-This disposition is awfully fearful in any community, and that it now
-exists in ours, though grating to our feelings to admit it, it would be
-a violation of truth and an insult to our intelligence to deny. Accounts
-of outrages committed by mobs form the every-day news of the times.
-They have pervaded the country from New England to Louisiana; they are
-neither peculiar to the eternal snows of the former, nor the burning sun
-of the latter. They are not the creature of climate; neither are they
-confined to the slaveholding or non-slaveholding States. Alike they
-spring up among the pleasure-hunting masters of Southern slaves and
-the order-loving citizens of the land of steady habits. Whatever, then,
-their cause may be, it is common to the whole country."
-
-The orator then adverts to the doings of recent mobs in various parts
-of the country, and insists, that, if the spirit that produced them
-continues to increase, the laws and the government itself must fall
-before it: bad citizens will be encouraged, and good ones, having no
-protection against the lawless, will be glad to receive an individual
-master who will be able to give them the peace and order they desire.
-That will be the time when the usurper will put down his heel on
-the neck of the people, and batter down the "fair fabric" of free
-institutions. "Many great and good men," he says, "sufficiently
-qualified for any task they should undertake, may ever be found,
-whose ambition would aspire to nothing beyond a seat in Congress, a
-gubernatorial or a presidential chair; _but such belong not to the
-family of the lion or the tribe of the eagle._1 What! Think you these
-places would satisfy an Alexander, a Cæsar, or a Napoleon? Never!
-Towering genius disdains a beaten path. It seeks regions hitherto
-unexplored. It sees no distinction in adding story to story upon the
-monuments of fame erected to the memory of others. It denies that it
-is glory enough to serve under any chief. It scorns to tread in the
-footsteps of any predecessor, however illustrious. It thirsts and burns
-for distinction; and, if possible, it will have it, whether at the
-expense of emancipating slaves or enslaving freemen.... Another reason
-which once _was_, but which, to the same extent, _is now no more_, has
-done much in maintaining our institutions thus far. I mean the powerful
-influence which the interesting scenes of the Revolution had upon the
-_passions_ of the people as distinguished from their judgment." This
-influence, the lecturer maintains, was kept alive by the presence of
-the surviving soldiers of the Revolution, who were in some sort "living
-histories," and concludes with this striking peroration:--
-
-"But those histories are gone. They _can_ be read no more forever. They
-_were_ a fortress of strength; but what invading foeman could never do,
-the silent artillery of time _has done_,--the levelling of its
-walls. They are gone. They _were_ a forest of giant oaks; but the
-all-resistless hurricane has swept over them, and left only here and
-there a lonely trunk, despoiled of its verdure, shorn of its foliage,
-unshading and unshaded, to murmur in a few more gentle breezes, and to
-combat with its mutilated limbs a few more rude storms, then to sink and
-be no more. They _were_ the pillars of the temple of liberty; and now
-that they have crumbled away, that temple must fall, unless we, the
-descendants, supply their places with other pillars hewn from the same
-solid quarry of sober reason. Passion has helped us, but can do so
-no more. It will in future be our enemy. Reason--cold, calculating,
-unimpassioned reason--must furnish all the materials for our future
-support and defence. Let those materials be moulded into _general
-intelligence, sound morality_, and, in particular, _a reverence for the
-Constitution and the laws_; and that we improved to the last, that we
-revered his name to the last, that during his long sleep we permitted no
-hostile foot to pass or desecrate his resting-place, shall be that which
-to learn the last trump shall awaken our Washington. Upon these let the
-proud fabric of freedom rest as the rock of its basis, and as truly as
-has been said of the only greater institution, 'The gates of hell shall
-not prevail against it."'
-
- 1 The italics are the orator's.
-
-These extracts from a lecture carefully composed by Mr. Lincoln at the
-mature age of twenty-eight, and after considerable experience in the
-public service, are worthy of attentive perusal. To those familiar with
-his sober and pure style at a later age, these sophomoric passages will
-seem incredible. But they were thought "able and eloquent" by the "Young
-Men's Lyceum" of Springfield: he was "solicited to furnish a copy for
-publication," and they were duly printed in "The Sangamon Journal." In
-the mere matter of rhetoric, they compare favorably with some of his
-other productions of nearly the same date. This was what he would have
-called his "growing time;" and it is intensely interesting to witness
-the processes of such mental growth as his. In time, gradually, but
-still rapidly, his style changes completely: the constrained and
-unnatural attempts at striking and lofty metaphor disappear, and the
-qualities which produced the Gettysburg address--that model of unadorned
-eloquence--begin to be felt. He finds the people understand him better
-when he comes down from his stilts, and talks to them from their own
-level.
-
-Political discussions at Springfield were apt to run into heated and
-sometimes unseemly personal controversies. When Douglas and Stuart were
-candidates for Congress in 1838, they fought like tigers in Herndon's
-grocery, over a floor that was drenched with slops, and gave up the
-struggle only when both were exhausted. Then, as a further entertainment
-to the populace, Mr. Stuart ordered out a "barrel of whiskey and wine."
-
-On the election-day in 1840, it was reported to Mr. Lincoln that one
-Radford, a contractor on the railroad, had brought up his men, and taken
-full possession of one of the polling-places. Lincoln started off to
-the precinct on a slow trot. Radford knew him well, and a little stern
-advice reversed proceedings without any fighting. Among other remarks,
-Lincoln said, "Radford, you'll spoil and blow if you live much longer."
-He wanted to hit Radford, but could get no chance to do so, and
-contented himself with confiding his intentions to Speed. "I intended
-just to knock him down, and leave him kicking."
-
-The same year, Col. Baker was making a speech to a promiscuous audience
-in the court-room,--"a rented room in Hoffman's Row." It will be
-remembered that Lincoln's office was just above, and he was listening
-to Baker through a large hole or trap-door in the ceiling. Baker warmed
-with his theme, and, growing violent and personally offensive,
-declared at length, "that wherever there was a land-office, there was
-a Democratic newspaper to defend its corruptions." "This," says John B.
-Webber, "was a personal attack on my brother, George Webber. I was in
-the Court House, and in my anger cried, 'Pull him down!'" A scene of
-great confusion ensued, threatening to end in a general riot, in which
-Baker was likely to suffer. But just at the critical moment Lincoln's
-legs were seen coming through the hole; and directly his tall figure
-was standing between Baker and the audience, gesticulating for silence.
-"Gentlemen," said he, "let us not disgrace the age and country in which
-we live. This is a land where freedom of speech is guaranteed. Mr Baker
-has a right to speak, and ought to be permitted to do so. I am here to
-protect him, and no man shall take him from this stand if I can prevent
-it." Webber only recollects that "some one made some soothing, kind
-remarks," and that he was properly "held until the excitement ceased,"
-and the affair "soon ended in quiet and peace."
-
-In 1838, or 1840, Jesse B. Thomas made an intemperate attack upon the
-"Long Nine," and especially upon Mr. Lincoln, as the longest and worst
-of them. Lincoln was not present at the meeting; but being sent for, and
-informed of what had passed, he ascended the platform, and made a reply
-which nobody seems to remember, but which everybody describes as a
-"terrible skinning" of his victim. Ellis says, that, at the close of a
-furious personal denunciation, he wound up by "mimicking" Thomas, until
-Thomas actually cried with vexation and anger. Edwards, Speed, Ellis,
-Davis, and many others, refer to this scene, and, being asked whether
-Mr. Lincoln could not be vindictive upon occasion, generally respond,
-"Remember the Thomas skinning."
-
-The most intimate friend Mr. Lincoln ever had, at this or any other
-time, was probably Joshua F. Speed. In 1836 he settled himself in
-Springfield, and did a thriving business as a merchant. Ellis was one
-of his clerks, and so also was William H. Herndon, Mr. Lincoln's future
-partner. This store was for years Lincoln's familiar haunt. There he
-came to while away the tedious evenings with Speed and the congenial
-company that naturally assembled around these choice spirits. He even
-slept in the store room as often as he slept at home, and here made to
-Speed the most confidential communications he ever made to mortal man.
-If he had on earth "a bosom crony," it was Speed, and that deep and
-abiding attachment subsisted unimpaired to the day of Mr. Lincoln's
-death. In truth, there were good reasons why he should think of Speed
-with affection and gratitude, for through life no man rendered him more
-important services.
-
-One night in December, 1839, Lincoln, Douglas, Baker, and some other
-gentlemen of note, were seated at Speed's hospitable fire in the store.
-They got to talking politics, got warm, hot, angry. Douglas sprang up
-and said, "Gentlemen, this is no place to talk politics: we will discuss
-the questions publicly with you," and much more in a high tone of banter
-and defiance. A few days afterwards the Whigs had a meeting, at which
-Mr. Lincoln reported a resolution challenging the Democrats to a joint
-debate. The challenge was accepted; and Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn, and
-Jesse B. Thomas were deputed by the Democrats to meet Logan, Baker,
-Browning, and Lincoln on the part of the Whigs. The intellectual
-encounter between these noted champions is still described by those
-who witnessed it as "the great debate." It took place in the Second
-Presbyterian Church, in the hearing of as many people as could get into
-the building, and was adjourned from night to night. When Mr. Lincoln's
-turn came, the audience was very thin; but, for all that, his speech
-was by many persons considered the best one of the series. To this day,
-there are some who believe he had assistance in the preparation of it.
-Even Mr. Herndon accused Speed of having "had a hand in it," and got
-a flat denial for his answer. At all events, the speech was a popular
-success, and was written out, and published in "The Sangamon Journal,"
-of March 6, 1840. The exordium was a sort of complaint that must have
-had a very depressing effect upon both the speaker and his hearers:--
-
-"Fellow-Citizens,--It is peculiarly embarrassing to me to attempt a
-continuance of the discussion, on this evening, which has been conducted
-in this hall on several preceding ones. It is so, because on each of
-these evenings there was a much fuller attendance than now, without any
-reason for its being so, except the greater interest the community feel
-in the speakers who addressed them then, than they do in him who is to
-do so now. I am, indeed, apprehensive that the few who have attended
-have done so more to spare me of mortification, than in the hope of
-being interested in any thing I may be able to say. This circumstance
-casts a damp upon my spirits which I am sure I shall be unable to
-overcome during the evening.
-
-"The subject heretofore and now to be discussed is the Sub-Treasury
-scheme of the present administration, as a means of collecting,
-safe-keeping, transferring, and disbursing the revenues of the nation,
-as contrasted with a National Bank for the same purposes. Mr. Douglas
-has said that we (the Whigs) have not dared to meet them (the Locos) in
-argument on this question. I protest against this assertion. I say we
-have again and again, during this discussion, urged facts and arguments
-against the Sub-Treasury which they have neither dared to deny nor
-attempted to answer. But lest some may be led to believe that we really
-wish to avoid the question, I now propose, in my humble way, to urge
-these arguments again; at the same time begging the audience to mark
-well the positions I shall take, and the proofs I shall offer to sustain
-them, and that they will not again allow Mr. Douglas or his friends to
-escape the force of them by a round and groundless assertion that we
-dare not meet them in argument.
-
-"Of the Sub-Treasury, then, as contrasted with a National Bank, for the
-before-enumerated purposes, I lay down the following propositions, to
-wit:--
-
-"1st. It will injuriously affect the community by its operation on the
-circulating medium.
-
-"2d. It will be a more expensive fiscal agent.
-
-"3d. It will be a less secure depository for the public money."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's objections to the Sub-Treasury were those commonly urged
-by its enemies, and have been somewhat conclusively refuted by the
-operation of that admirable institution from the hour of its adoption
-to the present. "The extravagant expenditures" of Mr. Van Buren's
-administration, however, was a standard topic of the Whigs in those
-days, and, sliding gracefully off from the Sub-Treasury, Mr. Lincoln
-dilated extensively upon this more attractive subject. This part of his
-speech was entirely in reply to Mr. Douglas. But, when he came to answer
-Mr. Lamborn's remarks, he "got in a hard hit" that must have brought
-down the house.
-
-"Mr. Lamborn insists that the difference between the Van Buren party and
-the Whigs is, that, although the former sometimes err in practice,
-they are always correct in principle, whereas the latter are wrong
-in principle; and, the better to impress this proposition, he uses a
-figurative expression in these words: 'The Democrats are vulnerable in
-the heel, but they are sound in the heart and head.' The first branch of
-the figure,--that is, that the Democrats are vulnerable in the heel,--I
-admit is not merely figuratively but literally true. Who that looks but
-for a moment at their Swartwouts, their Prices, their Harringtons,
-and their hundreds of others, scampering away with the public money to
-Texas, to Europe, and to every spot of the earth where a villain may
-hope to find refuge from justice, can at all doubt that they are most
-distressingly affected in their heels with a species of 'running itch.'
-It seems that this malady of their heels operates on the sound-headed
-and honest-hearted creatures very much like the cork-leg in the comic
-song did on its owner, which, when he had once got started on it, the
-more he tried to stop it, the more it would run away. At the hazard of
-wearing this point threadbare, I will relate an anecdote which seems to
-be too strikingly in point to be omitted. A witty Irish soldier who
-was always boasting of his bravery when no danger was near, but
-who invariably retreated without orders at the first charge of the
-engagement, being asked by his captain why he did so, replied, 'Captain,
-I have as brave a heart as Julius Cæsar ever had, but somehow or other,
-whenever danger approaches, my cowardly legs will run away with it.' So
-with Mr. Lamborn's party. They take the public money into their hands
-for the most laudable purpose that wise heads and honest hearts can
-dictate; but, before they can possibly get it out again, their rascally
-vulnerable heels will run away with them."
-
-But, as in the lecture before the Lyceum, Mr. Lincoln reserved his most
-impressive passage, his boldest imagery, and his most striking metaphor,
-for a grand and vehement peroration.
-
-"Mr. Lamborn refers to the late elections in the States, and, from their
-results, confidently predicts every State in the Union will vote for Mr.
-Van Buren at the next presidential election. Address that argument to
-cowards and knaves: with the free and the brave it will affect nothing.
-It may be true: if it must, let it. Many free countries have lost their
-liberty, and ours may lose hers; but, if she shall, be it my proudest
-plume, not that I was the last to desert, but that I never deserted her.
-I know that the great volcano at Washington, aroused and directed by the
-evil spirit that reigns there, is belching forth the lava of political
-corruption in a current broad and deep, which is sweeping with frightful
-velocity over the whole length and breadth of the land, bidding fair to
-leave unscathed no green spot or living thing; while on its bosom are
-riding, like demons on the wave of hell, the imps of that evil spirit,
-and fiendishly taunting all those who dare to resist its destroying
-course with the hopelessness of their efforts; and, knowing this, I
-cannot deny that all may be swept away. Broken by it, I, too, may
-be; bow to it, I never will. The probability that we may fall in the
-struggle ought not to deter us from the support of a cause we believe
-to be just. It shall not deter me. If ever I feel the soul within me
-elevate and expand to those dimensions, not wholly unworthy of its
-almighty Architect, it is when I contemplate the cause of my country,
-deserted by all the world beside, and I standing up boldly, alone,
-hurling defiance at her victorious oppressors. Here, without
-contemplating consequences, before Heaven and in face of the world, I
-swear eternal fealty to the just cause, as I deem it, of the land of
-my life, my liberty, and my love. And who that thinks with me will not
-fearlessly adopt that oath that I take? Let none falter who thinks he is
-right, and we may succeed. But if, after all, we shall fail, be it so:
-we still shall have the proud consolation of saying to our consciences,
-and to the departed shade of our country's freedom, that the cause
-approved of our judgment and adored of our hearts, in disaster, in
-chains, in torture, in death, we never faltered in defending."
-
-Considering that the times were extremely peaceful, and that the speaker
-saw no bloodshed except what flowed from the noses of belligerents
-in the groceries about Springfield, the speech seems to have been
-unnecessarily defiant.
-
-In 1840 Mr. Lincoln was a candidate for presidential elector on the
-Harrison ticket, and stumped a large part of the State. He and Douglas
-followed Judge Treat's court all around the circuit, "and spoke in the
-afternoons." The Harrison club at Springfield became thoroughly familiar
-with his voice. But these one-sided affairs were not altogether suited
-to his temper: through his life he preferred a joint discussion, and
-the abler the man pitted against him, the better he liked it. He knew he
-shone in retort, and sought every opportunity to practise it. From 1838
-to 1858, he seems to have followed up Douglas as a regular business
-during times of great political excitement, and only on one or two
-occasions did he find the "Little Giant" averse to a conflict. Here, in
-1840, they came in collision, as they did in 1839, and as they continued
-to do through twenty or more years, until Lincoln became President of
-the United States, and Douglas's disappointments were buried with his
-body. Once during this Harrison campaign they had a fierce discussion
-before a meeting assembled in the market-house. In the course of his
-speech, Lincoln imputed to Van Buren the great sin of having voted
-in the New York State Convention for negro suffrage with a property
-qualification. Douglas denied the fact; and Lincoln attempted to prove
-his statement by reading a certain passage from Holland's "Life of Van
-Buren," containing a letter from Van Buren to one Mr. Fithian. Whereupon
-"Douglas got mad," snatched up the book, and, tossing it into the crowd,
-remarked sententiously, although not conclusively, "Damn such a book!"
-
-"He was very sensitive," says Mr. Gillespie, "where he thought he had
-failed to come up to the expectations of his friends. I remember a case.
-He was pitted by the Whigs, in 1840, to debate with Mr. Douglas, the
-Democratic champion. Lincoln did not come up to the requirements of the
-occasion. He was conscious of his failure; and I never saw any man so
-much distressed. He begged to be permitted to try it again, and was
-reluctantly indulged; and in the next effort he transcended our highest
-expectations. I never heard, and never expect to hear, such a triumphant
-vindication as he then gave of Whig measures or policy. He never after,
-to my knowledge, fell below himself."
-
-It must by this time be clear to the reader that Mr. Lincoln was never
-agitated by any passion more intense than his wonderful thirst for
-distinction. There is good evidence that it furnished the feverish
-dreams of his boyhood; and no man that knew him well can doubt that it
-governed all his conduct, from the hour when he astonished himself by
-his oratorical success against Posey and Ewing, in the back settlements
-of Macon County, to the day when the assassin marked him as the first
-hero of the restored Union, re-elected to his great office, surrounded
-by every circumstance that could minister to his pride, or exalt his
-sensibilities,--a ruler whose power was only less wide than his renown.
-He never rested in the race he had determined to run; he was ever ready
-to be honored; he struggled incessantly for place. There is no instance
-where an important office seemed to be within his reach, and he did not
-try to get it. Whatsoever he did in politics, at the bar, in private
-life, had more or less reference to this great object of his life. It
-is not meant to be said that he was capable of any shameful act,
-any personal dishonor, any surrender or concealment of political
-convictions. In these respects, he was far better than most men. It was
-not in his nature to run away from the fight, or to desert to the enemy;
-but he was quite willing to accept his full share of the fruits of
-victory.
-
-Born in the humblest circumstances, uneducated, poor, acquainted with
-flatboats and groceries, but a stranger to the drawing-room, it was
-natural that he should seek in a matrimonial alliance those social
-advantages which he felt were necessary to his political advancement.
-This was, in fact, his own view of the matter; but it was strengthened
-and enforced by the counsels of those whom he regarded as friends.
-
-[Miss Mary Lincoln. Wife of the President 270]
-
-In 1839 Miss Mary, daughter of Hon. Robert S. Todd of Lexington, Ky.,
-came to live with her sister, Mrs. Ninian W. Edwards, at Springfield.
-Like Miss Owens, Miss Todd had a stepmother, with whom she failed to
-"agree," and for that reason the Edwardses offered her a home with them.
-She was young,--just twenty-one,--her family was of the best, and her
-connections in Illinois among the most refined and distinguished people.
-Her mother having died when she was a little girl, she had been educated
-under the care of a French lady, "opposite Mr. Clay's." She was gifted
-with rare talents, had a keen sense of the ridiculous, a ready insight
-into the weaknesses of individual character, and a most fiery and
-ungovernable temper. Her tongue and her pen were equally sharp.
-High-bred, proud, brilliant, witty, and with a will that bent every one
-else to her purpose, she took Mr. Lincoln captive the very moment she
-considered it expedient to do so.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was a rising politician, fresh from the people, and
-possessed of great power among them: Miss Todd was of aristocratic and
-distinguished family, able to lead through the awful portals of "good
-society" whomsoever they chose to countenance. It was thought that a
-union between them could not fail of numerous benefits to both parties.
-Mr. Edwards thought so; Mrs. Edwards thought so; and it was not long
-before Mary Todd herself thought so. She was very ambitious, and even
-before she left Kentucky announced her belief that she was "destined
-to be the wife of some future President." For a little while she was
-courted by Douglas as well as by Lincoln; but she is said to have
-refused the "Little Giant," "on account of his bad morals." Being asked
-which of them she intended to have, she answered, "The one that has the
-best chance of being President." She decided in favor of Lincoln, and,
-in the opinion of some of her husband's friends, aided to no small
-extent in the fulfilment of the prophecy which the bestowal of her hand
-implied. A friend of Miss Todd was the wife of an elderly but wealthy
-gentleman; and being asked by one of the Edwards coterie why she had
-married "such an old, dried-up husband, such a withered-up old buck,"
-she answered that "He had lots of horses and gold." But Mary Todd spoke
-up in great surprise, and said, "Is that true? I would rather marry
-a good man, a man of mind, with hope and bright prospects ahead for
-position, fame, and power, than to marry all the horses, gold, and bones
-in the world."
-
-Mrs. Edwards, Miss Todd's sister, tells us that Mr. Lincoln "was charmed
-with Mary's wit and fascinated with her quick sagacity, her will, her
-nature and culture." "I have happened in the room," she says, "where
-they were sitting often and often, and Mary led the conversation.
-Lincoln would listen, and gaze on her as if drawn by some superior
-power,--irresistibly so: he listened, but never scarcely said a word....
-Lincoln could not hold a lengthy conversation with a lady,--was not
-sufficiently educated and intelligent in the female line to do so."
-
-Mr. Lincoln and Mary were engaged, and their marriage was only a
-question of time. But Mr. Lincoln's love-affairs were destined never
-to run smoothly, and now one Miss Matilda Edwards made her "sweet
-appearance," and brought havoc in her train. She was the sister of
-Ninian W. Edwards, and came to spend a year with her brother. She was
-very fair, and soon was the reigning belle. No sooner did Lincoln know
-her than he felt his heart change. The other affair, according to the
-Edwardses, according to Stuart, according to Herndon, according to
-Lincoln and everybody else, was a "policy match;" but _this_ was love.
-For a while he evidently tried hard to go on as before, but his feelings
-were too strong to be concealed. Mr. Edwards endeavored to reconcile
-matters by getting his sister to marry Speed; but the rebellious beauty
-refused Speed incontinently (as she did Douglas too), and married Mr.
-Schuyler Strong. Poor Lincoln never whispered a word of his passion to
-her: his high sense of honor prevented that, and perhaps she would not
-have listened to him if it had been otherwise.
-
-At length, after long reflection, in great agony of spirit, Mr. Lincoln
-concluded that duty required him to make a candid statement of his
-feelings to the lady who was entitled to his hand. He wrote her a
-letter, and told her gently but plainly that he did not love her. He
-asked Speed to deliver it; but Speed advised him to burn it. "Speed,"
-said Mr. Lincoln, "I always knew you were an obstinate man. If you won't
-deliver it, I'll get some one else to do it." But Speed now had the
-letter in his hand; and, emboldened by the warm friendship that existed
-between them, replied, "I shall not deliver it, nor give it to you to be
-delivered. Words are forgotten, misunderstood, passed by, not noticed
-in a private conversation; but once put your words in writing, and they
-stand as a living and eternal monument against you. If you think you
-have _will_ and manhood enough to go and see her, and speak to her
-what you say in that letter, you may do that." Lincoln went to see
-her forthwith, and reported to Speed. He said, that, when he made his
-somewhat startling communication, she rose and said, "'The deceiver
-shall be deceived: woe is me!' alluding to a young man she had fooled."
-Mary told him she knew the reason of his change of heart, and released
-him from his engagement. Some parting endearments took place between
-them, and then, as the natural result of those endearments, a
-reconciliation.
-
-We quote again from Mrs. Edwards:--
-
-"Lincoln and Mary were engaged; every thing was ready and prepared
-for the marriage, even to the supper. Mr. Lincoln failed to meet his
-engagement. Cause, insanity!
-
-"In his lunacy he declared he hated Mary and loved Miss Edwards. This is
-true, yet it was not his real feelings. A crazy man hates those he loves
-when at himself. Often, often, is this the case. The world had it that
-Mr. Lincoln backed out, and this placed Mary in a peculiar situation;
-and to set herself right, and free Mr. Lincoln's mind, she wrote a
-letter to Mr. Lincoln, stating that she would release him from his
-engagement.... The whole of the year was a crazy spell. Miss Edwards
-was at our house, say a year. I asked Miss Edwards if Mr. Lincoln ever
-mentioned the subject of his love to her. Miss Edwards said, 'On my
-word, he never mentioned such a subject to me: he never even stooped to
-pay me a compliment.'"
-
-In the language of Mr. Edwards, "Lincoln went as crazy as a loon," and
-was taken to Kentucky by Speed, who kept him "until he recovered." He
-"did not attend the Legislature in 1841-2 for this reason."
-
-Mr. Herndon devoutly believes that Mr. Lincoln's insanity grew out of a
-most extraordinary complication of feelings,--aversion to the marriage
-proposed, a counter-attachment to Miss Edwards, and a new access of
-unspeakable tenderness for the memory of Ann Rutledge,--the old love
-struggling with a new one, and each sending to his heart a sacrificial
-pang as he thought of his solemn engagement to marry a third person. In
-this opinion Mr. Speed appears to concur, as shown by his letter below.
-At all events, Mr. Lincoln's derangement was nearly, if not quite,
-complete. "We had to remove razors from his room," says Speed, "take
-away all knives, and other dangerous things. It was terrible." And now
-Speed determined to do for him what Bowlin Greene had done on a similar
-occasion at New Salem. Having sold out his store on the 1st of January,
-1841, he took Mr. Lincoln with him to his home in Kentucky, and kept
-him there during most of the summer and fall, or until he seemed
-sufficiently restored to be given his liberty again at Springfield, when
-he was brought back to his old quarters. During this period, "he was at
-times very melancholy," and, by his own admission, "almost contemplated
-self-destruction." It was about this time that he wrote some gloomy
-lines under the head of "Suicide," which were published in "The Sangamon
-Journal." Mr. Herndon remembered something about them; but, when he
-went to look for them in the office-file of the "Journal," he found them
-neatly cut out,--"supposed to have been done," says he, "by Lincoln."
-Speed's mother was much pained by the "deep depression" of her guest,
-and gave him a Bible, advising him to read it, to adopt its precepts,
-and pray for its promises. He acknowledged this attempted service, after
-he became President, by sending her a photograph of himself, with this
-inscription: "To my very good friend, Mrs. Lucy G. Speed, from whose
-pious hands I received an Oxford Bible twenty years ago." But Mrs.
-Speed's medicine, the best ever offered for a mind diseased, was of
-no avail in this case. Among other things, he told Speed, referring
-probably to his inclination to commit suicide, "that he had done nothing
-to make any human being remember that he had lived, and that to connect
-his name with the events transpiring in his day and generation, and so
-impress himself upon them as to link his name with something that would
-redound to the interest of his fellow-man, was what he desired to live
-for." Of this conversation he pointedly reminded Speed at the time, or
-just before the time, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation.
-
-What took place after his return to Springfield cannot be better told
-than in the words of the friends of both parties. "Mr. Edwards and
-myself," says Mrs. Edwards, "after the first crash of things, told Mary
-and Lincoln that they had better not ever marry; that their natures,
-minds, education, raising, &c., were so different, that they could not
-live happy as man and wife; had better never think of the subject again.
-All at once we heard that Mr. Lincoln and Mary had secret meetings at
-Mr. S. Francis's, editor of 'The Springfield Journal.' Mary said the
-reason this was so, the cause why it was, was that the world, woman
-and man, were uncertain and slippery, and that it was best to keep the
-secret courtship from all eyes and ears. Mrs. Lincoln told Mr. Lincoln,
-that, though she had released him in the letter spoken of, yet she would
-hold the question an open one,--that is, that she had not changed her
-mind, but felt as always.... The marriage of Mr. Lincoln and Mary was
-quick and sudden,--one or two hours' notice." How poor Mr. Lincoln felt
-about it, may be gathered from the reminiscences of his friend, J.
-H. Matheny, who says, "that Lincoln and himself, in 1842, were very
-friendly; that Lincoln came to him one evening and said, 'Jim, I shall
-have to marry that girl.'" He was married that evening, but Matheny
-says, "he looked as if he was going to the slaughter," and that Lincoln
-"had often told him, directly and individually, that he was driven into
-the marriage; that it was concocted and planned by the Edwards family;
-that Miss Todd--afterwards Mrs. Lincoln--was crazy for a week or so, not
-knowing what to do; and that he loved Miss Edwards, and went to see her,
-and not Mrs. Lincoln."
-
-The license to marry was issued on the 4th of November, 1842, and on
-the same day the marriage was celebrated by Charles Dresser, "M.G."
-With this date carefully borne in mind, the following letters are of
-surpassing interest. They are relics, not only of a great man, but of a
-great agony.
-
-The first is from Mr. Speed to Mr. Herndon, and explains the
-circumstances under which the correspondence took place. Although it
-is in part a repetition of what the reader already knows, it is of such
-peculiar value, that we give it in full:--
-
-W. H. Herndon, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--I enclose you copies of all the letters of any interest from
-Mr. Lincoln to me.
-
-Some explanation may be needed, that you may rightly understand their
-import.
-
-In the winter of 1840 and 1841 he was unhappy about his engagement to
-his wife,--not being entirely satisfied that his _heart_ was going with
-his hand. How much he suffered then on that account, none know so well
-as myself: he disclosed his whole heart to me.
-
-In the summer of 1841 I became engaged to my wife. He was here on a
-visit when I courted her; and, strange to say, something of the same
-feeling which I regarded as so foolish in him took possession of me, and
-kept me very unhappy from the time of my engagement until I was married.
-
-This will explain the deep interest he manifested in his letters on my
-account.
-
-Louisville, Nov. 30, 1866.
-
-If you use the letters (and some of them are perfect gems) do it care
-fully, so as not to wound the feelings of Mrs. Lincoln.
-
-One thing is plainly discernible: if I had not been married and
-happy,--far more happy than I ever expected to be,--he would not have
-married.
-
-I have erased a name which I do not wish published. If I have failed
-to do it anywhere, strike it out when you come to it. That is the
-word------.
-
-I thank you for your last lecture. It is all new to me, but so true
-to my appreciation of Lincoln's character, that, independent of my
-knowledge of you, I would almost swear to it.
-
-Lincoln wrote a letter (a long one, which he read to me) to Dr. Drake,
-of Cincinnati, descriptive of his case. Its date would be in December,
-1840, or early in January, 1841. I think that he must have informed
-Dr. D. of his early love for Miss Rutledge, as there was a part of the
-letter which he would not read.
-
-It would be worth much to you, if you could procure the original.
-
-Charles D. Drake, of St. Louis, may have his father's papers. The date
-which I give you will aid in the search.
-
-I remember Dr. Drake's reply, which was, that he would not undertake to
-prescribe for him without a personal interview. I would advise you to
-make some effort to get the letter.
-
-Your friend, &c.,
-
-J. F. Speed.
-
-The first of the papers from Mr. Lincoln's pen is a letter of advice and
-consolation to his friend, for whom he apprehends the terrible things
-through which, by the help of that friend, he has himself just passed.
-
-My dear Speed,--Feeling, as you know I do, the deepest solicitude for
-the success of the enterprise you are engaged in, I adopt this as the
-last method I can invent to aid you, in case (which God forbid) you
-shall need any aid. I do not place what I am going to say on paper,
-because I can say it better in that way than I could by word of mouth;
-but, were I to say it orally before we part, most likely you would
-forget it at the very time when it might do you some good. As I think it
-reasonable that you will feel very badly sometime between this and the
-final consummation of your purpose, it is intended that you shall read
-this just at such a time. Why I say it is reasonable that you will
-feel very badly yet, is because of three _special causes_ added to _the
-general one_ which I shall mention.
-
-The general cause is, that you are naturally of a nervous temperament,
-and this I say from what I have seen of you personally, and what you
-have told me concerning your mother at various times, and concerning
-your brother William at the time his wife died. The first special cause
-is your _exposure to bad weather_ on your journey, which my experience
-clearly proves to be very severe on defective nerves. The second is
-the _absence of all business and conversation_ of friends, which might
-divert your mind, give it occasional rest from the intensity of thought
-which will sometimes wear the sweetest idea threadbare, and turn it to
-the bitterness of death.
-
-The third is _the rapid and near approach of that crisis on which all
-your thoughts and feelings concentrate._
-
-If from all these causes you shall escape, and go through triumphantly,
-without another "twinge of the soul," I shall be most happily but most
-egregiously deceived. If, on the contrary, you shall, as I expect you
-will at some time, be agonized and distressed, let me, who have some
-reason to speak with judgment on such a subject, beseech you to ascribe
-it to the causes I have mentioned, and not to some false and ruinous
-suggestion of the Devil.
-
-"But," you will say, "do not your causes apply to every one engaged in a
-like undertaking?" By no means. _The particular causes_, to a greater
-or less extent, perhaps, do apply in all cases; but the _general
-one_,--nervous debility, which is the key and conductor of all the
-particular ones, and without which they would be utterly harmless,
-though it _does_ pertain to you,--_does not_ pertain to one in a
-thousand. It is out of this that the painful difference between you and
-the mass of the world springs.
-
-I know what the painful point with you is at all times when you are
-unhappy: it is an apprehension that you do not love her as you should.
-What nonsense! How came you to court her? Was it because you thought she
-deserved it, and that you had given her reason to expect it? If it was
-for that, why did not the same reason make you court Ann Todd, and at
-least twenty others of whom you can think, and to whom it would apply
-with greater force than to _her?_ Did you court her for her wealth? Why,
-you know she had none. But you say you reasoned yourself into it. What
-do you mean by that? Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason
-yourself out of it? Did you not think, and partly form the purpose, of
-courting her the first time you ever saw her or heard of her? What had
-reason to do with it at that early stage? There was nothing at that time
-for reason to work upon. Whether she was moral, amiable, sensible,
-or even of good character, you did not, nor could then know, except,
-perhaps, you might infer the last from the company you found her in.
-
-All you then did or could know of her was her personal _appearance and
-deportment_; and these, if they impress at all, impress the heart, and
-not the head.
-
-Say candidly, were not those heavenly _black eyes_ the whole basis of
-all your early _reasoning_ on the subject? After you and I had once been
-at the residence, did you not go and take me all the way to Lexington
-and back, for no other purpose but to get to see her again, on our
-return on that evening to take a trip for that express object?
-
-What earthly consideration would you take to find her scouting and
-despising you, and giving herself up to another? But of this you have no
-apprehension; and therefore you cannot bring it home to your feelings.
-
-I shall be so anxious about you, that I shall want you to write by every
-mail. Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., Feb. 3, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Your letter of the 25th January came to hand to-day. You
-well know that I do not feel my own sorrows much more keenly than I do
-yours, when I know of them; and yet I assure you I was not much hurt by
-what you wrote me of your excessively bad feeling at the time you wrote.
-Not that I am less capable of sympathizing with you now than ever, not
-that I am less your friend than ever, but because I hope and believe
-that your present anxiety and distress about her health and her life
-must and will forever banish those horrid doubts which I know you
-sometimes felt as to the truth of your affection for her. If they can
-once and forever be removed (and I almost feel a presentiment that the
-Almighty has sent your present affliction expressly for that object),
-surely, nothing can come in their stead to fill their immeasurable
-measure of misery. The death-scenes of those we love are surely painful
-enough; but these we are prepared for and expect to see: they happen to
-all, and all know they must happen. Painful as they are, they are not
-an unlooked-for sorrow. Should she, as you fear, be destined to an early
-grave, it is indeed a great consolation to know that she is so well
-prepared to meet it.. Her religion, which you once disliked so much, I
-will venture you now prize most highly.
-
-But I hope your melancholy bodings as to her early death are not well
-founded. I even hope that ere this reaches you, she will have returned
-with improved and still-improving health, and that you will have met
-her, and forgotten the sorrows of the past in the enjoyment of the
-present. I would say more if I could, but it seems that I have said
-enough. It really appears to me that you yourself ought to rejoice, and
-not sorrow, at this indubitable evidence of your undying affection for
-her.
-
-Why, Speed, if you did not love her, although you might not wish her
-death, you would most certainly be resigned to it. Perhaps this point is
-no longer a question with you, and my pertinacious dwelling upon it is
-a rude intrusion upon your feelings. If so, you must pardon me. You know
-the hell I have suffered on that point, and how tender I am upon it.
-You know I do not mean wrong. I have been quite clear of hypo since you
-left, even better than I was along in the fall. I have seen------but
-once. She seemed very cheerful, and so I said nothing to her about what
-we spoke of.
-
-Old Uncle Billy Herndon is dead, and it is said this evening that Uncle
-Ben Ferguson will not live. This, I believe, is all the news, and enough
-at that, unless it were better.
-
-Write me immediately on the receipt of this.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., Feb. 13, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 1st inst. came to hand three or four days ago.
-When this shall reach you, you will have been Fanny's husband several
-days. You know my desire to befriend you is everlasting; that I will
-never cease while I know how to do any thing.
-
-But you will always hereafter be on ground that I have never occupied,
-and consequently, if advice were needed, I might advise wrong. I do
-fondly hope, however, that you will never again need any comfort from
-abroad. But, should I be mistaken in this, should excessive pleasure
-still be accompanied with a painful counterpart at times, still let me
-urge you, as I have ever done, to remember, in the depth and even agony
-of despondency, that very shortly you are to feel well again. I am now
-fully convinced that you love her as ardently as you are capable of
-loving. Your ever being happy in her presence, and your intense anxiety
-about her health, if there were nothing else, would place this beyond
-all dispute in my mind. I incline to think it probable that your nerves
-will fail you occasionally for a while; but once you get them firmly
-graded now, that trouble is over forever.
-
-I think if I were you, in case my mind were not exactly right, I would
-avoid being _idle_. I would immediately engage in some business, or go
-to making preparations for it, which would be the same thing.
-
-If you went through the ceremony calmly, or even with sufficient
-composure not to excite alarm in any present, you are safe beyond
-question, and in two or three months, to say the most, will be the
-happiest of men.
-
-I would desire you to give my particular respects to Fanny; but perhaps
-you will not wish her to know you have received this, lest she should
-desire to see it. Make her write me an answer to my last letter to her;
-at any rate, 1 would set great value upon a note or letter from her.
-
-Write me whenever you have leisure.
-
-Yours forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--I have been quite a man since you left.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 16th inst., announcing that Miss Fanny and you
-are "no more twain, but one flesh," reached me this morning. I have no
-way of telling how much happiness I wish you both, though I believe you
-both can conceive it. I feel somewhat jealous of both of you now:
-you will be so exclusively concerned for one another, that I shall be
-forgotten entirely. My acquaintance with Miss Fanny (I call her this,
-lest you should think I am speaking of your mother) was too short for me
-to reasonably hope to long be remembered by her; and still I am sure I
-shall not forget her soon. Try if you cannot remind her of that debt she
-owes me,--and be sure you do not interfere to prevent her paying it.
-
-I regret to learn that you have resolved to not return to Illinois.
-I shall be very lonesome without you. How miserable things seem to be
-arranged in this world! If we have no friends, we have no pleasure; and,
-if we have them, we are sure to lose them, and be doubly pained by the
-loss. I did hope she and you would make your home here; but I own I have
-no right to insist. You owe obligations to her ten thousand times
-more sacred than you can owe to others, and in that light let them be
-respected and observed. It is natural that she should desire to remain
-with her relatives and friends. As to friends, however, _she_ could not
-need them anywhere: she would have them in abundance here.
-
-Give my kind remembrance to Mr. Williamson and his family, particularly
-Miss Elizabeth; also to your mother, brother, and sisters. Ask little
-Eliza Davis if she will ride to town with me if I come there again.
-
-And, finally, give Fanny a double reciprocation of all the love she sent
-me. Write me often, and believe me
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Poor Easthouse is gone at last. He died a while before day this
-morning. They say he was very loath to die.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--I received yours of the 12th, written the day you went down
-to William's place, some days since, but delayed answering it till I
-should receive the promised one of the 16th, which came last night. I
-opened the letter with intense anxiety and trepidation; so much, that,
-although it turned out better than I expected, I have hardly yet, at the
-distance of ten hours, become calm.
-
-I tell you, Speed, our forebodings (for which you and I are peculiar)
-are all the worst sort of nonsense. I fancied, from the time I received
-your letter of Saturday, that the one of Wednesday was never to come,
-and yet it did come, and, what is more, it is perfectly clear, both from
-its tone and handwriting, that you were much happier, or, if you think
-the term preferable, less miserable, when you wrote it, than when you
-wrote the last one before. You had so obviously improved at the
-very time I so much fancied you would have grown worse. You say that
-something indescribably horrible and alarming still haunts you. You will
-not say that three months from now, I will venture. When your nerves
-once get steady now, the whole trouble will be over forever. Nor should
-you become impatient at their being even very slow in becoming steady.
-Again you say, you much fear that that Elysium of which you have dreamed
-so much is never to be realized. Weil, if it shall not, I dare swear it
-will not be the fault of her who is now your wife. I now have no doubt,
-that it is the peculiar misfortune of both you and me to dream dreams of
-Elysium far exceeding all that any thing earthly can realize. Far short
-of your dreams as you may be, no woman could do more to realize them
-than that same black-eyed Fanny. If you could but contemplate her
-through my imagination, it would appear ridiculous to you that any one
-should for a moment think of being unhappy with her. My old father
-used to have a saying, that, "If you make a bad bargain, hug it all the
-tighter;" and it occurs to me, that, if the bargain you have just closed
-can possibly be called a bad one, it is certainly the most pleasant one
-for applying that maxim to which my fancy can by any effort picture.
-
-I write another letter, enclosing this, which you can show her, if she
-desires it. I do this because she would think strangely, perhaps, should
-you tell her that you received no letters from me, or, telling her you
-do, refuse to let her see them. I close this, entertaining the confident
-hope that every successive letter I shall have from you (which I here
-pray may not be few, nor far between) may show you possessing a more
-steady hand and cheerful heart than the last preceding it.
-
-As ever, your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, March 27, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 10th inst. was received three or four days
-since. You know I am sincere when I tell you the pleasure its contents
-gave me was and is inexpressible. As to your farm matter, I have
-no sympathy with you. I have no farm, nor ever expect to have, and
-consequently have not studied the subject enough to be much interested
-with it. I can only say that I am glad you are satisfied and pleased
-with it.
-
-But on that other subject, to me of the most intense interest whether in
-joy or sorrow, I never had the power to withhold my sympathy from you.
-It cannot be told how it now thrills me with joy to hear you say you
-are "_far happier than you ever expected to be_." That much I know is
-enough. I know you too well to suppose your expectations were not, at
-least, sometimes extravagant, and, if the reality exceeds them all, I
-say, Enough, dear Lord. I am not going beyond the truth when I tell you,
-that the short space it took me to read your last letter gave me more
-pleasure than the total sum of all I have enjoyed since that fatal 1st
-of January, 1841. Since then it seems to me I should have been entirely
-happy, but for the never-absent idea that there is _one_ still unhappy
-whom I have contributed to make so. That still kills my soul. I cannot
-but reproach myself for even wishing to be happy while she is otherwise.
-She accompanied a large party on the railroad cars to Jacksonville
-last Monday, and on her return spoke, so that I heard of it, of having
-enjoyed the trip exceedingly. God be praised for that.
-
-You know with what sleepless vigilance I have watched you ever since the
-commencement of your affair; and, although I am almost confident it is
-useless, I cannot forbear once more to say, that I think it is even yet
-possible for your spirits to flag down and leave you miserable. If they
-should, don't fail to remember that they cannot long remain so. One
-thing I can tell you which I know you will be glad to hear, and that is
-that I have seen------and scrutinized her feelings as well as I could,
-and am fully convinced she is far happier now than she has been for the
-last fifteen months past.
-
-You will see by the last "Sangamon Journal" that I have made a
-temperance speech on the 22d of February, which I claim that Fanny
-and you shall read as an act of charity to me; for I cannot learn that
-anybody else has read it, or is likely to. Fortunately, it is not very
-long, and I shall deem it a sufficient compliance with my request if one
-of you listens while the other reads it.
-
-As to your Lockridge matter, it is only necessary to say that there
-has been no court since you left, and that the next commences to-morrow
-morning, during which I suppose we cannot fail to get a judgment.
-
-I wish you would learn of Everett what he would take, over and above a
-discharge, for all trouble we have been at, to take his business out
-of our hands and give it to somebody else. It is impossible to collect
-money on that or any other claim here now, and, although you know I am
-not a very petulant man, I declare I am almost out of patience with Mr.
-Everett's endless importunity. It seems like he not only writes all
-the letters he can himself, but gets everybody else in Louisville and
-vicinity to be constantly writing to us about his claim. I have always
-said that Mr. Everett is a very clever fellow, and I am very sorry
-he cannot be obliged; but it does seem to me he ought to know we are
-interested to collect his claim, and therefore would do it if we could.
-
-I am neither joking nor in a pet when I say we would thank him to
-transfer his business to some other, without any compensation for what
-we have done, provided he will see the court cost paid, for which we are
-security.
-
-The sweet violet you enclosed came safely to hand, but it was so dry,
-and mashed so flat, that it crumbled to dust at the first attempt
-to handle it. The juice that mashed out of it stained a place in the
-letter, which I mean to preserve and cherish for the sake of her who
-procured it to be sent. My renewed good wishes to her in particular, and
-generally to all such of your relations who know me.
-
-As ever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., July 4, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 16th June was received only a day or two
-since. It was not mailed at Louisville till the 25th. You speak of the
-great time that has elapsed since I wrote you. Let me explain that. Your
-letter reached here a day or two after I had started on the circuit. I
-was gone five or six weeks, so that I got the letters only a few weeks
-before Butler started to your country. I thought it scarcely worth while
-to write you the news which he could and would tell you more in detail.
-On his return, he told me you would write me soon, and so I waited for
-your letter. As to my having been displeased with your advice, surely
-you know better than that. I know you do, and therefore will not labor
-to convince you. True, that subject is painful to me; but it is not your
-silence, or the silence of all the world, that can make me forget it. I
-acknowledge the correctness of your advice too; but, before I resolve
-to do the one thing or the other, I must gain my confidence in my own
-ability to keep my resolves when they are made. In that ability you know
-I once prided myself, as the only or chief gem of my character: that
-gem I lost, how and where you know too well. I have not yet regained it;
-and, until I do, I cannot trust myself in any matter of much importance.
-I believe now, that, had you understood my case at the time as well as I
-understood yours afterwards, by the aid you would have given me I should
-have sailed through clear; but that does not now afford me sufficient
-confidence to begin that or the like of that again.
-
-You make a kind acknowledgment of your obligations to me for your
-present happiness. I am much pleased with that acknowledgment. But a
-thousand times more am I pleased, to know that you enjoy a degree of
-happiness worthy of an acknowledgment. The truth is, I am not sure that
-there was any went with me in the part I took in your difficulty: I was
-drawn to it as by fate. If I would, I could not have done less than
-I did. I always was superstitious: I believe God made me one of the
-instruments of bringing your Fanny and you together, which union I have
-no doubt he had fore-ordained. Whatever he designs, he will do for me
-yet. "Stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord" is my text just
-now. If, as you say, you have told Fanny all, I should have no objection
-to her seeing this letter, but for its reference to our friend here:
-let her seeing it depend upon whether she has ever known any thing of my
-affairs; and, if she has not, do not let her.
-
-I do not think I can come to Kentucky this season. I am so poor, and
-make so little headway in the world, that I drop back in a month of
-idleness as much as I gain in a year's sowing. I should like to visit
-you again. I should like to see that "sis" of yours that was absent when
-I was there, though I suppose she would run away again, if she were to
-hear I was coming.
-
-My respects and esteem to all your friends there, and, by your
-permission, my love to your Fanny. Ever yours, Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 5, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--You have heard of my duel with Shields, and I have now
-to inform you that the duelling business still rages in this city. Day
-before yesterday Shields challenged Butler, who accepted, and proposed
-fighting next morning at sunrising in Bob Allen's meadow, one hundred
-yards' distance, with rifles. To this Whitesides, Shields's second, said
-"no," because of the law. Thus ended duel No. 2. Yesterday Whiteside
-chose to consider himself insulted by Dr. Merryman, so sent him a kind
-of _quasi_-challenge, inviting him to meet him at the Planter's House in
-St. Louis, on the next Friday, to settle their difficulty. Merryman made
-me his friend, and sent W. a note, inquiring to know if he meant his
-note as a challenge, and, if so, that he would, according to the law
-in such case made and provided, prescribe the terms of the meeting. W.
-returned for answer, that, if M. would meet him at the Planter's House
-as desired, he would challenge him. M. replied in a note, that he denied
-W.'s right to dictate time and place, but that he (M.) would waive the
-question of time, and meet him at Louisiana, Mo. Upon my presenting this
-note to W., and stating verbally its contents, he declined receiving it,
-saying he had business in St. Louis, and it was as near as Louisiana.
-Merryman then directed me to notify Whiteside that he should publish the
-correspondence between them, with such comments as he thought fit. This
-I did. Thus it stood at bedtime last night. This morning Whiteside, by
-his friend Shields, is praying for a new trial, on the ground that he
-was mistaken in Merryman's proposition to meet him at Louisiana, Mo.,
-thinking it was the State of Louisiana. This Merryman hoots at, and
-is preparing his publication; while the town is in a ferment, and a
-street-fight somewhat anticipated.
-
-But I began this letter, not for what I have been writing, but to
-say something on that subject which you know to be of such infinite
-solicitude to me. The immense sufferings you endured from the first days
-of September till the middle of February you never tried to conceal from
-me, and I well understood. You have now been the husband of a lovely
-woman nearly eight months. That you are happier now than the day you
-married her, I well know; for without you could not be living. But I
-have your word for it, too, and the returning elasticity of spirits
-which is manifested in your letters. But I want to ask a close question,
-"Are you now in _feeling_, as well as _judgment_, glad you are married
-as you are?" From anybody but me this would be an impudent question, not
-to be tolerated; but I know you will pardon it in me. Please answer it
-quickly, as I am impatient to know.
-
-I have sent my love to your Fanny so often, I fear she is getting tired
-of it. However, I venture to tender it again,
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-In the last of these letters, Mr. Lincoln refers to his "duel with
-Shields." That was another of the disagreeable consequences which flowed
-from his fatal entanglement with Mary. Not content with managing a
-timid, although half-frantic and refractory, lover, her restless spirit
-led her into new fields of adventure. Her pen was too keen to be idle in
-the political controversies of the time. As a satirical writer, she
-had no rival of either sex at Springfield, and few, we venture to say,
-anywhere else. But that is a dangerous talent: the temptations to use it
-unfairly are numerous and strong; it inflicts so much pain, and almost
-necessarily so much injustice, upon those against whom it is directed,
-that its possessor rarely, if ever, escapes from a controversy without
-suffering from the desperation it provokes. Mary Todd was not disposed
-to let her genius rust for want of use; and, finding no other victim
-handy, she turned her attention to James Shields, "Auditor." She had a
-friend, one Miss Jayne, afterwards Mrs. Trumbull, who helped to keep
-her literary secrets, and assisted as much as she could in worrying the
-choleric Irishman. Mr. Francis, the editor, knew very well that Shields
-was "a fighting-man;" but the "pieces" sent him by the wicked ladies
-were so uncommonly rich in point and humor, that he yielded to a
-natural inclination, and printed them, one and all. Below we give a few
-specimens:--
-
-LETTER FROM THE LOST TOWNSHIPS.
-
-Lost Townships, Aug. 27, 1842.
-
-Dear Mr. Printer,--I see you printed that long letter I sent you a spell
-ago: I'm quite encouraged by it, and can't keep from writing again. I
-think the printing of my letters will be a good thing all round,--it
-will give me the benefit of being known by the world, and give the world
-the advantage of knowing what's going on in the Lost Townships, and
-give your paper respectability besides. So here comes another. Yesterday
-afternoon I hurried through cleaning up the dinner-dishes, and stepped
-over to Neighbor S----, to see if his wife Peggy was as well as mought be
-expected, and hear what they called the baby. Well, when I got there,
-and just turned round the corner of his log-cabin, there he was setting
-on the doorstep reading a newspaper.
-
-"How are you, Jeff?" says I. He sorter started when he heard me, for he
-hadn't seen me before.
-
-"Why," says he, "I'm mad as the devil, Aunt'Becca!"
-
-"What about?" says I: "ain't its hair the right color? None of that
-nonsense, Jeff: there ain't an honester woman in the Lost Townships
-than"--
-
-"Than who?" says he: "what the mischief are you about?"
-
-I began to see I was running the wrong trail, and so says I, "Oh!
-nothing: I guess I was mistaken a little, that's all. But what is it
-you're mad about?" "Why," says he, "I've been tugging ever since harvest
-getting out wheat and hauling it to the river, to raise State-Bank paper
-enough to pay my tax this year, and a little school-debt I owe; and
-now, just as I've got it, here I open this infernal 'Extra Register,'
-expecting to find it full of 'Glorious Democratic Victories' and
-'High-Comb'd Cocks,' when, lo and behold! I find a set of fellows
-calling themselves officers of State have forbidden the tax-collectors
-and school-commissioners to receive State paper at all; and so here it
-is, dead on my hands. I don't now believe all the plunder I've got will
-fetch ready cash enough to pay my taxes and that school-debt."
-
-I was a good deal thunderstruck myself; for that was the first I had
-heard of the proclamation, and my old man was pretty much in the same
-fix with Jeff. We both stood a moment staring at one another, without
-knowing what to say. At last says I, "Mr. S------, let me look at that
-paper." He handed it to me, when I read the proclamation over.
-
-"There, now," says he, "did you ever see such a piece of impudence
-and imposition as that?" I saw Jeff was in a good tune for saying some
-ill-natured things, and so I tho't I would just argue a little on the
-contrary side, and make him rant a spell if I could.
-
-"Why," says I, looking as dignified and thoughtful as I could, "it seems
-pretty tough, to be sure, to have to raise silver where there's none to
-be raised; but then, you see, 'there will be danger of loss' if it ain't
-done."
-
-"Loss, damnation 1" says he. "I defy Daniel Webster, I defy King
-Solomon, I defy the world,--I defy--I defy--yes, I defy even you,
-Aunt'Becca, to show how the people can lose any thing by paying their
-taxes in State paper."
-
-"Well," says I, "you see what the officers of State say about it, and
-they are a desarnin' set of men. But," says I, "I guess you're mistaken
-about what the proclamation says. It don't say the people will lose any
-thing by the paper money being taken for taxes. It only says 'there will
-be danger of loss;' and though it is tolerable plain that the people
-can't lose by paying their taxes in something they can get easier than
-silver, instead of having to pay silver; and though it is just as plain
-that the State can't lose by taking State-Bank paper, however low it
-may be, while she owes the bank more than the whole revenue, and can pay
-that paper over on her debt, dollar for dollar,--still there is danger
-of loss to the 'officers of State;' and you know, Jeff, we can't get
-along without officers of State."
-
-"Damn officers of State!" says he: "that's what you Whigs are always
-hurrahing for."
-
-"Now, don't swear so, Jeff," says I: "you know I belong to the meetin',
-and swearin' hurts my feelins'."
-
-"Beg pardon, Aunt'Becca," says he; "but I do say it's enough to make Dr.
-Goddard swear, to have tax to pay in silver, for nothing only that Ford
-may get his two thousand a year, and Shields his twenty-four hundred a
-year, and Carpenter his sixteen hundred a year, and all without 'danger
-of loss' by taking it in State paper. Yes, yes: it's plain enough now
-what these officers of State mean by 'danger of loss.' Wash, I s'pose,
-actually lost fifteen hundred dollars out of the three thousand that two
-of these 'officers of State' let him steal from the treasury, by
-being compelled to take it in State paper. Wonder if we don't have a
-proclamation before long commanding us to make up this loss to Wash in
-silver."
-
-And so he went on till his breath run out, and he had to stop. I
-couldn't think of any thing to say just then; and so I begun to look
-over the paper again. "Ay! here's another proclamation, or something
-like it."
-
-"Another!" says Jeff; "and whose egg is it, pray?"
-
-I looked to the bottom of it, and read aloud, "Your obedient servant,
-Jas. Shields, Auditor."
-
-"Aha!" says Jeff, "one of them same three fellows again. Well, read it,
-and let's hear what of it."
-
-I read on till I came to where it says, "The object of this measure is
-to suspend the collection of the revenue for the current year."
-
-"Now stop, now stop!" says he: "that's a lie a'ready, and I don't want
-to hear of it."
-
-"Oh! maybe not," says I.
-
-"I say it--is--a--lie. Suspend the collection, indeed! Will the
-collectors, that have taken their oaths to make the collection, dare
-to suspend it? Is there any thing in the law requiring them to perjure
-themselves at the bidding of James Shields? Will the greedy gullet of
-the penitentiary be satisfied with swallowing him instead of all them,
-if they should venture to obey him? And would he not discover some
-'danger of loss,' and be off, about the time it came to taking their
-places?
-
-"And suppose the people attempt to suspend, by refusing to pay, what
-then? The collectors would just jerk up their horses and cows, and the
-like, and sell them to the highest bidder for silver in hand, without
-valuation or redemption. Why, Shields didn't believe that story himself:
-it was never meant for the truth. If it was true, why was it not writ
-till five days after the proclamation? Why didn't Carlin and Carpenter
-sign it as well as Shields? Answer me that, Aunt'Becca. I say it's a
-lie, and not a well-told one at that. It grins out like a copper dollar.
-Shields is a fool as well as a liar. With him truth is out of the
-question; and, as for getting a good bright passable lie out of him, you
-might as well try to strike fire from a cake of tallow. I stick to it,
-it's all an infernal Whig lie!"
-
-"A Whig lie! Highty tighty!"
-
-"Yes, a Whig lie; and it's just like every thing the cursed British
-Whigs do. First they'll do some divilment, and then they'll tell a lie
-to hide it. And they don't care how plain a lie it is: they think they
-can cram any sort of a one down the throats of the ignorant Locofocos,
-as they call the Democrats."
-
-"Why, Jeff, you're crazy: you don't mean to say Shields is a Whig!"
-
-"_Yes, I do."_
-
-"Why, look here! the proclamation is in your own Democratic paper, as
-you call it."
-
-"I know it; and what of that? They only printed it to let us Democrats
-see the deviltry the Whigs are at."
-
-"Well, but Shields is the auditor of this Loco--I mean this Democratic
-State."
-
-"So he is, and Tyler appointed him to office."
-
-"Tyler appointed him?"
-
-"Yes (if you must chaw it over), Tyler appointed him; or, if it wasn't
-him, it was old Granny Harrison, and that's all one. I tell you,
-Aunt'Becca, there's no mistake about his being a Whig. Why, his very
-looks shows it,--every thing about him shows it: if I was deaf and
-blind, I could tell him by the smell. I seed him when I was down in
-Springfield last winter. They had a sort of a gatherin' there one night
-among the grandees, they called a fair. All the gals about town was
-there; and all the handsome widows and married women, finickin' about,
-trying to look like gals, tied as tight in the middle, and puffed out
-at both ends, like bundles of fodder that hadn't been stacked yet, but
-wanted stackin' pretty bad. And then they had tables all round the
-house kivered over with [ ] caps, and pincushions, and ten thousand such
-little knick-knacks, tryin' to sell'em to the fellows that were bowin'
-and scrapin' and kungeerin' about'em. They wouldn't let no Democrats in,
-for fear they'd disgust the ladies, or scare the little gals, or dirty
-the floor. I looked in at the window, and there was this same fellow
-Shields floatin' about on the air, without heft or earthly substance,
-just like a lock of cat-fur where cats had been fightin'.
-
-"He was paying his money to this one, and that one, and t'other one, and
-sufferin' great loss because it wasn't silver instead of State paper;
-and the sweet distress he seemed to be in,--his very features, in the
-ecstatic agony of his soul, spoke audibly and distinctly, 'Dear girls,
-it is distressing, but I cannot marry you all. Too well I know how
-much you suffer; but do, do remember, it is not my fault that I am so
-handsome and so interesting.'
-
-"As this last was expressed by a most exquisite contortion of his face,
-he seized hold of one of their hands, and squeezed, and held on to it
-about a quarter of an hour. 'O my good fellow!' says I to myself, 'if
-that was one of our Democratic gals in the Lost Townships, the way
-you'd get a brass pin let into you, would be about up to the head.' He
-a Democrat! Fiddlesticks! I tell you, Aunt'Becca, he's a Whig, and no
-mistake: nobody but a Whig could make such a conceity dunce of himself."
-
-"Well," says I, "maybe he is; but, if he is, I'm mistaken the worst
-sort. Maybe so, maybe so; but, if I am, I'll suffer by it; I'll be a
-Democrat if it turns out that Shields is a Whig; considerin' you shall
-be a Whig if he turns out a Democrat."
-
-"A bargain, by jingoes!" says he; "but how will we find out?"
-
-"Why," says I, "we'll just write, and ax the printer."
-
-"Agreed again!" says he; "and, by thunder! if it does turn out that
-Shields is a Democrat, I never will"--
-
-"Jefferson,--Jefferson"--
-
-"What do you want, Peggy?"
-
-"Do get through your everlasting clatter sometime, and bring me a gourd
-of water: the child's been crying for a drink this live-long hour."
-
-"Let it die, then: it may as well die for water as to be taxed to death
-to fatten officers of State."
-
-Jeff run off to get the water, though, just like he hadn't been sayin'
-any thing spiteful; for he's a raal good-hearted fellow, after all, once
-you get at the foundation of him.
-
-I walked into the house, and "Why, Peggy," says I, "I declare, we like
-to forgot you altogether."
-
-"Oh, yes!" says she, "when a body can't help themselves, everybody
-soon forgets'em; but, thank God! by day after to-morrow I shall be well
-enough to milk the cows, and pen the calves, and wring the contrary
-ones' tails for'em, and no thanks to nobody."
-
-"Good-evening, Peggy," says I; and so I sloped, for I seed she was mad
-at me for making Jeff neglect her so long.
-
-And now, Mr. Printer, will you be sure to let us know in your next paper
-whether this Shields is a Whig or a Democrat? I don't care about it for
-myself, for I know well enough how it is already; but I want to convince
-Jeff. It may do some good to let him, and others like him, know who
-and what those officers of State are. It may help to send the present
-hypocritical set to where they belong, and to fill the places they now
-disgrace with men who will do more work for less pay, and take a fewer
-airs while they are doing it. It ain't sensible to think that the same
-men who get us into trouble will change their course; and yet it's
-pretty plain, if some change for the better is not made, it's not long
-that either Peggy or I, or any of us, will have a cow left to milk, or a
-calf's tail to wring.
-
-Yours, truly,
-
-Rebecca------.
-
-Lost Townships, Sept. 8,1842. Dear Mr. Printer,--I was a-standin' at the
-spring yesterday a-washin' out butter, when I seed Jim Snooks a-ridin'
-up towards the house for very life like, when, jist as I was a wonderin'
-what on airth was the matter with him, he stops suddenly, and ses he,
-"Aunt'Becca, here's somethin' for you;" and with that he hands out your
-letter. Well, you see I steps out towards him, not thinkin' that I had
-both hands full of butter; and seein' I couldn't take the letter, you
-know, without greasin' it, I ses, "Jim, jist you open it, and read it
-for me." Well, Jim opens it, and reads it; and would you believe it,
-Mr. Editor? I was so completely dumfounded, and turned into stone, that
-there I stood in the sun, a-workin' the butter, and it a-runnin' on the
-ground, while he read the letter, that I never thunk what I was about
-till the hull on't run melted on the ground, and was lost. Now, sir,
-it's not for the butter, nor the price of the butter, but, the Lord have
-massy on us, I wouldn't have sich another fright for a whole firkin of
-it. Why, when I found out that it was the man what Jeff seed down to
-the fair that had demanded the author of my letters, threatnin' to
-take personal satisfaction of the writer, I was so skart that I tho't I
-should quill-wheel right where I was.
-
-You say that Mr. S. is offended at being compared to cat's fur, and
-is as mad as a March hare (that ain't far), because I told about the
-squeezin'. Now, I want you to tell Mr. S, that, rather than fight, I'll
-make any apology; and, if he wants personal satisfaction, let him only
-come here, and he may squeeze my hand as hard as I squeeze the butter,
-and, if that ain't personal satisfaction, I can only say that he is the
-fust man that was not satisfied with squeezin' my hand. If this should
-not answer, there is one thing more that I would do rather than get a
-lickin'. I have all along expected to die a widow; but, as Mr. S.
-is rather good-looking than otherwise, I must say I don't care if
-we compromise the matter by--really, Mr. Printer, I can't help
-blushin'--but I--it must come out--I--but widowed modesty--well, if I
-must, I must--wouldn't he--maybe sorter, let the old grudge drap if I
-was to consent to be--be--h-i-s w-i-f-e? I know he's a fightin' man, and
-would rather fight than eat; but isn't marryin' better than fightin',
-though it does sometimes run into it? And I don't think, upon the whole,
-that I'd be sich a bad match neither: I'm not over sixty, and am just
-four feet three in my bare feet, and not much more round the girth; and
-for color, I wouldn't turn my back to nary gal in the Lost Townships.
-But, after all, maybe I'm countin' my chickins before they' re hatched,
-and dreamin' of matrimonial bliss when the only alternative reserved for
-me may be a lickin'. Jeff tells me the way these fire-eaters do is to
-give the challenged party choice of weapons, &c., which bein' the case,
-I'll tell you in confidence that I never fights with any thing but
-broomsticks, or hot water, or a shovelful of coals, or some such thing;
-the former of which being somewhat like a shillalah, may not be very
-objectionable to him. I will give him choice, however, in one thing, and
-that is, whether, when we fight, I shall wear breeches or he petticoats;
-for I presume that change is sufficient to place us on an equality.
-
-Yours, &c.
-
-Rebecca------.
-
-P. S.--Jist say to your friend, if he concludes to marry rather than
-fight, I shall only inforce one condition: that is, if he should ever
-happen to gallant any young gals home of nights from our house, he must
-not squeeze their hands.
-
-It is by no means a subject of wonder that these publications threw
-Mr. James Shields into a state of wrath. A thin-skinned, sensitive,
-high-minded, and high-tempered man, tender of his honor, and an Irishman
-besides, it would have been strange indeed, if he had not felt
-like snuffing blood. But his rage only afforded new delights to his
-tormentors; and when it reached its height, "Aunt'Becca" transformed
-herself to "Cathleen," and broke out in rhymes like the following, which
-Miss Jayne's brother "Bill" kindly consented to "drop" for the amiable
-ladies.
-
- [For The Journal.]
-
- Ye Jew's-harps awake! The A------s won:
- Rebecca the widow has gained Erin's son;
- The pride of the North from Emerald Isle
- Has been wooed and won by a woman's smile.
- The combat's relinquished, old loves all forgot:
- To the widow he's bound. Oh, bright be his lot!
- In the smiles of the conquest so lately achieved,
- Joyful be his bride, "widowed modesty" relieved.
- The footsteps of time tread lightly on flowers,
- May the cares of this world ne'er darken his hours!
- But the pleasures of life are fickle and coy
- As the smiles of a maiden sent off to destroy.
- Happy groom! in sadness, far distant from thee,
- The Fair girls dream only of past times of glee
- Enjoyed in thy presence; whilst the soft blarnied store
- Will be fondly remembered as relics of yore,
- And hands that in rapture you oft would have prest
- In prayer will be clasped that your lot may be blest.
-
- Cathleen.
-
-It was too bad. Mr. Shields could stand it no longer. He sent Gen.
-Whiteside to Mr. Francis, to demand the name of the person who wrote the
-letters from the "Lost Townships;" and Mr. Francis told him it was _A.
-Lincoln_. This information led to a challenge, a sudden scampering off
-of parties and friends to Missouri, a meeting, an explanation, and a
-peaceful return.
-
-Abraham Lincoln in the field of honor, sword in hand, manoeuvred by a
-second learned in the _duello_, would be an attractive spectacle under
-any circumstances. But with a celebrated man for an antagonist, and a
-lady's humor the occasion, the scene is one of transcendent interest;
-and the documents which describe it are well entitled to a place in his
-history. The letter of Mr. Shields's second, being first in date, is
-first in order.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 3, 1842. To the Editor op "The Sangamon Journal."
-
-Sir,--To prevent misrepresentation of the recent affair between Messrs.
-Shields and Lincoln, I think it proper to give a brief narrative of the
-facts of the case, as they came within my knowledge; for the truth
-of which I hold myself responsible, and request you to give the same
-publication. An offensive article in relation to Mr. Shields appeared in
-"The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d September last; and, on demanding the
-author, Mr. Lincoln was given up by the editor. Mr. Shields, previous to
-this demand, made arrangements to go to Quincy on public business; and
-before his return Mr. Lincoln had left for Tremont, to attend the court,
-with the intention, as we learned, of remaining on the circuit several
-weeks. Mr. Shields, on his return, requested me to accompany him to
-Tremont; and, on arriving there, we found that Dr. Merryman and Mr.
-Butler had passed us in the night, and got there before us. We arrived
-in Tremont on the 17th ult.; and Mr. Shields addressed a note to Mr.
-Lincoln immediately, informing him that he was given up as the author of
-some articles that appeared in "The Sangamon Journal" (one more over the
-signature having made its appearance at this time), and requesting
-him to _retract_ the offensive allusions contained in said articles in
-relation to his private character. Mr. Shields handed this note to me to
-deliver to Mr. Lincoln, and directed me, at the same time, not to
-enter into any verbal communication, or be the bearer of any verbal
-explanation, as such were always liable to misapprehension. This note
-was delivered by me to Mr. Lincoln, stating, at the same time, that I
-would call at his convenience for an answer. Mr. Lincoln, in the evening
-of the same day, handed me a letter addressed to Mr. Shields. In this
-he gave or offered no explanation, but stated therein that he could not
-submit to answer further, on the ground that Shields's note contained
-an assumption of facts and also a menace. Mr. Shields then addressed
-him another note, in which he disavowed all intention to menace, and
-requested to know whether he (Mr. Lincoln) was the author of either of
-the articles which appeared in "The Journal," headed "Lost Townships,"
-and signed "Rebecca;" and, if so, he repeated his request of a
-retraction of the offensive matter in relation to his private character;
-if not, his denial would be held sufficient. This letter was returned to
-Mr. Shields unanswered, with a verbal statement "that there could be no
-further negotiation between them until the first note was withdrawn."
-Mr. Shields thereupon sent a note designating me as his friend, to which
-Mr. Lincoln replied by designating Dr. Merryman. These three last notes
-passed on Monday morning, the 19th. Dr. Merryman handed me Mr. Lincoln's
-last note when by ourselves. I remarked to Dr. Merryman that the matter
-was now submitted to us, and that I would propose that he and myself
-should pledge our words of honor to each other to try to agree upon
-terms of amicable arrangement, and compel our principals to accept of
-them. To this he readily assented, and we shook hands upon the pledge.
-It was then mutually agreed that we should adjourn to Springfield, and
-there procrastinate the matter, for the purpose of effecting the secret
-arrangement between him and myself. All this I kept concealed from Mr.
-Shields. Our horse had got a little lame in going to Tremont, and
-Dr. Merryman invited me to take a seat in his buggy. I accepted the
-invitation the more readily, as I thought, that leaving Mr. Shields in
-Tremont until his horse would be in better condition to travel would
-facilitate the private agreement between Dr. Merryman and myself. I
-travelled to Springfield part of the way with him, and part with Mr.
-Lincoln; but nothing passed between us on the journey in relation to the
-matter in hand. We arrived in Springfield on Monday night. About noon on
-Tuesday, to my astonishment, a proposition was made to meet in Missouri,
-within three miles of Alton, on the next Thursday! The weapons, cavalry
-broadswords of the largest size; the parties to stand on each side of
-a barrier, and to be confined to a limited space. As I had not
-been consulted at all on the subject, and considering the private
-understanding between Dr. Merryman and myself, and it being known that
-Mr. Shields was left at Tremont, such a proposition took me by surprise.
-However, being determined not to violate the laws of the State, I
-declined agreeing upon the terms until we should meet in Missouri.
-Immediately after, I called upon Dr. Merryman, and withdrew the pledge
-of honor between him and myself in relation to a secret arrangement. I
-started after this to meet Mr. Shields, and met him about twenty miles
-from Springfield. It was late on Tuesday night when we both reached the
-city, and learned that Dr. Merryman had left for Missouri, Mr. Lincoln
-having left before the proposition was made, as Dr. Merryman had himself
-informed me. The time and place made it necessary to start at once.
-We left Springfield at eleven o'clock on Tuesday night, travelled all
-night, and arrived in Hillsborough on Wednesday morning, where we
-took in Gen. Ewing. From there we went to Alton, where we arrived on
-Thursday; and, as the proposition required three friends on each side, I
-was joined by Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, as the friends of Mr. Shields.
-
-We then crossed to Missouri, where a proposition was made by Gen.
-Hardin and Dr. English (who had arrived there in the mean time as mutual
-friends) to refer the matter to, I think, four friends for a settlement.
-This I believed Mr. Shields would refuse, and declined seeing him; but
-Dr. Hope, who conferred with him upon the subject, returned, and stated
-that Mr. Shields declined settling the matter through any other than the
-friends he had selected to stand by him on that occasion. The friends of
-both the parties finally agreed to withdraw the papers (temporarily) to
-give the friends of Mr. Lincoln an opportunity to explain. Whereupon the
-friends of Mr. Lincoln, to wit, Messrs. Merryman, Bledsoe, and Butler,
-made a full and satisfactory explanation in relation to the article
-which appeared in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, the only one written
-by him. This was all done without the knowledge or consent of Mr.
-Shields; and he refused to accede to it until Dr. Hope, Gen. Ewing, and
-myself declared the apology sufficient, and that we could not sustain
-him in going further. I think it necessary to state further, that no
-explanation or apology had been previously offered on the part of Mr.
-Lincoln to Mr. Shields, and that none was ever communicated by me to
-him, nor was any ever offered to me, unless a paper read to me by Dr.
-Merryman after he had handed me the broadsword proposition on Tuesday.
-I heard so little of the reading of the paper, that I do not know fully
-what it purported to be; and I was the less inclined to inquire, as Mr.
-Lincoln was then gone to Missouri, and Mr. Shields not yet arrived from
-Tremont. In fact, I could not entertain any offer of the kind, unless
-upon my own responsibility; and that I was not disposed to do after what
-had already transpired.
-
-I make this statement, as I am about to be absent for some time, and
-I think it due to all concerned to give a true version of the matter
-before I leave.
-
-Your obedient servant,
-
-John D. Whiteside.
-
-To which Mr. Merryman replied:--
-
-Springfield, Oct. 8, 1842.
-
-Editors of "The Journal."
-
-Gents,--By your paper of Friday, I discover that Gen. Whiteside has
-published his version of the late affair between Messrs. Shields and
-Lincoln. I now bespeak a hearing of my version of the same affair, which
-shall be true and full as to all material facts.
-
-On Friday evening, the 16th of September, I learned that Mr. Shields
-and Gen. Whiteside had started in pursuit of Mr. Lincoln, who was at
-Tremont, attending court. I knew that Mr. Lincoln was wholly unpractised
-both as to the diplomacy and weapons commonly employed in similar
-affairs; and I felt it my duty, as a friend, to be with him, and, so far
-as in my power, to prevent any advantage being taken of him as to either
-his honor or his life. Accordingly, Mr. Butler and myself started,
-passed Shields and Whiteside in the night, and arrived at Tremont ahead
-of them on Saturday morning. I told Mr. Lincoln what was brewing, and
-asked him what course he proposed to himself. He stated that he was
-wholly opposed to duelling, and would do any thing to avoid it that
-might not degrade him in the estimation of himself and friends; but, if
-such degradation or a fight were the only alternative, he would fight.
-
-In the afternoon Shields and Whiteside arrived, and very soon the former
-sent to Mr. Lincoln by the latter the following note or letter:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17,1842.
-
-A. Lincoln, Esq.--I regret that my absence on public business compelled
-me to postpone a matter of private consideration a little longer than I
-could have desired. It will only be necessary, however, to account for
-it by informing you that I have been to Quincy on business that would
-not admit of delay. I will now state briefly the reasons of my troubling
-you with this communication, the disagreeable nature of which I regret,
-as I had hoped to avoid any difficulty with any one in Springfield while
-residing there, by endeavoring to conduct myself in such a way amongst
-both my political friends and opponents, as to escape the necessity of
-any. Whilst thus abstaining from giving provocation, I have become
-the object of slander, vituperation, and personal abuse, which, were I
-capable of submitting to, I would prove myself worthy of the whole of
-it.
-
-In two or three of the last number's of "The Sangamon Journal," articles
-of the most personal nature, and calculated to degrade me, have made
-their appearance. On inquiring, I was informed by the editor of that
-paper, through the medium of my friend, Gen. Whiteside, that you are
-the author of those articles. This information satisfies me that I have
-become, by some means or other, the object of your secret hostility. I
-will not take the trouble of inquiring into the reason of all this;
-but I will take the liberty of requiring a full, positive, and
-absolute retraction of all offensive allusions used by you in these
-communications, in relation to my private character and standing as a
-man, as an apology for the insults conveyed in them.
-
-This may prevent consequences which no one will regret more than myself.
-
-Your ob't serv't,
-
-[Copy.] Jas. Shields.
-
-About sunset Gen. Whiteside called again, and received from Mr. Lincoln
-the following answer to Mr. Shields's note:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17, 1812
-
-Jas. Shields, Esq.--Your note of to-day was handed me by Gen. Whiteside.
-In that note, you say you have been informed, through the medium of the
-editor of "The Journal," that I am the author of certain articles
-in that paper which you deem personally abusive of you; and, without
-stopping to inquire whether I really am the author, or to point out what
-is offensive in them, you demand an unqualified retraction of all that
-is offensive, and then proceed to hint at consequences.
-
-Now, sir, there is in this so much assumption of facts, and so much of
-menace as to consequences, that I cannot submit to answer that note any
-further than I have, and to add, that the consequence to which I suppose
-you allude would be matter of as great regret to me as it possibly could
-to you. Respectfully,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-In about an hour Gen. Whiteside called again with another note from Mr.
-Shields; but after conferring with Mr. Butler for a long time, say two
-or three hours, returned without presenting the note to Mr. Lincoln.
-This was in consequence of an assurance from Mr. Butler that Mr. Lincoln
-could not receive any communication from Mr. Shields, unless it were a
-withdrawal of his first note, or a challenge. Mr. Butler further stated
-to Gen. Whiteside, that, on the withdrawal of the first note, and a
-proper and gentlemanly request for an explanation, he had no doubt one
-would be given. Gen. Whiteside admitted that that was the course Mr.
-Shields ought to pursue, but deplored that his furious and intractable
-temper prevented his having any influence with him to that end. Gen. W.
-then requested us to wait with him until Monday morning, that he might
-endeavor to bring Mr. Shields to reason.
-
-On Monday morning he called and presented Mr. Lincoln the same note
-as, Mr. Butler says, he had brought on Saturday evening. It was as
-follows:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17, 1842.
-
-A. Lincoln, Esq.--In your reply to my note of this date, you intimate
-that I assume facts and menace consequences, and that you cannot submit
-to answer it further. As now, sir, you desire it, I will be a little
-more particular. The editor of "The Sangamon Journal" gave me to
-understand that you are the author of an article which appeared,
-I think, in that paper of the 2d September inst., headed "The Lost
-Townships," and signed Rebecca or 'Becca. I would therefore take the
-liberty of asking whether you are the author of said article, or any
-other over the same signature which has appeared in any of the late
-numbers of that paper. If so, I repeat my request of an absolute
-retraction of all offensive allusion contained therein in relation to my
-private character and standing. If you are not the author of any of the
-articles, your denial will be sufficient. I will say further, it is not
-my intention to menace, but to do myself justice.
-
-Your ob't serv't,
-
-[Copy.] Jas. Shields.
-
-This Mr. Lincoln perused, and returned to Gen. Whiteside, telling
-him verbally, that he did not think it consistent with his honor to
-negotiate for peace with Mr. Shields, unless Mr. Shields would withdraw
-his former offensive letter.
-
-In a very short time Gen. Whiteside called with a note from Mr. Shields,
-designating Gen. Whiteside as his friend, to which Mr. Lincoln instantly
-replied, designating me as his. On meeting Gen. Whiteside, he proposed
-that we should pledge our honor to each other that we would endeavor
-to settle the matter amicably; to which I agreed, and stated to him the
-only conditions on which it could be so settled; viz., the withdrawal
-of Mr. Shields's first note; which he appeared to think reasonable, and
-regretted that the note had been written,--saying, however, that he had
-endeavored to prevail on Mr. Shields to write a milder one, but had not
-succeeded. He added, too, that I must promise not to mention it, as he
-would not dare to let Mr. Shields know that he was negotiating peace;
-for, said he, "He would challenge me next, and as soon cut my throat
-as not." Not willing that he should suppose my principal less dangerous
-than his own, I promised not to mention our pacific intentions to Mr.
-Lincoln or any other person; and we started for Springfield forthwith.
-
-We all, except Mr. Shields, arrived in Springfield late at night on
-Monday. We discovered that the affair had, somehow, got great publicity
-in Springfield, and that an arrest was probable. To prevent this, it was
-agreed by Mr. Lincoln and myself that he should leave early on Tuesday
-morning. Accordingly, he prepared the following instructions for my
-guide, on a suggestion from Mr. Butler that he had reason to believe
-that an attempt would be made by the opposite party to have the matter
-accommodated:--
-
-In case Whiteside shall signify a wish to adjust this affair without
-further difficulty, let him know, that, if the present papers be
-withdrawn, and a note from Mr. Shields asking to know if I am the author
-of the articles of which he complains, and asking that I shall make him
-gentlemanly satisfaction if I am the author, and this without menace or
-dictation as to what that satisfaction shall be, a pledge is made that
-the following answer shall be given:--
-
-"I did write the 'Lost Township' letter which appeared in the 'Journal'
-of the 2d inst., but had no participation in any form in any other
-article alluding to you. I wrote that wholly for political effect. I had
-no intention of injuring your personal or private character, or standing
-as a man or a gentleman; and I did not then think, and do not now think,
-that that article could produce, or has produced, that effect against
-you; and, had I anticipated such an effect, would have forborne to write
-it. And I will add, that your conduct towards me, so far as I knew, had
-always been gentlemanly, and that I had no personal pique against you,
-and no cause for any."
-
-If this should be done, I leave it with you to manage what shall and
-what shall not be published.
-
-If nothing like this is done, the preliminaries of the fight are to
-be:--
-
-1st, Weapons.--Cavalry broadswords of the largest size, precisely
-equal in all respects, and such as now used by the cavalry company at
-Jacksonville.
-
-2d, Position.--A plank ten feet long, and from nine to twelve inches
-broad, to be firmly fixed on edge on the ground as the line between us,
-which neither is to pass his foot over upon forfeit of his life. Next, a
-line drawn on the ground on either side of said plank and parallel with
-it, each at the distance of the whole length of the sword and three
-feet additional from the plank; and the passing of his own such line
-by either party during the fight shall be deemed a surrender of the
-contest.
-
-3d, Time.--On Thursday evening at 5 o'clock, if you can get it so; but
-in no case to be at a greater distance of time than Friday evening at 5
-o'clock.
-
-4th, Place.--Within three miles of Alton, on the opposite side of the
-river, the particular spot to be agreed on by you.
-
-Any preliminary details coming within the above rules, you are at
-liberty to make at your discretion; but you are in no case to swerve
-from these rules, or to pass beyond their limits.
-
-In the course of the forenoon I met Gen. Whiteside, and he again
-intimated a wish to adjust the matter amicably. I then read to him Mr.
-Lincoln's instructions to an adjustment, and the terms of the hostile
-meeting, if there must be one, both at the same time.
-
-He replied that it was useless to talk of an adjustment, if it could
-only be effected by the _withdrawal_ of Mr. Shields's paper, for such
-withdrawal Mr. Shields would never consent to; adding, that he would as
-soon think of asking Mr. Shields to "butt his brains out against a
-brick wall as to withdraw that paper." He proceeded: "I see but one
-course,--that is a desperate remedy:'tis to tell them, if they will not
-make the matter up, they must fight us." I replied, that, if he chose to
-fight Mr. Shields to compel him to do right, he might do so; but as for
-Mr. Lincoln, he was on the defensive, and, I believed, in the right, and
-I should do nothing to compel him to do wrong. Such withdrawal having
-been made indispensable by Mr. Lincoln, I cut this matter short as to an
-adjustment, an I proposed to Gan. Whiteside to accept the terms of the
-fight, which he refused to do until Mr. Shields's arrival in town,
-but agreed, verbally, that Mr. Lincoln's friends should procure the
-broadswords, and take them to the ground. In the afternoon he came to
-me, saying that some persons were swearing out affidavits to have us
-arrested, and that he intended to meet Mr. Shields immediately, and
-proceed to the place designated; lamenting, however, that I would not
-delay the time, that he might procure the interference of Gov. Ford and
-Gen. Ewing to mollify Mr. Shields. I told him that an accommodation,
-except upon the terms I mentioned, was out of the question; that to
-delay the meeting was to facilitate our arrest; and, as I was determined
-not to be arrested, I should leave town in fifteen minutes. I then
-pressed his acceptance of the preliminaries, which he disclaimed upon
-the ground that it would interfere with his oath of office as Fund
-Commissioner. I then, with two other friends, went to Jacksonville,
-where we joined Mr. Lincoln about 11 o'clock on Tuesday night. Wednesday
-morning we procured the broadswords, and proceeded to Alton, where we
-arrived about 11, A.M., on Thursday. The other party were in town before
-us. We crossed the river, and they soon followed. Shortly after, Gen.
-Hardin and Dr. English presented to Gen. Whiteside and myself the
-following note:--
-
-Alton, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Messrs. Whiteside and Merryman.--As the mutual personal friends of
-Messrs. Shields and Lincoln, but without authority from either, we
-earnestly desire to see a reconciliation of the misunderstanding
-which exists between them. Such difficulties should always be arranged
-amicably, if it is possible to do so with honor to both parties.
-
-Believing ourselves, that such an arrangement can possibly be effected,
-we respectfully, but earnestly, submit the following proposition for
-your consideration:--
-
-Let the whole difficulty be submitted to four or more gentlemen, to
-be selected by yourselves, who shall consider the affair, and report
-thereupon for your consideration.
-
-John J. Hardin.
-
-E. W. English.
-
-To this proposition Gen. Whiteside agreed: I declined doing so without
-consulting Mr. Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln remarked, that, as they had accepted
-the proposition, he would do so, but directed that his friends should
-make no terms except those first proposed. Whether the adjustment was
-finally made upon these very terms, and no other, let the following
-documents attest:--
-
-Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Gentlemen,--All papers in relation to the matter in controversy between
-Mr. Shields and Mr. Lincoln having been withdrawn by the friends of the
-parties concerned, the friends of Mr. Shields ask the friends of Mr.
-Lincoln to explain all offensive matter in the articles which appeared
-in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, 9th, and 16th of September, under
-the signature of "Rebecca," and headed "Lost Townships."
-
-It is due to Gen. Hardin and Mr. English to state that their
-interference was of the most courteous and gentlemanly character.
-
-John D. Whiteside.
-
-Wm. Lee D. Ewino.
-
-T. M. Hope.
-
-Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Gentlemen,--All papers in relation to the matter in controversy between
-Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Shields having been withdrawn by the friends of
-the parties concerned, we, the undersigned, friends of Mr. Lincoln,
-in accordance with your request that explanation of Mr. Lincoln's
-publication in relation to Mr. Shields in "The Sangamon Journal" of the
-2d, 9th, and 16th of September be made, take pleasure in saying, that,
-although Mr. Lincoln was the writer of the article signed "Rebecca"
-in the "Journal" of the 2d, and that only, yet he had no intention of
-injuring the personal or private character or standing of Mr. Shields
-as a gentleman or a man, and that Mr. Lincoln did not think, nor does he
-now think, that said article could produce such an effect; and, had Mr.
-Lincoln anticipated such an effect, he would have forborne to write
-it. We will further state, that said article was written solely for
-political effect, and not to gratify any personal pique against Mr.
-Shields, for he had none, and knew of no cause for any It is due to Gen.
-Hanlin and Mr. English to say that their interference was of the most
-courteous and gentlemanly character.
-
-E. H. Merryman.
-
-A. T. Bledsoe.
-
-Wm. Butler.
-
-Let it be observed now, that Mr. Shields's friends, after agreeing to
-the arbitrament of four disinterested gentlemen, declined the contract,
-saying that Mr. Shields wished his own friends to act for him. They then
-proposed that we should explain without any withdrawal of papers. This
-was promptly and firmly refused, and Gen. Whiteside himself pronounced
-the papers withdrawn. They then produced a note requesting us to
-"_disavow_" all offensive intentions in the publications, &c., &c. This
-we declined answering, and only responded to the above request for an
-explanation.
-
-These are the material facts in relation to the matter, and I think
-present the case in a very different light from the garbled and
-curtailed statement of Gen. Whiteside. Why he made that statement I know
-not, unless he wished to detract from the honor of Mr. Lincoln. This was
-ungenerous, more particularly as he on the ground requested us not to
-make in our explanation any quotations from the "Rebecca papers;" also
-not to make _public the terms of reconciliation_, and to unite with them
-in defending the honorable character of the adjustment.
-
-Gen. W., in his publication, says, "The friends of both parties agreed
-to withdraw the papers (temporarily) to give the friends of Mr. Lincoln
-an opportunity to explain." This I deny. I say the papers were withdrawn
-to enable Mr. Shields's friends to _ask_ an explanation; and I appeal to
-the documents for proof of my position.
-
-By looking over these documents, it will be seen that Mr. Shields
-had not before asked for an _explanation_, but had all the time been
-dictatorily insisting on a _retraction_.
-
-Gen. Whiteside, in his communication, brings to light much of Mr.
-Shields's manifestations of bravery behind the scenes. I can do nothing
-of the kind for Mr. Lincoln. He took his stand when I first met him at
-Tremont, and maintained it _calmly_ to the last, without difficulty or
-difference between himself and his friends.
-
-I cannot close this article, lengthy as it is, without testifying to the
-honorable and gentlemanly conduct of Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, nor indeed
-can I say that I saw any thing objectionable in the course of Gen.
-Whiteside up to the time of his communication. This is so replete with
-prevarication and misrepresentation, that I cannot accord to the General
-that candor which I once supposed him to possess. He complains that I
-did not procrastinate time according to agreement. He forgets that by
-his own act he cut me off from that chance in inducing me, by promise,
-not to communicate our secret contract to Mr. Lincoln. Moreover, I could
-see no consistency in wishing for an extension of time at that stage of
-the affair, when in the outset they were in so precipitate a hurry, that
-they could not wait three days for Mr. Lincoln to return from Tremont,
-but must hasten there, apparently with the intention of bringing the
-matter to a speedy issue. He complains, too, that, after inviting him
-to take a seat in my buggy, I never broached the subject to him on
-our route here. But was I, the defendant in the case, with a challenge
-hanging over me, to make advances, and beg a reconciliation? Absurd!
-Moreover, the valorous general forgets that he beguiled the tedium
-of the journey by recounting to me his exploits in many a well-fought
-battle,--dangers by "flood and field" in which I don't believe he ever
-participated,--doubtless with a view to produce a salutary effect on
-my nerves, and impress me with a proper notion of his fire-eating
-propensities.
-
-One more main point of his argument, and I have done. The General seems
-to be troubled with a convenient shortness of memory on some occasions.
-He does not remember that any explanations were offered at any time,
-unless it were a paper read when the "broadsword proposition" was
-tendered, when his mind was so confused by the anticipated clatter of
-broadswords, or _something else_, that he did "not know fully what
-it purported to be." The truth is, that by unwisely refraining from
-mentioning it to his principal, he placed himself in a dilemma which he
-is now endeavoring to shuffle out of. By his inefficiency, and want of
-knowledge of those laws which govern gentlemen in matters of this kind,
-he has done great injustice to his principal, a gentleman who I believe
-is ready at all times to vindicate his honor manfully, but who has been
-unfortunate in the selection of his friend; and this fault he is now
-trying to wipe out by doing an act of still greater injustice to Mr.
-Lincoln.
-
-E. H. Merryman.
-
-And so Mr. Lincoln acknowledged himself to have been the author of one
-of the "Lost Township Letters." Whether he was or not, was known only
-perhaps to Miss Todd and himself. At the time of their date, he was
-having secret meetings with her at Mr. Francis's house, and endeavoring
-to nerve himself to the duty of marrying her, with what success the
-letters to Speed are abundant evidence. It is probable that Mary
-composed them fresh from these stolen conferences; that some of Mr.
-Lincoln's original conceptions and peculiarities of style unwittingly
-crept into them, and that here and there he altered and amended the
-manuscript before it went to the printer. Such a connection with a
-lady's productions made it obligatory upon him to defend them. But
-why avow one, and disavow the rest? It is more than likely that he was
-determined to take just enough responsibility to fight upon, provided
-Shields should prove incorrigible, and not enough to prevent a peaceful
-issue, if the injured gentleman should be inclined to accept an apology.
-
-After his marriage, Mr. Lincoln took up his residence at the "Globe
-Tavern," where he had a room and boarding for man and wife for the
-moderate sum of four dollars per week. But, notwithstanding cheap
-living, he was still as poor as ever, and gave "poverty" as one of his
-reasons for not paying a friendly visit which seemed to be expected of
-him.
-
-At the bar and in political affairs he continued to work with as much
-energy as before, although his political prospects seem just now to have
-suffered an unexpected eclipse. In 1843, Lincoln, Hardin, and Baker were
-candidates for the Whig congressional nomination; but between Hardin
-and Baker there was "bitter hostility," and between Baker and Lincoln
-"suspicion and dislike." The contest was long and fierce; but, before it
-was over, Lincoln reluctantly withdrew in favor of Baker. He had had a
-hard time of it, and had been compelled to meet accusations of a very
-strange character. Among other things, he was charged with being
-an aristocrat; with having deserted his old friends, the people, by
-marrying a proud woman on account of her blood and family. This hurt him
-keenly, and he took great pains to disprove it; but this was not all.
-He was called an infidel by some, a Presbyterian here, an Episcopalian
-there; so that by turns he incurred the hostility of all the most
-powerful religious societies in the district.
-
-On the 24th of March, he wrote to Mr. Speed as follows:--
-
-Springfield, March 24, 1843.
-
-Dear Speed,--... We had a meeting of the Whigs of the county here on
-last Monday to appoint delegates to a district convention; and Baker
-beat me, and got the delegation instructed to go for him. The meeting,
-in spite of my attempt to decline it, appointed me one of the delegates;
-so that, in getting Baker the nomination, I shall be fixed a good deal
-like a fellow who is made a groomsman to a man that has cut him out,
-and is marrying his own dear "gal." About the prospects of your having a
-namesake at our town, can't say exactly yet.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-He was now a Baker delegate, pledged to get him the nomination if he
-could; and yet he was far from giving up the contest in his own behalf.
-Only two days after the letter to Speed, he wrote to Mr. Morris:--
-
-Springfield, Ill., March 26, 1843.
-
-Friend Morris,--Your letter of the 23d was received on yesterday
-morning, and for which (instead of an excuse, which you thought proper
-to ask) I tender you my sincere thanks. It is truly gratifying to me
-to learn, that, while the people of Sangamon have cast me off, my old
-friends of Menard, who have known me longest and best, stick to me.
-It would astonish, if not amuse, the older citizens (a stranger,
-friendless, uneducated, penniless boy, working on a flat-boat at ten
-dollars per month) to learn that I have been put down here as the
-candidate of pride, wealth, and aristocratic family distinction. Yet
-so, chiefly, it was. There was, too, the strangest combination of
-church-influence against me. Baker is a Campbellite; and therefore, as I
-suppose, with few exceptions, got all that church.
-
-My wife has some relations in the Presbyterian churches, and some with
-the Episcopal churches; and therefore, wherever it would tell, I was set
-down as either the one or the other, while it was everywhere contended
-that no Christian ought to go for me, because I belonged to no church,
-was suspected of being a deist, and had talked about fighting a duel.
-With all these things, Baker, of course, had nothing to do. Nor do I
-complain of them. As to his own church going for him, I think that was
-right enough: and as to the influences I have spoken of in the other,
-though they were very strong, it would be grossly untrue and unjust to
-charge that they acted upon them in a body, or were very near so. I only
-mean that those influences levied a tax of a considerable per cent upon
-my strength throughout the religious controversy. But enough of this.
-
-You say, that, in choosing a candidate for Congress, you have an
-equal right with Sangamon; and in this you are undoubtedly earnest. In
-agreeing to withdraw if the Whigs of Sangamon should go against me, I
-did not mean that they alone were worth consulting, but that if she,
-with her heavy delegation, should be against me, it would be impossible
-for me to succeed; and therefore I had as well decline. And in relation
-to Menard having rights, permit me fully to recognize them, and to
-express the opinion, that, if she and Mason act circumspectly, they will
-in the convention be able so far to enforce their rights as to decide
-absolutely which _one_ of the candidates shall be successful. Let me
-show the reason of this. Hardin, or some other Morgan candidate, will
-get Putnam, Marshall, Woodford, Tazewell, and Logan,--make sixteen.
-Then you and Mason, having three, can give the victory to either side.
-
-You say you shall instruct your delegates for me, unless I object. I
-certainly shall not object. That would be too pleasant a compliment for
-me to tread in the dust. And besides, if any thing should happen (which,
-however, is not probable) by which Baker should be thrown out of the
-fight, I would be at liberty to accept the nomination if I could get
-it. I do, however, feel myself bound not to hinder him in any way from
-getting the nomination. I should despise myself were I to attempt it.
-I think, then, it would be proper for your meeting to appoint three
-delegates, and to instruct them to go for some one as a first choice,
-some one else as a second, and perhaps some one as a third; and, if in
-those instructions I were named as the first choice, it would gratify me
-very much.
-
-If you wish to hold the balance of power, it is important for you to
-attend to and secure the vote of Mason also. You should be sure to have
-men appointed delegates that you know you can safely confide in. If
-yourself and James Short were appointed for your county, all would be
-safe; but whether Jim's woman affair a year ago might not be in the way
-of his appointment is a question. I don't know whether you know it, but
-I know him to be as honorable a man as there is in the world. You have
-my permission, and even request, to show this letter to Short; but to no
-one else, unless it be a very particular friend, who you know will not
-speak of it.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Will you write me again?
-
-[Illustration: Joshua F. Speed 306]
-
-To Martin M. Morris, Petersburg, 111.
-
-And finally to Speed on the same subject:--
-
-Springfield, May 18, 1843.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 9th inst. is duly received, which I do not
-meet as a "bore," but as a most welcome visitor. I will answer the
-business part of it first.
-
-In relation to our Congress matter here, you were right in supposing I
-would support the nominee. Neither Baker nor I, however, is the man, but
-Hardin, so far as I can judge from present appearances. We shall have no
-split or trouble about the matter,--all will be harmony. In relation to
-the "coming events" about which Butler wrote you, I had not heard one
-word before I got your letter; but I have so much confidence in the
-judgment of a Butler on such a subject, that I incline to think there
-may be some reality in it. What day does Butler appoint? By the way, how
-do "events" of the same sort come on in your family? Are you
-possessing houses and lands, and oxen and asses, and men-servants and
-maid-servants, and begetting sons and daughters? We are not keeping
-house, but boarding at the Globe Tavern, which is very well kept now
-by a widow lady of the name of Beck. Our room (the same Dr. Wallace
-occupied there) and boarding only costs us four dollars a week. Ann Todd
-was married something more than a year since to a fellow by the name of
-Campbell, and who, Mary says, is pretty much of a "dunce," though he has
-a little money and property. They live in Boonville, Mo., and have not
-been heard from lately enough for me to say any thing about her health.
-I reckon it will scarcely be in our power to visit Kentucky this year.
-Besides poverty and the necessity of attending to business, those
-"coming events," I suspect, would be somewhat in the way. I most
-heartily wish you and your Fanny would not fail to come. Just let us
-know the time, and we will have a room provided for you at our house,
-and all be merry together for a while. Be sure to give my respects to
-your mother and family: assure her, that, if I ever come near her, I
-will not fail to call and see her. Mary joins in sending love to your
-Fanny and you.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-After the "race," still smarting from the mortification of defeat,
-and the disappointment of a cherished hope, he took his old friend Jim
-Matheny away off to a solitary place in the woods, "and then and there,"
-"with great emphasis," protested that he had not grown proud, and was
-not an aristocrat. "Jim," said he, in conclusion, "I am now, and always
-shall be, the same Abe Lincoln that I always was."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-IN 1844 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for elector on the Whig
-ticket. Mr. Clay, as he has said himself, was his "_beau-ideal_ of a
-statesman," and he labored earnestly and as effectually as any one else
-for his election. For the most part, he still had his old antagonists
-to meet in the Springfield region, chief among whom this year was John
-Calhoun. With him and others he had joint debates, running through
-several nights, which excited much popular feeling. One of his old
-friends and neighbors, who attended all these discussions, speaks in
-very enthusiastic terms of Mr. Calhoun, and, after enumerating his many
-noble gifts of head and heart, concludes that "Calhoun came nearer of
-whipping Lincoln in debate than Douglas did."
-
-Mr. Lincoln made many speeches in Illinois, and finally, towards the
-close of the campaign, he went over into Indiana, and there continued
-"on the stump" until the end. Among other places he spoke at Rockport on
-the Ohio,--where he had first embarked for New Orleans with Gentry,--at
-Gentryville, and at a place in the country about two miles from the
-cabin where his father had lived. While he was in the midst of his
-speech at Gentryville, his old friend, Nat Grigsby, entered the room.
-Lincoln recognized him on the instant, and, stopping short in his
-remarks, cried out, "There's Nat!" Without the slightest regard for
-the proprieties of the occasion, he suspended his address totally, and,
-striding from the platform, began scrambling through the audience and
-over the benches, toward the modest Nat, who stood near the door.
-When he reached him, Lincoln shook his hand "cordially;" and, after
-felicitating himself sufficiently upon the happy meeting, he returned to
-the platform, and finished his speech. When that was over, Lincoln could
-not make up his mind to part with Nat, but insisted that they must sleep
-together. Accordingly, they wended their way to Col. Jones's, where that
-fine old Jackson Democrat received his distinguished "clerk" with all
-the honors he could show him. Nat says, that in the night a cat "began
-mewing, scratching, and making a fuss generally." Lincoln got up, took
-the cat in his hands, and stroking its back "gently and kindly," made
-it sparkle for Nat's amusement. He then "gently" put it out of the door,
-and, returning to bed, "commenced telling stories and talking over old
-times."
-
-It is hardly necessary to say, that the result of the canvass was a
-severe disappointment to Mr. Lincoln. No defeat but his own could have
-given him more pain; and thereafter he seems to have attended quietly to
-his own private business until the Congressional canvass of 1846.
-
-It was thought for many years by some persons well informed, that
-between Lincoln, Logan, Baker, and Hardin,--four very conspicuous Whig
-leaders,--there was a secret personal understanding that they four
-should "rotate" in Congress until each had had a term. Baker succeeded
-Hardin in 1844; Lincoln was elected in 1846, and Logan was nominated,
-but defeated, in 1848. Lincoln publicly declined to contest the
-nomination with Baker in 1844; Hardin did the same for Lincoln in 1846
-(although both seem to have acted reluctantly), and Lincoln refused to
-run against Logan in 1848. Col. Matheny and others insist, with great
-show of reason, that the agreement actually existed; and, if such
-was the case, it was practically carried out, although Lincoln was a
-candidate against Baker, and Hardin against Lincoln, as long as either
-of them thought there was the smallest prospect of success. They
-might have done this, however, merely to keep other and less tractable
-candidates out of the field. That Lincoln would cheerfully have made
-such a bargain to insure himself a seat in Congress, there can be no
-doubt; but the supposition that he did do it can scarcely be reconciled
-with the feeling displayed by him in the conflict with Baker, or the
-persistency of Hardin, to a very late hour, in the contest of 1846.
-
-At all events, Mr. Lincoln and Gen. Hardin were the two, and the only
-two, candidates for the Whig nomination in 1846. The contest was much
-like the one with Baker, and Lincoln was assailed in much the same
-fashion. He was called a deist and an infidel, both before and after his
-nomination, and encountered in a less degree the same opposition from
-the members of certain religious bodies that had met him before. But
-with Hardin he maintained personal relations the most friendly. The
-latter proposed to alter the mode of making the nomination; and, in
-the letter conveying this desire to Mr. Lincoln, he also offered to
-stipulate that each candidate should remain within the limits of his own
-county. To this Mr. Lincoln replied, "As to your proposed stipulation
-that all the candidates shall remain in their own counties, and restrain
-their friends to the same, it seems to me, that, on reflection, you will
-see the fact of your having been in Congress has, in various ways, so
-spread your name in the district as to give you a decided advantage in
-such a stipulation. I appreciate your desire to keep down excitement,
-and I promise you to 'keep cool' under the circumstances."
-
-On the 26th of February, 1846, "The Journal" contained Gen. Hardin's
-card declining to be "longer considered a candidate," and in its
-editorial comments occurred the following: "We have had, and now have,
-no doubt that he (Hardin) has been, and now is, a great favorite with
-the Whigs of the district. He states, in substance, that there was never
-any understanding on his part that his name was not to be presented
-in the canvasses of 1844 and 1846. This, we believe, is strictly true.
-Still, the doings of the Pekin Convention did seem to point that way;
-and the general's voluntary declination as to the canvass of 1844 was
-by many construed into an acquiescence on his part. These things had led
-many of his most devoted friends to not expect him to be a candidate
-at this time. Add to this the relation that Mr. Lincoln bears, and has
-borne, to the party, and it is not strange that many of those who are as
-strongly devoted to Gen. Hardin as they are to Mr. Lincoln should prefer
-the latter at this time. We do not entertain a doubt, that, if we could
-reverse the positions of the two men, that a very large portion of those
-who now have supported Mr. Lincoln most warmly would have supported Gen.
-Hardin quite as warmly." This article was admirably calculated to soothe
-Gen. Hardin, and to win over his friends. It was wise and timely. The
-editor was Mr. Lincoln's intimate friend. It is marked by Mr. Lincoln's
-style, and has at least one expression which was peculiar to him.
-
-In its issue of May 7, "The Journal" announced the nomination as having
-been made at Petersburg, on the Friday previous, and said further, "This
-nomination was, of course, anticipated, there being no other candidate
-in the field. Mr. Lincoln, we all know, is a good Whig, a good man, an
-able speaker, and richly deserves, as he enjoys, the confidence of the
-Whigs of this district and of the State."
-
-Peter Cartwright, the celebrated pioneer Methodist preacher, noted for
-his piety and combativeness, was Mr. Lincoln's competitor before the
-people. We know already the nature of the principal charges against Mr.
-Lincoln's personal character; and these, with the usual criticism upon
-Whig policy, formed the staple topics of the campaign on the Democratic
-side. But Peter himself did not escape with that impunity which might
-have been expected in the case of a minister of the gospel. Rough
-tongues circulated exaggerated stories of his wicked pugnacity and his
-worldly-mindedness, whilst the pretended servant of the Prince of peace.
-Many Democrats looked with intense disgust upon his present candidacy,
-and believed, that, by mingling in politics, he was degrading his office
-and polluting the Church. One of these Democrats told Mr. Lincoln what
-he thought, and said, that, although it was a hard thing to vote
-against his party, he would do it if it should be necessary to defeat
-Cartwright. Mr. Lincoln told him, that on the day of the election he
-would give him a candid opinion as to whether the vote was needed or
-not Accordingly, on that day, he called upon the gentleman, and said, "I
-have got the preacher,... and don't want your vote."
-
-Clay's majority in this district in 1844 had been but nine hundred and
-fourteen; whereas it now gave Mr. Lincoln a majority of fifteen hundred
-and eleven, in a year which had no Presidential excitements to bring
-out electors. In 1848 Gen. Taylor's majority was smaller by ten, and the
-same year the Whig candidate for Congress was defeated by a hundred and
-six.
-
-In the following letter to Mr. Speed, he intimates that the first
-sensations of pleasure attending his new distinction were not of long
-duration; at least, that there were moments in which, if he did not
-forget his greatness, it afforded him little joy.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 22, 1846.
-
-Dear Speed,--
-
-You no doubt assign the suspension of our correspondence to the true
-philosophic cause; though it must be confessed by both of us, that this
-is rather a cold reason for allowing a friendship such as ours to die
-out by degrees. I propose now, that, upon receipt of this, you shall
-be considered in my debt, and under obligations to pay soon, and that
-neither shall remain long in arrears hereafter. Are you agreed?
-
-Being elected to Congress, though I am very grateful to our friends for
-having done it, has not pleased me as much as I expected.
-
-We have another boy, born the 10th of March. He is very much such a
-child as Bob was at his age, rather of a longer order. Bob is "short
-and low," and expect always will be. He talks very plainly,--almost as
-plainly as anybody. He is quite smart enough. I sometimes fear he is one
-of the little rare-ripe sort, that are smarter at about five than
-ever after. He has a great deal of that sort of mischief that is the
-offspring of much animal spirits. Since I began this letter, a messenger
-came to tell me Bob was lost; but by the time I reached the house his
-mother had found him, and had him whipped; and by now, very likely,
-he is run away again. Mary has read your letter, and wishes to be
-remembered to Mrs. S. and you, in which I most sincerely join her. As
-ever yours.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-At the meeting of the Thirtieth Congress Mr. Lincoln took his seat, and
-went about the business of his office with a strong determination to
-do something memorable. He was the only Whig member from Illinois, and
-would be carefully watched. His colleagues were several of them old
-acquaintances of the Vandalia times. They were John McClernand, O. B.
-Ficklin, William A. Richardson, Thomas J. Turner, Robert Smith, and
-John Wentworth (Long John). And at this session that alert, tireless,
-ambitious little man, Stephen A. Douglas, took his seat in the Senate.
-
-The roll of this House shone with an array of great and brilliant names.
-Robert C. Winthrop was the Speaker. On the Whig side were John Quincy
-Adams, Horace Mann, Hunt of New York, Collamer of Vermont, Ingersoll of
-Pennsylvania, Botts and Goggin of Virginia, Morehead of Kentucky,
-Caleb B. Smith of Indiana, Stephens and Toombs of Georgia, Gentry of
-Tennessee, and Vinton and Schenck of Ohio. On the Democratic side were
-Wilmot of Pennsylvania, McLane of Maryland, McDowell of Virginia, Rhett
-of South Carolina, Cobb of Georgia, Boyd of Kentucky, Brown and Thompson
-of Mississippi, and Andrew Johnson and George W. Jones of Tennessee.
-In the Senate were Webster, Calhoun, Benton, Berrien, Clayton, Bell,
-Hunter, and William R. King.
-
-The House organized on the 6th; and the day previous to that. Mr.
-Lincoln wrote to his friend and partner, William H. Herndon:--
-
-Washington, Dec. 5, 1847.
-
-Dear William,--You may remember that about a year ago a man by the name
-of Wilson (James Wilson, I think) paid us twenty dollars as an advance
-fee to attend to a case in the Supreme Court for him, against a Mr.
-Campbell, the record of which case was in the hands of Mr. Dixon of
-St. Louis, who never furnished it to us. When I was at Bloomington last
-fall, I met a friend of Wilson, who mentioned the subject to me, and
-induced me to write to Wilson, telling him that I would leave the ten
-dollars with you which had been left with me to pay for making abstracts
-in the case, so that the case may go on this winter; but I came away,
-and forgot to do it. What I want now is to send you the money to be used
-accordingly, if any one comes on to start the case, or to be retained by
-you if no one does.
-
-There is nothing of consequence new here. Congress is to organize
-to-morrow. Last night we held a Whig caucus for the House, and nominated
-Winthrop of Massachusetts for Speaker, Sargent of Pennsylvania for
-Sergeant-at-arms, Homer of New Jersey Doorkeeper, and McCormick of
-District of Columbia Postmaster. The Whig majority in the House is
-so small, that, together with some little dissatisfaction, leaves it
-doubtful whether we will elect them all.
-
-This paper is too thick to fold, which is the reason I send only a
-halfsheet.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Again on the 13th, to the same gentleman:--
-
-Washington, Dec. 13, 1847.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter advising me of the receipt of our fee in the
-bank-case is just received, and I don't expect to hear another as good
-a piece of news from Springfield while I am away. I am under no
-obligations to the bank; and I therefore wish you to buy bank
-certificates, and pay my debt there, so as to pay it with the least
-money possible. I would as soon you should buy them of Mr. Ridgely, or
-any other person at the bank, as of any one else, provided you can get
-them as cheaply. I suppose, after the bank-debt shall be paid, there
-will be some money left, out of which I would like to have you pay
-Lavely and Stout twenty dollars, and Priest and somebody (oil-makers)
-ten dollars, for materials got for house-painting. If there shall still
-be any left, keep it till you see or hear from me.
-
-I shall begin sending documents so soon as I can get them. I wrote you
-yesterday about a "Congressional Globe." As you are all so anxious for
-me to distinguish myself, I have concluded to do so before long.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was a member of the Committee on Post-offices and
-Post-roads, and in that capacity had occasion to study the claim of a
-mail-contractor who had appealed to Congress against a decision of the
-Department. Mr. Lincoln made a speech on the case, in which, being
-his first, he evidently felt some pride, and reported progress to his
-friends at home:--
-
-Washington, Jan. 8, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of Dec. 27 was received a day or two ago. I
-am much obliged to you for the trouble you have taken, and promise
-to take, in my little business there. As to speech-making, by way of
-getting the hang of the House, I made a little speech two or three days
-ago, on a post-office question of no general interest. I find speaking
-_here and elsewhere_ about the same thing. I was about as badly scared,
-and no worse, as I am when I speak in court. I expect to make one within
-a week or two, in which I hope to succeed well enough to wish you to see
-it.
-
-It is very pleasant to me to learn from you that there are some who
-desire that I should be re-elected. I most heartily thank them for the
-kind partiality; and I can say, as Mr. Clay said of the annexation of
-Texas, that "_personally_ I would not object" to a re-election, although
-I thought at the time, and still think, it would be quite as well for
-me to return to the law at the end of a single term. I made the
-declaration, that I would not be a candidate again, more from a wish to
-deal fairly with others, to keep peace among our friends, and to keep
-the district from going to the enemy, than for any cause personal to
-myself; so that, if it should so happen _that nobody else wishes to be
-elected_, I could not refuse the people the right of sending me again.
-But to enter myself as a competitor of others, or to authorize any one
-so to enter me, is what my word and honor forbid.
-
-I get some letters intimating a probability of so much difficulty
-amongst our friends as to lose us the district; but I remember such
-letters were written to Baker when my own case was under consideration,
-and I trust there is no more ground for such apprehension now than there
-was then.
-
-Remember I am always glad to receive a letter from you.
-
-Most truly your friend,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Thoroughly hostile to Polk, and hotly opposed to the war, Mr. Lincoln
-took an active, although not a leading part in the discussions relating
-to the commencement and conduct of the latter. He was politician enough,
-however, to go with the majority of his party in voting supplies to the
-troops, and thanks to the generals, whilst censuring the President
-by solemnly declaring that the "war was unnecessarily and
-unconstitutionally begun by the President of the United States." But
-his position, and the position of the Whigs, will be made sufficiently
-apparent by the productions of his own pen.
-
-On the 22d of December, 1847, Mr. Lincoln introduced a preamble and
-resolutions, which attained great celebrity in Illinois under the title
-of "Spot Resolutions," and in all probability lost the party a great
-many votes in the Springfield district. They were as follows:--
-
-Whereas, The President of the United States, in his Message of May 11,
-1846, has declared that "the Mexican Government not only refused
-to receive him [the envoy of the United States], or listen to his
-propositions, but, after a long-continued series of menaces, has at last
-invaded _our territory_, and shed the blood of our fellow-citizens on
-_our own soil_;"
-
-And again, in his Message of Dec. 8, 1846, that "we had ample cause of
-war against Mexico long before the breaking out of hostilities; but even
-then we forbore to take redress into our own hands until Mexico herself
-became the aggressor, by invading _our soil_ in hostile array, and
-shedding the blood of our citizens;"
-
-And yet again, in his Message of Dec. 7, 1847, that "the Mexican
-Government refused even to hear the terms of adjustment which he [our
-minister of peace] was authorized to propose, and finally, under wholly
-unjustifiable pretexts, involved the two countries in war, by invading
-the territory of the State of Texas, striking the first blow, and
-shedding the blood of our citizens on _our own soil_;" and,
-
-Whereas, This House is desirous to obtain a full knowledge of all the
-facts which go to establish whether the particular spot on which the
-blood of our citizens was so shed was or was not at that time "_our own
-soil_;" therefore,
-
-Resolved by the House of Representatives, That the President of the
-United States be respectfully requested to inform this House,--
-
-1st. Whether the spot on which the blood of our citizens was shed, as
-in his Messages declared, was or was not within the territory of Spain,
-at least after the treaty of 1819, until the Mexican revolution.
-
-2d. Whether that spot is or is not within the territory which was
-wrested from Spain by the revolutionary government of Mexico.
-
-3d. Whether that spot is or is not within a settlement of people, which
-settlement has existed ever since long before the Texas revolution,
-and until its inhabitants fled before the approach of the United States
-army.
-
-4th. Whether that settlement is or is not isolated from any and all
-other settlements by the Gulf and the Rio Grande on the south and west,
-and by wide, uninhabited regions on the north and east.
-
-5th. Whether the people of that settlement, or a majority of them, or
-any of them, have ever submitted themselves to the government or laws
-of Texas or of the United States, by consent or by compulsion, either by
-accepting office, or voting at elections, or paying tax, or serving on
-juries, or having process served upon them, or in any other way.
-
-6th. Whether the people of that settlement did or did not flee from the
-approach of the United States army, leaving unprotected their homes and
-their growing crops, _before_ the blood was shed, as in the Messages
-stated; and whether the first blood, so shed, was or was not shed within
-the enclosure of one of the people who had thus fled from it.
-
-7th. Whether our _citizens_, whose blood was shed, as in his Messages
-declared, were or were not at that time armed officers and soldiers,
-sent into that settlement by the military order of the President,
-through the Secretary of War.
-
-8th. Whether the military force of the United States was or was not so
-sent into that settlement after Gen. Taylor had more than once intimated
-to the War Department, that, in his opinion, no such movement was
-necessary to the defence or protection of Texas.
-
-Mr. Lincoln improved the first favorable opportunity (Jan. 12, 1818), to
-address the House in the spirit of the "Spot Resolutions."
-
-In Committee of the Whole House, Jan. 12, 1848.
-
-Mr. Lincoln addressed the Committee as follows:--
-
-Mr. Chairman,--Some, if not at all, of the gentlemen on the other side
-of the House, who have addressed the Committee within the last two days,
-have spoken rather complainingly, if I have rightly understood them,
-of the vote given a week or ten days ago, declaring that the war
-with Mexico was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President. I admit that such a vote should not be given in mere party
-wantonness, and that the one given is justly censurable, if it have no
-other or better foundation. I am one of those who joined in that vote,
-and did so under my best impression of the _truth_ of the case. How I
-got this impression, and how it may possibly be removed, I will now
-try to show. When the war began, it was my opinion that all those who,
-because of knowing too _little_, or because of knowing too _much_,
-could not conscientiously approve the conduct of the President (in the
-beginning of it), should, nevertheless, as good citizens and patriots,
-remain silent on that point, at least till the war should be ended. Some
-leading Democrats, including ex-President Van Buren, have taken this
-same view, as I understand them; and I adhered to it, and acted upon it,
-until since I took my seat here; and I think I should still adhere to
-it, were it not that the President and his friends will not allow it
-to be so. Besides the continual effort of the President to argue every
-silent vote given for supplies into an indorsement of the justice and
-wisdom of his conduct; besides that singularly candid paragraph in his
-late Message, in which he tells us that Congress, with great unanimity
-(only two in the Senate and fourteen in the House dissenting), had
-declared that "by the act of the Republic of Mexico a state of war
-exists between that government and the United States;" when the same
-journals that informed him of this also informed him, that, when
-that declaration stood disconnected from the question of supplies,
-sixty-seven in the House, and not fourteen merely, voted against it;
-besides this open attempt to prove by telling the _truth_ what he could
-not prove by telling the _whole truth_, demanding of all who will not
-submit to be misrepresented, in justice to themselves, to speak out;
-besides all this, one of my colleagues [Mr. Richardson], at a very early
-day in the session, brought in a set of resolutions expressly indorsing
-the original justice of the war on the part of the President. Upon
-these resolutions, when they shall be put on their passage, I shall be
-_compelled_ to vote; so that I cannot be silent if I would. Seeing this,
-I went about preparing myself to give the vote understandingly when it
-should come. I carefully examined the President's Messages, to ascertain
-what he himself had said and proved upon the point. The result of this
-examination was to make the impression, that, taking for true all
-the President states as facts, he falls far short of proving his
-justification; and that the President would have gone further with his
-proof, if it had not been for the small matter that the _truth_ would
-not permit him. Under the impression thus made, I gave the vote
-before mentioned. I propose now to give concisely the process of the
-examination I made, and how I reached the conclusion I did.
-
-The President, in his first Message of May, 1846, declares that the soil
-was _ours_ on which hostilities were commenced by Mexico; and he repeats
-that declaration, almost in the same language, in each successive annual
-Message,--thus showing that he esteems that point a highly essential
-one. In the importance of that point I entirely agree with the
-President. To my judgment, it is the _very point_ upon which he should
-be justified or condemned. In his Message of December, 1846, it seems
-to have occurred to him, as is certainly true, that title, ownership
-to soil, or any thing else, is not a simple fact, but is a conclusion
-following one or more simple facts; and that it was incumbent upon him
-to present the facts from which he concluded the soil was ours on which
-the first blood of the war was shed.
-
-Accordingly, a little below the middle of page twelve, in the Message
-last referred to, he enters upon that task; forming an issue and
-introducing testimony, extending the whole to a little below the middle
-of page fourteen. Now, I propose to try to show that the whole of this,
-issue and evidence, is, from beginning to end, the sheerest deception.
-The issue, as he presents it, is in these words: "But there are those
-who, conceding all this to be true, assume the ground that the true
-western boundary of Texas is the Nueces, instead of the Rio Grande; and
-that, therefore, in marching our army to the east bank of the latter
-river, we passed the Texan line, and invaded the Territory of Mexico."
-Now, this issue is made up of two affirmatives, and no negative. The
-main deception of it is, that it assumes as true, that one river or the
-other is necessarily the boundary, and cheats the superficial thinker
-entirely out of the idea that possibly the boundary is somewhere between
-the two, and not actually at either. A further deception is, that it
-will let in evidence which a true issue would exclude. A true issue made
-by the President would be about as follows: "I say the soil _was ours_
-on which the first blood was shed; there are those who say it was not."
-
-I now proceed to examine the President's evidence, as applicable to
-such an issue. When that evidence is analyzed, it is all included in the
-following propositions:--
-
-1. That the Rio Grande was the western boundary of Louisiana, as we
-purchased it of France in 1803.
-
-2. That the Republic of Texas always claimed the Rio Grande as her
-western boundary.
-
-3. That, by various acts, she had claimed it on paper.
-
-4. That Santa Anna, in his treaty with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande
-as her boundary.
-
-5. That Texas _before_, and the United States _after_ annexation, had
-_exercised_ jurisdiction _beyond_ the Nueces, _between_ the two rivers.
-
-6. That our Congress _understood_ the boundary of Texas to extend beyond
-the Nueces.
-
-Now for each of these in its turn:--
-
-His first item is, that the Rio Grande was the western boundary of
-Louisiana, as we purchased it of France in 1803; and, seeming to expect
-this to be disputed, he argues over the amount of nearly a page to prove
-it true; at the end of which, he lets us know, that, by the treaty of
-1819, we sold to Spain the whole country, from the Rio Grande eastward
-to the Sabine. Now, admitting for the present, that the Rio Grande was
-the boundary of Louisiana, what, under Heaven, had that to do with the
-present boundary between us and Mexico? How, Mr. Chairman, the line that
-once divided your land from mine can still be the boundary between us
-after I have sold my land to you, is, to me, beyond all comprehension.
-And how any man, with an honest purpose only of proving the truth, could
-ever have thought of introducing such a fact to prove such an issue, is
-equally incomprehensible. The outrage upon common right, of seizing as
-our own what we have once sold, merely because it was ours before we
-sold it, is only equalled by the outrage on common sense of any attempt
-to justify it.
-
-The President's next piece of evidence is, that "The Republic of Texas
-always _claimed_ this river (Rio Grande) as her western boundary." That
-is not true, in fact. Texas _has_ claimed it, but she has not _always_
-claimed it. There is, at least, one distinguished exception. Her State
-Constitution--the public's most solemn and well-considered act, that
-which may, without impropriety, be called her last will and testament,
-revoking all others--makes no such claim. But suppose she had always
-claimed it. Has not Mexico always claimed the contrary? So that there is
-but claim against claim, leaving nothing proved until we get back of the
-claims, and find which has the better _foundation._
-
-Though not in the order in which the President presents his evidence,
-I now consider that class of his statements which are, in substance,
-nothing more than that Texas has, by various acts of her Convention and
-Congress, claimed the Rio Grande as her boundary--_on paper_. I mean
-here what he says about the fixing of the Rio Grande as her boundary
-in her old constitution (not her State Constitution), about forming
-congressional districts, counties, &c. Now, all this is but naked
-_claim_; and what I have already said about claims is strictly
-applicable to this. If I should claim your land by word of mouth, that
-certainly would not make it mine; and if I were to claim it by a deed
-which I had made myself, and with which you had nothing to do, the claim
-would be quite the same in substance, or rather in utter nothingness.
-
-I next consider the President's statement that Santa Anna, in his
-_treaty_ with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande as the western boundary
-of Texas. Besides the position so often taken that Santa Anna, while a
-prisoner of war, a captive, _could not_ bind Mexico by a treaty, which
-I deem conclusive,--besides this, I wish to say something in relation
-to this treaty, so called by the President, with Santa Anna. If any man
-would like to be amused by a sight at that _little_ thing, which
-the President calls by that _big_ name, he can have it by turning to
-"Niles's Register," vol. 1. p. 336. And if any one should suppose that
-"Niles's Register" is a curious repository of so mighty a document as
-a solemn treaty between nations, I can only say that I learned, to a
-tolerable degree of certainty, by inquiry at the State Department, that
-the President himself never saw it anywhere else. By the way, I believe
-I should not err if I were to declare, that, during the first ten years
-of the existence of that document, it was never by anybody _called_
-a treaty; that it was never so called till the President, in his
-extremity, attempted, by so calling it, to wring something from it in
-justification of himself in connection with the Mexican war. It has none
-of the distinguishing features of a treaty. It does not call itself a
-treaty. Santa Anna does not therein assume to bind Mexico: he assumes
-only to act as president, commander-in-chief of the Mexican army and
-navy; stipulates that the then present hostilities should cease, and
-that he would not himself take up arms, nor influence the Mexican
-people to take up arms, against Texas during the existence of the war of
-independence. He did not recognize the independence of Texas; he did not
-assume to put an end to the war, but clearly indicated his expectation
-of its continuance; he did not say one word about boundary, and most
-probably never thought of it. It is stipulated therein that the Mexican
-forces should evacuate the Territory of Texas, _passing to the other
-side of the Rio Grande;_ and in another article it is stipulated, that,
-to prevent collisions between the armies, the Texan army should not
-approach nearer than within five leagues,--of what is not said; but
-clearly, from the object stated, it is of the Rio Grande. Now, if this
-is a treaty recognizing the Rio Grande as the boundary of Texas, it
-contains the singular feature of stipulating that Texas shall not go
-within five leagues of _her own_ boundary.
-
-Next comes the evidence of Texas before annexation, and the United
-States afterwards, exercising jurisdiction beyond the Nueces, and
-between the two rivers. This actual exercise of jurisdiction is the very
-class or quality of evidence we want. It is excellent so far as it goes;
-but does it go far enough? He tells us it went beyond the Nueces; but he
-does not tell us it went to the Rio Grande. He tells us jurisdiction
-was exercised between the two rivers; but he does not tell us it was
-exercised over all the territory between them. Some simple-minded people
-think it possible to cross one river and go beyond it, without going
-all the way to the next; that jurisdiction may be exercised between two
-rivers without covering all the country between them. I know a man,
-not very unlike myself, who exercises jurisdiction over a piece of land
-between the Wabash and the Mississippi; and yet so far is this from
-being all there is between those rivers, that it is just a hundred
-and fifty-two feet long by fifty wide, and no part of it much within
-a hundred miles of either. He has a neighbor between him and the
-Mississippi,--that is, just across the street, in that direction,--whom,
-I am sure, he could neither persuade nor force to give up his
-habitation; but which, nevertheless, he could certainly annex, if it
-were to be done by merely standing on his own side of the street and
-claiming it, or even sitting down and writing a deed for it.
-
-But next, the President tells us, the Congress of the United States
-understood the State of Texas they admitted into the Union to extend
-beyond the Nueces. Well, I suppose they did,--I certainly so understand
-it,--but how far beyond? That Congress did not understand it to extend
-clear to the Rio Grande, is quite certain by the fact of their joint
-resolutions for admission, expressly leaving all questions of boundary
-to future adjustment. And it may be added, that Texas herself is proved
-to have had the same understanding of it that our Congress had, by
-the fact of the exact conformity of her new Constitution to those
-resolutions.
-
-I am now through the whole of the President's evidence; and it is a
-singular fact, that, if any one should declare the President sent the
-army into the midst of a settlement of Mexican people, who had never
-submitted, by consent or by force, to the authority of Texas or of the
-United States, and that there, and thereby, the first blood of the war
-was shed, there is not one word in all the President has said which
-would either admit or deny the declaration. In this strange omission
-chiefly consists the deception of the President's evidence,--an omission
-which, it does seem to me, could scarcely have occurred but by design.
-My way of living leads me to be about the courts of justice; and there I
-have sometimes seen a good lawyer, struggling for his client's neck in a
-desperate case, employing every artifice to work round, befog, and cover
-up with many words, some position pressed upon him by the prosecution,
-which he dared not admit, and yet could not deny. Party bias may help to
-make it appear so; but, with all the allowance I can make for such bias,
-it still does appear to me that just such, and from just such necessity,
-are the President's struggles in this case.
-
-Some time after my colleague (Mr. Richardson) introduced the
-resolutions I have mentioned, I introduced a preamble, resolution, and
-interrogatories, intended to draw the President out, if possible, on
-this hitherto untrodden ground. To show their relevancy, I propose to
-state my understanding of the true rule for ascertaining the boundary
-between Texas and Mexico. It is, that, _wherever_ Texas was _exercising_
-jurisdiction was hers; and wherever Mexico was exercising jurisdiction
-was hers; and that whatever separated the actual exercise of
-jurisdiction of the one from that of the other was the true boundary
-between them. If, as is probably true, Texas was exercising jurisdiction
-along the western bank of the Nueces, and Mexico was exercising it along
-the eastern bank of the Rio Grande, then neither river was the boundary,
-but the uninhabited country between the two was. The extent of our
-territory in that region depended, not on any treaty-fixed boundary (for
-no treaty had attempted it), but on revolution. Any people anywhere,
-being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake
-off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better.
-This is a most valuable, a most sacred right,--a right which, we hope
-and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to
-cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to
-exercise it. Any portion of such people that can may revolutionize, and
-make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit. More than
-this, a _majority_ of any portion of such people may revolutionize,
-putting down a _minority_, intermingled with or near about them, who
-may oppose their movements. Such minority was precisely the case of the
-Tories of our own Revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go
-by old lines or old laws, but to break up both, and make new ones. As to
-the country now in question, we bought it of France in 1803, and sold
-it to Spain in 1819, according to the President's statement. After this,
-all Mexico, including Texas, revolutionized against Spain; and, still
-later, Texas revolutionized against Mexico. In my view, just so far
-as she carried her revolution, by obtaining the _actual,_ willing or
-unwilling, submission of the people, _so far_ the country was hers, and
-no farther.
-
-Now, sir, for the purpose of obtaining the very best evidence as to
-whether Texas had actually carried her revolution to the place where the
-hostilities of the present war commenced, let the President answer the
-interrogatories I proposed, as before mentioned, or some other similar
-ones. Let him answer fully, fairly, and candidly. Let him answer
-with _facts_, and not with arguments. Let him remember he sits where
-Washington sat; and, so remembering, let him answer as Washington would
-answer. As a nation should not, and the Almighty will not, be evaded,
-so let him attempt no evasion, no equivocation. And if, so answering,
-he can show that the soil was ours where the first blood of the war was
-shed; that it was not within an inhabited country, or, if within such,
-that the inhabitants had submitted themselves to the civil authority of
-Texas, or of the United States, and that the same is true of the site
-of Fort Brown, then I am with him for his justification. In that case,
-I shall be most happy to reverse the vote I gave the other day. I have a
-selfish motive for desiring that the President may do this: I expect
-to give some votes, in connection with the war, which, without his so
-doing, will be of doubtful propriety, in my own judgment, but which will
-be free from the doubt if he does so. But if he cannot or will not do
-this,--if, on any pretence, or no pretence, he shall refuse or omit
-it,--then I shall be fully convinced of what I more than suspect
-already,--that he is deeply conscious of being in the wrong; that he
-feels the blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to Heaven
-against him; that he ordered Gen. Taylor into the midst of a peaceful
-Mexican settlement, purposely to bring on a war; that, originally
-having some strong motive--what I will not stop now to give my opinion
-concerning--to involve the two countries in a war, and trusting to
-escape scrutiny by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness
-of military glory,--that attractive rainbow that rises in showers of
-blood, that serpent's eye that charms to destroy,--he plunged into it,
-and has swept on and on, till, disappointed in his calculation of the
-ease with which Mexico might be subdued, he now finds himself he knows
-not where. How like the half-insane mumbling of a fever-dream is the
-whole war part of the late Message! At one time telling us that Mexico
-has nothing whatever that we can get but territory; at another, showing
-us how we can support the war by levying contributions on Mexico. At
-one time urging the national honor, the security of the future, the
-prevention of foreign interference, and even the good of Mexico herself,
-as among the objects of the war; at another, telling us that, "to reject
-indemnity by refusing to accept a cession of territory, would be to
-abandon all our just demands, and to wage the war, bearing all its
-expenses, without a purpose or definite object." So, then, the
-national honor, security of the future, and every thing but territorial
-indemnity, may be considered the no purposes and indefinite objects of
-the war! But having it now settled that territorial indemnity is the
-only object, we are urged to seize, by legislation here, all that he
-was content to take a few months ago, and the whole province of Lower
-California to boot, and to still carry on the war,--to take all we are
-fighting for, and still fight on. Again, the President is resolved,
-under all circumstances, to have full territorial indemnity for the
-expenses of the war; but he forgets to tell us how we are to get the
-excess after those expenses shall have surpassed the value of the
-whole of the Mexican territory. So, again, he insists that the separate
-national existence of Mexico shall be maintained; but he does not tell
-us how this can be done after we shall have taken all her territory.
-Lest the questions I here suggest be considered speculative merely, let
-me be indulged a moment in trying to show they are not.
-
-The war has gone on some twenty months; for the expenses of which,
-together with an inconsiderable old score, the President now claims
-about one-half of the Mexican territory, and that by far the better
-half, so far as concerns our ability to make any thing out of it. It is
-comparatively uninhabited; so that we could establish land-offices in
-it, and raise some money in that way. But the other half is already
-inhabited, as I understand it, tolerably densely for the nature of
-the country; and all its lands, or all that are valuable, already
-appropriated as private property. How, then, are we to make any thing
-out of these lands with this encumbrance on them, or how remove the
-encumbrance? I suppose no one will say we should kill the people,
-or drive them out, or make slaves of them, or even confiscate their
-property? How, then, can we make much out of this part of the territory?
-If the prosecution of the war has, in expenses, already equalled the
-better half of the country, how long its future prosecution will be in
-equalling the less valuable half is not a speculative but a practical
-question, pressing closely upon us; and yet it is a question which the
-President seems never to have thought of.
-
-As to the mode of terminating the war and securing peace, the President
-is equally wandering and indefinite. First, it is to be done by a
-more vigorous prosecution of the war in the vital parts of the enemy's
-country; and, after apparently talking himself tired on this point, the
-President drops down into a half-despairing tone, and tells us, that
-"with a people distracted and divided by contending factions, and a
-government subject to constant changes, by successive revolutions, _the
-continued success of our arms may fail to obtain a satisfactory peace."_
-Then he suggests the propriety of wheedling the Mexican people to desert
-the counsels of their own leaders, and, trusting in our protection,
-to set up a government from which we can secure a satisfactory peace,
-telling us that, "_this may become the only mode of obtaining such a
-peace_." But soon he falls into doubt of this, too, and then drops back
-on to the already half-abandoned ground of "more vigorous prosecution."
-All this shows that the President is in no wise satisfied with his own
-positions. First, he takes up one, and, in attempting to argue us into
-it, he argues himself out of it; then seizes another, and goes through
-the same process; and then, confused at being able to think of nothing
-new, he snatches up the old one again, which he has some time before
-cast off. His mind, tasked beyond its power, is running hither and
-thither, like some tortured creature on a burning surface, finding no
-position on which it can settle down and be at ease.
-
-Again, it is a singular omission in this Message, that it nowhere
-intimates _when_ the President expects the war to terminate. At its
-beginning, Gen. Scott was, by this same President, driven into disfavor,
-if not disgrace, for intimating that peace could not be conquered in
-less than three or four months. But now at the end of about twenty
-months, during which time our arms have given us the most splendid
-successes,--every department, and every part, land and water, officers
-and privates, regulars and volunteers, doing all that men could do, and
-hundreds of things which it had ever before been thought that men could
-not do,--after all this, this same President gives us a long Message
-without showing us that, _as to the end,_ he has himself even an
-imaginary conception. As I have before said, he knows not where he is.
-He is a bewildered, confounded, and miserably perplexed man. God grant
-he may be able to show that there is not something about his conscience
-more painful than all his mental perplexity.
-
-This speech he hastened to send home as soon as it was printed; for,
-while throughout he trod on unquestionable Whig ground, he had excellent
-reasons to fear the result. The following is the first letter to Mr.
-Herndon after the delivery of the speech, and notifying him of the
-fact:--
-
-Washington, Jan. 19, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Enclosed you find a letter of Louis W. Candler. What
-is wanted is, that you shall ascertain whether the claim upon the note
-described has received any dividend in the Probate Court of Christian
-County, where the estate of Mr. Overton Williams has been administered
-on. If nothing is paid on it, withdraw the note and send it to me, so
-that Candler can see the indorser of it. At all events, write me all
-about it, till I can somehow get it off hands. I have already been
-bored more than enough about it; not the least of which annoyance is his
-cursed, unreadable, and ungodly handwriting.
-
-I have made a speech, a copy of which I will send you by next mail.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-About the last of January, or the first of February, he began to hear
-the first murmurs of alarm and dissatisfaction from his district. He was
-now on the defensive, and compelled to write long and tedious letters
-to pacify some of the Whigs. Of this character are two extremely
-interesting epistles to Mr. Herndon:--
-
-Washington, Feb. 1, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of the 19th ult. was received last night, and
-for which I am much obliged. The only thing in it that I wish to talk to
-you about at once is, that, because of my vote for Ashmun's amendment,
-you fear that you and I disagree about the war. I regret this, not
-because of any fear we shall remain disagreed after you have read this
-letter, but because if you misunderstand, I fear other good friends
-may also. That vote affirms, that the war was unnecessarily and
-unconstitutionally commenced by the President; and I will stake my life,
-that, if you had been in my place, you would have voted just as I did.
-Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie? I know you
-would not. Would you have gone out of the House,--skulked the vote? I
-expect not. If you had skulked one vote, you would have had to skulk
-many more before the end of the session. Richardson's resolutions,
-introduced before I made any move, or gave any vote upon the subject,
-make the direct question of the justice of the war; so that no man
-can be silent if he would. You are compelled to speak; and your only
-alternative is to tell the _truth or tell a lie_. I cannot doubt which
-you would do.
-
-This vote has nothing to do in determining my votes on the questions of
-supplies. I have always intended, and still intend, to vote supplies;
-perhaps not in the precise form recommended by the President, but in a
-better form for all purposes, except Locofoco party purposes. It is
-in this particular you seem mistaken. The Locos are untiring in their
-efforts to make the impression that all who vote supplies, or take part
-in the war, do, of necessity, approve the President's conduct in the
-beginning of it; but the Whigs have, from the beginning, made and kept
-the distinction between the two. In the very first act nearly all the
-Whigs voted against the preamble declaring that war existed by the act
-of Mexico; and yet nearly all of them voted for the supplies. As to the
-Whig men who have participated in the war, so far as they have spoken to
-my hearing, they do not hesitate to denounce as unjust the President's
-conduct in the beginning of the war. They do not suppose that such
-denunciation is directed by undying hatred to them, as "The Register"
-would have it believed. There are two such Whigs on this floor (Col.
-Haskell and Major James). The former fought as a colonel by the side of
-Col. Baker, at Cerro Gordo, and stands side by side with me in the
-vote that you seem dissatisfied with. The latter, the history of whose
-capture with Cassius Clay you well know, had not arrived here when that
-vote was given; but, as I understand, he stands ready to give just such
-a vote whenever an occasion shall present. Baker, too, who is now here,
-says the truth is undoubtedly that way; and, whenever he shall speak
-out, he will say so. Col. Donaphin, too, the favorite Whig of Missouri,
-and who overrun all Northern Mexico, on his return home, in a public
-speech at St. Louis, condemned the administration in relation to the
-war, if I remember. G. T. M. Davis, who has been through almost the
-whole war, declares in favor of Mr. Clay; from which I infer that he
-adopts the sentiments of Mr. Clay, generally at least. On the other
-hand, I have heard of but one Whig who has been to the war attempting
-to justify the President's conduct. That one was Capt. Bishop; editor of
-"The Charleston Courier," and a very clever fellow. I do not mean this
-letter for the public, but for you. Before it reaches you, you will have
-seen and read my pamphlet speech, and, perhaps, scared anew by it. After
-you get over your scare, read it over again, sentence by sentence, and
-tell me honestly what you think of it. I condensed all I could for fear
-of being cut off by the hour rule; and, when I got through, I had spoken
-but forty-five minutes. Yours forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, Feb. 15, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of the 29th January was received last night.
-Being exclusively a constitutional argument, I wish to submit some
-reflections upon it in the same spirit of kindness that I know actuates
-you. Let me first state what I understand to be your position. It is,
-that, if it shall become necessary _to repel invasion_, the President
-may, without violation of the Constitution, cross the line, and _invade_
-the territory of another country; and that whether such _necessity_
-exists in any given case, the President is the _sole_ judge.
-
-Before going farther, consider well whether this is, or is not, your
-position. If it is, it is a position that neither the President himself,
-nor any friend of his, so far as I know, has ever taken. Their only
-positions are, first, that the soil was ours where the hostilities
-commenced; and second, that, whether it was rightfully ours or not,
-Congress had annexed it, and the President, for that reason, was bound
-to defend it, both of which are as clearly proved to be false in fact
-as you can prove that your house is mine. That soil was not ours; and
-Congress did not annex, or attempt to annex it. But to return to your
-position. Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation whenever he
-shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion, and you allow him to do so
-_whenever he may choose to say_ he deems it necessary for such purpose,
-and you allow him to make war at pleasure. Study to see if you can fix
-_any limit_ to his power in this respect, after having given him so much
-as you propose. If to-day he should choose to say he thinks it necessary
-to invade Canada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could
-you stop him? You may say to him, "I see no probability of the British
-invading us;" but he will say to you, "Be silent: I see it, if you
-don't."
-
-The provision of the Constitution giving the war-making power to
-Congress was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons:
-kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars,
-pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the
-object. This our convention understood to be the most oppressive of all
-kingly oppressions; and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that
-_no one man_ should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us.
-But your view destroys the whole matter, and places our President where
-kings have always stood.
-
-Write soon again.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-But the Whig National Convention to nominate a candidate for the
-Presidency was to meet at Philadelphia on the 1st of June, and Mr.
-Lincoln was to be a member. He was not a Clay man: he wanted a candidate
-that could be elected; and he was for "Old Rough," as the only available
-material at hand. But let him explain himself:--
-
-Washington, April 30, 1848.
-
-Dear Williams,--I have not seen in the papers any evidence of a movement
-to send a delegate from your circuit to the June Convention. I wish to
-say that I think it all important that a delegate should be sent. Mr.
-Clay's chance for an election is just no chance at all. He might get New
-York; and that would have elected in 1844, but it will not now, because
-he must now, at the least, lose Tennessee, which he had then, and in
-addition the fifteen new votes of Florida, Texas, Iowa, and Wisconsin.
-I know our good friend Browning is a great admirer of Mr. Clay, and
-I therefore fear he is favoring his nomination. If he is, ask him to
-discard feeling, and try if he can possibly, as a matter of judgment,
-count the votes necessary to elect him.
-
-In my judgment we can elect nobody but Gen. Taylor; and we cannot elect
-him without a nomination. Therefore don't fail to send a delegate.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-To Archibald Williams, Esq.
-
-Washington, June 12, 1848.
-
-Dear Williams,--On my return from Philadelphia, where I had been
-attending the nomination of "Old Rough," I found your letter in a mass
-of others which had accumulated in my absence. By many, and often, it
-had been said they would not abide the nomination of Taylor; but, since
-the deed has been done, they are fast falling in, and in my opinion we
-shall have a most overwhelming, glorious triumph. One unmistakable
-sign is, that all the odds and ends are with us,--Barnburners, Native
-Americans, Tyler men, disappointed, office-seeking Locofocos, and the
-Lord knows what. This is important, if in nothing else, in showing
-which way the wind blows. Some of the sanguine men here set down all the
-States as certain for Taylor but Illinois, and it is doubtful. Cannot
-something be done even in Illinois? Taylor's nomination takes the Locos
-on the blind side. It turns the war thunder against them. The war is now
-to them the gallows of Haman, which they built for us, and on which they
-are doomed to be hanged themselves.
-
-Excuse this short letter. I have so many to write that I cannot devote
-much time to any one.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-But his young partner in the law gave him a great deal of annoyance. Mr.
-Herndon seems to have been troubled by patriotic scruples. He could
-not understand how the war had been begun unconstitutionally and
-unnecessarily by President Polk, nor how the Whigs could vote supplies
-to carry on the war without indorsing the war itself. Besides all this,
-he sent news of startling defections; and the weary Representative took
-up his pen again and again to explain, defend, and advise:--
-
-Washington, June 22,1848.
-
-Dear William,--Last night I was attending a sort of caucus of the Whig
-members, held in relation to the coming Presidential election. The whole
-field of the nation was scanned; and all is high hope and confidence.
-Illinois is expected to better her condition in this race. Under these
-circumstances, judge how heart-rending it was to come to my room and
-find and read your discouraging letter of the 15th. We have made no
-gains, but have lost "H. R. Robinson, Turner, Campbell, and four or five
-more." Tell Arney to reconsider, if he would be saved. Baker and I used
-to do something, but I think you attach more importance to our absence
-than is just. There is another cause: in 1840, for instance, we had two
-Senators and five Representatives in Sangamon; now, we have part of one
-Senator and two Representatives. With quite one-third more people than
-we had then, we have only half the sort of offices which are sought by
-men of the speaking sort of talent. This, I think, is the chief cause.
-Now, as to the young men. You must not wait to be brought forward by the
-older men. For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into
-notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men.
-You young men get together and form a Rough and Ready Club, and have
-regular meetings and speeches. Take in everybody that you can get.
-Harrison, Grimsley, Z. A. Enos, Lee Kimball, and C. W. Matheny will do
-to begin the thing; but, as you go along, gather up all the shrewd,
-wild boys about town, whether just of age or a little under age,--Chris.
-Logan, Reddick Ridgely, Lewis Zwizler, and hundreds such. Let every one
-play the part he can play best,--some speak, some sing, and all hollow
-(holler ED). Your meetings will be of evenings; the older men, and the
-women, will go to hear you; so that it will not only contribute to
-the election of "Old Zack," but will be an interesting pastime, and
-improving to the intellectual faculties of all engaged. Don't fail to do
-this.
-
-You ask me to send you all the speeches made about "Old Zack," the war,
-&c., &c. Now, this makes me a little impatient. I have regularly sent
-you "The Congressional Globe" and "Appendix," and you cannot have
-examined them, or you would have discovered that they contain every
-speech made by every man in both Houses of Congress, on every subject,
-during the session. Can I send any more? Can I send speeches that nobody
-has made? Thinking it would be most natural that the newspapers would
-feel interested to give at least some of the speeches to their readers,
-I, at the beginning of the session, made arrangements to have one copy
-of "The Globe" and "Appendix" regularly sent to each Whig paper of the
-district. And yet, with the exception of my own little speech, which was
-published in two only of the then five, now four, Whig papers, I do not
-remember having seen a single speech, or even extract from one, in any
-single one of those papers. With equal and full means on both sides, I
-will venture that "The State Register" has thrown before its readers
-more of Locofoco speeches in a month than all the Whig papers of the
-district have done of Whig speeches during the session.
-
-If you wish a full understanding of the war, I repeat what I believe I
-said to you in a letter once before, that the whole, or nearly so, is
-to be found in the speech of Dixon of Connecticut. This I sent you in
-pamphlet, as well, as in "The Globe." Examine and study every sentence
-of that speech thoroughly, and you will understand the whole subject.
-
-You ask how Congress came to declare that war had existed by the act of
-Mexico. Is it possible you don't understand that yet? You have at
-least twenty speeches in your possession that fully explain it. I
-will, however, try it once more. The news reached Washington of the
-commencement of hostilities on the Rio Grande, and of the great peril of
-Gen. Taylor's army. Everybody, Whigs and Democrats, was for sending them
-aid, in men and money. It was necessary to pass a bill for this. The
-Locos had a majority in both Houses, and they brought in a bill with a
-preamble, saying, _Whereas_, War exists by the act of Mexico, therefore
-we send Gen. Taylor money. The Whigs moved to strike out the preamble,
-so that they could vote to send the men and money, without saying any
-thing about how the war commenced; but, being in the minority, they were
-voted down, and the preamble was retained. Then, on the passage of the
-bill, the question came upon them, "Shall we vote for preamble and bill
-both together, or against both together?" They did not want to vote
-against sending help to Gen. Taylor, and therefore they voted for both
-together. Is there any difficulty in understanding this? Even my little
-speech shows how this was; and, if you will go to the library, you
-may get "The Journal" of 1845-46, in which you can find the whole for
-yourself.
-
-We have nothing published yet with special reference to the Taylor race;
-but we soon will have, and then I will send them to everybody. I made
-an internal-improvement speech day before yesterday, which I shall
-send home as soon as I can get it written out and printed,--and which I
-suppose nobody will read.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, July 10, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter covering the newspaper slips was received
-last night. The subject of that letter is exceedingly painful to me;
-and I cannot but think there is some mistake in your impression of the
-motives of the old men. I suppose I am now one of the old men; and I
-declare, on my veracity, which I think is good with you, that nothing
-could afford me more satisfaction than to learn that you and others of
-my young friends at home were doing battle in the contest, and endearing
-themselves to the people, and taking a stand far above any I have ever
-been able to reach in their admiration. I cannot conceive that other old
-men feel differently. Of course, I cannot demonstrate what I say; but
-I was young once, and I am sure I was never ungenerously thrust back. I
-hardly know what to say. The way for a young man to rise is to improve
-himself every way he can, never suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder
-him. Allow me to assure you that suspicion and jealousy never did help
-any man in any situation. There may sometimes be ungenerous attempts to
-keep a young man down; and they will succeed, too, if he allows his
-mind to be diverted from its true channel, to brood over the attempted
-injury. Cast about, and see if this feeling has not injured every person
-you have ever known to fall into it.
-
-Now, in what I have said, I am sure you will suspect nothing but
-sincere friendship. I would save you from a fatal error. You have been a
-laborious, studious young man. You are far better informed on almost all
-subjects than I have ever been. You cannot fail in any laudable object,
-unless you allow your mind to be improperly directed. I have some the
-advantage of you in the world's experience, merely by being older; and
-it is this that induces me to advise.
-
-You still seem to be a little mistaken about "The Congressional Globe"
-and "Appendix." They contain _all_ of the speeches that are published
-in any way. My speech and Dayton's speech, which you say you got in
-pamphlet form, are both, word for word, in the "Appendix." I repeat
-again, all are there.
-
-Your friend, as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The "internal-improvement" speech to which Mr. Lincoln alludes in one of
-these letters was delivered on the 20th of June, and contained nothing
-remarkable or especially characteristic. It was in the main merely the
-usual Whig argument in favor of the constitutionality of Mr. Clay's
-"American System."
-
-But, after the nominations at Baltimore and Philadelphia, everybody
-in either House of Congress who could compose any thing at all "on his
-legs," or in the closet, felt it incumbent upon him to contribute at
-least one electioneering speech to the political literature of the day.
-At last, on the 27th of July, Mr. Lincoln found an opportunity to make
-his. Few like it have ever been heard in either of those venerable
-chambers. It is a common remark of those who know nothing of the
-subject, that Mr. Lincoln was devoid of imagination; but the reader of
-this speech will entertain a different opinion. It opens to us a mind
-fertile in images sufficiently rare and striking, but of somewhat
-questionable taste. It must have been heard in amazement by those
-gentlemen of the House who had never known a Hanks, or seen a New Salem.
-
-SPEECH ON THE PRESIDENCY AND GENERAL POLITICS.
-
-DELIVERED IN THE HOUSE, JULY 27, 1848.
-
-Mr. Speaker,--Our Democratic friends seem to be in great distress
-because they think our candidate for the Presidency don't suit us. Most
-of them cannot find out that Gen. Taylor has any principles at all;
-some, however, have discovered that he has one, but that that one is
-entirely wrong. This one principle is his position on the veto power.
-The gentleman from Tennessee (Mr. Stanton), who has just taken his
-seat, indeed, has said there is very little, if any, difference on this
-question between Gen. Taylor and all the Presidents; and he seems to
-think it sufficient detraction from Gen. Taylor's position on it, that
-it has nothing new in it. But all others whom I have heard speak
-assail it furiously. A new member from Kentucky (Mr. Clarke) of very
-considerable ability, was in particular concern about it. He thought it
-altogether novel and unprecedented for a President, or a Presidential
-candidate, to think of approving bills whose constitutionality may not
-be entirely clear to his own mind. He thinks the ark of our safety
-is gone, unless Presidents shall always veto such bills as, in their
-judgment, may be of doubtful constitutionality. However clear Congress
-may be of their authority to pass any particular act, the gentleman from
-Kentucky thinks the President must veto it if he has doubts about it.
-Now, I have neither time nor inclination to argue with the gentleman
-on the veto power as an original question; but I wish to show that Gen.
-Taylor, and not he, agrees with the earliest statesmen on this question.
-When the bill chartering the first Bank of the United States passed
-Congress, its constitutionality was questioned; Mr. Madison, then in
-the House of Representatives, as well as others, had opposed it on
-that ground. Gen. Washington, as President, was called on to approve or
-reject it. He sought and obtained, on the constitutional question, the
-separate written opinions of Jefferson, Hamilton, and Edmund Randolph;
-they then being respectively Secretary of State, Secretary of the
-Treasury, and Attorney-General. Hamilton's opinion was for the power;
-while Randolph's and Jefferson's were both against it. Mr. Jefferson,
-in his letter dated Feb. 15, 1791, after giving his opinion decidedly
-against the constitutionality of that bill, closed with the paragraph
-which I now read:--
-
-"It must be admitted, however, that, unless the President's mind, on
-a view of every thing which is urged for and against this bill, is
-tolerably clear that it is unauthorized by the Constitution; if the pro
-and the con hang so even as to balance his judgment, a just respect
-for the wisdom of the Legislature would naturally decide the balance in
-favor of their opinion; it is chiefly for cases where they are clearly
-misled by error, ambition, or interest, that the Constitution has placed
-a check in the negative of the President."
-
-Gen. Taylor's opinion, as expressed in his Allison letter, is as I now
-read:--
-
-"The power given by the veto is a high conservative power, but, in my
-opinion, should never be exercised, except in cases of clear violation
-of the Constitution, or manifest haste and want of consideration by
-Congress."
-
-It is here seen, that, in Mr. Jefferson's opinion, if, on the
-constitutionality of any given bill, the President doubts, he is not to
-veto it, as the gentleman from Kentucky would have him to do, but is
-to defer to Congress, and approve it. And if we compare the opinions of
-Jefferson and Taylor, as expressed in these paragraphs, we shall find
-them more exactly alike than we can often find any two expressions
-having any literal difference. None but interested fault-finders can
-discover any substantial variation.
-
-But gentlemen on the other side are unanimously agreed that Gen. Taylor
-has no other principle. They are in utter darkness as to his opinions on
-any of the questions of policy which occupy the public attention. But
-is there any doubt as to what he will do on the prominent question, if
-elected? Not the least. It is not possible to know what he will or would
-do in every imaginable case, because many questions have passed away,
-and others doubtless will arise, which none of us have yet thought
-of; but on the prominent questions of currency, tariff, internal
-improvements, and Wilmot Proviso, Gen. Taylor's course is at least as
-well defined as is Gen. Cass's. Why, in their eagerness to get at Gen.
-Taylor, several Democratic members here have desired to know whether, in
-case of his election, a bankrupt-law is to be established. Can they tell
-us Gen. Cass's opinion on this question? (Some member answered, He is
-against it.") Ay, how do you know he is? There is nothing about it in
-the platform, nor elsewhere, that I have seen. If the gentleman knows
-any thing which I do not, he can show it. But to return: Gen. Taylor, in
-his Allison letter, says,--
-
-"Upon the subject of the tariff, the currency, the improvement of our
-great highways, rivers, lakes, and harbors, the will of the people,
-as expressed through their Representatives in Congress, ought to be
-respected and carried out by the Executive."
-
-Now, this is the whole matter: in substance, it is this: The people say
-to Gen. Taylor, "If you are elected, shall we have a national bank?"
-He answers, "Your will, gentlemen, not mine"--"What about the
-tariff?"--"Say yourselves."--"Shall our rivers and harbors be
-improved?"--"Just as you please."--"If you desire a bank, an alteration
-of the tariff, internal improvements, any or all, I will not hinder you:
-if you do not desire them, I will not attempt to force them on you. Send
-up your members of Congress from the various districts, with opinions
-according to your own, and if they are for these measures, or any of
-them, I shall have nothing to oppose: if they are not for them, I shall
-not, by any appliances whatever, attempt to dragoon them into their
-adoption." Now, can there be any difficulty in understanding this? To
-you, Democrats, it may not seem like principle; but surely you cannot
-fail to perceive the position plain enough. The distinction between it
-and the position of your candidate is broad and obvious, and I admit
-you have a clear right to show it is wrong, if you can; but you have
-no right to pretend you cannot see it at all. We see it, and to us it
-appears like principle, and the best sort of principle at that,--the
-principle of allowing the people to do as they please with their own
-business. My friend from Indiana (Mr. C. B. Smith) has aptly asked, "Are
-you willing to trust the people?" Some of you answered substantially,
-"We are willing to trust the people; but the President is as much the
-representative of the people as Congress." In a certain sense, and to a
-certain extent, he is the representative of the people. He is elected by
-them as well as Congress is. But can he, in the nature of things, know
-the wants of the people as well as three hundred other men coming from
-all the various localities of the nation? If so, where is the propriety
-of having a Congress? That the Constitution gives the President a
-negative on legislation, all know; but that this negative should be so
-combined with platforms and other appliances as to enable him, and, in
-fact, almost compel him, to take the whole of legislation into his own
-hands, is what we object to, is what Gen. Taylor objects to, and is what
-constitutes the broad distinction between you and us. To thus transfer
-legislation is clearly to take it from those who understand with
-minuteness the interests of the people, and give it to one who does not
-and cannot so well understand it. I understand your idea,--that if a
-Presidential candidate avow his opinion upon a given question, or rather
-upon all questions, and the people, with full knowledge of this, elect
-him, they thereby distinctly approve all those opinions. This, though
-plausible, is a most pernicious deception. By means of it, measures are
-adopted or rejected contrary to the wishes of the whole of one party,
-and often nearly half of the other. The process is this: Three, four, or
-half a dozen questions are prominent at a given time; the party selects
-its candidate, and he takes his position on each of these questions.
-On all but one his positions have already been indorsed at former
-elections, and his party fully committed to them; but that one is new,
-and a large portion of them are against it. But what are they to do? The
-whole are strung together, and they must take all or reject all. They
-cannot take what they like, and leave the rest. What they are already
-committed to being the majority, they shut their eyes and gulp the
-whole. Next election, still another is introduced in the same way. If
-we run our eyes along the line of the past, we shall see that almost, if
-not quite, all the articles of the present Democratic creed have been at
-first forced upon the party in this very way. And just now, and just so,
-opposition to internal improvements is to be established if Gen. Cass
-shall be elected. Almost half the Democrats here are for improvements,
-but they will vote for Cass; and, if he succeeds, their votes will have
-aided in closing the doors against improvements. Now, this is a process
-which we think is wrong. We prefer a candidate, who, like Gen. Taylor,
-will allow the people to have their own way, regardless of his private
-opinion; and I should think the internal-improvement Democrats, at
-least, ought to prefer such a candidate. He would force nothing on them
-which they don't want; and he would allow them to have improvements
-which their own candidate, if elected, will not.
-
-Mr. Speaker, I have said Gen. Taylor's position is as well defined as is
-that of Gen. Cass. In saying this, I admit I do not certainly know what
-he would do on the Wilmot Proviso. I am a Northern man, or, rather, a
-Western Free State man, with a constituency I believe to be, and with
-personal feelings I know to be, against the extension of slavery.
-As such, and with what information I have, I hope and _believe_ Gen.
-Taylor, if elected, would not veto the proviso; but I do not _know_ it.
-Yet, if I knew he would, I still would vote for him. I should do so,
-because, in my judgment, his election alone can defeat Gen. Cass; and
-because, _should_ slavery thereby go into the territory we now have,
-just so much will certainly happen by the election of Cass, and, in
-addition, a course of policy leading to new wars, new acquisitions of
-territory, and still farther extensions of slavery. One of the two is to
-be President; which is preferable?
-
-But there is as much doubt of Cass on improvements as there is of Taylor
-on the proviso. I have no doubt myself of Gen. Cass on this question,
-but I know the Democrats differ among themselves as to his position. My
-internal-improvement colleague (Mr. Wentworth) stated on this floor the
-other day, that he was satisfied Cass was for improvements, because he
-had voted for all the bills that he (Mr. W.) had. So far, so good.
-But Mr. Polk vetoed some of these very bills; the Baltimore Convention
-passed a set of resolutions, among other things, approving these vetoes;
-and Cass declares, in his letter accepting the nomination, that he has
-carefully read these resolutions, and that he adheres to them as firmly
-as he approves them cordially. In other words, Gen. Cass voted for the
-bills, and thinks the President did right to veto them; and his friends
-here are amiable enough to consider him as being on one side or the
-other, just as one or the other may correspond with their own respective
-inclinations. My colleague admits that the platform declares against the
-constitutionality of a general system of improvement, and that Gen. Cass
-indorses the platform; but he still thinks Gen. Cass is in favor of some
-sort of improvements. Well, what are they? As he is against _general_
-objects, those he is for must be particular and local. Now, this
-is taking the subject precisely by the wrong end.
-
-_Particularity_--expending the money of the _whole_ people for an
-object which will benefit only a _portion_ of them--is the greatest real
-objection to improvements, and has been so held by Gen. Jackson, Mr.
-Polk, and all others, I believe, till now. But now, behold, the objects
-most general, nearest free from this objection, are to be rejected,
-while those most liable to it are to be embraced. To return: I cannot
-help believing that Gen. Cass, when he wrote his letter of acceptance,
-well understood he was to be claimed by the advocates of both sides
-of this question, and that he then closed the door against all further
-expressions of opinion, purposely to retain the benefits of that double
-position. His subsequent equivocation at Cleveland, to my mind, proves
-such to have been the case.
-
-One word more, and I shall have done with this branch of the subject.
-You Democrats and your candidate, in the main, are in favor of laying
-down in advance a platform,--a set of party positions, as a unit; and
-then of enforcing the people, by every sort of appliance, to ratify
-them, however unpalatable some of them may be. We and our candidate are
-in favor of making Presidential elections and the legislation of the
-country distinct matters; so that the people can elect whom they please,
-and afterward legislate just as they please, without any hinderance,
-save only so much as may guard against infractions of the Constitution,
-undue haste, and want of consideration. The difference between us is
-clear as noonday. That we are right, we cannot doubt. We hold the true
-republican position. In leaving the people's business in their hands, we
-cannot be wrong. We are willing, and even anxious, to go to the people
-on this issue.
-
-But I suppose I cannot reasonably hope to convince you that we have any
-principles. The most I can expect is, to assure you that we think we
-have, and are quite contented with them. The other day, one of the
-gentlemen from Georgia (Mr. Iverson), an eloquent man, and a man of
-learning, so far as I can judge, not being learned myself, came down
-upon us astonishingly. He spoke in what "The Baltimore American" calls
-the "scathing and withering style." At the end of his second severe
-flash I was struck blind, and found myself feeling with my fingers for
-an assurance of my continued physical existence. A little of the bone
-was left, and I gradually revived. He eulogized Mr. Clay in high
-and beautiful terms, and then declared that we had deserted all our
-principles, and had turned Henry Clay out, like an old horse, to root.
-This is terribly severe. It cannot be answered by argument; at least, I
-cannot so answer it. I merely wish to ask the gentleman if the Whigs
-are the only party he can think of, who sometimes turn old horses out
-to root? Is not a certain Martin Van Buren an old horse which your own
-party have turned out to root? and is he not rooting a little to your
-discomfort about now? But, in not nominating Mr. Clay, we deserted our
-principles, you say. Ah! in what? Tell us, ye men of principles, what
-principle we violated? We say you did violate principle in discarding
-Van Buren, and we can tell you how. You violated the primary,
-the cardinal, the one great living principle of all Democratic
-representative government,--the principle that the representative is
-bound to carry out the known will of his constituents. A large majority
-of the Baltimore Convention of 1844 were, by their constituents,
-instructed to procure Van Buren's nomination if they could.
-In violation, in utter, glaring contempt of this, you rejected
-him,--rejected him, as the gentleman from New York (Mr. Birdsall), the
-other day expressly admitted, for _availability_,--that same "general
-availability" which you charge upon us, and daily chew over here, as
-something exceedingly odious and unprincipled. But the gentleman from
-Georgia (Mr. Iverson) gave us a second speech yesterday, all well
-considered and put down in writing, in which Van Buren was scathed
-and withered a "few" for his present position and movements. I cannot
-remember the gentleman's precise language, but I do remember he put Van
-Buren down, down, till he got him where he was finally to "stink" and
-"rot."
-
-Mr. Speaker, it is no business or inclination of mine to defend Martin
-Van Buren. In the war of extermination now waging between him and his
-old admirers, I say, Devil take the hindmost--and the foremost. But
-there is no mistaking the origin of the breach; and, if the curse of
-"stinking" and "rotting" is to fall on the first and greatest violators
-of principle in the matter, I disinterestedly suggest, that the
-gentleman from Georgia and his present co-workers are bound to take it
-upon themselves.
-
-While I have Gen. Cass in hand, I wish to say a word about his political
-principles. As a specimen, I take the record of his progress on the
-Wilmot Proviso. In "The Washington Union" of March 2, 1847, there is a
-report of the speech of Gen. Cass, made the day before in the Senate,
-on the Wilmot Proviso, during the delivery of which, Mr. Miller of New
-Jersey is reported to have interrupted him as follows, to wit:--
-
-"Mr. Miller expressed his great surprise at the change in the sentiments
-of the Senator from Michigan, who had been regarded as the great
-champion of freedom in the North-west, of which he was a distinguished
-ornament. Last year the Senator from Michigan was understood to be
-decidedly in favor of the Wilmot Proviso; and, as no reason had been
-stated for the change, he (Mr. Miller) could not refrain from the
-expression of his extreme surprise."
-
-To this, Gen. Cass is reported to have replied as follows, to wit:--
-
-"Mr. Cass said, that the course of the Senator from New Jersey was
-most extraordinary. Last year he (Mr. Cass) should have voted for the
-proposition had it come up. But circumstances had altogether changed.
-The honorable Senator then read several passages from the remarks as
-given above which he had committed to writing, in order to refute such a
-charge as that of the Senator from New Jersey."
-
-In the "remarks above committed to writing," is one numbered 4, as
-follows, to wit:--
-
-"4th. Legislation would now be wholly imperative, because no territory
-hereafter to be acquired can be governed without an act of Congress
-providing for its government. And such an act, on its passage, would
-open the whole subject, and leave the Congress called on to pass it free
-to exercise its own discretion, entirely uncontrolled by any declaration
-found in the statute-book."
-
-In "Niles's Register," vol. lxxiii., p. 293, there is a letter of Gen.
-Cas? to A. O. P. Nicholson of Nashville, Tenn., dated Dec. 24, 1847,
-from which the following are correct extracts:--
-
-"The Wilmot Proviso has been before the country some time. It has been
-repeatedly discussed in Congress, and by the public press. I am strongly
-impressed with the opinion that a great change has been going on in the
-public mind upon this subject,--in my own as well as others; and that
-doubts are resolving themselves into convictions, that the principle it
-involves should be kept out of the national Legislature, and left to the
-people of the Confederacy in their respective local governments.
-
-"Briefly, then, I am opposed to the exercise of any jurisdiction by
-Congress over this matter; and I am in favor of leaving the people of
-any territory which may be hereafter acquired, the right to regulate it
-themselves, under the general principles of the Constitution. Because,
-
-"1. I do not see in the Constitution any grant of the requisite power
-to Congress; and I am not disposed to extend a doubtful precedent
-beyond its necessity,--the establishment of territorial governments when
-needed,--leaving to the inhabitants all the rights compatible with the
-relations they bear to the Confederation."
-
-These extracts show, that, in 1846, Gen. Cass was for the Proviso _at
-once_; that, in March, 1847, he was still for it, _but not just then_;
-and that in December, 1847, he was _against_ it altogether. This is a
-true index to the whole man. When the question was raised in 1846, he
-was in a blustering hurry to take ground for it. He sought to be in
-advance, and to avoid the uninteresting position of a mere follower; but
-soon he began to see glimpses of the great Democratic ox-gad waving in
-his face, and to hear indistinctly a voice saying, "Back!" "Back, sir!"
-"Back a little!" He shakes his head, and bats his eyes, and blunders
-back to his position of March, 1847; but still the gad waves, and the
-voice grows more distinct, and sharper still,--"Back, sir!" "Back, I
-say!" "Further back!" and back he goes to the position of December,
-1847; at which the gad is still, and the voice soothingly says, "So!"
-"Stand still at that."
-
-Have no fears, gentlemen, of your candidate: he exactly suits you, and
-we congratulate you upon it. However much you may be distressed about
-our candidate, you have all cause to be contented and happy with your
-own. If elected, he may not maintain all, or even any, of his positions
-previously taken; but he will be sure to do whatever the party exigency,
-for the time being, may require; and that is precisely what you want. He
-and Van Buren are the same "manner of men;" and, like Van Buren, he will
-never desert you till you first desert him.
-
-[After referring at some length to extra "charges" of Gen. Cass upon the
-Treasury, Mr. Lincoln continued:---]
-
-But I have introduced Gen. Cass's accounts here chiefly to show the
-wonderful physical capacities of the man. They show that he not only did
-the labor of several men at the same _time_, but that he often did it,
-at several _places_ many hundred miles apart, _at the same time_. And
-at eating, too, his capacities are shown to be quite as wonderful. From
-October, 1821, to May, 1822, he ate ten rations a day in Michigan, ten
-rations a day here in Washington, and nearly five dollars' worth a day
-besides, partly on the road between the two places. And then there is an
-important discovery in his example,--the art of being paid for what one
-eats, instead of having to pay for it. Hereafter, if any nice young man
-shall owe a bill which he cannot pay in any other way, he can just board
-it out. Mr. Speaker, we have all heard of the animal standing in doubt
-between two stacks of hay, and starving to death: the like of that would
-never happen to Gen. Cass. Place the stacks a thousand miles apart, he
-would stand stock-still, midway between them, and eat them both at once;
-and the green grass along the line would be apt to suffer some, too, at
-the same time. By all means make him President, gentlemen. He will feed
-you bounteously--if--if--there is any left after he shall have helped
-himself.
-
-But as Gen. Taylor is, par excellence, the hero of the Mexican War, and
-as you Democrats say we Whigs have always opposed the war, you think it
-must be very awkward and embarrassing for us to go for Gen. Taylor.
-The declaration that we have always opposed the war is true or false
-accordingly as one may understand the term "opposing the war." If to
-say "the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President," by opposing the war, then the Whigs have very generally
-opposed it. Whenever they have spoken at all, they have said this; and
-they have said it on what has appeared good reason to them: the marching
-an army into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement, frightening
-the inhabitants away, leaving their growing crops and other property
-to destruction, to you may appear a perfectly amiable, peaceful,
-unprovoking procedure; but it does not appear so to us. So to call such
-an act, to us appears no other than a naked, impudent absurdity, and we
-speak of it accordingly. But if when the war had begun, and had become
-the cause of the country, the giving of our money and our blood, in
-common with yours, was support of the war, then it is not true that we
-have always opposed the war. With few individual exceptions, you have
-constantly had our votes here for all the necessary supplies. And, more
-than this, you have had the services, the blood, and the lives of our
-political brethren in every trial, and on every field. The beardless
-boy and the mature man, the humble and the distinguished,--you have had
-them. Through suffering and death, by disease and in battle, they have
-endured and fought and fallen with you. Clay and Webster each gave a
-son, never to be returned. From the State of my own residence, besides
-other worthy but less known Whig names, we sent Marshall, Morrison,
-Baker, and Hardin: they all fought, and one fell, and in the fall of
-that one we lost our best Whig man. Nor were the Whigs few in number,
-or laggard in the day of danger. In that fearful, bloody, breathless
-struggle at Buena Vista, where each man's hard task was to beat back
-five foes or die himself, of the five high officers who perished, four
-were Whigs.
-
-In speaking of this, I mean no odious comparison between the
-lion-hearted Whigs and Democrats who fought there. On other occasions,
-and among the lower officers and privates on that occasion, I doubt not
-the proportion was different. I wish to do justice to all. I think of
-all those brave men as Americans, in whose proud fame, as an American,
-I, too, have a share. Many of them, Whigs and Democrats, are my
-constituents and personal friends; and I thank them,--more than thank
-them,--one and all, for the high, imperishable honor they have conferred
-on our common State.
-
-But the distinction between the _cause of the President in beginning
-the war,_ and the _cause of the country after it was begun_, is a
-distinction which you cannot perceive. To you, the President and the
-country seem to be all one. You are interested to see no distinction
-between them; and I venture to suggest that possibly your interest
-blinds you a little. We see the distinction, as we think, clearly
-enough; and our friends, who have fought in the war, have no difficulty
-in seeing it also. What those who have fallen would say, were they alive
-and here, of course we can never know; but with those who have returned
-there is no difficulty. Col. Haskell and Major Gaines, members here,
-both fought in the war; and one of them underwent extraordinary perils
-and hardships; still they, like all other Whigs here, vote on the record
-that the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President. And even Gen. Taylor himself, the noblest Roman of them all,
-has declared that, as a citizen, and particularly as a soldier, it is
-sufficient for him to know that his country is at war with a foreign
-nation, to do all in his power to bring it to a speedy and honorable
-termination, by the most vigorous and energetic operations, without
-inquiring about its justice, or any thing else connected with it.
-
-Mr. Speaker, let our Democratic friends be comforted with the assurance
-that we are content with our position, content with our company, and
-content with our candidate; and that although they, in their generous
-sympathy, think we ought to be miserable, we really are not, and that
-they may dismiss the great anxiety they have on our account.1
-
- 1 The following passage has generally been omitted from this
- speech, as published in the "Lives of Lincoln." The reason
- for the omission is quite obvious.
-
-"But the gentleman from Georgia further says, we have deserted all our
-principles, and taken shelter under Gen. Taylor's military coat-tail;
-and he seems to think this is exceedingly degrading. Well, as his faith
-is, so be it unto him. But can he remember no other military coat-tail,
-under which a certain other party have been sheltering for near a
-quarter of a century? Has he no acquaintance with the ample military
-coat-tail of Gen. Jackson? Does he not know that his own party have run
-the last five Presidential races under that coat-tail? and that they are
-now running the sixth under the same cover? Yes, sir, that coat-tail was
-used, not only for Gen, Jackson himself, but has been clung to with
-the grip of death by every Democratic candidate since. You have never
-ventured, and dare not now venture, from under it. Your campaign papers
-have constantly been 'Old Hickories,' with rude likenesses of the old
-general upon them; hickory poles and hickory brooms your never-ending
-emblems. Mr. Polk himself was 'Young Hickory.' 'Little Hickory,' or
-something so; and even now your campaign paper here is proclaiming that
-Cass and Butler are of the 'Hickory stripe.' No, sir, you dare not give
-it up. Like a horde of hungry ticks, you have stuck to the tail of the
-Hermitage lion to the end of his life; and you are still sticking to it,
-and drawing a loathsome sustenance from it, after he is dead. A fellow
-once advertised that he had made a discovery by which he could make a
-new man out of an old one, and have enough of the stuff left to make a
-little yellow dog. Just such a discovery has Gen. Jackson's popularity
-been to you. You not only twice made President of him out of it, but
-you have enough of the stuff left to make Presidents of several
-comparatively small men since; and it is your chief reliance now to make
-still another.
-
-"Mr. Speaker, old horses and military coat-tails, or tails of any sort,
-are not figures of speech such as I would be the first to introduce into
-discussions here; but, as the gentleman from Georgia has thought fit
-to introduce them, he and you are welcome to all you have made, or can
-make, by them. If you have any more old horses, trot them out; any more
-tails, just cock them, and come at us.
-
-"I repeat, I would not introduce this mode of discussion here; but
-I wish gentlemen on the other side to understand, that the use of
-degrading figures is a game at which they may find themselves unable to
-take all the winnings. ["We give it up."] Ay, you give it up, and well
-you may; but for a very different reason from that which you would have
-us understand. The point--the power to hurt--of all figures, consists
-in the _truthfulness_ of their application; and, understanding this, you
-may well give it up. They are weapons which hit you, but miss us.
-
-"But, in my hurry, I was very near closing on this subject of military
-tails before I was done with it. There is one entire article of the sort
-I have not discussed yet; I mean the military tail you Democrats are now
-engaged in dovetailing on to the great Michigander. Yes, sir, all his
-biographers (and they are legion) have him in hand, tying him to a
-military tail, like so many mischievous boys tying a dog to a bladder of
-beans. True, the material is very limited, but they are at it might and
-main. He invaded Canada without resistance, and he _out_vaded it without
-pursuit. As he did both under orders, I suppose there was, to him,
-neither credit nor discredit; but they are made to constitute a large
-part of the tail. He was not at Hull's surrender, but he was close by;
-he was volunteer aid to Gen. Harrison on the day of the battle of the
-Thames; and, as you said in 1840 Harrison was picking whortleberries
-two miles off while the battle was fought, I suppose it is a just
-conclusion, with you, to say Cass was aiding Harrison to pick
-whortleberries. This is about all, except the mooted question of the
-broken sword. Some authors say he broke it; some say he threw it away;
-and some others, who ought to know, say nothing about it. Perhaps it
-would be a fair historical compromise to say, if he did not break it, he
-did not do any thing else with it.
-
-"By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero? Yes sir:
-in the days of the Black-Hawk War, I fought, bled, and came away.
-Speaking of Gen. Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at
-Stillman's defeat, but I was about as near it as Cass was to Hull's
-surrender; and, like him, I saw the place very soon afterwards. It is
-quite certain I did not break my sword, for I had none to break; but I
-bent my musket pretty badly on one occasion. If Cass broke his sword,
-the idea is, he broke it in desperation: I bent the musket by accident.
-If Gen. Cass went in advance of me picking whortleberries,
-
-I guess I surpassed him in charges upon the wild onions. If he saw any
-live fighting Indians, it was more than I did, but I had a good many
-bloody struggles with the mosquitoes; and, although I never fainted from
-loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry, "Mr. Speaker,
-if ever I should conclude to doff whatever our Democratic friends may
-suppose there is of black-cockade Federalism about me, and, thereupon,
-they shall take me up as their candidate for the Presidency, I protest
-that they shall not make fun of me, as they have of Gen. Cass, by
-attempting to write me into a military hero."
-
-Congress adjourned on the 14th of August; but Mr. Lincoln went up to
-New England, and made various campaign speeches before he returned home.
-They were not preserved, and were probably of little importance.
-
-Soon after his return to Washington, to take his seat at the second
-session of the Thirtieth Congress, he received a letter from his father,
-which astonished and perhaps amused him. His reply intimates grave
-doubts concerning the veracity of his correspondent.
-
-Washington, Dec. 24, 1848. My dear Father,--Your letter of the 7th
-was received night before last. I very cheerfully send you the twenty
-dollars, which sum you say is necessary to save your land from sale. It
-is singular that you should have forgotten a judgment against you; and
-it is more singular that the plaintiff should have let you forget it
-so long; particularly as I suppose you always had property enough to
-satisfy a judgment of that amount. Before you pay it, it would be well
-to be sure you have not paid, or at least that you cannot prove you have
-paid it.
-
-Give my love to mother and all the connections.
-
-Affectionately your son,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The second session was a quiet one. Mr. Lincoln did nothing to attract
-public attention in any marked degree. He attended diligently and
-unobtrusively to the ordinary duties of his office, and voted generally
-with the Whig majority. One Mr. Gott, however, of New York, offered a
-resolution looking to the abolition of the slave-trade in the District
-of Columbia, and Mr. Lincoln was one of only three or four Northern
-Whigs who voted to lay the resolution on the table. At another time,
-however, Mr. Lincoln proposed a substitute for the Gott resolution,
-providing for gradual and compensated emancipation, with the consent
-of the people of the District, to be ascertained at a general election.
-This measure he evidently abandoned, and it died a natural death among
-the rubbish of "unfinished business." His record on the Wilmot Proviso
-has been thoroughly exposed, both by himself and Mr. Douglas, and in the
-Presidential campaign by his friends and foes. He said himself, that he
-had voted for it "about forty-two times." It is not likely that he had
-counted the votes when he made this statement, but spoke according to
-the best of his "knowledge and belief."
-
-The following letters are printed, not because they illustrate the
-author's character more than a thousand others would, but because they
-exhibit one of the many perplexities of Congressional life.
-
-Springfield, April 25, 1849.
-
-Dear Thompson,--A tirade is still kept up against me here for
-recommending T. R. King. This morning it is openly avowed that my
-supposed influence at Washington shall be broken down generally, and
-King's prospects defeated in particular. Now, what I have done in this
-matter, I have done at the request of you and some other friends in
-Tazewell; and I therefore ask you to either admit it is wrong, or come
-forward and sustain me. If the truth will permit, I propose that you
-sustain me in the following manner: copy the enclosed scrap in your own
-handwriting, and get everybody (not three or four, but three or four
-hundred) to sign it, and then send it to me. Also, have six, eight, or
-ten of our best known Whig friends there to write me individual letters,
-stating the truth in this matter as they understand it. Don't neglect
-or delay in the matter. I understand information of an indictment having
-been found against him about three years ago for gaming, or keeping a
-gaming-house, has been sent to the Department. I shall try to take care
-of it at the Department till your action can be had and forwarded on.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, June 5, 1849.
-
-Dear William,--Your two letters were received last night. I have a great
-many letters to write, and so cannot write very long ones. There must be
-some mistake about Walter Davis saying I promised him the Post-office. I
-did not so promise him. I did tell him, that, if the distribution of the
-offices should fall into my hands, he should have something; and, if
-I shall be convinced he has said any more than this, I shall be
-disappointed.
-
-I said this much to him, because, as I understand, he is of good
-character, is one of the young men, is of the mechanics, and always
-faithful, and never troublesome, a Whig and is poor, with the support
-of a widow-mother thrown almost exclusively on him by the death of his
-brother. If these are wrong reasons, then I have been wrong; but I
-have certainly not been selfish in it, because, in my greatest need of
-friends, he was against me and for Baker.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Let the above be confidential.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-LIKE most other public men in America, Mr. Lincoln made his bread by
-the practice of his profession, and the better part of his fame by
-the achievements of the politician. He was a lawyer of some note,
-and, compared with the crowds who annually take upon themselves the
-responsible office of advocate and attorney, he might very justly have
-been called a good one; for he regarded his office as a trust, and
-selected and tried his cases, not with a view to personal gain, but to
-the administration of justice between suitors. And here, midway in
-his political career, it is well enough to pause, and take a leisurely
-survey of him in his other character of country lawyer, from the time
-he entered the bar at Springfield until he was translated from it to the
-Presidential chair. It is unnecessary to remind the reader (for by this
-time it must be obvious enough) that the aim of the writer is merely to
-present facts and contemporaneous opinions, with as little comment as
-possible.
-
-In the courts and at the bar-meetings immediately succeeding his death,
-his professional brethren poured out in volumes their testimony to his
-worth and abilities as a lawyer. But, in estimating the value of this
-testimony, it is fair to consider the state of the public mind at the
-time it was given,--the recent triumph of the Federal arms under his
-direction; the late overwhelming indorsement of his administration; the
-unparalleled devotion of the people to his person as exhibited at the
-polls; the fresh and bitter memories of the hideous tragedy that took
-him off; the furious and deadly passions it inspired in the one party,
-and the awe, indignation, and terror it inspired in the other. It was
-no time for nice and critical examinations, either of his mental or his
-moral character; and it might have been attended with personal danger to
-attempt them. For days and nights together it was considered treason to
-be seen in public with a smile on the face. Men who spoke evil of the
-fallen chief, or even ventured a doubt concerning the ineffable purity
-and saintliness of his life, were pursued by mobs, were beaten to death
-with paving-stones, or strung up by the neck to lampposts. If there was
-any rivalry, it was as to who should be foremost and fiercest among his
-avengers, who should canonize him in the most solemn words, who should
-compare him to the most sacred character in all history, sacred and
-profane. He was prophet, priest, and king; he was Washington; he was
-Moses; and there were not wanting even those who likened him to the God
-and Redeemer of all the earth. These latter thought they discovered in
-his lowly origin, his kindly nature, his benevolent precepts, and
-the homely anecdotes in which he taught the people, strong points of
-resemblance between him and the divine Son of Mary. Even at this day,
-men are not wanting in prominent positions in life, who knew Mr. Lincoln
-well, and who do not hesitate to make such a comparison.
-
-[Illustration: Judge David Davis 349]
-
-For many years, Judge David Davis was the near friend and the intimate
-associate of Mr. Lincoln. He presided in the court where Lincoln was
-oftenest heard: year in and year out they travelled together from
-town to town, from county to county, riding frequently in the same
-conveyance, and lodging in the same room. Although a judge on the bench,
-Mr. Davis watched the political course of his friend with affectionate
-solicitude, and more than once interposed most effectually to advance
-his fortunes. When Mr. Lincoln ascended to the Presidency, it was well
-understood that no man enjoyed more confidential relations with him than
-Judge Davis. At the first opportunity, he commissioned Judge Davis an
-Associate Justice of that august tribunal, the Supreme Court of the
-United States; and, upon his death, Judge Davis administered upon his
-estate at the request of his family. Add to this the fact, that, among
-American jurists, Judge Davis's fame is, if not peerless, at least not
-excelled by that of any man whose reputation rests upon his labors as
-they appear in the books of Reports, and we may very fairly consider
-him a competent judge of the professional character of Mr. Lincoln. At
-Indianapolis, Judge Davis spoke of him as follows:--
-
-"I enjoyed for over twenty years the personal friendship of Mr. Lincoln.
-We were admitted to the bar about the same time, and travelled for many
-years what is known in Illinois as the Eighth Judicial Circuit. In 1848,
-when I first went on the bench, the circuit embraced fourteen counties,
-and Mr. Lincoln went with the court to every county. Railroads were
-not then in use, and our mode of travel was either on horseback or in
-buggies.
-
-"This simple life he loved, preferring it to the practice of the law
-in a city, where, although the remuneration would be greater, the
-opportunity would be less for mixing with the great body of the people,
-who loved him, and whom he loved. Mr. Lincoln was transferred from the
-bar of that circuit to the office of President of the United States,
-having been without official position since he left Congress in 1849. In
-all the elements that constitute the great lawyer, he had few equals.
-He was great both at _nisi prius_ and before an appellate tribunal. He
-seized the strong points of a cause, and presented them with clearness
-and great compactness. His mind was logical and direct, and he did not
-indulge in extraneous discussion. Generalities and platitudes had no
-charms for him. An unfailing vein of humor never deserted him; and he
-was always able to chain the attention of court and jury, when the cause
-was the most uninteresting, by the appropriateness of his anecdotes.
-
-"His power of comparison was large, and he rarely failed in a legal
-discussion to use that mode of reasoning. The framework of his mental
-and moral being was honesty, and a wrong cause was poorly defended by
-him. The ability which some eminent lawyers possess, of explaining away
-the bad points of a cause by ingenious sophistry, was denied him. In
-order to bring into full activity his great powers, it was necessary
-that he should be convinced of the right and justice of the matter which
-he advocated. When so convinced, whether the cause was great or small,
-he was usually successful. He read law-books but little, except when
-the cause in hand made it necessary; yet he was usually self-reliant,
-depending on his own resources, and rarely consulting his brother
-lawyers, either on the management of his case or on the legal questions
-involved.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was the fairest and most accommodating of practitioners,
-granting all favors which he could do consistently with his duty to
-his client, and rarely availing himself of an unwary oversight of his
-adversary.
-
-"He hated wrong and oppression everywhere; and many a man whose
-fraudulent conduct was undergoing review in a court of justice has
-writhed under his terrific indignation and rebukes. He was the most
-simple and unostentatious of men in his habits, having few wants, and
-those easily supplied.
-
-"To his honor be it said, that he never took from a client, even when
-the cause was gained, more than he thought the service was worth and the
-client could reasonably afford to pay. The people where he practised law
-were not rich, and his charges were always small.
-
-"When he was elected President, I question whether there was a lawyer
-in the circuit, who had been at the bar as long a time, whose means were
-not larger. It did not seem to be one of the purposes of his life to
-accumulate a fortune. In fact, outside of his profession, he had no
-knowledge of the way to make money, and he never even attempted it.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was loved by his brethren of the bar; and no body of men
-will grieve more at his death, or pay more sincere tributes to his
-memory. His presence on the circuit was watched for with interest, and
-never failed to produce joy and hilarity. When casually absent, the
-spirits of both bar and people were depressed. He was not fond of
-controversy, and would compromise a lawsuit whenever practicable."
-
-More or other evidence than this may, perhaps, be superfluous. Such an
-eulogium, from such a source, is more than sufficient to determine
-the place Mr. Lincoln is entitled to occupy in the history, or, more
-properly speaking, the traditions, of the Western bar. If Sir Matthew
-Hale had spoken thus of any lawyer of his day, he would have insured
-to the subject of his praise a place in the estimation of men only less
-conspicuous and honorable than that of the great judge himself. At the
-risk, however, of unnecessary accumulation, we venture to record an
-extract from Judge Drummond's address at Chicago:--
-
-"With a probity of character known to all, with an intuitive insight
-into the human heart, with a clearness of statement which was in itself
-an argument, with uncommon power and felicity of illustration,--often,
-it is true, of a plain and homely kind,--and with that sincerity and
-earnestness of manner which carried conviction, he was, perhaps, one
-of the most successful jury lawyers we ever had in the State. He always
-tried a case fairly and honestly. He never intentionally misrepresented
-the evidence of a witness, nor the argument of an opponent. He met both
-squarely, and, if he could not explain the one or answer the other,
-substantially admitted it. He never misstated the law, according to
-his own intelligent view of it. Such was the transparent candor and
-integrity of his nature, that he could not well, or strongly, argue a
-side or a cause that he thought wrong. Of course, he felt it his duty to
-say what could be said, and to leave the decision to others; but there
-could be seen in such cases the inward struggles of his own mind. In
-trying a case, he might occasionally dwell too long upon, or give too
-much importance to, an inconsiderable point; but this was the exception,
-and generally he went straight to the citadel of the cause or question,
-and struck home there, knowing, if that were won, the outworks would
-necessarily fall. He could hardly be called very learned in his
-profession, and yet he rarely tried a cause without fully understanding
-the law applicable to it; and I have no hesitation in saying he was one
-of the ablest lawyers I have ever known. If he was forcible before
-a jury, he was equally so with the court. He detected, with unerring
-sagacity, the weak points of an opponent's argument, and pressed his own
-views with overwhelming strength. His efforts were quite unequal; and it
-might happen that he would not, on some occasions, strike one as at all
-remarkable. But let him be thoroughly roused,--let him feel that he was
-right, and that some principle was involved in his cause,--and he would
-come out with an earnestness of conviction, a power of argument, and a
-wealth of illustration, that I have never seen surpassed."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's partnership with John T. Stuart began on the 27th of
-April, 1837, and continued until the 14th of April, 1841, when it was
-dissolved, in consequence of Stuart's election to Congress. In that same
-year (1841), Mr. Lincoln united in practice with Stephen T. Logan, late
-presiding judge of the district, and they remained together until 1845.
-
-Soon afterwards he formed a copartnership with William H. Herndon, his
-friend, familiar, and, we may almost say, biographer,--a connection
-which terminated only when the senior partner took an affectionate leave
-of the old circuit, the old office, home, friends, and all familiar
-things, to return no more until he came a blackened corpse. "He once
-told me of you," says Mr. Whitney in one of his letters to Mr. Herndon,
-"that he had taken you in as partner, supposing that you had a system,
-and would keep things in order, but that he found that you had no more
-system than he had, but that you were a fine lawyer; so that he was
-doubly disappointed." 1
-
- 1 The following letter exhibits the character of his early
- practice, and gives us a glimpse into his social and
- political life;--
-
- Springfield, Dec. 23,1839.
-
- Dear--,--Dr. Henry will write you all the political news. I
- write this about some little matters of business. You
- recollect you told me you had drawn the Chicago Masack
- money, and sent it to the claimants. A d----d hawk-billed
- Yankee is here besetting me at every turn I take, saying
- that Robert Kenzie never received the eighty dollars to
- which he was entitled.
-
- Can you tell any thing about the matter? Again, old Mr.
- Wright, who lives up South Fork somewhere, is teasing me
- continually about some deeds, which he says he left with
- you, but which I can find nothing of. Can you tell where
- they are? The Legislature is in session, and has suffered
- the bank to forfeit its charter without benefit of clergy.
- There seems but little disposition to resuscitate it.
-
- Whenever a letter comes from you to Mrs.------, I carry it
- to her, and then I see Betty:
-
- she is a tolerable nice fellow now. Maybe I will write again
- when I get more time.
-
- Your friend as ever,
-
- A. Lincoln.
-
- P. S.--The Democratic giant is here, but he is not now worth
- talking about.
-
- A. L.
-
-As already stated by Judge Davis, Mr. Lincoln was not "a great reader of
-law-books;" but what he knew he knew well, and within those limits
-was self-reliant and even intrepid. He was what is sometimes called "a
-case-lawyer,"--a man who reasoned almost entirely to the court and jury
-from analagous causes previously decided and reported in the books, and
-not from the elementary principles of the law, or the great
-underlying reasons for its existence. In consultation he was cautious,
-conscientious, and painstaking, and was seldom prepared to advise,
-except after careful and tedious examination of the authorities. He did
-not consider himself bound to take every case that was brought to him,
-nor to press all the points in favor of a client who in the main was
-right and entitled to recover. He is known to have been many times on
-the verge of quarrelling with old and valued friends, because he could
-not see the justice of their claims, and, therefore, could not be
-induced to act as their counsel. Henry McHenry, one of his New-Salem
-associates, brought him a case involving the title to a piece of land.
-McHenry had placed a family in a cabin which Mr. Lincoln believed to be
-situated on the other side of the adversary's line. He told McHenry that
-he must move the family out. "McHenry said he should not do it. 'Well,'
-said Mr. Lincoln, 'if you do not, I shall not attend to the suit.'
-McHenry said he did not care a d--n whether he did or not; that he
-(Lincoln) was not all the lawyer there was in town. Lincoln studied
-a while, and asked about the location of the cabin,... and then said,
-'McHenry, you are right: I will attend to the suit,' and did attend to
-it, and gained it; and that was all the harsh words that passed."
-
-"A citizen of Springfield," says Mr. Herndon, "who visited our office
-on business about a year before Mr. Lincoln's nomination, relates the
-following:--
-
-"'Mr. Lincoln was seated at his table, listening very attentively to a
-man who was talking earnestly in a low tone. After the would-be client
-had stated the facts of his case, Mr. Lincoln replied, "Yes, there is
-no reasonable doubt but that I can gain your case for you. I can set a
-whole neighborhood at loggerheads; I can distress a widowed mother
-and her six fatherless children, and thereby get for you six hundred
-dollars, which rightfully belongs, it appears to me, as much to the
-woman and her children as it does to you. You must remember that some
-things that are legally right are not morally right. I shall not take
-your case, but will give you a little advice, for which I will charge
-you nothing. You seem to be a sprightly, energetic man. I would advise
-you to try your hand at making six hundred dollars in some other way."'"
-
-In the summer of 1841, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a curious case. The
-circumstances impressed him very deeply with the insufficiency and
-danger of "circumstantial evidence;" so much so, that he not only wrote
-the following account of it to Speed, but another more extended one,
-which was printed in a newspaper published at Quincy, 111. His mind was
-full of it: he could think of nothing else. It is apparent that in his
-letter to Speed he made no pause to choose his words: there is nothing
-constrained, and nothing studied or deliberate about it; but its
-simplicity, perspicuity, and artless grace make it a model of English
-composition. What Goldsmith once said of Locke may better be said of
-this letter: "He never says more nor less than he ought, and never makes
-use of a word that he could have changed for a better."
-
-Springfield, June 19,1841.
-
-Dear Speed,--We have had the highest state of excitement here for a
-week past that our community has ever witnessed; and although the public
-feeling is somewhat allayed, the curious affair which aroused it is very
-far from being over yet, cleared of mystery. It would take a quire of
-paper to give you any thing like a full account of it, and I therefore
-only propose a brief outline. The chief personages in the drama are
-Archibald Fisher, supposed to be murdered, and Archibald Trailor, Henry
-Trailor, and William Trailor, supposed to have murdered him. The three
-Trailors are brothers: the first, Arch., as you know, lives in town;
-the second, Henry, in Clary's Grove; and the third, William, in Warren
-County; and Fisher, the supposed murdered, being without a family, had
-made his home with William. On Saturday evening, being the 29th of May,
-Fisher and William came to Henry's in a one-horse dearborn, and there
-staid over Sunday; and on Monday all three came to Springfield (Henry on
-horseback), and joined Archibald at Myers's, the Dutch carpenter.
-That evening at supper Fisher was missing, and so next morning some
-ineffectual search was made for him; and on Tuesday, at 1 o'clock, p.m.,
-William and Henry started home without him. In a day or two Henry and
-one or two of his Clary-Grove neighbors came back for him again, and
-advertised his disappearance in the papers. The knowledge of the matter
-thus far had not been general, and here it dropped entirely, till about
-the 10th inst., when Keys received a letter from the postmaster in
-Warren County, that William had arrived at home, and was telling a very
-mysterious and improbable story about the disappearance of Fisher, which
-induced the community there to suppose he had been disposed of unfairly.
-Keys made this letter public, which immediately set the whole town and
-adjoining county agog. And so it has continued until yesterday. The mass
-of the people commenced a systematic search for the dead body, while
-Wickersbam was despatched to arrest Henry Trailor at the Grove, and Jim
-Maxcy to Warren to arrest William. On Monday last, Henry was brought in,
-and showed an evident inclination to insinuate that he knew Fisher to be
-dead, and that Arch, and William had killed him. He said he guessed the
-body could be found in Spring Creek, between the Beardstown Road and
-Hickox's mill. Away the people swept like a herd of buffalo, and cut
-down Hickox's mill-dam _nolens volens_, to draw the water out of the
-pond, and then went up and down, and down and up the creek, fishing and
-raking, and raking and ducking, and diving for two days, and, after all,
-no dead body found. In the mean time a sort of a scuffling-ground had
-been found in the brush in the angle, or point, where the road leading
-into the woods past the brewery, and the one leading in past the brick
-grove meet. From the scuffle-ground was the sign of something about
-the size of a man having been dragged to the edge of the thicket, where
-joined the track of some small wheeled carriage drawn by one horse,
-as shown by the road-tracks. The carriage-track led off toward Spring
-Creek. Near this drag-trail Dr. Merryman found two hairs, which, after a
-long scientific examination, he pronounced to be triangular human hair,
-which term, he says, includes within it the whiskers, the hair growing
-under the arms, and on other parts of the body; and he judged that these
-two were of the whiskers, because the ends were cut, showing that
-they had flourished in the neighborhood of the razor's operations. On
-Thursday last Jim Maxcy brought in William Trailor from Warren. On the
-same day Arch, was arrested, and put in jail. Yesterday (Friday) William
-was put upon his examining trial before May and Lavely. Archibald and
-Henry were both present. Lamborn prosecuted, and Logan, Baker, and your
-humble servant defended. A great many witnesses were introduced and
-examined, but I shall only mention those whose testimony seemed most
-important. The first of these was Capt. Ransdell. He swore, that, when
-William and Henry left Springfield for home on Tuesday before mentioned,
-they did not take the direct route,--which, you know, leads by the
-butcher-shop,--but that they followed the street north until they got
-opposite, or nearly opposite, May's new house, after which he could not
-see them from where he stood; and it was afterwards proved, that, in
-about an hour after they started, they came into the street by the
-butcher's shop from towards the brick-yard. Dr. Merryman and others
-swore to what is stated about the scuffle-ground, drag-trail, whiskers,
-and carriage-tracks. Henry was then introduced by the prosecution.
-He swore, that, when they started for home, they went out north, as
-Ransdell stated, and turned down west by the brick-yard into the woods,
-and there met Archibald; that they proceeded a small distance farther,
-when he was placed as a sentinel to watch for and announce the approach
-of any one that might happen that way; that William and Arch, took the
-dearborn out of the road a small distance to the edge of the thicket,
-where they stopped, and he saw them lift the body of a man into it; that
-they then moved off with the carriage in the direction of Hickox's mill,
-and he loitered about for something like an hour, when William returned
-with the carriage, but without Arch., and said they had put him in a
-safe place; that they went somehow, he did not know exactly how, into
-the road close to the brewery, and proceeded on to Clary's Grove. He
-also stated that some time during the day William told him that he and
-Arch, had killed Fisher the evening before; that the way they did it was
-by him (William) knocking him down with a club, and Arch, then choking
-him to death. An old man from Warren, called Dr. Gilmore, was then
-introduced on the part of the defence. He swore that he had known Fisher
-for several years; that Fisher had resided at his house a long time at
-each of two different spells,--once while he built a barn for him, and
-once while he was doctored for some chronic disease; that two or three
-years ago Fisher had a serious hurt in his head by the bursting of
-a gun, since which he had been subject to continued bad health and
-occasional aberration of mind. He also stated that on last Tuesday,
-being the same day that Maxcy arrested William Trailor, he (the doctor)
-was from home in the early part of the day, and on his return, about 11
-o'clock, found Fisher at his house in bed, and apparently very unwell;
-that he asked him how he had come from Springfield; that Fisher said he
-had come by Peoria, and also told of several other places he had been
-at, more in the direction of Peoria, which showed that he at the time
-of speaking did not know where he had been wandering about in a state
-of derangement. He further stated, that in about two hours he received
-a note from one of Trail-or's friends, advising him of his arrest, and
-requesting him to go on to Springfield as a witness, to testify as to
-the state of Fisher's health in former times; that he immediately set
-off, calling up two of his neighbors as company, and, riding all evening
-and all night, overtook Maxcy and William at Lewiston in Fulton. County;
-That Maxcy refusing to discharge Trailor upon his statement, his two
-neighbors returned, and he came on to Springfield. Some question being
-made as to whether the doctor's story was not a fabrication, several
-acquaintances of his (among whom was the same postmaster who wrote to
-Keys, as before mentioned) were introduced as sort of compurgators, who
-swore that they knew the doctor to be of good character for truth
-and veracity, and generally of good character in every way. Here the
-testimony ended, and the Trailors were discharged, Arch, and William
-expressing, both in word and manner, their entire confidence that Fisher
-would be found alive at the doctor's by Galloway, Mallory, and Myers,
-who a day before had been despatched for that purpose; while Henry still
-protested that no power on earth could ever show Fisher alive. Thus
-stands this curious affair. When the doctor's story was first made
-public, it was amusing to scan and contemplate the countenances, and
-hear the remarks, of those who had been actively engaged in the search
-for the dead body: some looked quizzical, some melancholy, and some
-furiously angry. Porter, who had been very active, swore he always knew
-the man was not dead, and that he had not stirred an inch to hunt for
-him: Langford, who had taken the lead in cutting down Hickox's mill-dam,
-and wanted to hang Hickox for objecting, looked most awfully woebegone;
-he seemed the "_wictim of hunrequited affection_," as represented in the
-comic almanacs we used to laugh over. And Hart, the little drayman
-that hauled Molly home once, said it was too damned bad to have so much
-trouble, and no hanging, after all.
-
-I commenced this letter on yesterday, since which I received yours of
-the 13th. I stick to my promise to come to Louisville. Nothing new here,
-except what I have written. I have not seen------since my last trip; and
-I am going out there as soon as I mail this letter.
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-On the 3d of December, 1839, Mr. Lincoln was admitted to practice in
-the Circuit Court of the United States; and on the same day the names
-of Stephen A. Douglas, S. H. Treat, Schuyler Strong, and two other
-gentlemen, were placed on the same roll. The "Little Giant" is always in
-sight!
-
-The first speech he delivered in the Supreme Court of the State was
-one the like of which will never be heard again, and must have led the
-judges to doubt the sanity of the new attorney. We give it in the form
-in which it seems to be authenticated by Judge Treat:--
-
-"A case being called for hearing in the Court, Mr. Lincoln stated
-that he appeared for the appellant, and was ready to proceed with the
-argument. He then said, 'This is the first case I have ever had in this
-court, and I have therefore examined it with great care. As the Court
-will perceive, by looking at the abstract of, the record, the only
-question in the case is one of authority. I have not been able to find
-any authority sustaining _my_ side of the case, but I _have found_
-several cases directly in point on the _other_ side. I will now give
-_these_ cases, and then submit the case.'"
-
-The testimony of all the lawyers, his contemporaries and rivals, is in
-the same direction. "But Mr. Lincoln's love of justice and fair play,"
-says Mr. Gillespie, "was his predominating trait. I have often listened
-to him when I thought he would certainly state his case out of Court.
-It was not in his nature to assume, or to attempt to bolster up, a false
-position. He would abandon his case first. He did so in the case of
-Buckmaster for the use of Denham vs. Beenes and Arthur, in our Supreme
-Court, in which I happened to be opposed to him. Another gentleman, less
-fastidious, took Mr. Lincoln's place, and gained the case."
-
-In the Patterson trial--a case of murder which attained some
-celebrity--in Champaign County, Ficklin and Lamon prosecuted, and
-Lincoln and Swett defended. After hearing the testimony, Mr. Lincoln
-felt himself morally paralyzed, and said, "Swett, the man is guilty:
-you defend him; I can't." They got a fee of five hundred or a thousand
-dollars; of which Mr. Lincoln declined to take a cent, on the ground
-that it justly belonged to Swett, whose ardor, courage, and eloquence
-had saved the guilty man from justice.
-
-It was probably his deep sense of natural justice, his irresistible
-propensity to get at the equities of the matter in hand, that made him
-so utterly impatient of all arbitrary or technical rules. Of these he
-knew very little,--less than an average student of six months: "Hence,"
-says Judge Davis, "a child could make use of the simple and technical
-rules, the means and mode of getting at justice, better than Lincoln
-could." "In this respect," says Mr. Herndon, "I really think he was very
-deficient."
-
-Sangamon County was originally in the First Judicial Circuit; but under
-the Constitution of 1848, and sundry changes in the Judiciary Acts, it
-became the Eighth Circuit. It was in 1848 that Judge Davis came on the
-bench for the first time. The circuit was a very large one, containing
-fourteen counties, and comprising the central portion of the State.
-Lincoln travelled all over it--first with Judge Treat and then with
-Judge Davis--twice every year, and was thus absent from Springfield
-and home nearly, if not quite, six months out of every twelve. "In my
-opinion," says Judge Davis, "Lincoln was as happy as _he_ could be,
-on this circuit, and happy in no other place. This was his place of
-enjoyment. As a general rule, of a Saturday evening, when all the
-lawyers would go home [the judge means those who were close enough to
-get there and back by the time their cases were called] and see their
-families and friends, Lincoln would refuse to go." "It was on this
-circuit," we are told by an authority equally high, "that he shone as a
-_nisi prius_ lawyer; it was on this circuit Lincoln thought, spoke, and
-acted; it was on this circuit that the people met, greeted, and cheered
-on the man; it was on this circuit that he cracked his jokes, told his
-stories, made his money, and was happy as nowhere in the world beside."
-When, in 1857, Sangamon County was cut off from the Eighth Circuit by
-the act creating the Eighteenth, "Mr. Lincoln would still continue with
-Judge Davis, first finishing his business in Sangamon."
-
-On his return from one of these long journeys, he found that Mrs.
-Lincoln had taken advantage of his absence, and, with the connivance and
-assistance of his neighbor, Gourly, had placed a second story and a new
-roof on his house. Approaching it for the first time after this rather
-startling alteration, and pretending not to recognize it, he called to
-a man on the street, "Stranger, can you tell me where Lincoln lives? He
-used to live here."
-
-When Mr. Lincoln first began to "ride the circuit," he was too poor to
-own horseflesh or vehicle, and was compelled to borrow from his friends.
-But in due time he became the proprietor of a horse, which he fed and
-groomed himself, and to which he was very much attached. On this animal
-he would set out from home, to be gone for weeks together, with no
-baggage but a pair of saddle-bags, containing a change of linen, and
-an old cotton umbrella, to shelter him from sun or rain. When he got a
-little more of this world's goods, he set up a one-horse buggy,--a
-very sorry and shabby-looking affair, which he generally used when the
-weather promised to be bad. But the lawyers were always glad to see him,
-and the landlords hailed his coming with pleasure. Yet he was one of
-those peculiar, gentle, uncomplaining men, whom those servants of
-the public who keep "hotels" would generally put off with the most
-indifferent accommodations. It was a very significant remark of a lawyer
-thoroughly acquainted with his habits and disposition, that "Lincoln
-was never seated next the landlord at a crowded table, and never got a
-chicken liver or the best cut from the roast." If rooms were scarce, and
-one, two, three, or four gentlemen were required to lodge together, in
-order to accommodate some surly man who "stood upon his rights," Lincoln
-was sure to be one of the unfortunates. Yet he loved the life, and never
-went home without reluctance.
-
-From Mr. S. O. Parks of Lincoln, himself a most reputable lawyer, we
-have two or three anecdotes, which we give in his own language:--
-
-"I have often said, that, for a man who was for the quarter of a century
-both a lawyer and a politician, he was the most honest man I ever knew.
-He was not only morally honest, but intellectually so. He could not
-reason falsely: if he attempted it, he failed. In politics he never
-would try to mislead. At the bar, when he thought he was wrong, he was
-the weakest lawyer I ever saw. You know this better than I do. But I
-will give you an example or two which occurred in this county, and which
-you may not remember.
-
-"A man was indicted for larceny: Lincoln, Young, and myself defended
-him. Lincoln was satisfied by the evidence that he was guilty, and ought
-to be convicted. He called Young and myself aside, and said, 'If you can
-say any thing for the man, do it. I can't: if I attempt, the jury will
-see that I think he is guilty, and convict him, of course.' The case was
-submitted by us to the jury without a word. The jury failed to agree;
-and before the next term the man died. Lincoln's honesty undoubtedly
-saved him from the penitentiary.
-
-"In a closely-contested civil suit, Lincoln had proved an account for
-his client, who was, though he did not know it at the time, a very
-slippery fellow. The opposing attorney then proved a receipt clearly
-covering the entire cause of action. By the time he was through, Lincoln
-was missing. The court sent for him to the hotel. 'Tell the judge,' said
-he, 'that I can't come: _my hands are dirty; and I came over to clean
-them!_'
-
-"In the case of Harris and Jones vs. Buckles, Harris wanted Lincoln to
-assist you and myself. His answer was characteristic: 'Tell Harris it's
-no use to _waste money on me_ in that case: he'll get beat.'"
-
-Mr. Lincoln was prone to adventures in which _pigs_ were the other
-party. The reader has already enjoyed one from the pen of Miss Owen; and
-here is another, from an incorrigible humorist, a lawyer, named J. H.
-Wickizer:--
-
-"In 1855 Mr. Lincoln and myself were travelling by buggy from Woodford
-County Court to Bloomington, 111.; and, in passing through a little
-grove, we suddenly heard the terrific squealing of a little pig near by
-us. Quick as thought Mr. Lincoln leaped out of the buggy, seized a club,
-pounced upon the old sow, and beat her lustily: she was in the act of
-eating one of her young ones. Thus he saved the pig, and then remarked,
-'By jing! the unnatural old brute shall not devour her own progeny!'
-This, I think, was his first proclamation of freedom."
-
-But Mr. Wickizer gives us another story, which most happily illustrates
-the readiness of Mr. Lincoln's wit:--
-
-"In 1858, in the court at Bloomington, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a case
-of no great importance; but the attorney on the other side, Mr. S------,
-a young lawyer of fine abilities (now a judge of the Supreme Court of
-the State), was always very sensitive about being beaten, and in this
-case manifested unusual zeal and interest. The case lasted until late
-at night, when it was finally submitted to the jury. Mr. S------spent a
-sleepless night in anxiety, and early next morning learned, to his great
-chagrin, that he had lost the case. Mr. Lincoln met him at the Court
-House, and asked him what had become of his case. With lugubrious
-countenance and melancholy tone, Mr. S-said, 'It's gone to hell.'--'Oh,
-well!' replied Lincoln, 'then you'll see it again!'"
-
-Although the humble condition and disreputable character of some of his
-relations and connections were the subject of constant annoyance and
-most painful reflections, he never tried to shake them off, and
-never abandoned them when they needed his assistance. A son of his
-foster-brother, John Johnston, was arrested in------County for stealing
-a watch.
-
-Mr. Lincoln went to the same town to address a mass meeting while the
-poor boy was in jail. He waited until the dusk of the evening, and then,
-in company with Mr. H. C. Whitney, visited the prison. "Lincoln knew he
-was guilty," says Mr. Whitney, "and was very deeply affected,--more
-than I ever saw him. At the next term of the court, upon the State's
-Attorney's consent, Lincoln and I went to the prosecution witnesses, and
-got them to come into open court, and state that they did not care to
-presecute." The boy was released; and that evening, as the lawyers were
-leaving the town in their buggies, Mr. Lincoln was observed to get down
-from his, and walk back a short distance to a poor, distressed-looking
-young man who stood by the roadside. It was young Johnston. Mr. Lincoln
-engaged for a few moments apparently in earnest and nervous conversation
-with him, then giving him some money, and returning to his buggy, drove
-on.
-
-A thousand tales could be told of Mr. Lincoln's amusing tricks and
-eccentricities on these quiet rides from county to county, in company
-with judges and lawyers, and of his quaint sayings and curious doings at
-the courts in these Western villages. But, much against our will, we are
-compelled to make selections, and present a few only, which rest upon
-the most undoubted authority.
-
-It is well known that he used to carry with him, on what Mr. Stuart
-calls "the tramp around the circuit," ordinary school-books,--from
-Euclid down to an English grammar,--and study them as he rode along, or
-at intervals of leisure in the towns where he stopped. He supplemented
-these with a copy of Shakspeare, got much of it by rote, and recited
-long passages from it to any chance companion by the way.
-
-He was intensely fond of cutting wood with an axe; and he was often
-seen to jump from his buggy, seize an axe out of the hands of a roadside
-chopper, take his place on the log in the most approved fashion, and,
-with his tremendous long strokes, cut it in two before the man could
-recover from his surprise.
-
-It was this free life that charmed him, and reconciled him to existence.
-Here he forgot the past, with all its cruelties and mortifications:
-here were no domestic afflictions to vex his weary spirit and to try his
-magnanimous heart.
-
-"After he had returned from Congress," says Judge Davis, "and had lost
-his practice, Goodrich of Chicago proposed to him to open a law-office
-in Chicago, and go into partnership with him. Goodrich had an extensive
-practice there. Lincoln refused to accept, and gave as a reason, that he
-tended to consumption; that, if he went to Chicago, he would have to
-sit down and study hard, and it would kill him; that he would rather go
-around the circuit--the Eighth Judicial Circuit--than to sit down and
-die in Chicago."
-
-In the summer of 1857, at a camp-meeting in Mason County, one Metzgar
-was most brutally murdered. The affray took place about half a mile
-from the place of worship, near some wagons loaded with liquors and
-provisions. Two men, James H. Norris and William D. Armstrong, were
-indicted for the crime. Norris was tried in Mason County, convicted of
-manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of eight
-years. But Armstrong, the popular feeling being very high against him in
-Mason, "took a change of venue to Cass County," and was there tried
-(at Beardstown) in the spring of 1858. Hitherto Armstrong had had
-the services of two able counsellors, but now their efforts were
-supplemented by those of a most determined and zealous volunteer.
-
-Armstrong was the son of Jack and Hannah Armstrong of New Salem, the
-child whom Mr. Lincoln had rocked in the cradle while Mrs. Armstrong
-attended to other household duties. His life was now in imminent peril:
-he seemed clearly guilty; and, if he was to be saved, it must be by the
-interposition of some power which could deface that fatal record in the
-Norris trial, refute the senses of witnesses, and make a jury forget
-themselves and their oaths. Old Hannah had one friend whom she devoutly
-believed could accomplish this. She wrote to Mr. Lincoln, and he replied
-that he would defend the boy. (She says she has lost his letter.)
-Afterwards she visited him at Springfield, and prepared him for the
-event as well as she could, with an understanding weakened by a long
-strain of severe and almost hopeless reflection.
-
-When the trial came on, Mr. Lincoln appeared for the defence. His
-colleague, Mr. Walker, had possessed him of the record in the Norris
-case; and, upon close and anxious examination, he was satisfied that the
-witnesses could, by a well-sustained and judicious cross-examination, be
-made to contradict each other in some important particulars. Mr. Walker
-"handled" the victims of this friendly design, while Mr. Lincoln sat
-by and suggested questions. Nevertheless, to the unskilled mind, the
-testimony seemed to be absolutely conclusive against the prisoner, and
-every word of it fell like a new sentence of death. Norris had beaten
-the murdered man with a club from behind, while Armstrong had pounded
-him in the face with a slung-shot deliberately prepared for the
-occasion; and, according to the medical men, either would have been
-fatal without the other. But the witness whose testimony bore hardest
-upon Armstrong swore that the crime was committed about eleven o'clock
-at night, and that he saw the blows struck by the light of a moon nearly
-full, and standing in the heavens about where the sun would stand at
-ten o'clock in the morning. It is easy to pervert and even to destroy
-evidence like this; and here Mr. Lincoln saw an opportunity which nobody
-had dreamed of on the Norris trial. He handed to an officer of the court
-an almanac, and told him to give it back to him when he should call for
-it in presence of the jury. It was an almanac of the year previous to
-the murder.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln," says Mr. Walker, "made the closing argument for the
-defence. At first he spoke slowly, and carefully reviewed the whole
-testimony,--picked it all to pieces, and showed that the man had not
-received his wounds at the place or time named by the witnesses, _but
-afterwards, and at the hands of some one else_" "The evidence bore
-heavily upon his client," says Mr. Shaw, one of the counsel for the
-prosecution. "There were many witnesses, and each one seemed to add one
-more cord that seemed to bind him down, until Mr. Lincoln was something
-in the situation of Gulliver after his first sleep in Lilliput. But,
-when he came to talk to the jury (that was always his forte), he
-resembled Gulliver again. He skilfully untied here and there a knot,
-and loosened here and there a peg, until, fairly getting warmed up,
-he raised himself in his full power, and shook the arguments of his
-opponents from him as if they were cobwebs." In due time he called for
-the almanac, and easily proved by it, that, at the time the main witness
-declared the moon was shining in great splendor, there was, in fact, no
-moon at all, but black darkness over the whole scene. In the "roar
-of laughter" and undisguised astonishment succeeding this apparent
-demonstration, court, jury, and counsel forgot to examine that seemingly
-conclusive almanac, and let it pass without a question concerning its
-genuineness.1
-
-In conclusion, Mr. Lincoln drew a touching picture of Jack Armstrong
-(whose gentle spirit alas! had gone to that place of coronation for
-the meek), and Hannah,--this sweet-faced old lady with the silver
-locks,--welcoming to their humble cabin a strange and penniless boy,
-to whom Jack, with that Christian benevolence which distinguished him
-through life, became as a father, and the guileless Hannah even more
-than a mother. The boy, he said, stood before them pleading for the life
-of his benefactors' son,--the staff of the widow's declining years.
-
- 1 Mr. E. J. Loomis, assistant in charge of the "Nautical
- Almanac" office, Washington, D.C., under date of Aug.
- 1,1871, says,--
-
- "Referring to the 'Nautical Almanac' for 1857, I find, that,
- between the hours of ten and eleven o'clock on the night of
- the 29th of August, 1857, the moon was within one hour of
- setting.
-
- "The computed time of its setting on that night is 11 h. 57
- m.,--three minutes before midnight.
-
- "The moon was only two days past its first quarter, and
- could hardly be mistaken for 'nearly full.'"
-
- "In the case of the People vs. Armstrong, I was assisting
- prosecuting counsel. The prevailing belief at that time, and
- I may also say at the present, in Cass County, was as
- follows:--
-
- "Mr. Lincoln, previous to the trial, handed an almanac of
- the year previous to the murder to an officer of the court,
- stating that he might call for one during the trial, and, if
- he did, to send him that one. An important witness for the
- People had fixed the time of the murder to be in the night,
- near a camp-meeting; 'that the moon was about in the same
- place that the sun would be at ten o'clock in the morning,
- and was nearly full,'therefore he could see plainly, &c. At
- the proper time, Mr. Lincoln called to the officer for an
- almanac; and the one prepared for the occasion was shown by
- Mr. 'Lincoln, he reading from it at the time referred to by
- the witness 'The moon had already set;' that in the roar of
- laughter the jury and opposing counsel forgot to look at the
- date. Mr. Carter, a lawyer of this city (Beardstown), who
- was present at, but not engaged in, the Armstrong case, says
- he is satisfied that the almanac was of the year previous,
- and thinks he examined it at the time. This was the general
- impression in the court-room. I have called on the sheriff
- who officiated at that time (James A. Dick), who says that
- he saw a 'Goudy's Almanac' lying upon Mr. Lincoln's table
- during the trial, and that Mr. Lincoln took it out of his
- own pocket. Mr. Dick does not know the date of it. I have
- seen several of the petit jurymen who sat upon the case, who
- only recollect that the almanac floored the witness. But one
- of the jurymen, the foreman, Mr. Milton Logan, says that it
- was the one for the year of the murder, and no trick about
- it; that he is willing to make an affidavit that he examined
- it as to date, and that it was an almanac of the year of the
- murder. My own opinion is, that when an almanac was called
- for by Mr. Lincoln, two were brought, one of the year of the
- murder, and one of the year previous; that Mr. Lincoln was
- entirely innocent of any deception in the matter. I the more
- think this, from the fact that Armstrong was not cleared by
- any want of testimony against him, but by the irresistible
- appeal of Mr. Lincoln in his favor."--Henry Shaw.
-
-"The last fifteen minutes of his speech," his colleague declares, "was
-as eloquent as I ever heard; and such the power and earnestness with
-which he spoke to that jury, that all sat as if entranced, and, when
-he was through, found relief in a gush of tears." "He took the jury by
-storm," says one of the prosecutors. "There were tears in Mr. Lincoln's
-eyes while he spoke, but they were genuine. His sympathies were fully
-enlisted in favor of the young man, and his terrible sincerity could
-not help but arouse the same passion in the jury. I have said a hundred
-times that it was Lincoln's speech that saved that criminal from the
-gallows." In the language of Hannah, who sat by enchanted, "he told the
-stories about our first acquaintance,--what I did for him, and how I did
-it;" and she thinks it "was truly eloquent."
-
-"As to the trial," continues Hannah, "Lincoln said to me, 'Hannah, your
-son will be cleared before sundown.' He and the other lawyers addressed
-the jury, and closed the case. I went down at Thompson's pasture: Stator
-came to me, and told me soon that my son was cleared and a free man.
-I went up to the Court House: the jury shook hands with me, so did the
-Court, so did Lincoln. We were all affected, and tears, streamed down
-Lincoln's eyes. He then remarked to me, 'Hannah, what did I tell you? I
-pray to God that William may be a good boy hereafter; that this lesson
-may prove in the end a good lesson to him and to all.'... After the
-trial was over, Lincoln came down to where I was in Beardstown. I asked
-him what he charged me; told him I was poor. He said, 'Why, Hannah, I
-sha'n't charge you a cent,--never. Any thing I can do for you I will do
-for you willing and freely without charges.' He wrote to me about some
-land which some men were trying to get from me, and said, 'Hannah, they
-can't get your land. Let them try it in the Circuit Court, and then you
-appeal it; bring it to Supreme Court, and I and Herndon will attend to
-it for nothing.'"
-
-This boy William enlisted in the Union army. But in 1863 Hannah
-concluded she "wanted" him. She does not say that William was laboring
-under any disability, or that he had any legal right to his discharge.
-She merely "wanted" him, and wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect. He
-replied promptly by telegraph:--
-
-September, 1863.
-
-Mrs. Hannah Armstrong,--I have just ordered the discharge of your boy
-William, as you say, now at Louisville, Ky.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-For many years Mr. Lincoln was the attorney of the Illinois Central
-Railway Company; and, having rendered in some recent causes most
-important and laborious services, he presented a bill in 1857 for five
-thousand dollars. He pressed for his money, and was referred to some
-under-official who was charged with that class of business. Mr. Lincoln
-would probably have modified his bill, which seemed exorbitant as
-charges went among country lawyers, but the company treated him with
-such rude insolence, that he contented himself with a formal demand,
-and then immediately instituted suit on the claim. The case was tried at
-Bloomington before Judge Davis; and, upon affidavits of N. B. Judd, O.
-H.
-
-Browning, S. T. Logan, and Archy Williams, respecting the value of the
-services, was decided in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment given for
-five thousand dollars. This was much more money than Mr. Lincoln had
-ever had at one time.
-
-In the summer of 1859 Mr. Lincoln went to Cincinnati to argue the
-celebrated McCormick reaping-machine case. Mr. Edwin M. Stanton, whom he
-never saw before, was one of his colleagues, and the leading counsel
-in the case; and although the other gentlemen engaged received him with
-proper respect, Mr. Stanton treated him with such marked and habitual
-discourtesy, that he was compelled to withdraw from the case. When he
-reached home he said that he had "never been so brutally treated as by
-that man Stanton;" and the facts justified the statement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-WE have seen already, from one of his letters to Mr. Herndon, that Mr.
-Lincoln was personally quite willing to be a candidate for Congress the
-second time. But his "honor" forbade: he had given pledges, and made
-private arrangements with other gentlemen, to prevent "the district
-from going to the enemy." Judge Logan was nominated in his place; and,
-although personally one of the most popular men in Illinois, he was
-sadly beaten, in consequence of the record which the Whig party had made
-"against the war." It was well as it was; for, if Mr. Lincoln had been
-the candidate, he would have been still more disastrously defeated,
-since it was mainly the votes he had given in Congress which Judge Logan
-found it so difficult to explain and impossible to defend.
-
-[Illustration: Stephen T. Logan 371]
-
-Mr. Lincoln was an applicant, and a very urgent one, for the office of
-Commissioner of the General Land-Office in the new Whig administration.
-He moved his friends to urge him in the newspapers, and wrote to some
-of his late associates in Congress (among them Mr. Schenck of Ohio),
-soliciting their support. But it was all of no avail; Mr. Justin
-Butterfield (also an Illinoisian) beat him in the race to Washington,
-and got the appointment. It is said by one of Mr. Lincoln's numerous
-biographers, that he often laughed over his failure to secure this great
-office, pretending to think it beneath his merits; but we can find no
-evidence of the fact alleged, and have no reason to believe it.
-
-Mr. Fillmore subsequently offered him the governorship of Oregon. The
-news reached him whilst away at court at Tremont or Bloomington. Mr.
-Stuart and others "coaxed him to take it;" the former insisting that
-Oregon would soon become a State, and he one of its senators. Mr.
-Lincoln saw it all, and said he would accept "if his wife would
-consent." But his wife "refused to do so;" and time has shown that she
-was right, as she usually was when it came to a question of practical
-politics.
-
-From the time of his retirement from Congress to 1854, when the repeal
-of the Missouri Compromise and the Kansas-Nebraska Bill broke the hollow
-truce of 1856, which Mr. Clay and his compeers fondly regarded as a
-peace, Mr. Lincoln's life was one of comparative political inactivity.
-He did not believe that the sectional agitations could be permanently
-stilled by the devices which then seemed effectual to the foremost
-statesmen of either party and of both sections. But he was not disposed
-to be forward in the renewal of them. He probably hoped against
-conviction that time would allay the animosities which endangered at
-once the Union and the principles of free government, which had thus far
-preserved a precarious existence among the North American States.
-
-Coming home to Springfield from the Tremont court in 1850 in company
-with Mr. Stuart, he said, "The time will come when we must all be
-Democrats or Abolitionists. When that time comes, my mind is made up.
-The 'slavery question' can't be compromised."--"So is my mind made up,"
-replied his equally firm companion; and at that moment neither doubted
-on which side he would find the other when the great struggle took
-place.
-
-The Whig party everywhere, in Congress and in their conventions, local
-and national, accepted the compromise of 1850 under the leadership of
-Mr. Clay and Mr. Webster. Mr. Lincoln did the same; for, from the hour
-that party lines were distinctly and closely drawn in his State, he
-was an unswerving party man. But although he said nothing against those
-measures, and much in favor of them, it is clear that he accepted the
-result with reluctance. He spoke out his disapproval of the Fugitive
-Slave Law as it was passed, believing and declaring wherever he went,
-that a negro man apprehended as a slave should have the privilege of a
-trial by jury, instead of the summary processes provided by the law.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln and I were going to Petersburg in 1850, I think," says Mr.
-Herndon. "The political world was dead: the compromises of 1850 seemed
-to settle the negro's fate. Things were stagnant; and all hope for
-progress in the line of freedom seemed to be crushed out. Lincoln was
-speculating with me about the deadness of things, and the despair which
-arose out of it, and deeply regretting that his human strength and
-power were limited by his nature to rouse and stir up the world. He said
-gloomily, despairingly, sadly, 'How hard, oh! how hard it is to die and
-leave one's country no better than if one had never lived for it! The
-world is dead to hope, deaf to its own death-struggle, made known by a
-universal cry, What is to be done? Is any thing to be done? Who can
-do any thing? and how is it to be done? Did you ever think of these
-things?'"
-
-In 1850 Mr. Lincoln again declined to be a candidate for Congress; and a
-newspaper called "The Tazewell Mirror" persisting in naming him for
-the place, he published a letter, refusing most emphatically to be
-considered a candidate. The concluding sentence alleged that there were
-many men among the Whigs of the district who would be as likely as he to
-bring "the district right side up."
-
-Until the death of his excellent step-mother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, Mr.
-Lincoln never considered himself free for a moment from the obligation
-to look after and care for her family. She had made herself his mother;
-and he regarded her and her children as near relatives,--much nearer
-than any of the Hankses.
-
-The limit of Thomas Lincoln's life was rapidly approaching. Mrs.
-Chapman, his step-daughter, wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect; and so did
-John Johnston. He began to fear that the straitened circumstances of the
-household might make them think twice before they sent for a doctor, or
-procured other comforts for the poor old man, which he needed, perhaps,
-more than drugs. He was too busy to visit the dying man, but sent him
-a kind message, and directed the family to get whatever was wanted upon
-his credit.
-
-Springfield, Jan. 12,1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--On the day before yesterday I received a letter from
-Harriet, written at Greenup. She says she has just returned from your
-house, and that father is very low, and will hardly recover. She also
-says that you have written me two letters, and that, although you do not
-expect me to come now, you wonder that I do not write. I received both
-your letters; and, although I have not answered them, it is not because
-I have forgotten them, or not been interested about them, but because
-it appeared to me I could write nothing which could do any good. You
-already know I desire that neither father nor mother shall be in want of
-any comfort, either in health or sickness, while they live; and I feel
-sure you have not failed to use my name, if necessary, to procure a
-doctor or any thing else for father in his present sickness. My business
-is such that I could hardly leave home now, if it were not, as it is,
-that my own wife is sick a-bed. (It is a case of baby sickness, and, I
-suppose, is not dangerous.) I sincerely hope father may yet recover
-his health; but, at all events, tell him to remember to call upon and
-confide in our great and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away
-from him in any extremity. He notes the fall of a sparrow, and numbers
-the hairs of our heads; and he will not forget the dying man who puts
-his trust in him. Say to him, that, if we could meet now, it is doubtful
-whether it would not be more painful than pleasant; but that, if it be
-his lot to go now, he will soon have a joyous meeting with loved ones
-gone before, and where the rest of us, through the help of God, hope ere
-long to join them.
-
-Write me again when you receive this.
-
-Affectionately,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Before and after the death of Thomas Lincoln, John Johnston and Mr.
-Lincoln had a somewhat spirited correspondence regarding John's present
-necessities and future plans. John was idle, thriftless, penniless, and
-as much disposed to rove as poor old Tom had been in his earliest and
-worst days. This lack of character and enterprise on John's part added
-seriously to Mr. Lincoln's anxieties concerning his step-mother, and
-greatly embarrassed his attempts to provide for her. At length he
-wrote John the following energetic exhortation, coupled with a most
-magnanimous pecuniary offer. It is the letter promised in a previous
-chapter, and makes John an intimate acquaintance of the reader:--
-
-Dear Johnston,--Your request for eighty dollars, I do not think it
-best to comply with now. At the various times when I have helped you a
-little, you have said to me, "We can get along very well now;" but in a
-very short time I find you in the same difficulty again. Now, this can
-only happen by some defect in your conduct. What that defect is, I
-think I know. You are not _lazy_, and still you are an _idler_. I doubt
-whether, since I saw you, you have done a good whole day's work in any
-one day. You do not very much dislike to work, and still you do not work
-much, merely because it does not seem to you that you could get much for
-it. This habit of uselessly wasting time is the whole difficulty; and it
-is vastly important to you, and still more so to your children, that you
-should break the habit. It is more important to them, because they have
-longer to live, and can keep out of an idle habit before they are in it
-easier than they can get out after they are in.
-
-You are now in need of some money; and what I propose is, that you shall
-go to work, "tooth and nail," for somebody who will give you money for
-it. Let father and your boys take charge of things at home, prepare for
-a crop, and make the crop, and you go to work for the best money-wages,
-or in discharge of any debt you owe, that you can get; and, to secure
-you a fair reward for your labor, I now promise you, that, for every
-dollar you will, between this and the first of next May, get for your
-own labor, either in money or as your own indebtedness, I will then give
-you one other dollar. By this, if you hire yourself at ten dollars a
-month, from me you will get ten more, making twenty dollars a month for
-your work. In this I do not mean you shall go off to St. Louis, or the
-lead-mines, or the gold-mines in California; but I mean for you to go at
-it for the best wages you can get close to home, in Cole's County. Now,
-if you will do this, you will be soon out of debt, and, what is better,
-you will have a habit that will keep you from getting in debt again.
-But, if I should now clear you out of debt, next year you would be just
-as deep in as ever. You say you would almost give your place in heaven
-for $70 or $80. Then you value your place in heaven very cheap; for I am
-sure you can, with the offer I make, get the seventy or eighty dollars
-for four or five months' work. You say, if I will furnish you the money,
-you will deed me the land, and, if you don't pay the money back, you
-will deliver possession. Nonsense! If you can't now live with the land,
-how will you then live without it? You have always been kind to me,
-and I do not mean to be unkind to you. On the contrary, if you will but
-follow my advice, you will find it worth more than eighty times eighty
-dollars to you.
-
-Affectionately your brother,
-
-A. Lincoln
-
-Again he wrote:--
-
-Shelbyville, Nov. 4, 1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--When I came into Charleston day before yesterday, I
-learned that you are anxious to sell the land where you live, and move
-to Missouri. I have been thinking of this ever since, and cannot but
-think such a notion is utterly foolish. What can you do in Missouri
-better than here? Is the land any richer? Can you there, any more than
-here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? Will anybody there,
-any more than here, do your work for you? If you intend to go to work,
-there is no better place than right where you are: if you do not intend
-to go to work, you cannot get along anywhere. Squirming and crawling
-about from place to place can do no good. You have raised no crop this
-year; and what you really want is to sell the land, get the money, and
-spend it. Part with the land you have, and, my life upon it, you will
-never after own a spot big enough to bury you in. Half you will get for
-the land you will spend in moving to Missouri, and the other half you
-will eat and drink and wear out, and no foot of land will be bought.
-Now, I feel it is my duty to have no hand in such a piece of foolery.
-I feel that it is so even on your own account, and particularly on
-_mother's_ account. The eastern forty acres I intend to keep for mother
-while she lives: if you _will not cultivate it_, it will rent for enough
-to support her; at least, it will rent for something. Her dower in the
-other two forties she can let you have, and no thanks to me. Now, do not
-misunderstand this letter: I do not write it in any unkindness. I write
-it in order, if possible, to get you to _face_ the truth, which truth
-is, you are destitute because you have idled away all your time. Your
-thousand pretences for not getting along better are all nonsense: they
-deceive nobody but yourself. _Go to work_ is the only cure for your
-case.
-
-A word to mother. Chapman tells me he wants you to go and live with
-him. If I were you, I would try it a while. If you get tired of it (as I
-think you will not), you can return to your own home. Chapman feels
-very kindly to you; and I have no doubt he will make your situation very
-pleasant.
-
-Sincerely your son,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-And again:--
-
-Shelbyville, Nov. 9,1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--When I wrote you before, I had not received your letter.
-I still think as I did; but if the land can be sold so that I get three
-hundred dollars to put to interest for mother, I will not object, if
-she does not. But, before I will make a deed, the money must be had, or
-secured beyond all doubt, at ten per cent.
-
-As to Abram, I do not want him, _on my own account_; but I understand he
-wants to live with me, so that he can go to school, and get a fair start
-in the world, which I very much wish him to have. When I reach home, if
-I can make it convenient to take, I will take him, provided there is no
-mistake between us as to the object and terms of my taking him.
-
-In haste as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-On the 1st of July, 1852, Mr. Lincoln was chosen by a public meeting of
-his fellow-citizens at Springfield to deliver in their hearing a eulogy
-upon the life and character of Henry Clay; and on the 16th of the same
-month he complied with their request. Such addresses are usually called
-orations; but this one scarcely deserved the name. He made no effort to
-be eloquent, and in no part of it was he more than ordinarily animated.
-It is true that he bestowed great praise upon Mr. Clay; but it was
-bestowed in cold phrases and a tame style, wholly unlike the bulk of
-his previous compositions. In truth, Mr. Lincoln was never so devoted a
-follower of Mr. Clay as some of his biographers have represented him. He
-was for another man in 1836, most probably for another in 1840, and very
-ardently for another in 1848. Dr. Holland credits him with a visit to
-Mr. Clay at Ashland, and an interview which effectually cooled his ardor
-in behalf of the brilliant statesman. But, in fact, Mr. Lincoln never
-troubled himself to make such a pilgrimage to see or hear any man,--much
-less Mr. Clay. None of his friends--Judge Davis, Mr. Herndon, Mr. Speed,
-or any one else, so far as we are able to ascertain--ever heard of the
-visit. If it had been made at any time after 1838, it could scarcely
-have been concealed from Mr. Speed; and we are compelled to place it
-along with the multitude of groundless stories which have found currency
-with Mr. Lincoln's biographers.
-
-If the address upon Clay is of any historical value at all, it is
-because it discloses Mr. Lincoln's unreserved agreement with Mr. Clay in
-his opinions concerning slavery and the proper method of extinguishing
-it. They both favored gradual emancipation by the voluntary action of
-the people of the Slave States, and the transportation of the whole
-negro population to Africa as rapidly as they should be freed from
-service to their masters: it was a favorite scheme with Mr. Lincoln
-then, as it was long after he became President of the United States.
-"Compensated" and "voluntary emancipation," on the one hand, and
-"colonization" of the freedmen on the other, were essential parts
-of every "plan" which sprung out of his own individual mind. On this
-occasion, after quoting Mr. Clay, he said, "This suggestion of the
-possible ultimate redemption of the African race and African continent
-was made twenty-five years ago. Every succeeding year has added strength
-to the hope of its realization. May it indeed be realized! Pharaoh's
-country was cursed with plagues, and his hosts were drowned in the Red
-Sea, for striving to retain a captive people who had already served them
-more than four hundred years. May like disasters never befall us! If, as
-the friends of colonization hope, the present and coming generations of
-our countrymen shall by any means succeed in freeing our land from the
-dangerous presence of slavery, and at the same time restoring a captive
-people to their long-lost fatherland, with bright prospects for the
-future, and this, too, so gradually that neither races nor individuals
-shall have suffered by the change, it will indeed be a glorious
-consummation. And if to such a consummation the efforts of Mr. Clay
-shall have contributed, it will be what he most ardently wished; and
-none of his labors will have been more valuable to his country and his
-kind."
-
-During the campaign of 1852, Judge Douglas took the stump for Pierce
-"in twenty-eight States out of the thirty-one." His first speech was
-at Richmond, Va. It was published extensively throughout the Union, and
-especially in Illinois. Mr. Lincoln felt an ardent desire to answer it,
-and, according to his own account, got the "permission" of the "Scott
-Club" of Springfield to make the speech under its auspices. It was a
-very poor effort. If it was distinguished by one quality above another,
-it was by its attempts at humor; and all those attempts were strained
-and affected, as well as very coarse. He displayed a jealous and
-petulant temper from the first sentence to the last, wholly beneath the
-dignity of the occasion and the importance of the topic. Considered as
-a whole, it may be said that none of his public performances was more
-unworthy of its really noble author than this one. The reader has
-doubtless observed in the course of this narrative, as he will in
-the future, that Mr. Douglas's great success in obtaining place and
-distinction was a standing offence to Mr. Lincoln's self-love and
-individual ambition. He was intensely jealous of him, and longed to
-pull him down, or outstrip him in the race for popular favor, which
-they united in considering "the chief end of man." Some of the first
-sentences of this speech before the "Scott Club" betray this feeling
-in a most unmistakable and painful manner. "This speech [that of Mr.
-Douglas at Richmond] has been published with high commendations in at
-least one of the Democratic papers in this State, and I suppose it has
-been and will be in most of the others. When I first saw it and read it,
-I was reminded of old times, _when Judge Douglas was not so much greater
-man than all the rest of us, as he is now_,--of the Harrison campaign
-twelve years ago, when I used to hear and try to answer many of his
-speeches; and believing that the Richmond speech, though marked with the
-same species of 'shirks and quirks' as the old ones, was not marked with
-any greater ability, I was seized with a strange inclination to attempt
-an answer to it; and this inclination it was that prompted me to seek
-the privilege of addressing you on this occasion."
-
-In the progress of his remarks, Mr. Lincoln emphatically indorsed Mr.
-Douglas's great speech at Chicago in 1850, in defence of the compromise
-measures, which Mr. Lincoln pronounced the work of no party, but which,
-"for praise or blame," belonged to Whigs and Democrats alike. The rest
-of the address was devoted to a humorous critique upon Mr. Douglas's
-language in the Richmond speech, to ridicule of the campaign biographies
-of Pierce, to a description of Gens. Shields and Pierce wallowing in the
-ditch in the midst of a battle, and to a most remarkable account of a
-militia muster which might have been seen at Springfield a few years
-previous. Mr. Douglas had expressed great confidence in the sober
-judgment of the people, and at the same time had, rather inconsistently
-as well as indecently, declared that Providence had saved us from one
-military administration by the timely removal of Gen. Taylor. To this
-Mr. Lincoln alluded in his closing paragraph, which is given as a fair
-sample of the whole:--
-
-"Let us stand by our candidate as faithfully as he has always stood by
-our country, and I much doubt if we do not perceive a slight abatement
-in Judge Douglas's confidence in Providence, as well as in the people. I
-suspect that confidence is not more firmly fixed with the judge than
-it was with the old woman whose horse ran away with her in a buggy. She
-said she 'trusted in Providence till the britchin' broke, and then she
-didn't know what on airth to do.' The chance is, the judge will see the
-'britchin' broke;' and then he can at his leisure bewail the fate of
-Locofocoism as the victim of misplaced confidence."
-
-On the 4th of January, 1854, Mr. Douglas, Chairman of the Committee
-on Territories, of the Senate of the United States, reported a bill
-to establish a territorial government in Nebraska. This bill contained
-nothing in relation to the Missouri Compromise, which still remained
-upon the statute-book, although the principle on which it was based had
-been violated in the Compromise legislation of 1850. A Whig Senator from
-Kentucky gave notice, that, when the Committee's bill came before the
-Senate, he would move an amendment repealing the Missouri Compromise.
-With this admonition in mind, the Committee instructed Mr. Douglas to
-report a substitute, which he did on the 23d of the same month. The
-substitute made two Territories out of Nebraska, and called one of them
-Kansas. It annulled the Missouri Compromise, forbade its application to
-Kansas, Nebraska, or any other territory, and, as amended and finally
-passed, fixed the following rules:... "It being the true intent and
-meaning of this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or
-State, nor to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
-perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their
-own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States." Mr.
-Douglas had long since denounced his imprecations upon "the ruthless
-hand" that should disturb that ancient compact of peace between the
-sections; and now he put forth his own ingenious hand to do the deed,
-and to take the curse, in both of which he was eminently successful. Not
-that the Missouri Act may not have been repugnant to the Constitution,
-for no court had ever passed upon it; but it was enacted for a holy
-purpose, was venerable in age, was consecrated in the hearts of the
-people by the unsurpassed eloquence of the patriots of a previous
-generation, and having the authority of law, of reason, and of covenant,
-it had till then preserved the Union, as its authors designed it should;
-and, being in truth a sacred thing, it was not a proper subject for the
-"ruthless" interference of mere politicians, like those who now devoted
-it to destruction. If, upon a regularly heard and decided issue, the
-Supreme Court should declare it unconstitutional, the recision of the
-compact could be attributed to no party,--neither to slavery nor to
-antislavery,--and the peace of the country might still subsist. But
-its repeal by the party that did it--a coalition of Southern Whigs and
-Democrats with Northern Democrats--was evidence of a design to carry
-slavery into the region north of 36° 30'; or the legislation was without
-a purpose at all. It was the first aggression of the South; but be
-it remembered in common justice, that she was tempted to it by the
-treacherous proffers of a restless but powerful Northern leader, who
-asked no recompense but her electoral votes. In due time he opened
-her eyes to the nature of the fraud; and, if he carried through the
-Kansas-Nebraska Act to catch the votes of the South in 1856, it cost him
-no inconvenience to give it a false and startling construction to catch
-the votes of the North in 1860. In the repeal of the Compromise, the
-Northern Democrats submitted with reluctance to the dictation of Douglas
-and the South. It was the great error of the party,--the one disastrous
-error of all its history. The party succeeded in 1856 only by the
-nomination of Mr. Buchanan, who was out of the country when the
-Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, and who was known to have opposed it.
-But the questions which grew out of it, the false and disingenuous
-construction of the act by its author, the slavery agitations in Kansas
-and throughout the country, disrupted the party at Charleston, and made
-possible Mr. Lincoln's election by a minority of the votes cast. And to
-the Whig party, whose Senators and Representatives from the South voted
-for the Douglas Bill in a body, the renewal of the slavery agitation,
-invited and insured by their action, was the signal of actual
-dissolution.
-
-Up to this date, Mr. Lincoln's views of slavery, and how they were
-formed, are as well known to the reader as they can be made known from
-the materials left behind for a history of them. It is clear that his
-_feelings_ on the subject were inspired by individual cases of apparent
-hardship which had come under his observation. John Hanks, on the last
-trip to New Orleans, was struck by Lincoln's peculiarly active sympathy
-for the servile race, and insists, that, upon sight of their wrongs,
-"the iron entered his heart." In a letter to Mr. Speed, which will
-shortly be presented, Mr. Lincoln confesses to a similar experience
-in 1841, and speaks with great bitterness of the pain which the actual
-presence of chained and manacled slaves had given him. Indeed, Mr.
-Lincoln was not an ardent sympathizer with sufferings of any sort,
-which he did not witness with the eye of flesh. His compassion might be
-stirred deeply by an object present, but never by an object absent and
-unseen. In the former case he would most likely extend relief, with
-little inquiry into the merits of the case, because, as he expressed it
-himself, it "took a pain out of his own heart;" and he devoutly believed
-that every such act of charity or mercy sprung from motives purely
-selfish. None of his public acts, either before or after he became
-President, exhibits any special tenderness for the African race, or
-any extraordinary commiseration of their lot. On the contrary, he
-invariably, in words and deeds, postponed the interests of the blacks to
-the interests of the whites, and expressly subordinated the one to the
-other. When he was compelled, by what he deemed an overruling necessity,
-founded on both military and political considerations, to declare the
-freedom of the public enemy's slaves, he did so with avowed reluctance,
-and took pains to have it understood that his resolution was in no wise
-affected by sentiment. He never at any time favored the admission of
-negroes into the body of electors, in his own State or in the States of
-the South. He claimed that those who were incidentally liberated by the
-Federal arms were poor-spirited, lazy, and slothful; that they could be
-made soldiers only by force, and willing laborers not at all; that they
-seemed to have no interest in the cause of their own race, but were as
-docile in the service of the Rebellion as the mules that ploughed the
-fields or drew the baggage-trains; and, as a people, were useful only to
-those who were at the same time their masters and the foes of those who
-sought their good. With such views honestly formed, it is no wonder that
-he longed to see them transported to Hayti, Central America, Africa, or
-anywhere, so that they might in no event, and in no way, participate in
-the government of his country. Accordingly, he was, from the beginning,
-as earnest a colonizationist as Mr. Clay, and, even during his
-Presidency, zealously and persistently devised schemes for the
-deportation of the negroes, which the latter deemed cruel and atrocious
-in the extreme. He believed, with his rival, that this was purely a
-"white man's government;" but he would have been perfectly willing to
-share its blessings with the black man, had he not been very certain
-that the blessings would disappear when divided with such a partner. He
-was no Abolitionist in the popular sense; did not want to break over the
-safeguards of the Constitution to interfere with slavery where it had
-a lawful existence; but, wherever his power rightfully extended, he was
-anxious that the negro should be protected, just as women and
-children and unnaturalized men are protected, in life, limb, property,
-reputation, and every thing that nature or law makes sacred. But this
-was all: he had no notion of extending to the negro the _privilege of
-governing_ him and other white men, by making him an elector. That was a
-political trust, an office to be exercised only by the superior race.
-
-It was therefore as a white man, and in the interests of white men,
-that he threw himself into the struggle to keep the blacks out of the
-Territories. He did not want them there either as slaves or freemen;
-but he wanted them less as slaves than as freemen. He perceived clearly
-enough the motives of the South in repealing the Missouri Compromise. It
-did, in fact, arouse him "like a fire-bell in the night." He felt that a
-great conflict impended; and, although he had as yet no idea that it was
-an "irrepressible conflict between opposing and enduring forces," which
-must end in making all free or all slave, he thought it was serious
-enough to demand his entire mind and heart; and he freely gave them
-both.
-
-Mr. Gillespie gives the substance of a conversation with him, which,
-judging from the context, must have taken place about this time.
-Prefacing with the remark that the slavery question was the only one "on
-which he (Mr. Lincoln) would become excited," he says,--
-
-"I recollect meeting with him once at Shelbyville, when he remarked that
-something must be done, or slavery would overrun the whole country. He
-said there were about six hundred thousand non-slaveholding whites
-in Kentucky to about thirty-three thousand slaveholders; that, in the
-convention then recently held, it was expected that the delegates would
-represent these classes about in proportion to their respective
-numbers; but, when the convention assembled, there was not a single
-representative of the non-slaveholding class: every one was in the
-interest of the slaveholders; 'and,' said he, 'the thing is spreading
-like wildfire over the country. In a few years we will be ready to
-accept the institution in Illinois, and the whole country will adopt
-it.' I asked him to what he attributed the change that was going on in
-public opinion. He said he had put that question to a Kentuckian shortly
-before, who answered by saying, 'You might have any amount of land,
-money in your pocket, or bank-stock, and, while travelling around,
-nobody would be any wiser; but, if you had a darkey trudging at your
-heels, everybody would see him, and know that you owned a slave.' 'It is
-the most glittering, ostentatious, and displaying property in the world;
-and now,' says he, 'if a young man goes courting, the only inquiry
-is, how many negroes he or she owns. The love for slave property was
-swallowing up every other mercenary possession. Its ownership betokened,
-not only the possession of wealth, but indicated the gentleman of
-leisure, who was above and scorned labor.' These things Mr. Lincoln
-regarded as highly seductive to the thoughtless and giddy-headed young
-men who looked upon work as vulgar and ungentlemanly. Mr. Lincoln was
-really excited, and said, with great earnestness, that this spirit
-ought to be met, and, if possible, checked; that slavery was a great
-and crying injustice, an enormous national crime, and that we could not
-expect to escape punishment for it. I asked him how he would proceed in
-his efforts to check the spread of slavery. _He confessed he did not
-see his way clearly. I think he made up his mind from that time that he
-would oppose slavery actively_. I know that Mr. Lincoln always contended
-that no man had any right other than mere brute force gave him to a
-slave. He used to say that it was singular that the courts would hold
-that a man never lost his right to his property that had been stolen
-from him, but that he instantly lost his right to himself if he was
-stolen. Mr. Lincoln always contended that the cheapest way of getting
-rid of slavery was for the nation to buy the slaves, and set them free."
-
-If the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill awakened Lincoln from his
-dream of security regarding the slavery question, which he hoped had
-been put to rest by the compromises of 1820 and 1850, it did the
-same with all likeminded people in the North. From that moment
-the Abolitionists, on the one hand, discerned a hope, not only of
-restricting slavery, but of ultimate emancipation; and the Southern
-Disunionists, on the other, who had lately met with numerous and signal
-defeats in their own section, perceived the means of inflaming
-the popular heart to the point of disunion. A series of agitations
-immediately began,--incessant, acrimonious, and in Kansas murderous and
-bloody,--which destroyed the Whig party at once, and continued until
-they severed the Democratic party at Charleston. All other issues were
-as chaff to this,--slavery or no slavery in the Territories,--while the
-discussion ranged far back of this practical question, and involved the
-much broader one, whether slavery possessed inherent rights under
-the Constitution. The Whigs South having voted for the repeal of the
-compromise, and the Whigs North against it, that party was practically
-no more. Some of its members went into the Know-Nothing lodges; some
-enlisted under the Abolition flag, and others drifted about and together
-until they formed themselves into a new organization, which they called
-Republican. It was a disbanded army; and, released from the authority of
-discipline and party tradition, a great part of the members engaged for
-a while in political operations of a very disreputable character. But
-the better class, having kept themselves unspotted from the pollution
-of Know-Nothingism, gradually but speedily formed the Republican party,
-which in due time drew into its mighty ranks nearly all the elements of
-opposition to the Democracy. Such a Whig was Mr. Lincoln, who lost no
-time in taking his ground. In Illinois the new party was not (in 1854)
-either Abolitionist, Republican, Know-Nothing, Whig, or Democratic, for
-it was composed of odds and ends of all; but simply the Anti-Nebraska
-party, of which Mr. Lincoln soon became the acknowledged leader.
-
-Returning from Washington, Mr. Douglas attempted to speak at Chicago;
-but he was not heard, and, being hissed and hooted by the populace of
-the city, betook himself to more complaisant audiences in the country.
-Early in October, the State Fair being in progress there, he spoke at
-Springfield. His speech was ingenious, and, on the whole, able: but he
-was on the defensive; and the consciousness of the fact, both on his own
-part and that of the audience, made him seem weaker than he really was.
-By common consent the Anti-Nebraska men put up Mr. Lincoln to reply; and
-he did reply with such power as he had never exhibited before. He was
-not the Lincoln who had spoken that tame address over Clay in 1852,
-or he who had deformed his speech before the "Scott Club" with petty
-jealousies and gross vulgarisms, but a new and greater Lincoln, the like
-of whom no one in that vast multitude had ever heard before. He felt
-that he was addressing the people on a living and vital question, not
-merely for the sake of speaking, but to produce conviction, and achieve
-a great practical result. How he succeeded in his object may be gathered
-from the following extracts from a leading editorial in "The Springfield
-Journal," written by Mr. Herndon:--
-
-"This Anti-Nebraska speech of Mr. Lincoln was the profoundest, in our
-opinion, that he has made in his whole life. He felt upon his soul the
-truths burn which he uttered, and all present felt that he was true to
-his own soul. His feelings once or twice swelled within, and came near
-stifling utterance.... He quivered with emotion. The whole house was as
-still as death.
-
-"He attacked the Nebraska Bill with unusual warmth and energy; and all
-felt that a man of strength was its enemy, and that he intended to blast
-it if he could by strong and manly efforts. He was most successful, and
-the house approved the glorious triumph of truth by loud and continued
-huzzas. Women waved their white handkerchiefs in token of woman's silent
-but heartfelt assent. Douglas felt the sting: the animal within was
-roused, because he frequently interrupted Mr. Lincoln. His friends felt
-that he was crushed by Lincoln's powerful argument, manly logic, and
-illustrations from nature around us. The Nebraska Bill was shivered,
-and, like a tree of the forest, was torn and rent asunder by hot bolts
-of truth.... Mr. Lincoln exhibited Douglas in all the attitudes he could
-be placed in a friendly debate. He exhibited the bill in all its aspects
-to show its humbuggery and falsehood; and, when thus torn to rags, cut
-into slips, held up to the gaze of the vast crowd, a kind of scorn and
-mockery was visible upon the face of the crowd and upon the lips of the
-most eloquent speaker.... At the conclusion of this speech, every man,
-woman, and child felt that it was unanswerable.... He took the heart
-captive, and broke like a sun over the understanding."
-
-Mr. Douglas rose to reply. He was excited, angry, imperious in his tone
-and manner, and his voice loud and shrill. Shaking his forefinger at the
-Democratic malcontents with furious energy, and declaiming rather than
-debating, he occupied to little purpose the brief interval remaining
-until the adjournment for supper. Then, promising to resume his address
-in the evening, he went his way; and that audience "saw him no more."
-Evening came, but not the orator. Many fine speeches were made during
-the continuance of that fair upon the one absorbing topic,--speeches by
-the ablest men in Illinois,--Judge Trumbull, Judge Breese, Col. Taylor
-(Democratic recusants), and Stephen A. Douglas and John Calhoun (then
-Surveyor-General of Nebraska). But it is no shame to any one of these,
-that their really impressive speeches were but slightly appreciated,
-nor long remembered, beside Mr. Lincoln's splendid and enduring
-performance,--enduring in the memory of his auditors, although preserved
-upon no written or printed page.
-
-Among those whom the State Fair brought to Springfield for political
-purposes, were some who were neither Whigs, Democrats, Know-Nothings,
-nor yet mere Anti-Nebraska men: there were the restless leaders of the
-then insignificant Abolition faction. Chief among them was Owen Lovejoy;
-and second to him, if second to any, was William H. Herndon. But the
-position of this latter gentleman was one of singular embarrassment.
-According to himself, he was an Abolitionist "sometime before he was
-born," and hitherto he had made his "calling and election sure" by
-every word and act of a life devoted to political philanthropy and
-disinterested political labors. While the two great national parties
-divided the suffrages of the people, North and South, every thing in his
-eyes was "dead." He detested the bargains by which those parties were
-in the habit of composing sectional troubles, and sacrificing the
-"principle of freedom." When the Whig party "paid its breath to time,"
-he looked upon its last agonies as but another instance of divine
-retribution. He had no patience with time-servers, and regarded with
-indignant contempt the "policy" which would postpone the natural rights
-of an enslaved race to the success of parties and politicians. He stood
-by at the sacrifice of the Whig party in Illinois with the spirit of
-Paul when he "held the clothes of them that stoned Stephen." He believed
-it was for the best, and hoped to see a new party rise in its place,
-great in the fervor of its faith, and animated by the spirit of
-Wilberforce, Garrison, and the Lovejoys. He was a fierce zealot, and
-gloried proudly in his title of "fanatic;" for it was his conviction
-that fanatics were at all times the salt of the earth, with power to
-save it from the blight that follows the wickedness of men. He believed
-in a God, but it was the God of nature,--the God of Socrates and Plato,
-as well as the God of Jacob. He believed in a Bible, but it was the open
-scroll of the universe; and in a religion clear and well defined, but it
-was a religion that scorned what he deemed the narrow slavery of verbal
-inspiration. Hot-blooded, impulsive, brave morally and physically,
-careless of consequences when moved by a sense of individual duty, he
-was the very man to receive into his inmost heart the precepts of Mr.
-Seward's "higher law." If he had pledged faith to slavery, no peril of
-life or body could have induced him to violate it. But he held himself
-no party to the compromises of the Constitution, nor to any law which
-recognized the justice of human bondage; and he was therefore free to
-act as his God and nature prompted.
-
-Now, Mr. Herndon had determined to make an Abolitionist out of Mr.
-Lincoln when the proper time should arrive; and that time would be only
-when Mr. Lincoln could change front and "come out" without detriment to
-his personal aspirations. For, although Mr. Herndon was a zealot in the
-cause, he loved his partner too dearly to wish him to espouse it while
-it was unpopular and politically dangerous to belong to it. "I cared
-nothing for the ruin of myself," said he; "but I did not wish to see Mr.
-Lincoln sacrificed." He looked forward to a better day, and, in the
-mean time, was quite willing that Mr. Lincoln should be no more than
-a nominal Whig, or a strong Anti-Nebraska man; being quite sure, that,
-when the auspicious moment arrived, he would be able to present him to
-his brethren as a convert over whom there would surely be great joy.
-Still, there was a bare chance that he might lose him. Mr. Lincoln was
-beset by warm friends and by old coadjutors, and besought to pause in
-his antislavery course while there was yet time. Among these there was
-none more earnest or persuasive than John T. Stuart, who was but the
-type of a class. Tempted on the one side to be a Know-Nothing, and on
-the other side to be an Abolitionist, Mr. Lincoln said, as if in some
-doubt of his real position, "I _think_ I am still a Whig." But Mr.
-Herndon was more than a match for the full array against him. An earnest
-man, instant in season and out of season, he spoke with the eloquence
-of apparent truth and of real personal love. Moreover, Mr. Lincoln's
-preconceptions inclined him to the way in which Mr. Herndon desired him
-to walk; and it is not surprising that in time he was, not only almost,
-but altogether, persuaded by a friend and partner, whose opportunities
-to reach and convince his wavering mind were, daily and countless. "From
-1854 to 1860," says Mr. Herndon, "I kept putting in Lincoln's hands the
-speeches and sermons of Theodore Parker, the speeches of Phillips and
-Beecher. I took 'The Anti-slavery Standard' for years before 1856, 'The
-Chicago Tribune,' and 'The New York Tribune;' kept them in my office,
-kept them purposely on my table, and would read to Lincoln good, sharp,
-and solid things well put. Lincoln was a natural antislavery man, as I
-think, and yet he needed watching,--needed hope, faith, energy; and I
-think I warmed him. Lincoln and I were just the opposite one of
-another. He was cautious and practical; I was spontaneous, ideal, and
-speculative. He arrived at truths by reflection; I, by intuition; he,
-by reason; I, by my soul. He calculated; I went to toil asking no
-questions, never doubting. Lincoln had great faith in my intuitions, and
-I had great faith in his reason."
-
-Of course such a man as we have described Mr. Herndon to be could have
-nothing but loathing and disgust for the secret oaths, the midnight
-lurking, and the proscriptive spirit of Know-Nothingism. "A number of
-gentlemen from Chicago," says he, "among them the editor of 'The Star of
-the West,' an Abolitionist paper published in Chicago, waited on me
-in my office, and asked my advice as to the policy of going into
-Know-Nothing Lodges, and ruling them for freedom. I opposed it as being
-wrong in principle, as well as a fraud on the lodges, and wished to
-fight it out in open daylight. Lincoln was opposed to Know-Nothingism,
-but did not say much in 1854 or 1855 (did afterwards). I told Lincoln
-what was said, and argued the question with him often, insisting that,
-as we were advocating _freedom for the slave in tendency_ under the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill, it was radically wrong to enslave the religious
-ideas and faith of men. The gentlemen who waited on me as before stated
-asked me if I thought that Mr. Lincoln could be trusted for freedom.
-I said to them, 'Can you trust yourselves? If you can, you can trust
-Lincoln forever.'"
-
-[Illustration: John T. Stuart 392]
-
-With this explanation of the political views of Mr. Herndon, and
-his personal relations to Mr. Lincoln, the reader will more easily
-understand what follows.
-
-"This State Fair," continues Mr. Herndon, "called thousands to the city.
-We Abolitionists all assembled here, taking advantage of the fair to
-organize and disseminate our ideas. As soon as Lincoln had finished his
-speech, Lovejoy, who had been in the hall, rushed up to the stand, and
-notified the crowd that there would be a meeting there in the evening:
-subject, _Freedom_. I had been with the Abolitionists that day, and knew
-their intentions: namely, to force Lincoln with our organization, and
-to take broader and deeper and more radical views and ideas than in his
-speech, which was simply _Historic Kansas_.... He (Lincoln) had not
-then announced himself for freedom, only discussed the inexpediency
-of repealing the Missouri Compromise Line. The Abolitionists that day
-determined to make Lincoln take a stand. I determined he should _not at
-that time_, because the time had not yet come when Lincoln should show
-his hand. When Lovejoy announced the Abolition gathering in the evening,
-I rushed to Lincoln, and said, 'Lincoln, go home; take Bob and the
-buggy, and leave the county: go quickly, go right off, and never mind
-the order of your going.' Lincoln took a hint, got his horse and buggy,
-and did leave quickly, not noting the order of his going. He staid away
-till all conventions and fairs were over."
-
-But the speech against the repeal of the Compromise signally impressed
-all parties opposed to Mr. Douglas's late legislation,--Whigs,
-Abolitionists, and Democratic Free-soilers,--who agreed with perfect
-unanimity, that Mr. Lincoln should be pitted against Mr. Douglas
-wherever circumstances admitted of their meeting. As one of the
-evidences of this sentiment, Mr. William Butler drew up a paper
-addressed to Mr. Lincoln, requesting and "urging him to follow Douglas
-up until the election." It was signed by Mr. Butler, William Jayne,
-P. P. Eads, John Cassady, B. F. Irwin, and many others. Accordingly,
-Lincoln "followed" Douglas to Peoria, where the latter had an
-appointment, and again replied to him, in much the same spirit, and with
-the same arguments, as before. The speech was really a great one, almost
-perfectly adapted to produce conviction upon a doubting mind. It ought
-to be carefully read by every one who desires to know Mr. Lincoln's
-power as a debater, after his intellect was matured and ripened by years
-of hard experience. On the general subject of slavery and negroes in the
-Union, he spoke as follows:--
-
-"Before proceeding, let me say, I think I have no prejudice against the
-Southern people: they are just what we would be in their situation. If
-slavery did not now exist among them, they would not introduce it: if
-it did now exist amongst us, we should not instantly give it up. This I
-believe of the masses North and South. Doubtless there are individuals
-on both sides who would not hold slaves under any circumstances, and
-others would gladly introduce slavery anew if it were out of existence.
-We know that some Southern men do free their slaves, go North, and
-become tip-top Abolitionists; while some Northern men go South, and
-become cruel slave-masters.
-
-"When Southern people tell us they are no more responsible for the
-origin of slavery than we, I acknowledge the fact. When it is said that
-the institution exists, and that it is very difficult to get rid of it
-in any satisfactory way, I can understand and appreciate the saying. _I
-surely will not blame them for not doing what I should not know how to
-do myself. If all earthly power were given me, I should not know what
-to do as to the existing institution_. My first impulse would be to free
-all the existing slaves, and send them to Liberia,--to their own native
-land; but a moment's reflection would convince me that whatever of high
-hope (as I think there is) there may be in this, in the long run, its
-sudden execution is impossible. If they were all landed there in a day,
-they would all perish in the next ten days; and there are not surplus
-shipping and surplus money enough in the world to carry them there in
-many times ten days. What then? Free them all, and keep them among us
-as underlings? Is it quite certain that this betters their condition? _I
-think I would not hold_ one in slavery at any rate, yet the point is not
-clear enough to me to denounce people upon. What next? Free them, and
-make them politically and socially our equals? My own feelings will not
-admit of this; and, if mine would, we all know that those of the great
-mass of white people would not. Whether this feeling accords with
-justice and sound judgment is not the sole question, if, indeed, it is
-any part of it. A universal feeling, whether well or ill founded, cannot
-be safely disregarded. _We cannot, then, make them equals_. It does seem
-to me that systems of gradual emancipation might be adopted; but for
-their tardiness in this I will not undertake to judge our brethren
-of the South. When they remind us of their constitutional rights, I
-acknowledge them, not grudgingly, but fully and fairly; _and I would
-give them any legislation for the reclaiming of their fugitives which
-should not in its stringency be more likely to carry a free man into
-slavery than our ordinary criminal laws are to hang an innocent one_.
-
-"But all this, to my judgment, furnishes no more excuse for permitting
-slavery to go into our own free territory than it would for reviving the
-African slave-trade by law. The law which forbids the bringing of slaves
-_from_ Africa, and that which has so long forbidden the taking them _to_
-Nebraska, can hardly be distinguished on any moral principle; and the
-repeal of the former could find quite as plausible excuses as that of
-the latter.
-
-"But Nebraska is urged as a great Union-saving measure. Well, I, too,
-go for saving the Union. Much as I hate slavery, I would consent to the
-extension of it, rather than see the Union dissolved, just as I would
-consent to any great evil to avoid a greater one. But, when I go to
-Union-saving, I must believe, at least, that the means I employ have
-adaptation to the end. To my mind, Nebraska has no such adaptation. 'It
-hath no relish of salvation in it.' It is an aggravation, rather, of the
-only one thing which ever endangers the Union. When it came upon us, all
-was peace and quiet. The nation was looking to the forming of new bonds
-of Union, and a long course of peace and prosperity seemed to lie before
-us. In the whole range of possibility, there scarcely appears to me to
-have been any thing out of which the slavery agitation could have been
-revived, except the project of repealing the Missouri Compromise. Every
-inch of territory we owned already had a definite settlement of the
-slavery question, and by which all parties were pledged to abide.
-Indeed, there was no uninhabited country on the continent which we could
-acquire, if we except some extreme Northern regions, which are wholly
-out of the question. In this state of the case, the Genius of Discord
-himself could scarcely have invented a way of getting us by the ears,
-but by turning back and destroying the peace measures of the past.
-
-"The structure, too, of the Nebraska Bill is very peculiar. The people
-are to decide the question of slavery for themselves; but _when_
-they are to decide, or _how_ they are to decide, or whether, when the
-question is once decided, it is to remain so, or is to be subject to an
-indefinite succession of new trials, the law does not say. Is it to be
-decided by the first dozen settlers who arrive there, or is it to await
-the arrival of a hundred? Is it to be decided by a vote of the people,
-or a vote of the Legislature, or, indeed, on a vote of any sort? To
-these questions the law gives no answer. There is a mystery about this;
-for, when a member proposed to give the Legislature express authority
-to exclude slavery, it was hooted down by the friends of the bill.
-This fact is worth remembering. Some Yankees in the East are sending
-emigrants to Nebraska to exclude slavery from it; and, so far as I can
-judge, they expect the question to be decided by voting in some way
-or other. But the Missourians are awake too. They are within a
-stone's-throw of the contested ground. They hold meetings and pass
-resolutions, in which not the slightest allusion to voting is made. They
-resolve that slavery already exists in the Territory; that more shall go
-there; and that they, remaining in Missouri, will protect it, and
-that Abolitionists shall be hung or driven away. Through all this,
-bowie-knives and six-shooters are seen plainly enough, but never a
-glimpse of the ballot-box. And really, what is the result of this? Each
-party within having numerous and determined backers without, is it not
-probable that the contest will come to blows and bloodshed? Could there
-be a more apt invention to bring about a collision and violence on
-the slavery question than this Nebraska project is? I do not charge or
-believe that such was intended by Congress; but if they had literally
-formed a ring, and placed champions within it to fight out the
-controversy, the fight could be no more likely to come off than it is.
-And, if this fight should begin, is it likely to take a very peaceful,
-Union-saving turn? Will not the first drop of blood so shed be the real
-knell of the Union?"
-
-No one in Mr. Lincoln's audience appreciated the force of this speech
-more justly than did Mr. Douglas himself. He invited the dangerous
-orator to a conference, and frankly proposed a truce. What took place
-between them was explicitly set forth by Mr. Lincoln to a little knot
-of his friends, in the office of Lincoln & Herndon, about two days after
-the election. We quote the statement of B. F. Irwin, explicitly
-indorsed by P. L. Harrison and Isaac Cogdale, all of whom are already
-indifferently well known to the reader. "W. H. Herndon, myself, P. L.
-Harrison, and Isaac Cogdale were present. What Lincoln said was about
-this: that the day after the Peoria debate in 1854, Douglas came to
-him (Lincoln), and flattered him that he (Lincoln) understood the
-Territorial question from the organization of the government better than
-all the opposition in the Senate of the United States; and he did not
-see that he could make any thing by debating it with him; and then
-reminded him (Lincoln) of the trouble they had given him, and remarked
-that Lincoln had given him more trouble than all the opposition in the
-Senate combined; and followed up with the proposition, that he would
-go home, and speak no more during the campaign, if Lincoln would do
-the same: to which proposition Lincoln acceded." This, according to
-Mr. Irwin's view of the thing, was running Douglas "into his hole," and
-making "him holler, Enough."
-
-Handbills and other advertisements announced that Judge Douglas would
-address the people of Lacon the day following the Peoria encounter; and
-the Lacon Anti-Nebraska people sent a committee to Peoria to secure Mr.
-Lincoln for a speech in reply. He readily agreed to go, and on the way
-said not a word of the late agreement to the gentleman who had him
-in charge. Judge Douglas observed the same discreet silence among
-his friends. Whether they had both agreed to go to Lacon before this
-agreement was made, or had mutually contrived this clever mode of
-deception, cannot now be determined. But, when they arrived at Lacon,
-Mr. Douglas said he was too hoarse to speak, although, "a large portion
-of the people of the county assembled to hear him." Mr. Lincoln, with
-unheard-of magnanimity, "informed his friends that he would not like to
-take advantage of the judge's indisposition, and would not address the
-people." His friends could not see the affair in the same light, and
-"pressed him for a speech;" but he persistently and unaccountably
-"refused."
-
-Of course, Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas met no more during the campaign.
-Mr. Douglas did speak at least once more (at Princeton), but Mr. Lincoln
-scrupulously observed the terms of the agreement. He came home, wrote
-out his Peoria speech, and published it in seven consecutive issues of
-"The Illinois Daily Journal;" but he never spoke nor thought of speaking
-again. When his friends insisted upon having a reason for this most
-unexpected conduct, he gave the answer already quoted from Mr. Irwin.
-
-The election took place on the 7th of November. During his absence,
-Mr. Lincoln had been announced as a candidate for the House of
-Representatives of the Illinois Legislature. William Jayne took the
-responsibility of making him a candidate. Mrs. Lincoln, however, "saw
-Francis, the editor, and had Lincoln's name taken out." When Mr. Lincoln
-returned, Jayne (Mrs. Lincoln's old friend "Bill") went to see him. "I
-went to see him," says Jayne, "in order to get his consent to run.
-This was at his house. He was then the saddest man I ever saw,--the
-gloomiest. He walked up and down the floor, almost crying; and to all my
-persuasions to let his name stand in the paper, he said, 'No, I can't.
-You don't know all. I say you don't begin to know one-half, and that's
-enough.' I did, however, go and have his name re-instated; and there
-it stood. He and Logan were elected by about six hundred majority."
-Mr. Jayne had caused originally both Judge Logan and Mr. Lincoln to be
-announced, and they were both elected. But, after all, Mrs. Lincoln
-was right, and Jayne and Lincoln were both wrong. Mr. Lincoln was a
-well-known candidate for the United States Senate, in the place of Mr.
-Shields, the incumbent, who had voted for the Kansas-Nebraska Bill; and,
-when the Legislature met and showed a majority of Anti-Nebraska men,
-he thought it a necessary preliminary of his candidacy that he should
-resign his seat in the House. He did so, and Mr. Jayne makes the
-following acknowledgment: "Mr. Lincoln resigned his seat, finding
-out that the Republicans, the Anti-Nebraska men, had carried the
-Legislature. A. M. Broadwell ran as a Whig Anti-Nebraska man, and was
-badly beaten. The people of Sangamon County was down on Lincoln,--hated
-him." None can doubt that even the shame of taking a woman's advice
-might have been preferable to this!
-
-But Mr. Lincoln "had set his heart on going to the United States
-Senate." Counting in the Free-soil Democrats, who had revolted against
-Mr. Douglas's leadership, and been largely supported the Whigs in the
-late elections, there was now on joint ballot a clear Anti-Nebraska
-majority of two. A Senator was to be chosen to succeed Mr. Shields; and
-Mr. Lincoln had a right to expect the place. He had fairly earned the
-distinction, and nobody in the old Whig party was disposed to withhold
-it. But a few Abolitionists doubted his fidelity to their extreme
-views; and five Anti-Nebraska Senators and Representatives, who had been
-elected as Democrats, preferred to vote for a Senator with antecedents
-like their own. The latter selected Judge Trumbull as their candidate,
-and clung to him manfully through the whole struggle. They were five
-only in number; but in the situation of affairs then existing they
-were the sovereign five. They were men of conceded integrity, of good
-abilities in debate, and extraordinary political sagacity. Their
-names ought to be known to posterity, for their unfriendliness at this
-juncture saved Mr. Lincoln to the Republicans of Illinois, to be brought
-forward at the critical moment as a fresh and original candidate for the
-Presidency. They were Judd of Cook County, Palmer of Macoupin, Cook of
-La Salle, Baker and Allen of Madison. They called themselves Democrats,
-and, with the modesty peculiar to bolters, claimed to be the only
-"Simon-pure." "They could not act with the Democrats from principle,
-and would not act with the Whigs from policy;" but, holding off from the
-caucuses of both parties, they demanded that all Anti-Nebraska should
-come to them, or sacrifice the most important fruits of their late
-victory at the polls. But these were not the only enemies Mr. Lincoln
-could count in the body of his party. The Abolitionists suspected him,
-and were slow to come to his support. Judge Davis went to Springfield,
-and thinks he "got some" of this class "to go for" him; but it is
-probable they were "got" in another way. Mr. Lovejoy was a member, and
-required, as the condition of his support and that of his followers,
-that Mr. Lincoln should pledge himself to favor the exclusion of slavery
-from _all_ the Territories of the United States. This was a long step
-in advance of any that Mr. Lincoln had previously taken. He was, as
-a matter of course, opposed to the introduction of slavery into the
-Territories north of the line of 36° 30'; but he had, up to this time,
-regarded all south of that as being honestly open to slavery. The
-villany of obliterating that line, and the necessity of its immediate
-restoration,--in short, the perfect sanctity of the Missouri
-settlement,--had formed the burden of all his speeches in-the preceding
-canvass. But these opinions by no means suited the Abolitionists, and
-they required him to change them forthwith. He thought it would be
-wise to do so, considering the peculiar circumstances of his case; but,
-before committing himself finally, he sought an understanding with Judge
-Logan. He told the judge what he was disposed to do, and said he would
-act upon the inclination, if the judge would not regard it as "treading
-upon his toes." The judge said he was opposed to the doctrine proposed;
-but, for the sake of the cause in hand, he would cheerfully risk his
-"toes." And so the Abolitionists were accommodated: Mr. Lincoln quietly
-made the pledge, and they voted for him.
-
-On the eighth day of February, 1855, the two Houses met in convention to
-choose a Senator. On the first ballot, Mr. Shields had forty-one votes,
-and three Democratic votes were scattered. Mr. Lincoln had forty-five,
-Mr. Trumbull five, and Mr. Koerner two. On the seventh ballot, the
-Democrats left Shields, and, with two exceptions, voted for Gov.
-Matte-son. In addition to the party strength, Matteson received also the
-votes of two of the anti-Nebraska Democrats. That stout little knot, it
-was apparent, was now breaking up. For many reasons the Whigs detested
-Matteson most heartily, and dreaded nothing so much as his success. But
-of that there now appeared to be great danger; for, unless the Whigs
-abandoned Lincoln and went for Trumbull, the five Anti-Nebraska men
-would unite on Matteson, and elect him. Mr. Gillespie went to Lincoln
-for advice. "He said unhesitatingly, 'You ought to drop me, and go for
-Trumbull: that is the only way you can defeat Matteson.' Judge Logan
-came up about that time, and insisted on running Lincoln still; but the
-latter said, 'If you do, you will lose both Trumbull and myself; and I
-think the cause, in this case, is to be preferred to men.' We adopted
-his suggestion, and turned upon Trumbull, and elected him, although it
-grieved us to the heart to give up Mr. Lincoln. This, I think, shows
-that Mr. Lincoln was capable of sinking himself for the cause in which
-he was engaged." It was with great bitterness of spirit that the Whigs
-accepted this hard alternative. Many of them accused the little squad
-of Anti-Nebraska Democrats of "ungenerous and selfish" motives. One of
-them, "Mr. Waters of McDonough, was especially indignant, and utterly
-refused to vote for Mr. Trumbull at all. On the last ballot he threw
-away his ballot on Mr. Williams."
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was very much disappointed," says Mr. Parks, a member of
-the Legislature, and one of Mr. Lincoln's special friends; "for I think,
-that, at that time, it was the height of his ambition to get into the
-United States Senate. He manifested, however, no bitterness towards Mr.
-Judd, or the other Anti-Nebraska Democrats, by whom politically he was
-beaten, but evidently thought that their motives were right. He told
-me several times afterwards, that the election of Trumbull was the best
-thing that could have happened."
-
-In the great campaign of 1858, Mr. Douglas on various occasions
-insisted, that, in 1854, Mr. Lincoln and Judge Trumbull, being until
-then political enemies, had formed a secret agreement to abolitionize,
-the one the Whig, and the other the Democratic party; and, in order that
-neither might go unrewarded for a service so timely and patriotic,
-Mr. Trumbull had agreed on the one hand that Mr. Lincoln should have
-Shields's seat in the United States Senate (in 1855); and Mr. Lincoln
-had agreed, on the other, that Judge Trumbull should have Douglas's seat
-(in 1859). But Mr. Douglas alleged, that, when the first election
-(in 1854) came on, Judge Trumbull treated his fellow-conspirator with
-shameful duplicity, and cheated himself into the Senate just four years
-in advance of his appointed time; that, Mr. Lincoln's friends being
-greatly incensed thereat, Col. James H. Matheny, Mr. Lincoln's "friend
-and manager for twenty years," exposed the plot and the treachery; that,
-in order to silence and conciliate the injured party, Mr. Lincoln was
-promised the senatorial nomination in 1858, and thus a second time
-became a candidate in pursuance of a bargain more than half corrupt. But
-it is enough to say here, that Mr. Lincoln explicitly and emphatically
-denied the accusation as often as it was made, and bestowed upon the
-character of Judge Trumbull encomiums as lofty and as warm as he ever
-bestowed upon any contemporary. With the exception of Col. Matheny,
-we find none of Mr. Lincoln's peculiar friends complaining of Judge
-Trumbull; but as many of them as have spoken in the records before us
-(and they are numerous and prominent) speak of the purity, devotion,
-and excellence of Judge Trumbull in the most unreserved and unaffected
-manner. In fact and in truth, he did literally nothing to advance his
-own interest: he solicited no vote, and got none which did not come to
-him by reason of the political necessities of the time. His election
-consolidated the Anti-Nebraska party in the State, and, in the language
-of Mr. Parks, his "first encounter with Mr. Douglas in the Senate filled
-the people of Illinois with admiration for his abilities; and the ill
-feeling caused by his election gradually passed away."
-
-But Mr. Douglas had a graver charge to make against Mr. Lincoln than
-that of a simple conspiracy with Trumbull to dispose of a great office.
-He seems to have known nothing of Mr. Lincoln's secret understanding
-with Lovejoy and his associates; but he found, that, on the day previous
-to the election for Senator, Lovejoy had introduced a series of extreme
-antislavery resolutions; and with these he attempted to connect Mr.
-Lincoln, by showing, that, with two exceptions, every member who voted
-for the resolutions on the 7th of February voted also for Mr. Lincoln
-on the 8th. The first of the resolutions favored the restoration of the
-prohibition of slavery north of 36° 30', and also a similar prohibition
-as to "_all_ territory which now belongs to the United States, or which
-may hereafter come under their jurisdiction." The second resolution
-declared against the admission of any Slave State, no matter out of what
-Territory, or in what manner formed; and the third demanded, first, the
-unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law, or, failing that, the
-right of _habeas corpus_ and trial by jury for the person claimed as a
-slave. The first resolution was carried by a strict party vote; while
-the second and third were defeated. But Mr. Douglas asserted that Mr.
-Lincoln was committed in favor of all three, because the members that
-supported them subsequently supported him. Of all this Mr. Lincoln
-took no further notice than to say that Judge Douglas might find the
-Republican platform in the resolutions of the State Convention of that
-party, held at Bloomington in 1856. In fact, he maintained a singular
-reticence about the whole affair, probably dreading to go into it too
-deeply, lest his rival should unearth the private pledge to Lovejoy, of
-which Judge Logan has given us the history. When Judge Douglas produced
-a set of resolutions which he said had been passed by the Abolitionists
-at their Convention at Springfield, during the State Fair (the meeting
-alluded to by Mr. Herndon), and asserted that Mr. Lincoln was one of the
-committee that reported them, the latter replied with great spirit,
-and said what he could say with perfect truth,--that he was not near
-Springfield when that body met, and that his name had been used without
-his consent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-MR. LINCOLN predicted a bloody conflict in Kansas as the immediate
-effect of the repeal of the Missouri restriction. He had not long to
-wait for the fulfilment of his prophecy: it began, in fact, before he
-spoke; and if blood had not actually flowed on the plains of Kansas,
-occurrences were taking place on the Missouri border which could
-not avoid that result. The South invited the struggle by repealing a
-time-honored compromise, in such a manner as to convince the North that
-she no longer felt herself bound by any Congressional restrictions upon
-the institution of slavery; and that she intended, as far as her power
-would permit, to push its existence into all the Territories of the
-Union. The Northern States accepted the challenge promptly. The people
-of the Free States knew how to colonize and settle new Territories. The
-march of their westward settlements had for years assumed a steady
-tread as the population of these States augmented, and the facility for
-emigrating increased. When, therefore, the South threw down the barriers
-which had for thirty years consecrated all the Territories north of 36°
-30' to free labor, and announced her intention of competing therein for
-the establishment of her "peculiar institution," the North responded
-by using the legitimate means at her command to throw into the exposed
-regions settlers who would organize the Territories in the interest of
-free labor. The "irrepressible conflict" was therefore opened in the
-Territories, with the people of the two sections of the country arrayed
-against each other as participants in, as well as spectators of, the
-contest. As participants, each section aided its representatives. The
-struggle opened in Kansas, and in favor of the South. During the passage
-of the bill organizing the Territory, preparations had been extensively
-made along the Missouri border, by "Blue Lodges" and "Social Bands," for
-the purpose of getting control of its Territorial government. The whole
-eastern border of the Territory was open to these marauders; and they
-were not slow to embrace the opportunity of meeting their enemies with
-so man y advantages in their favor. Public meetings were held in many
-of the frontier counties of Missouri, in which the people were not only
-advised to go over and take early possession of the Territory, but to
-hold themselves in readiness to remove all emigrants who should go there
-under the auspices of the Northern Aid Societies. It was with these
-"Border Ruffians," and some volunteers from Alabama and South Carolina,
-with a few vagabond "colonels" and "generals" from the Slave States
-generally, that the South began the struggle. Of course, the North did
-not look with complacency upon such a state of things. If the repeal
-of the Missouri Compromise startled the people of the Free States from
-their sense of security, the manner of applying "popular sovereignty,"
-as indicated at its first introduction, was sufficient to arouse public
-sentiment to an unwonted degree. Kansas became at once a subject of
-universal interest. Societies were formed for throwing into her borders,
-with the utmost expedition, settlers who could be relied upon to mould
-her government in the interest of freedom. At the same time there was
-set in train all the political machinery that could be used to agitate
-the question, until the cry of "Bleeding Kansas" was heard throughout
-the land.
-
-It is not necessary in this connection to set down, in order, the raids,
-assassinations, burnings, robberies, and election frauds which followed.
-Enough if their origin and character be understood. For this present
-purpose, a brief summary only will be given of what occurred during
-the long struggle to make Kansas a Slave State; for upon the practical
-issues which arose during the contest followed the discussions between
-Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas, upon the merits of which the former was
-carried into the Presidential office.
-
-The first Territorial governor appointed under the provisions of
-the Kansas-Nebraska Act was Andrew H. Reeder of Pennsylvania. He was
-appointed by President Pierce. He reached Kansas in the autumn of 1854,
-and proceeded to establish a Territorial Government. The first election
-was for a delegate to Congress. By the aid of the people of Missouri,
-it resulted in favor of the Democrats. The governor then ordered an
-election for a first Territorial Legislature, to be held on the 31st of
-March, 1855. To this election the Missourians came in greater force than
-before; and succeeded in electing proslavery men to both Houses of the
-Legislature, with a single exception in each house. The governor,
-a proslavery man, set aside the returns in six districts, as being
-fraudulent; whereupon new elections were held, which, with one
-exception, resulted in favor of the Free-State men. These parties,
-however, were refused their seats in the Legislature; while the persons
-chosen at the previous election were accepted.
-
-The Legislature thus organized proceeded to enact the most hostile
-measures against the Free-State men. Many of these acts were promptly
-vetoed by the governor. The Legislature then petitioned the President
-for his removal. Their wishes were complied with; and Wilson G. Shannon
-of Ohio was appointed in his stead. In the mean time, the Free-State
-men entirely repudiated the Legislature, and refused to be bound by its
-enactments.
-
-Such was the situation in Kansas when Mr. Lincoln addressed to Mr. Speed
-the following letter:--
-
-Springfield, Aug. 24, 1855.
-
-Dear Speed,--You know what a poor correspondent I am. Ever since I
-received your very agreeable letter of the 22d of May, I have been
-intending to write you an answer to it. You suggest that in political
-action now you and I would differ. I suppose we would; not quite as
-much, however, as you may think. You know I dislike slavery; and you
-fully admit the abstract wrong of it. So far there is no cause of
-difference. But you say, that, sooner than yield your legal right to
-the slave,--especially at the bidding of those who are not themselves
-interested,--you would see the Union dissolved. I am not aware that _any
-one_ is bidding you yield that right: very certainly I am not. I leave
-that matter entirely to yourself. I also acknowledge your rights and my
-obligations under the Constitution in regard to your slaves. I confess I
-hate to see the poor creatures hunted down, and caught and carried
-back to their stripes and unrequited toils; but I bite my lip, and keep
-quiet. In 1841 you and I had together a tedious low-water trip on a
-steamboat from Louisville to St. Louis. You may remember, as I well do,
-that, from Louisville to the mouth of the Ohio, there were on board
-ten or a dozen slaves shackled together with irons. That sight was a
-continued torment to me; and I see something like it every time I touch
-the Ohio, or any other slave border. It is not fair for you to assume
-that I have no interest in a thing which has, and continually exercises,
-the power of making me miserable. You ought rather to appreciate how
-much the great body of the Northern people do crucify their feelings, in
-order to maintain their loyalty to the Constitution and the Union. I
-do oppose the extension of slavery because my judgment and feeling so
-prompt me; and I am under no obligations to the contrary. If for this
-you and I must differ, differ we must. You say, if you were President,
-you would send an army, and hang the leaders of the Missouri outrages
-upon the Kansas elections; still, if Kansas fairly votes herself a Slave
-State, she must be admitted, or the Union must be dissolved. But how if
-she votes herself a Slave State _unfairly_,--that is, by the very means
-for which you say you would hang men? Must she still be admitted, or the
-Union dissolved? That will be the phase of the question when it first
-becomes a practical one. In your assumption that there may be a fair
-decision of the slavery question in Kansas, I plainly see you and I
-would differ about the Nebraska law. I look upon that enactment, _not as
-a law, but a violence_ from the beginning. It was conceived in violence,
-is maintained in violence, and is being executed in violence. I say
-it was conceived in violence, because the destruction of the Missouri
-Compromise, under the circumstances, was nothing less than violence. It
-was passed in violence, because it could not have passed at all but
-for the votes of many members in violence of the known will of their
-constituents. It is maintained in violence, because the elections since
-clearly demand its repeal; and the demand is openly disregarded.
-
-You say men ought to be hung for the way they are executing that law;
-and I say the way it is being executed is quite as good as any of its
-antecedents. It is being executed in the precise way which was intended
-from the first; else why does no Nebraska man express astonishment or
-condemnation? Poor Reeder is the only public man who has been silly
-enough to believe that any thing like fairness was ever intended; and he
-has been bravely undeceived.
-
-That Kansas will form a slave constitution, and with it will ask to be
-admitted into the Union, I take to be already a settled question, and so
-settled by the very means you so pointedly condemn. By every principle
-of law ever held by any court, North or South, every negro taken to
-Kansas is free; yet, in utter disregard of this,--in the spirit of
-violence merely,--that beautiful Legislature gravely passes a law to
-hang any man who shall venture to inform a negro of his legal rights.
-This is the substance and real object of the law. If, like Haman, they
-should hang upon the gallows of their own building, I shall not be among
-the mourners for their fate. In my humble sphere, I shall advocate
-the restoration of the Missouri Compromise so long as Kansas remains a
-Territory; and when, by all these foul means, it seeks to come into the
-Union as a Slave State, I shall oppose it. I am very loath, in any case,
-to withhold my assent to the enjoyment of property acquired or located
-in good faith; but I do not admit that good faith in taking a negro to
-Kansas to be held in slavery is a probability with any man. Any man who
-has sense enough to be the controller of his own property has too much
-sense to misunderstand the outrageous character of the whole Nebraska
-business. But I digress. In my opposition to the admission of Kansas, I
-shall have some company; but we may be beaten. If we are, I shall not,
-on that account, attempt to dissolve the Union. I think it probable,
-however, we shall be beaten. Standing as a unit among yourselves, you
-can, directly and indirectly, bribe enough of our men to carry the day,
-as you could on the open proposition to establish a monarchy. Get hold
-of some man in the North whose position and ability is such that he can
-make the support of your measure, whatever it may be, a Democratic party
-necessity, and the thing is done. Apropos of this, let me tell you an
-anecdote. Douglas introduced the Nebraska Bill in January. In February
-afterwards, there was a called session of the Illinois Legislature. Of
-the one hundred members composing the two branches of that body,
-about seventy were Democrats. These latter held a caucus, in which the
-Nebraska Bill was talked of, if not formally discussed. It was thereby
-discovered that just three, and no more, were in favor of the measure.
-In a day or two Douglas's orders came on to have resolutions passed
-approving the bill; and they were passed by large majorities!!! The
-truth of this is vouched for by a bolting Democratic member. The masses,
-too, Democratic as well as Whig, were even nearer unanimous against it;
-but, as soon as the party necessity of supporting it became apparent,
-the way the Democracy began to see the wisdom and justice of it was
-perfectly astonishing.
-
-You say, that, if Kansas fairly votes herself a Free State, as a
-Christian you will rather rejoice at it. All decent slaveholders talk
-that way; and I do not doubt their candor. But they never vote that way.
-Although in a private letter, or conversation, you will express your
-preference that Kansas shall be free, you would vote for no man for
-Congress who would say the same thing publicly. No such man could be
-elected from any district in a Slave State. You think Stringfellow & Co.
-ought to be hung; and yet, at the next Presidential election, you
-will vote for the exact type and representative of Stringfellow. The
-slave-breeders and slave-traders are a small, odious, and detested class
-among you; and yet in politics they dictate the course of all of you,
-and are as completely your masters as you are the master of your own
-negroes. You inquire where I now stand. That is a disputed point. I
-think I am a Whig; but others say there are no Whigs, and that I am an
-Abolitionist. When I was at Washington, I voted for the Wilmot Proviso
-as good as forty times; and I never heard of any one attempting to un
-whig me for that. I now do no more than oppose the extension of slavery.
-I am not a Know-Nothing: that is certain. How could I be? How can
-any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading
-classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to
-be pretty rapid. As a nation, we began by declaring that"_all men are
-created equal._" We now practically read it "all men are created equal,
-except negroes." When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read "all
-men are created equal, except negroes and foreigners and Catholics."
-When it comes to this, I should prefer emigrating to some country where
-they make no pretence of loving liberty,--to Russia, for instance, where
-despotism can be taken pure, and without the base, alloy of hypocrisy.
-
-Mary will probably pass a day or two in Louisville in October. My
-kindest regards to Mrs. Speed. On the leading subject of this letter, I
-have more of her sympathy than I have of yours; and yet let me say I am
-
-Your friend forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Gov. Shannon arrived in the Territory Sept. 1,1855. On his way thither,
-he declared himself in favor of making Kansas a Slave State. He found
-affairs in a turbulent condition, which his policy by no means tended
-to mitigate or assuage. The Free-State party held a mass-meeting at Big
-Springs in the early part of September, at which they distinctly and
-earnestly repudiated the legislative government, which claimed to
-have been elected in March, as well as all laws passed by it; and they
-decided not to participate in an election for a delegate to Congress,
-which the Legislature had appointed to be held on the 1st of October
-following. They also held a Delegate Convention at Topeka, on the 19th
-of September, and appointed an Executive Committee for the Territory;
-and also an election for a Delegate to Congress, to be held on the
-second Tuesday in October. These two rival elections for a congressional
-delegate took place on different days; at the former of which,
-Whitfield, representing the proslavery party, was elected; while at the
-other, Gov. Reeder, representing the Free-State party, was chosen.
-On the 28d of October, the Free-State party held a constitutional
-Convention at Topeka, and formed a State constitution in their interest,
-under the provisions of which they subsequently acted, and also asked
-for admission into the Union.
-
-While we are upon this phase of the Kansas question, it may not be amiss
-to postpone the relation of some intermediate events, in order to give
-the reader the benefit of an expression of Mr. Lincoln's views, which
-thus far has found place in no printed record.
-
-Sometime in 1856 an association of Abolitionists was formed in Illinois
-to go to Kansas and aid the Free-State men in opposing the Government.
-The object of those engaged in this work was, in their opinion, a very
-laudable one,--no other than the defence of freedom, which they thought
-foully menaced in that far-off region. Among these gentlemen, and one
-of the most courageous and disinterested, was William H. Herndon. He
-says,--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was informed of our intents by some means. Probably the
-idea of resistance was more known than I now remember. He took the first
-opportunity he could to dissuade us from our partially-formed purpose.
-We spoke of liberty, justice, and God's higher law, and invoked the
-spirit of these as our holiest inspiration. In 1856 he addressed us on
-this very subject, substantially in these words:--
-
-"'Friends, I agree with you in Providence; but I believe in the
-providence of the most men, the largest purse, and the longest cannon.
-You are in the minority,--in a sad minority; and you can't hope to
-succeed, reasoning from all human experience. You would rebel against
-the Government, and redden your hands in the blood of your countrymen.
-If you are in the minority, as you are, you can't succeed. I say again
-and again, against the Government, with a great majority of its best
-citizens backing it, and when they have the most men, the longest purse,
-and the biggest cannon, you can't succeed.
-
-"'If you have the majority, as some of you say you have, you can succeed
-with the ballot, throwing away the bullet. You can peaceably, then,
-redeem the Government, and preserve the liberties of mankind, through
-your votes and voice and moral influence. Let there be peace. In a
-democracy, where the majority rule by the ballot through the forms of
-law, these physical rebellions and bloody resistances are radically
-wrong, unconstitutional, and are treason. Better bear the ills you have
-than fly to those you know not of. Our own Declaration of Independence
-says, that governments long established, for trivial causes should
-not be resisted. Revolutionize through the ballot-box, and restore the
-Government once more to the affections and hearts of men, by making it
-express, as it was intended to do, the highest spirit of justice and
-liberty. Your attempt, if there be such, to resist the laws of Kansas
-by force, is criminal and wicked; and all your feeble attempts will be
-follies, and end in bringing sorrow on your heads, and ruin the cause
-you would freely die to preserve!'
-
-"This little speech," continues Mr. Herndon, "is not in print. It is a
-part of a much longer one, likewise not in print. This speech squelched
-the ideas of physical resistance, and directed our energies through
-other more effective channels, which his wisdom and coolness pointed
-out to us. This little speech, so timely and well made, saved many of
-us from great follies, if not our necks from the halter. The man who
-uttered it is no more; but this little speech, I hope, shall not soon be
-forgotten. Mr. Lincoln himself, after this speech, subscribed money to
-the people of Kansas _under conditions_, which I will relate in other
-ways. He was not alone in his gifts: I signed the same paper, I think,
-for the same amount, most cheerfully; and would do it again, only
-doubling the sum, adding no conditions, only the good people's wise
-discretion."
-
-Early in 1856 it became painfully apparent to Mr. Lincoln that he
-must take a decisive stand upon the questions of the day, and become
-a Know-Nothing, a Democrat, a Republican, or an Abolitionist. Mere
-"Anti-Nebraska" would answer no longer: the members of that ephemeral
-coalition were seeking more permanent organizations. If interrogated
-concerning his position, he would probably have answered still, "I think
-I am a Whig." With the Abolition or Liberty party, he had thus far
-shown not a particle of sympathy. In 1840, 1844, 1848, and 1852, the
-Abolitionists, Liberty-men, or Free-Soilers, ran candidates of their own
-for the Presidency, and made no little noise and stir in the politics of
-the country; but they were as yet too insignificant in number to claim
-the adhesion of a practical man like Mr. Lincoln. In fact, his partner,
-one of the most earnest of them all, had not up to this time desired his
-fellowship. But now Mr. Herndon thought the hour had arrived when his
-hero should declare himself in unmistakable terms. He found, however,
-one little difficulty in the way: he was not precisely certain of his
-hero. Mr. Lincoln might go that way, and he might go the other way: his
-mind was not altogether made up; and there was no telling on which side
-the decision would fall. "He was button-holed by three ideas, and by men
-belonging to each class: first, he was urged to remain a Whig; secondly,
-he was urged to become a Know-Nothing, Say-Nothing, Do-Nothing;
-and, thirdly, he was urged to be baptized in Abolitionism: and in my
-imagination I can see Lincoln strung out three ways. At last two cords
-were snapped, he flying to Freedom."
-
-And this is the way the cords were snapped: Mr. Herndon drew up a
-paper to be signed by men of his class in politics, calling a county
-convention to elect delegates to the State convention at Bloomington.
-"Mr. Lincoln was then backward," says Mr. Herndon, "dodge-y,--so" and
-so. I was determined to make him take a stand, if he would not do
-it willingly, which he might have done, as he was naturally inclined
-Abolitionward. Lincoln was absent when the call was signed, and
-circulated here. I signed Mr. Lincoln's name without authority; had
-it published in "The Journal." John T. Stuart was keeping his eye on
-Lincoln, with the view of keeping him on his side,--the totally-dead
-conservative side. Mr. Stuart saw the published call, and grew mad;
-rushed into my office, seemed mad, horrified, and said to me, 'Sir, did
-Mr. Lincoln sign that Abolition call which is published this morning?' I
-answered, 4 Mr. Lincoln did not sign that call.'--'Did Lincoln authorize
-you to sign it?' said Mr. Stuart. 'No: he never authorized me to sign
-it.'--'Then do you know that you have ruined Mr. Lincoln?'--'I did not
-know that I had ruined Mr. Lincoln; did not intend to do so; thought
-he was a made man by it; that the time had come when conservatism was a
-crime and a blunder.'--'You, then, take the responsibility of your acts;
-do you?'--'I do, most emphatically.'
-
-"However, I instantly sat down and wrote to Mr. Lincoln, who was then
-in Pekin or Tremont,--possibly at court. He received my letter, and
-instantly replied, either by letter or telegraph,--most likely by
-letter,--that he adopted _in toto_ what I had done, and promised to meet
-the radicals--Lovejoy, and suchlike men--among us."
-
-At Bloomington Lincoln was the great figure. Beside him all the
-rest--even the oldest in the faith and the strongest in the work--were
-small. Yet he was universally regarded as a recent convert, although the
-most important one that could be made in the State of Illinois. "We
-met at Bloomington; and it was there," says Mr. Herndon in one of his
-lectures, "that Mr. Lincoln was baptized, and joined our church. He made
-a speech to us. I have heard or read all Mr. Lincoln's great speeches;
-and I give it as my opinion, on my best judgment, that the Bloomington
-speech was the grand effort of his life. Heretofore, and up to this
-moment, he had simply argued the slavery question on grounds of
-policy,--on what are called the statesman's grounds,--never reaching the
-question of the radical and the eternal right. Now he was newly baptized
-and freshly born: he had the fervor of a new convert; the smothered
-flame broke out; enthusiasm unusual to him blazed up; his eyes were
-aglow with an inspiration; he felt justice; his heart was alive to the
-right; his sympathies, remarkably deep for him, burst forth, and he
-stood before the throne of the eternal Right, in presence of his God,
-and then and there unburdened his penitential and fired soul. This
-speech was fresh, new, genuine, odd, original; filled with fervor not
-unmixed with a divine enthusiasm; his head breathing out through his
-tender heart its truths, its sense of right, and its feeling of the good
-and for the good. This speech was full of fire and energy and force:
-it was logic; it was pathos; it was enthusiasm; it was justice, equity,
-truth, right, and the good, set ablaze by the divine fires of a soul
-maddened by the wrong; it was hard, heavy, knotty, gnarly, edged, and
-heated. I attempted for about fifteen minutes, as was usual with me
-then, to take notes; but at the end of that time I threw pen and paper
-to the dogs, and lived only in the inspiration of the hour. If Mr.
-Lincoln was six feet four inches high usually, _at Bloomington_ he was
-seven feet, and inspired at that. From that day to the day of his death,
-he stood firm on the right. He felt his great cross, had his great
-idea, nursed it, kept it, taught it to others, and in his fidelity bore
-witness of it to his death, and finally sealed it with his precious
-blood."
-
-[Illustration: William Herndon 418]
-
-If any thing in the foregoing description by Mr. Herndon seems
-extravagant to the reader, something must be pardoned to the spirit of a
-patient friend and an impatient teacher, who saw in this scene the
-first fruits of his careful husbandry, and the end of his long vigil. He
-appears to have participated even then in the belief which Mr. Lincoln
-himself avowed,--that the latter was designed by the Dispenser of all
-things to occupy a great place in the world's history; and he felt
-that that day's doings had fixed his political character forever. The
-Bloomington Convention was called "Republican," and the Republican party
-of Illinois was there formed: but the most noted Abolitionists were in
-it, the spirit of the Lovejoys was present; and Mr. Herndon had a right
-to say, that, if Mr. Lincoln was not an Abolitionist, he was tending
-"Abolition-ward" so surely that no doubt could be entertained of his
-ultimate destination. But, after all, the resolutions of the convention
-were very "moderate." They merely denounced the administration for
-its course regarding Kansas, stigmatized the repeal of the Missouri
-Compromise as an act of bad faith, and opposed "the extension of slavery
-into Territories heretofore free." It was surely not because Mr. Lincoln
-was present, and aiding at the passage of such resolutions, that Mr.
-Herndon and others thereafter regarded him as a "newborn" Abolitionist.
-It must have been the general warmth of his speech against the
-South,--his manifest detestation of slaveholders and slaveholding, as
-exhibited in his words,--which led them to believe that his feelings at
-least, if not his opinions, were similar to theirs. But the reader will
-see, nevertheless, as we get along in our history, that the Bloomington
-resolutions were the actual standard of Mr. Lincoln's views; that he
-continued to express his determination to maintain the rights of the
-Slave States under the Constitution, and to make conspicuously plain his
-abhorrence of negro suffrage and negro equality. He certainly disliked
-the Southern politicians very much; but even that sentiment, growing
-daily more fierce and ominous in the masses of the new party, was in his
-case counterbalanced by his prejudices or his caution, and he never saw
-the day when he would willingly have clothed the negroes with political
-privileges.
-
-Notwithstanding the conservative character of the resolutions, the
-proceedings of the Bloomington Convention were alarming to a portion of
-the community, and seem to have found little favor with the people of
-Springfield. About five days after its adjournment, Herndon and Lincoln
-bethought them of holding a ratification meeting. Mr. Herndon got out
-huge posters, announcing the event, and employed a band of musicians to
-parade the streets and "drum up a crowd." As the hour of meeting drew
-near, he "lit up the Court House with many blazes," rung the bells, and
-blew a horn. At seven o'clock the meeting should have been called to
-order, but it turned out to be extremely slim. There was nobody present,
-with all those brilliant lights, but A. Lincoln, W. H. Herndon, and John
-Pain. "When Lincoln came into the courtroom," says the bill-poster and
-horn-blower of this great demonstration, "he came with a sadness and a
-sense of the ludicrous on his face. He walked to the stand, mounted
-it in a kind of mockery,--mirth and sadness all combined,--and said,
-'Gentlemen, this meeting is larger than I _knew_ it would be. I knew
-that Herndon and myself would come, but I did not know that any one else
-would be here; and yet another has come,--you, John Pain. These are sad
-times, and seem out of joint. All seems dead, dead, dead: but the age
-is not yet dead; it liveth as sure as our Maker liveth. Under all this
-seeming want of life and motion, the world does move nevertheless. Be
-hopeful. And now let us adjourn, and appeal to the people.'
-
-"This speech is in substance just as he delivered it, and substantially
-in the same sad but determined spirit; and so we did adjourn, did go
-out, and did witness the fact that 'the world was not dead.'"
-
-The Bloomington Convention sent delegates to the general Republican
-Convention, which was to be held at Philadelphia in June. That body was
-to nominate candidates for the Presidency and Vice-Presidency, and high
-hopes were entertained of their success. But much remained to be done
-before such a revolution in sentiment could be expected. The American
-or Know-Nothing party--corrupt, hideous, and delusive, but still
-powerful--had adopted the old Whig platform on the several slavery
-questions, and planted itself decisively against the agitations of the
-Anti-Nebraska men and the Republicans. A "National Council" had taken
-this position for it the year previous, in terms beside which
-the resolutions of the Whigs and Democrats in 1852 were mild and
-inexpressive. Something, therefore, must be done to get this great
-organization out of the way, or to put its machinery under "Republican"
-control. We have seen a party of gentlemen from Chicago proposing to
-go into the lodges, and "rule them for freedom." Mr. Herndon and Mr.
-Lincoln rejected the plot with lofty indignation; but a section of the
-Free-Soil politicians were by no means so fastidious. They were for
-the most part bad, insincere, trading men, with whom the profession of
-principles of any kind was merely a convenient disguise, and who could
-be attached to no party, except from motives of self-interest. As yet,
-they were not quite certain whether it were possible to raise more
-hatred in the Northern mind against foreigners and Catholics than
-against slaveholders; and they prudently determined to be in a situation
-to try either. Accordingly, they went into the lodges, took the oaths,
-swore to stand by the platform of the "National Council" of 1855, and
-were perfectly ready to do that, or to betray the organization to the
-Republicans, as the prospect seemed good or bad. Believing the latter
-scheme to be the best, upon deliberation, they carried it out as far as
-in them lay, and then told the old, grim, honest, antislavery men,
-with whom they again sought association, that they had joined the
-Know-Nothings, and sworn irrevocable oaths to proscribe foreigners and
-Catholics, solely that they might rule the order "for freedom;" and,
-the Republicans standing in much need of aid just then, the excuse was
-considered very good. But it was too shameless a business for Lincoln
-and Herndon; and they most righteously despised it.
-
-In February, 1856, the Republicans held what Mr. Greeley styles their
-"first National. Convention," at Pittsburg; but they made no nominations
-there. At the same time, a Know-Nothing American "National Council" was
-sitting at Philadelphia (to be followed by a nominating convention); and
-the Republicans at Pittsburg had not adjourned before they got news
-by telegraph, that the patriots who had entered the lodges on false
-pretences were achieving a great success: the American party was
-disintegrating, and a great section of it falling away to the
-Republicans. A most wonderful political feat had been performed, and
-the way was now apparently clear for a union of the all-formidable
-anti-Democratic elements in the Presidential canvass.
-
-On the 17th of June the National Republican Convention met at
-Philadelphia, and nominated John C. Fremont for President, and William
-L. Dayton for Vice-President. Mr. Williams, Chairman of the Illinois
-Delegation, presented to the convention the name of Abraham Lincoln for
-the latter office; and it was received with great enthusiasm by some of
-the Western delegates. He received, however, but 110 votes, against
-259 for Mr. Dayton, and 180 scattered; and Mr. Dayton was immediately
-thereafter unanimously declared the nominee.
-
-While this convention was sitting, Mr. Lincoln was attending court at
-Urbana, in Champaign County. When the news reached that place that Mr.
-Dayton had been nominated, and "Lincoln had received 110 votes," some
-of the lawyers insisted that the latter must have been "our [their]
-Lincoln;" but he said, "No, it could not be: it must have been the
-_great_ Lincoln from Massachusetts." He utterly refused to believe in
-the reality of this unexpected distinction until he saw the proceedings
-in full. He was just then in one of his melancholy moods, his spirits
-depressed, and his heart suffering the miseries of a morbid mind.
-
-With an indorsement of the "self-evident truths" and "inalienable
-rights" of the Declaration of Independence, the Republican Convention
-adopted the following as the practical and essential features of its
-platform:--
-
-"Resolved,... That we deny the authority of Congress, of a territorial
-Legislature, of any individual, or association of individuals, to give
-legal existence to slavery in any Territory of the United States while
-the present Constitution shall be maintained.
-
-"Resolved, That the Constitution confers upon Congress sovereign power
-over the Territories of the United States for their government; and
-that, in the exercise of this power, it is both the right and the
-duty of Congress to prohibit in the Territories those twin relics of
-barbarism,--polygamy and slavery."
-
-The National Democratic Convention had already placed in nomination
-Buchanan and Breckenridge. Their platform denounced as sectional the
-principles and purposes of their opponents; re-affirmed "the principles
-contained in the organic laws establishing the Territories of Kansas and
-Nebraska, as embodying the only sound and safe solution of the slavery
-question," and declared further,--
-
-"That by the uniform application of Democratic principles to the
-organization of Territories and the admission of new States, with or
-without slavery as they may elect, the equal rights of all the States
-will be preserved intact, the original compacts of the Constitution
-maintained inviolate, and the perpetuity and expansion of the Union
-insured to its utmost capacity of embracing, in peace and harmony,
-every future American State that may be constituted or annexed with a
-republican form of government."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the office of Presidential
-elector, and made a thorough and energetic canvass. Some of his speeches
-were very striking; and probably no man in the country discussed
-the main questions in that campaign--Kansas, and slavery in the
-Territories--in a manner more original and persuasive. From first to
-last, he scouted the intimation that the election of Fremont would
-justify a dissolution of the Union, or that it could possibly become
-even the occasion of a dissolution. In his eyes, the apprehensions of
-disunion were a "humbug;" the threat of it mere bluster, and the fear of
-it silly timidity.
-
-In the heat of the canvass, Mr. Lincoln wrote the following perfectly
-characteristic letter,--marked "Confidential:"--
-
-Springfield, Sept. 8, 1856.
-
-Harrison Maltby, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--I understand you are a Fillmore man. Let me prove to you that
-every vote withheld from Fremont and given to Fillmore in this State
-actually lessens Fillmore's chance of being President.
-
-Suppose Buchanan gets all the Slave States and Pennsylvania, and any
-other one State besides; then he is elected, no matter who gets all the
-rest.
-
-But suppose Fillmore gets the two Slave States of Maryland and
-Kentucky; then Buchanan is not elected: Fillmore goes into the House of
-Representatives, and may be made President by a compromise.
-
-But suppose, again, Fillmore's friends throw away a few thousand votes
-on him in Indiana and Illinois: it will inevitably give these States to
-Buchanan, which will more than compensate him for the loss of Maryland
-and Kentucky; will elect him, and leave Fillmore no chance in the H. R.,
-or out of it.
-
-This is as plain as adding up the weights of three small hogs. As Mr.
-Fillmore has no possible chance to carry Illinois for himself, it is
-plainly to his interest to let Fremont take it, and thus keep it out of
-the hands of Buchanan. Be not deceived. Buchanan is the hard horse to
-beat in this race. Let him have Illinois, and nothing can beat him;
-and he will get Illinois if men persist in throwing away votes upon
-Mr. Fillmore. Does some one persuade you that Mr. Fillmore can carry
-Illinois? Nonsense! There are over seventy newspapers in Illinois
-opposing Buchanan, only three or four of which support Mr. Fillmore, all
-the rest going for Fremont. Are not these newspapers a fair index of the
-proportion of the votes? If not, tell me why.
-
-Again, of these three or four Fillmore newspapers, two, at least, are
-supported in part by the Buchanan men, as I understand. Do not they know
-where the shoe pinches? They know the Fillmore movement helps them, and
-therefore they help it.
-
-Do think these things over, and then act according to your judgment.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-(Confidential.)
-
-This letter was discovered by the Buchanan men, printed in their
-newspapers, and pronounced, as its author anticipated, "a mean trick."
-It was a dangerous document to them, and was calculated to undermine the
-very citadel of their strength.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was still in imperfect fellowship--if, indeed, in any
-fellowship at all--with the extreme Abolitionists. He had met
-with Lovejoy and his followers at Bloomington, and was apparently
-co-operating with them for the same party purposes; but the intensity of
-his opposition to their radical views is intimated very strongly in this
-letter to Mr. Whitney:--
-
-SprinGfield, July 9, 1856.
-
-Dear Whitney,--I now expect to go to Chicago on the 15th, and I probably
-shall remain there or thereabout for about two weeks.
-
-It turned me blind when I first heard Swett was beaten and Lovejoy
-nominated; but, after much anxious reflection, I really believe it is
-best to let it stand. This, of course, I wish to be confidential.
-
-Lamon did get your deeds. I went with him to the office, got them, and
-put them in his hands myself.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-In June, 1857, Judge Douglas made a speech at Springfield, in which he
-attempted to vindicate the wisdom and fairness of the law under which
-the people of Kansas were about to choose delegates to a convention to
-be held at Lecompton to frame a State constitution. He declared
-with emphasis, that, if the Free-State party refused to vote at this
-election, they alone would be blamable for the proslavery constitution
-which might be formed. The Free-State men professed to have a vast
-majority,--"three-fourths," "four-fifths," "nine-tenths," of the voters
-of Kansas. If these wilfully staid away from the polls, and allowed the
-minority to choose the delegates and make the constitution, Mr. Douglas
-thought they ought to abide the result, and not oppose the constitution
-adopted. Mr. Douglas's speech indicated clearly that he himself would
-countenance no opposition to the forthcoming Lecompton Convention, and
-that he would hold the Republican politicians responsible if the result
-failed to be satisfactory to them.
-
-Judge Douglas seldom spoke in that region without provoking a reply from
-his constant and vigilant antagonist. Mr. Lincoln heard this speech
-with a critical ear, and then, waiting only for a printed report of it,
-prepared a reply to be delivered a few weeks later. The speeches were
-neither of them of much consequence, except for the fact that Judge
-Douglas seemed to have plainly committed himself in advance to the
-support of the Lecompton Constitution. Mr. Lincoln took that much for
-granted; and, arguing from sundry indications that the election would
-be fraudulently conducted, he insisted that Mr. Douglas himself, as
-the author of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, and the inventor of "popular
-sovereignty," had made this "outrage" possible. He did not believe
-there were any "Free-State Democrats" in Kansas to make it a Free State
-without the aid of the Republicans, whom he held to be a vast majority
-of the population. The latter, he contended, were not all registered;
-and, because all were not registered, he thought none ought to vote.
-But Mr. Lincoln advised no bloodshed, no civil war, no roadside
-assassinations. Even if an incomplete registry might justify a majority
-of the people in an obstinate refusal to participate in the regulation
-of their own affairs, it certainly would not justify them in taking up
-arms to oppose all government in the Territory; and Mr. Lincoln did not
-say so. We have seen already how, in the "little speech" reported by Mr.
-Herndon, he deprecated "all physical rebellions" in this country, and
-applied his views to this case.
-
-Mr. Lincoln also discussed the Dred-Scott Decision at some length; and,
-while doing so, disclosed his firm belief, that, in some respects, such
-as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," the negroes were made
-by the Declaration of Independence the equals of white men. But it
-did not follow from this that he was in favor of political or social
-equality with them. "There is," said he, "a natural disgust in the
-minds of nearly all the white people to the idea of an indiscriminate
-amalgamation of the white and black races; and Judge Douglas evidently
-is basing his chief hope upon the chances of his being able to
-appropriate the benefit of this disgust to himself. If he can, by
-much drumming and repeating, fasten the odium of that idea upon his
-adversaries, he thinks he can struggle through the storm. He therefore
-clings to his hope, as a drowning man to the last plank. He makes
-an occasion for lugging it in from the opposition to the Dred-Scott
-Decision. He finds the Republicans insisting that the Declaration of
-Independence includes all men,--black as well as white; and forthwith
-he boldly denies that it includes negroes at all, and proceeds to argue
-gravely, that all who contend it does, do so only because they want to
-vote, eat, sleep, and marry with negroes. Now, I protest against the
-counterfeit logic which concludes, that, because I do not want a black
-woman for a slave, I must necessarily want her for a wife. I need not
-have her for either. I can just leave her alone. In some respects, she
-certainly is not my equal; but in her natural right to eat the bread she
-earns with her own hands, without asking leave of any one else, she is
-my equal, and the equal of all others."
-
-These speeches were delivered, the one early and the other late, in
-the month of June: they present strongly, yet guardedly, the important
-issues which were to engage Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas in the famous
-campaign of 1858, and leave us no choice but to look into Kansas, and
-observe what had taken place and what was happening there.
-
-Violence still (June, 1857) prevailed throughout the Territory. The
-administration of President Pierce committed itself at the first in
-support of the proslavery party. It acknowledged the Legislature as the
-only legal government in the Territory, and gave it military assistance
-to enforce its enactments. Gov. Shannon, having by his course only
-served to increase the hostility between the parties, was recalled, and
-John W. Geary of Pennsylvania was appointed his successor. Gov. Geary,
-while adopting the policy of the administration, so far as recognizing
-the Legislative party as the only legally organized government, was yet
-disposed to see, that, so far as the two parties could be got to act
-together, each should be fairly protected. This policy, however, soon
-brought him into collision with some of the proslavery leaders in the
-Territory; and, not being sustained by Mr. Buchanan's administration,
-which had in the mean time succeeded the administration of President
-Pierce, he resigned his office. Hon. Robert J. Walker of Mississippi
-was appointed his successor, with Hon. F. P. Stanton of Tennessee as
-secretary. Both were strong Democrats; and both were earnest advocates
-of the policy of the administration, as expressed in the recent
-presidential canvass, and in Mr. Buchanan's inaugural Message,--the
-absolute freedom of the people of the Territories to form such
-governments as they saw fit, subject to the provisions of the
-Constitution. Gov. Walker and his secretary earnestly set themselves to
-work to carry out this policy. The governor, in various addresses to the
-people of the Territory, assured all parties that he would protect
-them in the free expression of their wishes in the election for a new
-Territorial legislature; and he besought the Free-State men to give up
-their separate Territorial organization, under which they had already
-applied for admission into the Union, and by virtue of which they
-claimed still to have an equitable legal existence. The governor was so
-earnest in his policy, and so fair-minded in his purposes, that he
-soon drew upon himself the opposition of the proslavery party of the
-Territory, now in a small minority, as well as the enmity of that party
-in the States. He assured the people they should have a fair election
-for the new Legislature to be chosen in October (1857), and which would
-come into power in January following. The people took him at his word;
-and he kept it. Enormous frauds were discovered in two districts,
-which were promptly set aside. The triumph of the Free-State party was
-complete: they elected a legislature in their interest by a handsome
-majority. And now began another phase of the struggle. The policy of
-the Governor and the Secretary was repudiated at Washington: the former
-resigned, and the latter was removed. Meanwhile, a convention held under
-the auspices of the old Legislature had formed a new constitution, known
-as the Lecompton Constitution, which the old Legislature proposed to
-submit to the people for ratification on the 21st of December. The
-manner of submitting it was singular, to say the least. The people
-were required to vote either for the constitution with slavery, or the
-constitution without slavery. As without slavery the constitution was
-in some of its provisions as objectionable as if it upheld slavery, the
-Free-State men refused to participate in its ratification. The vote
-on its submission, therefore, stood 4,206 for the constitution with
-slavery, and 567 without slavery; and it was this constitution, thus
-submitted and thus adopted, that Mr. Buchanan submitted to Congress on
-the 2d of February, 1858, as the free expression of the wishes of the
-people of Kansas; and its support was at once made an administration
-measure. Meantime the new Legislature elected by the people of the
-Territory in October submitted this same Lecompton Constitution to the
-people again, and in this manner: votes to be given for the constitution
-with slavery and without slavery, and also against the constitution
-entirely. The latter manner prevailed; the vote against the constitution
-in any form being over ten thousand. Thus the proslavery party in the
-Territory was overthrown. Under the auspices of the new Free-State
-Legislature, a constitutional convention was held at Wyandotte, in
-March, 1859. A Free-State constitution was adopted, under which Kansas
-was subsequently admitted into the Union.
-
-Before leaving this Kansas question, there is one phase of the closing
-part of the struggle which it is worth while to note, particularly as it
-has a direct bearing upon the fortunes of Judge Douglas, and indirectly
-to the success of Mr. Lincoln. Douglas always insisted that his plan of
-"popular sovereignty" would give to the people of the Territories the
-utmost freedom in the formation of their local governments. When Mr.
-Buchanan attempted to uphold the Lecompton Constitution as being the
-free choice of the people of Kansas, Judge Douglas at once took issue
-with the administration on this question, and the Democratic party
-was split in twain. Up to the time of the vote of the people of the
-Territory on the constitution, Douglas had been an unswerving supporter
-of the administration policy in Kansas. His speech at Springfield,
-in the June previous, could not be misunderstood. He held all the
-proceedings which led to the Lecompton issue to be in strict accordance,
-not only with the letter, but the spirit, of the Kansas-Nebraska Act,
-and with the faith of the Democratic party as expounded by himself. But
-a few weeks later it became manifest that his opinions had undergone
-a change. Ominous rumors of a breach with the administration began to
-circulate among his friends. It was alleged at length that Mr. Douglas's
-delicate sense of justice had been shocked by the unfairness of certain
-elections in Kansas: it was even intimated that he, too, considered the
-Lecompton affair an "outrage" upon the sovereign people of Kansas, and
-that he would speedily join the Republicans--the special objects of
-his indignation in the June speech--in denouncing and defeating it. The
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill had borne its appropriate fruits,--the fruits all
-along predicted by Mr. Lincoln,--and Mr. Douglas commended them to
-anybody's eating but his own. His desertion was sudden and astonishing;
-but there was method in it, and a reason for it. The next year Illinois
-was to choose a senator to fill the vacancy created by the expiration of
-his own term; and the choice lay between the author of the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill and its most conspicuous opponent in that State.
-The newspapers were not yet done publishing Mr. Lincoln's speech, in
-which occurred the following paragraph:--
-
-"Three years and a half ago Judge Douglas brought forward his famous
-Nebraska Bill. The country was at once in a blaze. He scorned all
-opposition, and carried it through Congress. Since then he has seen
-himself superseded in a Presidential nomination by one indorsing the
-general doctrine of his measure, but at the same time standing clear of
-the odium of its untimely agitation and its gross' breach of national
-faith; and he has seen the successful rival constitutionally elected,
-not by the strength of friends, but by the division of his adversaries,
-being in a popular minority of nearly four hundred thousand votes.
-He has seen his chief aids in his own State, Shields and Richardson,
-politically speaking, successively tried, convicted, and executed for
-an offence not their own, but his. And now he sees his own case standing
-next on the docket for trial."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-ALTHOUGH primarily responsible for all that had taken place in Kansas,
-Mr. Douglas appeared to be suddenly animated by a new and burning zeal
-in behalf of the Free-State party in the Territory. It struck him very
-forcibly, just when he needed most to be struck by a new idea, that
-the Lecompton Constitution was not "the act and deed of the people of
-Kansas."
-
-Accordingly, Mr. Douglas took his stand against Lecompton at the first
-note of the long conflict in Congress. We shall make no analysis of the
-debates, nor set out the votes of senators and representatives which
-marked the intervals of that fierce struggle between sections, parties,
-and factions which followed. It is enough to say here, that Mr. Douglas
-was found speaking and voting with the Republicans upon every phase of
-the question. He had but one or two followers in the Senate, and a mere
-handful in the House; yet these were faithful to his lead until a final
-conference committee and the English Bill afforded an opportunity for
-some of them to escape. For himself he scorned all compromises, voted
-against the English Bill, and returned to Illinois to ask the votes
-of the people upon a winter's record wholly and consistently
-anti-Democratic. The fact is mentioned, not to obscure the fame of the
-statesman, nor to impugn the honesty of the politician, but because it
-had an important influence upon the canvass of the ensuing summer.
-
-During the winter Mr. Douglas held frequent consultations with the
-leaders of the Republican party. Their meetings were secret, and for
-that reason the more significant. By this means, harmony of action was
-secured for the present, and something provided for the future. Mr.
-Douglas covertly announced himself as a convert to the Republicans,
-declared his uncompromising enmity to "the slave power," and said that,
-however he might be distrusted then, he would be seen "fighting their
-battles in 1860;" but for the time he thought it wise to conceal his
-ultimate intentions. He could manage the Democracy more effectually
-by remaining with them until better opportunities should occur. "He
-insisted that he would never be driven from the party, but would remain
-in it until he exposed the administration and the Disunionists; and,
-when he went out, he would go of his own accord. He was in the habit of
-remarking, that it was policy for him to remain in the party, in order
-to hold certain of the rank-and-file; so that, if he went over from the
-Democracy to any other party, he would be able to take the crowd along
-with him; and, when he got them all over, he would cut down the bridges,
-and sink the boats." When asked if he knew precisely where his present
-course was taking him, he answered repeatedly, "I do; and I have checked
-all my baggage, and taken a through ticket."
-
-He was a proselyte not to be despised: his weight might be sufficient
-to turn the scale in the Presidential election. The Republicans were
-naturally pleased with his protestations of friendship, and more than
-pleased with his proffers of active service; but he was not content with
-this alone. He contrived to convince many of his late opponents that the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill itself was actually conceived in the interests
-of antislavery, and that the device was the most cunning of political
-tricks, intended to give back to "freedom" all the vast expanse of
-territory which the Missouri line had dedicated forever to slavery. "Mr.
-Douglas's plan for destroying the Missouri line," said one Republican,
-"and thereby opening the way for the march of freedom beyond the limits
-forever prohibited by that line, and the opening up of Free States in
-territory which it was conceded belonged to the Slave States, and its
-march westward, embracing the whole line of the Pacific from the British
-possessions to Mexico, struck me as the most magnificent scheme
-ever conceived by the human mind. This character of conversation, so
-frequently employed by Mr. Douglas with those with whom he talked, made
-the deepest impression upon their minds, enlisted them in his behalf,
-and changed, in almost every instance, their opinion of the man." In
-support of this view, Mr. Douglas could point to Kansas, where the
-battle under his bill was being fought out. The Free-State men had,
-perhaps from the very beginning, been in a majority, and could take
-possession of the Territory or the new State, as the case might be,
-whenever they could secure a fair vote. The laboring classes of, the
-North were the natural settlers of the western Territories. If these
-failed in numbers, the enormous and increasing European immigration
-was at their back; and, if both together failed, the churches, aid
-societies, and antislavery organizations were at hand to raise, arm,
-and equip great bodies of emigrants, as they would regular forces for a
-public purpose. The South had no such facilities: its social, political,
-and material conditions made a sudden exodus of its voting population
-to new countries a thing impossible. It might send here a man with a few
-negroes, and there another. It might insist vehemently upon its supposed
-rights in the common Territories, and be ready to fight for them; but
-it could never cover the surface of those Territories with cosey
-farmsteads, or crowd them with intelligent and muscular white men; and
-yet these last would inevitably give political character to the
-rising communities. Such clearly were to be the results of "popular
-sovereignty," as Mr. Douglas had up to that time maintained it under the
-Nebraska Bill.
-
-It signified the right of the people of a Territory "to form and
-regulate their domestic institutions in their own way" when, and not
-before, they came to frame a State constitution. The Missouri line, on
-the contrary, had been a sort of convention, which, by common consent,
-gave all north of it to freedom, and all south of it to slavery. But
-popular sovereignty disregarded all previous compacts, all ordinances,
-and all laws. With this doctrine in practice, the North were sure to be
-victors in every serious contest. But when Mr. Douglas changed ground
-again, and popular sovereignty became squatter sovereignty, he had
-reason to boast himself the most efficient, although the wiliest and
-coolest, antislavery agitator on the continent. The new doctrine implied
-the right of a handful of settlers to determine the slavery question in
-their first Legislature. It made no difference whether they did this by
-direct or "unfriendly legislation:" the result was the same.
-
-"Popular sovereignty! popular sovereignty!" said Mr. Lincoln. "Let us
-for a moment inquire into this vast matter of popular sovereignty. What
-is popular sovereignty? We recollect, that, in an early period in
-the history of this struggle, there was another name for the
-same thing,--_squatter sovereignty_. It was not exactly popular
-sovereignty,--squatter sovereignty. What do these terms mean? What do
-those terms mean when used now? And vast credit is taken by our friend,
-the Judge, in regard to his support of it, when he declares the last
-years of his life have been, and all the future years of his life shall
-be, devoted to this matter of popular sovereignty. What is it? Why,
-it is the sovereignty of the people! What was squatter sovereignty?
-I suppose, if it had any significance at all, it was the right of the
-people to govern themselves, to be sovereign in their own affairs while
-they were squatted down in a country not their own, while they had
-squatted on a territory that did not belong to them; in the sense that
-a State belongs to the people who inhabit it, when it belongs to
-the nation. Such right to govern themselves was called 'squatter
-sovereignty.'"
-
-Again, and on another occasion, but still before Mr. Douglas had
-substituted "squatter" for "popular" sovereignty,--a feat which was not
-performed until September, 1859,--Mr. Lincoln said,--
-
-"I suppose almost every one knows, that in this controversy, whatever
-has been said has had reference to negro slavery. We have not been in
-a controversy about the right of the people to govern themselves in the
-ordinary matters of domestic concern in the States and Territories.
-Mr. Buchanan, in one of his late messages (I think when he sent up the
-Lecompton Constitution), urged that the main point to which the public
-attention had been directed was not in regard to the great variety of
-small domestic matters, but it was directed to negro slavery; and he
-asserts, that, if the people had had a fair chance to vote on that
-question, there was no reasonable ground of objection in regard to minor
-questions. Now, while I think that the people had not had given them, or
-offered them, a fair chance upon that slavery question, still, if
-there had been a fair submission to a vote upon that main question, the
-President's proposition would have been true to the uttermost. Hence,
-when hereafter I speak of popular sovereignty, I wish to be understood
-as applying what I say to the question of slavery only, not to other
-minor domestic matters of a Territory or a State.
-
-"Does Judge Douglas, when he says that several of the past years of his
-life have been devoted to the question of popular sovereignty, and that
-all the remainder of his life shall be devoted to it,--does he mean to
-say, that he has been devoting his life to securing to the people of
-the Territories the right to exclude slavery from the Territories? If
-he means so to say, he means to deceive; because he and every one knows
-that the decision of the Supreme Court, which he approves, and makes an
-especial ground of attack upon me for disapproving, forbids the people
-of a Territory to exclude slavery. This covers the whole ground, from
-the settlement of a Territory till it reaches the degree of maturity
-entitling it to form a State constitution. So far as all that ground
-is concerned, the judge is not sustaining popular sovereignty, but
-absolutely opposing it. He sustains the decision which declares that the
-popular will of the Territories has no constitutional power to exclude
-slavery during their territorial existence. This being so, the period of
-time from the first settlement of a territory till it reaches the point
-of forming a State constitution is not the thing that the Judge has
-fought for, or is fighting for; but, on the contrary, he has fought for,
-and is fighting for, the thing that annihilates and crushes out that
-same popular sovereignty."
-
-It is probable, that, in the numerous private conferences held by Mr.
-Douglas with Republican leaders in the winter of 1857-8, he managed
-to convince them that it was, after all, not popular sovereignty,
-but squatter sovereignty, that he meant to advance as his final and
-inevitable deduction from "the great principles" of the Nebraska Bill.
-This he knew, and they were sure, would give antislavery an unbroken
-round of solid victories in all the Territories. The South feared it
-much more than they did the Republican theory: it was, in the language
-of their first orator, "a shortcut to all the ends of Sewardism."
-
-But Mr. Douglas's great difficulty was to produce any belief in his
-sincerity. At home, in Illinois, the Republicans distrusted him almost
-to a man; and at Washington, among his peers in the Senate and the
-House, it seemed necessary for him to repeat his plans and promises
-very often, and to mingle with them bitter and passionate declamations
-against the South. At last, however, he succeeded,--partially, at least.
-Senator Wilson believed him devoutly; Mr. Burlingame said his record
-was "laid up in light;" Mr. Colfax, Mr. Blair, and Mr. Covode were
-convinced; and gentlemen of the press began industriously to prepare
-the way for his entrance into the Republican party. Mr. Greeley was
-thoroughly possessed by the new idea, and went about propagating
-and enforcing it with all his might. Among all the grave counsellors
-employed in furthering Mr. Douglas's defection, it is singular that only
-one man of note steadily resisted his admission to a place of leadership
-in the Republican ranks: Judge Trumbull could not be persuaded; he had
-no faith in the man who proposed to desert, and had some admonitions to
-deliver, based upon the history of recent events. He was willing enough
-to take him "on probation," but wholly opposed to giving him any power.
-Covode was employed to mollify Judge Trumbull; but he met with no
-success, and went away without so much as delivering the message with
-which Mr. Douglas had charged him. The message was a simple proposition
-of alliance with the home Republicans, to the effect, that, if they
-agreed to return him to the Senate in 1858, he would fight their
-Presidential battle in 1860. Judge Trumbull did not even hear it, but he
-was well assured that Mr. Douglas was "an applicant for admission into
-the Republican party." "It was reported to me at that time," said
-he, "that such was the fact; and such appeared to be the universal
-understanding, among the Republicans at Washington. I will state another
-fact,--I almost quarrelled with some of my best Republican friends in
-'regard to this matter. I was willing to receive Judge Douglas into
-the Republican party on probation; but I was not, as these Republican
-friends were, willing to receive him, and place him at the head of our
-ranks."
-
-Toward the latter part of April, 1858, a Democratic State Convention
-met in Illinois, and, besides nominating a ticket for State officers,
-indorsed Mr. Douglas. This placed him in the field for re-election as
-an Anti-Lecompton Democrat; but it by no means shook the faith of his
-recently acquired Republican friends: they thought it very natural,
-under the circumstances, that his ways should be a little devious, and
-his policy somewhat dark. He had always said he could do more for them
-by seeming to remain within the Democratic party; and they looked
-upon this latest proceeding--his practical nomination by a Democratic
-convention--as the foundation for an act of stupendous treason between
-that time and the Presidential election. They continued to press the
-Republicans of Illinois to make no nomination against him,--to vote for
-him, to trust him, to follow him, as a sincere and manifestly a powerful
-antislavery leader. These representations had the effect of seducing
-away, for a brief time, Mr. Wash-burne and a few others among the
-lesser politicians of the State; but, when they found the party at large
-irrevocably opposed to the scheme, they reluctantly acquiesced in what
-they could not prevent,--Mr. Lincoln's nomination. But the plot made a
-profound impression on Mr. Lincoln's mind: it proved the existence
-of personal qualities in Mr. Douglas, which, to a simpler man, were
-unimaginable and inexplicable. A gentleman once inquired of Mr. Lincoln
-what he thought of Douglas's chances at Charleston. "Well," he replied,
-"were it not for certain matters that I know transpired, which I
-regarded at one time among the impossibilities, I would say he stood no
-possible chance. I refer to the fact, that, in the Illinois contest with
-myself, he had the sympathy and support of Greeley, of Burlingame, and
-of Wilson of Massachusetts, and other leading Republicans; that, at
-the same time, he received the support of Wise, and the influence of
-Breckinridge, and other Southern men; that he took direct issue with
-the administration, and secured, against all its power, one hundred and
-twenty-five thousand out of one hundred and thirty thousand Democratic
-votes cast in the State. A man that can bring such influence to bear
-with his own exertions may play the devil at Charleston."
-
-From about the 7th to the 16th of June, 1858, Mr. Lincoln was busily
-engaged writing a speech: he wrote it in scraps,--a sentence now, and
-another again. It was originally scattered over numberless little pieces
-of paper, and was only reduced to consecutive sheets and connected form
-as the hour for its delivery drew near. It was to be spoken on or
-about the 16th, when the Republican State Convention would assemble at
-Springfield, and, as Mr. Lincoln anticipated, would nominate him for
-senator in Congress.
-
-About the 13th of June, Mr. Dubois, the State auditor, entered the
-office of Lincoln & Herndon, and found Mr. Lincoln deeply intent upon
-the speech. "Hello, Lincoln! what _are_ you writing?" said the auditor.
-"Come, tell me."--"I sha'n't tell you," said Lincoln. "_It is none of
-your business_, Mr. Auditor. Come, sit down, and let's be jolly."
-
-On the 16th, the convention, numbering, with delegates and alternates,
-about a thousand men, met, and passed unanimously the following
-resolution:--
-
-"That Hon. Abraham Lincoln is our first and only choice for United
-States senator to fill the vacancy about to be created by the expiration
-of Mr. Douglas's term of office."
-
-That evening Mr. Lincoln came early to his office, along with Mr.
-Herndon. Having carefully locked the door, and put the key in his own
-pocket, he pulled from his bosom the manuscript of his speech, and
-proceeded to read it slowly and distinctly. When he had finished the
-first paragraph, he came to a dead pause, and turned to his astounded
-auditor with the inquiry, "How do you like that? What do you think of
-it?"--"I think," returned Mr. Herndon, "it is true; but is it entirely
-_politic_ to read or speak it as it is written?"
-
---"That makes no difference," Mr. Lincoln said. "That expression is a
-truth of all human experience,--'a house divided against itself cannot
-stand;' and 'he that runs may read.' The proposition is indisputably
-true, and has been true for more than six thousand years; and--I will
-deliver it as written. I want to use some universally known figure,
-expressed in simple language as universally known, that may strike home
-to the minds of men, in order to rouse them to the peril of the times.
-I would rather be _defeated with this expression in_ the speech, and it
-held up and discussed before the people, than _to be victorious without
-it._"
-
-It may be questioned whether Mr. Lincoln had a clear right to indulge in
-such a venture, as a representative party man in a close contest. He
-had other interests than his own in charge: he was bound to respect the
-opinions, and, if possible, secure the success, of the party which had
-made him its leader. He knew that the strange doctrine, so strikingly
-enunciated, would alienate many well-affected voters. Was it his duty
-to cast these away, or to keep them? He was not asked to sacrifice any
-principle of the party, or any opinion of his own previously expressed,
-but merely to forego the trial of an experiment, to withhold the
-announcement of a startling theory, and to leave the creed of the
-party as it came from the hands of its makers, without this individual
-supplement, of which they had never dreamed. It is evident that he
-had not always been insensible to the force of this reasoning. At the
-Bloomington Convention he had uttered the same ideas in almost the same
-words; and their novelty, their tendency, their recognition of a
-state of incipient civil war in a country for the most part profoundly
-peaceful,--these, and the bloody work which might come of their
-acceptance by a great party, had filled the minds of some of his hearers
-with the most painful apprehensions. The theory was equally shocking to
-them, whether as partisans or as patriots. Among them was Hon. T. Lyle
-Dickey, who sought Mr. Lincoln, and begged him to suppress them in
-future. He vindicated his speech as he has just vindicated it in the
-interview with Mr. Herndon; but, after much persuasion, he promised at
-length not to repeat it.
-
-It was now Mr. Herndon's turn to be surprised: the pupil had outstripped
-the teacher. He was intensely anxious for Mr. Lincoln's election:
-he feared the effect of this speech; and yet it was so exactly in
-accordance with his own faith, that he could not advise him to suppress
-it. It might be heresy to many others, but it was orthodoxy to him;
-and he was in the habit of telling the whole truth, without regard
-to consequences. If it cost a single defeat now, he was sure that its
-potency would one day be felt, and the wisdom of its present utterance
-acknowledged. He therefore urged Mr. Lincoln to speak it as he had
-written it, and to treat with the scorn of a prophet those who, having
-ears, would not hear, and, having eyes, would not see. The advice was
-not unacceptable, but Mr. Lincoln thought he owed it to other friends to
-counsel with them also.
-
-About a dozen gentlemen were called to meet in the Library Room in
-the State House. "After seating them at the round table," says John
-Armstrong, one of the number, "he read that clause or section of his
-speech which reads, 'a house divided against itself cannot stand,' &c.
-He read it slowly and cautiously, so as to let each man fully understand
-it. After he had finished the reading, he asked the opinions of his
-friends as to the wisdom or policy of it. Every man among them condemned
-the speech in substance and spirit, and especially that section quoted
-above. They unanimously declared that the whole speech was too far in
-advance of the times; and they all condemned that section or part of his
-speech already quoted, as unwise and impolitic, if not false. William
-H. Herndon sat still while they were giving their respective opinions
-of its unwisdom and impolicy: then he sprang to his feet and said,
-'Lincoln, deliver it just as it reads. If it is in advance of the times,
-let us--you and I, if no one else--lift the people to the level of this
-speech now, higher hereafter. The speech is true, wise, and politic, and
-will succeed now or in the future. Nay, it will aid you, if it will not
-make you President of the United States.'
-
-"Mr. Lincoln sat still a short moment, rose from his chair, walked
-backwards and forwards in the hall, stopped and said, 'Friends, I have
-thought about this matter a great deal, have weighed the question well
-from all corners, and am thoroughly convinced the time has come when it
-should be uttered; and if it must be that I must go down because of this
-speech, then let me go down linked to truth,--die in the advocacy of
-what is right and just. This nation cannot live on injustice,--"a house
-divided against itself cannot stand," I say again and again.' This was
-spoken with some degree of emotion,--the effects of his love of truth,
-and sorrow from the disagreement of his friends with himself."
-
-On the evening of the 17th this celebrated speech--known since as
-"The House-divided-against-itself Speech"--was delivered to an immense
-audience in the hall of the House of Representatives. Mr. Lincoln never
-penned words which had a more prodigious influence upon the public mind,
-or which more directly and powerfully affected his own career. It was as
-follows:--
-
-Gentlemen of the Convention,--If we could first know where we are, and
-whither we are tending, we could then better judge what to do, and
-how to do it. We are now far on into the fifth year since a policy was
-initiated with the avowed object and confident promise of putting an end
-to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation
-had not only not ceased, but has constantly augmented. In my opinion,
-it will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed. "A
-house divided against itself cannot stand." I believe this Government
-cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect
-the Union to be dissolved,--I do not expect the house to fall; but I do
-expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or
-all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the farther
-spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the
-belief that it is in course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates
-will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the
-States,--old as well as new, North as well as South.
-
-Have we no tendency to the latter condition? Let any one who doubts
-carefully contemplate that now almost complete legal combination,--piece
-of machinery, so to speak,--compounded of the Nebraska doctrine and the
-Dred-Scott Decision. Let him consider, not only what work the machinery
-is adapted to do, and how well adapted, but also let him study the
-history of its construction, and trace, if he can, or rather fail, if he
-can, to trace, the evidences of design and concert of action among its
-chief master-workers from the beginning.
-
-But so far Congress only had acted; and an indorsement by the people,
-real or apparent, was indispensable, to save the point already gained
-and give chance for more. The New Year of 1854 found slavery excluded
-from more than half the States by State constitutions, and from most
-of the national territory by congressional prohibition. Four days later
-commenced the struggle which ended in repealing that congressional
-prohibition. This opened all the national territory to slavery, and was
-the first point gained.
-
-This necessity had not been overlooked, but had been provided for, as
-well as might be, in the notable argument of "_squatter sovereignty_"
-otherwise called "_sacred right of self-government;_" which latter
-phrase, though expressive of the only rightful basis of any government,
-was so perverted in this attempted use of it as to amount to just this:
-that, if any one man choose to enslave another, no third man shall be
-allowed to object. That argument was incorporated into the Nebraska Bill
-itself, in the language which follows: "It being the true intent and
-meaning of this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or
-State, nor exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
-perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their
-own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States."
-
-Then opened the roar of loose declamation in favor of "squatter
-sovereignty" and "sacred right of self-government."
-
-"But," said opposition members, "let us be more specific,--let us amend
-the bill so as to expressly declare that the people of the Territory may
-exclude slavery."--"Not we," said the friends of the measure; and down
-they voted the amendment.
-
-While the Nebraska Bill was passing through Congress, a law-case
-involving the question of a negro's freedom, by reason of his owner
-having voluntarily taken him first into a Free State, and then a
-Territory covered by the congressional prohibition, and held him as a
-slave,--for a long time in each,--was passing through the United-States
-Circuit Court for the District of Missouri; and both the Nebraska Bill
-and lawsuit were brought to a decision in the same month of May, 1854.
-The negro's name was Dred Scott, which name now designates the decision
-finally made in the case.
-
-Before the then next Presidential election, the law-case came to, and
-was argued in, the Supreme Court of the United States; but the decision
-of it was deferred until after the election. Still, before the election,
-Senator Trumbull, on the floor of the Senate, requests the leading
-advocate of the Nebraska Bill to state his opinion whether a people of
-a Territory can constitutionally exclude slavery from their limits; and
-the latter answers, "That is a question for the Supreme Court."
-
-The election came. Mr. Buchanan was elected, and the indorsement, such
-as it was, secured. That was the second point gained. The indorsement,
-however, fell short of a clear popular majority by nearly four hundred
-thousand votes; and so, perhaps, was not overwhelmingly reliable and
-satisfactory. The outgoing President, in his last annual Message, as
-impressively as possible echoed back upon the people the weight and
-authority of the indorsement.
-
-The Supreme Court met again; did not announce their decision, but
-ordered a re-argument. The Presidential inauguration came, and still
-no decision of the court; but the incoming President, in his inaugural
-address, fervently exhorted the people to abide by the forthcoming
-decision, whatever it might he. Then, in a few days, came the decision.
-
-This was the third point gained.
-
-The reputed author of the Nebraska Bill finds an early occasion to
-make a speech at this Capitol indorsing the Dred-Scott Decision, and
-vehemently denouncing all opposition to it. The new President, too,
-seizes the early occasion of the Silliman letter to indorse and strongly
-construe that decision, and to express his astonishment that any
-different view had ever been entertained. At length a squabble springs
-up between the President and the author of the Nebraska Bill, on the
-mere question of fact whether the Lecompton Constitution was, or was
-not, in any just sense, made by the people of Kansas; and, in that
-squabble, the latter declares that all he wants is a fair vote for the
-people, and that he cares not whether slavery be voted down or voted up.
-I do not understand his declaration, that he cares not whether slavery
-be voted down or voted up, to be intended by him other than as an apt
-definition of the policy he would impress upon the public mind,--the
-principle for which he declares he has suffered much, and is ready to
-suffer to the end.
-
-And well may he cling to that principle! If he has any parental feeling,
-well may he cling to it! That principle is the only shred left of his
-original Nebraska doctrine. Under the Dred-Scott Decision, squatter
-sovereignty squatted out of existence,--tumbled down like temporary
-scaffolding; like the mould at the foundery, served through one blast,
-and fell back into loose sand; helped to carry an election, and then
-was kicked to the winds. His late joint struggle with the Republicans
-against the Lecompton Constitution involves nothing of the original
-Nebraska doctrine. That struggle was made on a point--the right of a
-people to make their own constitution--upon which he and the Republicans
-have never differed.
-
-The several points of the Dred-Scott Decision, in connection with
-Senator Douglas's "care-not" policy, constitute the piece of machinery
-in its present state of advancement. The working-points of that
-machinery are,--
-
-First, That no negro slave, imported as such from Africa, and no
-descendant of such, can ever be a citizen of any State, in the sense of
-that term as used in the Constitution of the United States.
-
-This point is made in order to deprive the negro, in every possible
-event, of the benefit of this provision of the United States
-Constitution, which declares that "The citizens of each State shall be
-entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several
-States.
-
-Secondly, That, "subject to the Constitution of the United States,"
-neither Congress nor a Territorial Legislature can exclude slavery from
-any United States Territory.
-
-This point is made in order that individual men may fill up the
-Territories with slaves, without danger of losing them as property, and
-thus to enhance the chances of permanency to the institution through all
-the future.
-
-Thirdly, That whether the holding a negro in actual slavery in a Free
-State makes him free, as against the holder, the United States courts
-will not decide, but will leave it to be decided by the courts of any
-Slave State the negro may be forced into by the master.
-
-This point is made, not to be pressed immediately; but if acquiesced in
-for a while, and apparently indorsed by the people at an election, then
-to sustain the logical conclusion, that, what Dred Scott's master might
-lawfully do with Dred Scott in the free State of Illinois, every other
-master may lawfully do with any other one or one thousand slaves in
-Illinois, or in any other Free State.
-
-Auxiliary to all this, and working hand in hand with it, the Nebraska
-doctrine, or what is left of it, is to educate and mould public opinion,
-at least Northern public opinion, not to care whether slavery is voted
-down or voted up.
-
-This shows exactly where we now are, and partially, also, whither we are
-tending.
-
-It will throw additional light on the latter to go back and run the mind
-over the string of historical facts already stated. Several things
-will now appear less dark and mysterious than they did when they were
-transpiring.
-
-The people were to be left "perfectly free," "subject only to the
-Constitution." What the Constitution had to do with it, outsiders could
-not then see. Plainly enough now, it was an exactly fitted niche for
-the Dred-Scott Decision afterward to come in, and declare that perfect
-freedom of the people to be just no freedom at all.
-
-Why was the amendment expressly declaring the right of the people to
-exclude slavery voted down? Plainly enough now: the adoption of it would
-have spoiled the niche for the Dred-Scott Decision.
-
-Why was the court decision held up? Why even a senator's individual
-opinion withheld till after the Presidential election? Plainly enough
-now: the speaking out then would have damaged the "perfectly free"
-argument upon which the election was to be carried.
-
-Why the outgoing President's felicitation on the indorsement? Why the
-delay of a re-argument? Why the incoming President's advance exhortation
-in favor of the decision? These things look like the cautious patting
-and petting of a spirited horse preparatory to mounting him, when it
-is dreaded that he may give the rider a fall. And why the hasty
-after-indorsements of the decision by the President and others?
-
-We cannot absolutely know that all these exact adaptations are the
-result of preconcert. But when we see a lot of framed timbers, different
-portions of which we know have been gotten out at different times and
-places, and by different workmen,--Stephen, Franklin, Roger, and James,
-for instance,--and when we see these timbers joined together, and see
-they exactly make the frame of a house or a mill, all the tenons and
-mortises, exactly fitting, and all the lengths and proportions of the
-different pieces exactly adapted to their respective places, and not
-a piece too many or too few,--not omitting even scaffolding--or, if
-a single piece be lacking, we can see the place in the frame exactly
-fitted and prepared to yet bring such piece in,--in such a case, we find
-it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and
-James all understood one another from the beginning, and all worked upon
-a common plan or draft drawn up before the first blow was struck.
-
-It should not be overlooked, that, by the Nebraska Bill, the people of
-a State as well as Territory were to be left "perfectly free" "subject
-only to the Constitution." Why mention a State? They were legislating
-for Territories, and not for or about States. Certainly the people of
-a State are and ought to be subject to the Constitution of the United
-States; but why is mention of this lugged into this merely territorial
-law? Why are the people of a Territory and the people of a State therein
-lumped together, and their relation to the Constitution therein treated
-as being precisely the same?
-
-While the opinion of the court by Chief-Justice Taney, in the Dred-Scott
-case, and the separate opinions of all the concurring judges, expressly
-declare that the Constitution of the United States neither permits
-Congress nor a Territorial Legislature to exclude slavery from any
-United States
-
-Territory, they all omit to declare whether or not the same Constitution
-permits a State, or the people of a State, to exclude it. Possibly, this
-was a mere omission; but who can be quite sure, if McLean or Curtis had
-sought to get into the opinion a declaration of unlimited power in the
-people of a State to exclude slavery from their limits, just as Chase
-and Mace sought to get such declaration, in behalf of the people of a
-Territory, into the Nebraska Bill,--I ask, who can be quite sure that
-it would not have been voted down in the one case as it had been in the
-other?
-
-The nearest approach to the point of declaring the power of a State over
-slavery is made by Judge Nelson. He approaches it more than once, using
-the precise idea, and almost the language too, of the Nebraska Act. On
-one occasion his exact language is, "Except in cases where the power
-is restrained by the Constitution of the United States, the law of the
-State is supreme over the subject of slavery within its jurisdiction."
-
-In what cases the power of the State is so restrained by the United
-States Constitution is left an open question, precisely as the same
-question, as to the restraint on the power of the Territories, was
-left open in the Nebraska Act. Put that and that together, and we have
-another nice little niche, which we may ere long see filled with another
-Supreme Court decision, declaring that the Constitution of the United
-States does not permit a State to exclude slavery from its limits. And
-this may especially be expected if the doctrine of "care not whether
-slavery be voted down or voted up" shall gain upon the public mind
-sufficiently to give promise that such a decision can be maintained when
-made.
-
-Such a decision is all that slavery now lacks of being alike lawful in
-all the States. Welcome or unwelcome, such decision is probably coming,
-and will soon be upon us, unless the power of the present political
-dynasty shall be met and overthrown. We shall lie down pleasantly
-dreaming that the people of Missouri are on the verge of making their
-State free; and we shall awake to the reality, instead, that the Supreme
-Court has made Illinois a Slave State.
-
-To meet and overthrow the power of that dynasty is the work now before
-all those who would prevent that consummation. That is what we have to
-do. But how can we best do it?
-
-There are those who denounce us openly to their own friends, and yet
-whisper softly, that Senator Douglas is the aptest instrument there is
-with which to effect that object. They do not tell us, nor has he told
-us, that he wishes any such object to be effected. They wish us to infer
-all, from the facts that he now has a little quarrel with the present
-head of the dynasty; and that he has regularly voted with us, on a
-single point, upon which he and we have never differed.
-
-They remind us that he is a very great man, and that the largest of us
-are very small ones. Let this be granted. But "a _living dog_ is better
-than a _dead lion_." Judge Douglas, if not a dead lion for this work,
-is at least a caged and toothless one. How can he oppose the advances
-of slavery? He don't care any thing about it. His avowed mission is
-impressing the "public heart" to care nothing about it.
-
-A leading Douglas Democrat newspaper thinks Douglas's superior talent
-will be needed to resist the revival of the African slave-trade. Does
-Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? He has
-not said so. Does he really think so? But, if it is, how can he resist
-it? For years he has labored to prove it a sacred right of white men to
-take negro slaves into the new Territories. Can he possibly show that
-it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest?
-And unquestionably they can be bought cheaper in Africa than in
-Virginia.
-
-He has done all in his power to reduce the whole question of slavery
-to one of a mere right of property; and as such, how can he oppose the
-foreign slave-trade,--how can he refuse that trade in that "property"
-shall be "perfectly free,"--unless he does it as a protection to the
-home production? And, as the home producers will probably not ask the
-protection, he will be wholly without a ground of opposition.
-
-Senator Douglas holds, we know, that a man may rightfully be wiser
-to-day than he was yesterday; that he may rightfully change when he
-finds himself wrong. But can we for that reason run ahead, and infer
-that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has
-given no intimation? Can we safely base our action upon any such vague
-inferences?
-
-Now, as ever, I wish not to misrepresent Judge Douglas's position,
-question his motives, or do aught that can be personally offensive to
-him. Whenever, if ever, he and we can come together on principle, so
-that our great cause may have assistance from his great ability, I hope
-to have interposed no adventitious obstacle.
-
-But clearly he, is not now with us; he does not pretend to be; he does
-not promise ever to be. Our cause, then, must be intrusted to, and
-conducted by, its own undoubted friends,--those whose hands are free,
-whose hearts are in the work, who do care for the result.
-
-Two years ago the Republicans of the nation mustered over thirteen
-hundred thousand strong. We did this under the single impulse of
-resistance to a common danger, with every external circumstance against
-us. Of strange, discordant, and even hostile elements, we gathered from
-the four winds, and formed and fought the battle through, under the
-constant hot fire of a disciplined, proud, and pampered enemy. Did we
-brave all then to falter now?--now, when that same enemy is wavering,
-dissevered, and belligerent?
-
-The result is not doubtful. We shall not fail,--if we stand firm, we
-shall not fail. Wise counsels may accelerate or mistakes delay it; but,
-sooner or later, the victory is sure to come.
-
-The speech produced a profound impression upon men of all parties:
-the Democrats rejoiced in it, and reprobated it; the conservative
-Republicans received it coldly, and saw in it the sign of certain
-defeat. In the eyes of the latter it was a disheartening mistake at
-the outset of a momentous campaign,--a fatal error, which no policy or
-exertion could retrieve. Alone of all those directly affected by it, the
-Abolitionists, the compatriots of Mr. Herndon, heard in it the voice of
-a fearless leader, who had the wisdom to comprehend an unwelcome fact,
-and the courage to proclaim it at the moment when the delusion of
-fancied security and peace was most generally and fondly entertained.
-It was the "irrepressible conflict" which Mr. Seward had been preaching,
-and to which the one party had given almost as little credit as the
-other. Except a few ultraists here and there, nobody as yet had actually
-prepared his armor for this imaginary conflict, to which the nation was
-so persistently summoned,--and, indeed, none but those few seriously
-believed in the possibility of its existence. The Republican party had
-heretofore disavowed the doctrine with a unanimity nearly as great as
-that exhibited by the little council of Mr. Lincoln's immediate friends.
-It was therefore to be expected, that, when a slow, cautious, moderate
-man like Mr. Lincoln came forward with it in this startling fashion,
-it would carry dismay to his followers, and a cheering assurance to his
-enemies. But Mr. Lincoln was looking farther than this campaign: he was
-quietly dreaming of the Presidency, and edging himself to a place in
-advance, where he thought the tide might take him up in 1860. He was
-sure that sectional animosities, far from subsiding, would grow deeper
-and stronger with time; and for that reason the next nominee of the
-exclusively Northern party must be a man of radical views. "I think,"
-says Mr. Herndon, "the speech was intended to take the wind out of
-Seward's sails;" and Mr. Herndon is not alone in his opinion.
-
-A day or two after Mr. Lincoln spoke, one Dr. Long came into his office,
-and delivered to him a foretaste of the remarks he was doomed to hear
-for several months. "Well, Lincoln," said he, "that foolish speech of
-yours will kill you,--will defeat you in this contest, and probably for
-all offices for all time to come. I am sorry, sorry,--very sorry: I wish
-it was wiped out of existence. Don't you wish it, now?" Mr. Lincoln had
-been writing during the doctor's lament; but at the end of it he laid
-down his pen, raised his head, lifted his spectacles, and, with a look
-half quizzical, half contemptuous, replied, "Well, doctor, if I had to
-draw a pen across, and erase my whole life from existence, and I had
-one poor gift or choice left, as to what I should save from the wreck, I
-should choose that speech, and leave it to the world unerased."
-
-Leonard Swett, than whom there was no more gifted man, nor a better
-judge of political affairs, in Illinois, is convinced that "the first
-ten lines of that speech defeated him." "The sentiment of the 'house
-divided against itself' seemed wholly inappropriate," says Mr. Swett.
-"It was a speech made at the commencement of a campaign, and apparently
-made for the campaign. Viewing it in this light alone, nothing could
-have been more unfortunate or inappropriate. It was saying first the
-wrong thing; yet he saw that it was an abstract truth, and standing by
-the speech would ultimately find him in the right place. I was inclined
-at the time to believe these words were hastily and inconsiderately
-uttered; but subsequent facts have convinced me they were deliberate and
-had been matured.... In the summer of 1859, when he was dining with
-a party of his intimate friends at Bloomington, the subject of his
-Springfield speech was discussed. We all insisted that it was a great
-mistake; but he justified himself, and finally said, 'Well, gentlemen,
-you may think that speech was a mistake; but I never have believed it
-was, and you will see the day when you will consider it was the wisest
-thing I ever said.'"
-
-John T. Stuart was a family connection of the Todds and Edwardses, and
-thus also of Lincoln. Mr. C. C. Brown married Mr. Stuart's daughter,
-and speaks of Mr. Lincoln as "our relative." This gentleman says, "The
-Todd-Stuart-Edwards family, with preacher and priest, dogs and servants,
-got mad at Mr. Lincoln because he made 'The House-divided-against-itself
-Speech.' He flinched, dodged, said he would explain, and did explain, in
-the Douglas debates."
-
-But it was difficult to explain: explanations of the kind are generally
-more hurtful than the original offence. Accordingly, Mr. Herndon reports
-in his broad, blunt way, that "Mr. Lincoln met with many cold shoulders
-for some time,--nay, during the whole canvass with Douglas." At the
-great public meetings which characterized that campaign, "you could
-hear, from all quarters in the crowd, Republicans saying, 'Damn that
-fool speech! it will be the cause of the death of Lincoln and the
-Republican party. Such folly! such nonsense! Damn it!'"
-
-Since 1840 Lincoln and Douglas had appeared before the people, almost as
-regularly as the elections came round, to discuss, the one against the
-other, the merits of parties, candidates, and principles. Thus far Mr.
-Lincoln had been in a certain sense the pursuer: he had lain in wait
-for Mr. Douglas; he had caught him at unexpected turns and upon sharp
-points; he had mercilessly improved the advantage of Mr. Douglas's long
-record in Congress to pick apart and to criticise, while his own was so
-much more humble and less extensive. But now at last they were
-abreast, candidates for the same office, with a fair field and equal
-opportunities. It was the great crisis in the lives of both. Let us see
-what they thought of each other; and, in the extracts which convey the
-information, we may also get a better idea of the character of each for
-candor, generosity, and truthfulness.
-
-Dr. Holland quotes from one of Mr. Lincoln's unpublished manuscripts as
-follows:--
-
-"Twenty-two 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 so as he. With me the race of
-ambition has been a failure,--a flat failure; with him it has been one
-of splendid success. His name fills the nation, and is not unknown even
-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."
-
-Again, in the pending campaign, Mr. Lincoln said, "There is still
-another disadvantage under which we labor, and to which I will invite
-your attention. It arises out of the relative positions of the two
-persons who stand before the State as candidates for the Senate. Senator
-Douglas is of worldwide renown. All the anxious politicians of his
-party, or who had been of his party for years past, have been looking
-upon him as certainly, at no distant day, to be the President of the
-United States. They have seen, in his round, jolly, fruitful face,
-post-offices, land-offices, marshalships, and cabinet appointments,
-chargéships and foreign missions, bursting and sprouting out in
-wonderful exuberance, ready to be laid hold of by their greedy hands.
-And as they have been gazing upon this attractive picture so long, they
-cannot, in the little distraction that has taken place in the party,
-bring themselves to give up the charming hope; but, with greedier
-anxiety, they rush about him, sustain him, and give him marches,
-triumphal entries, and receptions, beyond what, even in the days of his
-highest prosperity, they could have brought about in his favor. On the
-contrary, nobody has ever expected me to be President. In my poor, lean,
-lank face, nobody has ever seen that any cabbages were sprouting out.
-These are disadvantages, all taken together, that the Republicans
-labor under. We have to fight this battle upon principle, and principle
-alone."
-
-Now hear Mr. Douglas. In their first joint debate at Ottawa, he said,
-"In the remarks I have made on this platform, and the position of Mr.
-Lincoln upon it, I mean nothing personally disrespectful or unkind to
-that gentleman. I have known him for nearly twenty-five years. There
-were many points of sympathy between us when we first got acquainted.
-We were both comparatively boys, and both struggling with poverty in a
-strange land. I was a schoolteacher in the town of Winchester, and he a
-flourishing grocery-keeper in the town of Salem. He was more successful
-in his occupation than I was in mine, and hence more fortunate in this
-world's goods. Lincoln is one of those peculiar men who perform with
-admirable skill every thing which they undertake. I made as good a
-school-teacher as I could; and, when a cabinet-maker, I made a good
-bedstead and tables, although my old boss said I succeeded better with
-bureaus and secretaries than with any thing else; but I believe that
-Lincoln was always more successful in business than I, for his business
-enabled him to get into the Legislature. I met him there, however, and
-had a sympathy with him, because of the up-hill struggle we both had in
-life. He was then just as good at telling an anecdote as now. He could
-beat any of the boys wrestling, or running a foot-race, in pitching
-quoits, or tossing a copper; could ruin more liquor than all of the boys
-of the town together; and the dignity and impartiality with which he
-presided at a horse-race or fist-fight excited the admiration and won
-the praise of everybody that was present and participated. I sympathized
-with him because he was struggling with difficulties; and so was I. Mr.
-Lincoln served with me in the Legislature in 1836, when we both retired,
-and he subsided, or became submerged; and he was lost sight of as
-a public man for some years. In 1846, when Wilmot introduced his
-celebrated proviso, and the abolition tornado swept over the country,
-Lincoln again turned up as a member of Congress from the Sangamon
-district. I was then in the Senate of the United States, and was glad
-to welcome my old friend and companion. Whilst in Congress, he
-distinguished himself by his opposition to the Mexican War, taking the
-side of the common enemy against his own country; and, when he
-returned home, he found that the indignation of the people followed
-him everywhere, and he was again submerged, or obliged to retire into
-private life, forgotten by his former friends. He came up again in 1854,
-just in time to make this abolition or Black Republican platform,
-in company with Giddings, Lovejoy, Chase, and Fred. Douglas, for the
-Republican party to stand upon. Trumbull, too, was one of our own
-contemporaries."
-
-Previous pages of this book present fully enough for our present purpose
-the issues upon which this canvass was made to turn. The principal
-speeches, the joint debates, with five separate and independent speeches
-by Mr. Lincoln, and three by Mr. Douglas, have been collected and
-published under Mr. Lincoln's supervision in a neat and accessible
-volume. It is, therefore, unnecessary, and would be unjust, to reprint
-them here. They obtained at the time a more extensive circulation than
-such productions usually have, and exerted an influence which is very
-surprising to the calm reader of the present day.
-
-Mr. Douglas endeavored to prove, from Mr. Lincoln's Springfield speech,
-that he (Mr. Lincoln) was a self-declared Disunionist, in favor of
-reducing the institutions of all the States "to a dead uniformity," in
-favor of abolishing slavery everywhere,--an old-time abolitionist, a
-negropolist, an amalgamationist. This, with much vaunting of himself
-for his opposition to Lecompton, and a loud proclamation of "popular
-sovereignty," made the bulk of Mr. Douglas's speeches.
-
-Mr. Lincoln denied these accusations; he had no "thought of bringing
-about civil war," nor yet uniformity of institutions: he would not
-interfere with slavery where it had a lawful existence, and was not in
-favor of negro equality or miscegenation. He did, however, believe that
-Congress had the right to exclude slavery from the Territories,
-and ought to exercise it. As to Mr. Douglas's doctrine of popular
-sovereignty, there could be no issue concerning it; for everybody
-agreed that the people of a Territory might, when they formed a State
-constitution, adopt or exclude slavery as they pleased. But that a
-Territorial Legislature possessed exclusive power, or any power at all,
-over the subject, even Mr Douglas could not assert, inasmuch as the
-Dred-Scott Decision was plain and explicit the other way; and Mr.
-Douglas boasted that decision as the rule of his political conduct,
-and sought to impose it upon all parties as a perfect definition of the
-rights and duties of government, local and general.
-
-At Ottawa, Mr. Douglas put to Mr. Lincoln a series of questions,
-which, upon their next meeting (at Freeport), Mr. Lincoln answered as
-follows:--
-
-I have supposed myself, since the organization of the Republican party
-at Bloomington, in May, 1856, bound as a party man by the platforms
-of the party, then and since. If, in any interrogatories which I shall
-answer, I go beyond the scope of what is within these platforms, it will
-be perceived that no one is responsible but myself.
-
-Having said thus much, I will take up the judge's interrogatories as I
-find them printed in "The Chicago Times," and answer them _seriatim_.
-In order that there may be no mistake about it, I have copied the
-interrogatories in writing, and also my answers to them. The first one
-of these interrogatories is in these words:--
-
-Question 1.--"I desire to know whether Lincoln to-day stands, as he
-did in 1854, in favor of the unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave
-Law."
-
-Answer.--I do not now, nor ever did, stand in favor of the unconditional
-repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law.
-
-Q. 2.--"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to-day, as he
-did in 1854, against the admission of any more Slave States into the
-Union, even if the people want them."
-
-A.--I do not now, nor ever did, stand pledged against the admission of
-any more Slave States into the Union.
-
-Q. 3.--"I want to know whether he stands pledged against the admission
-of a new State into the Union with such a constitution as the people of
-that State may see fit to make."
-
-A.--I do not stand pledged against the admission of a new State into the
-Union, with such a constitution as the people of that State may see fit
-to make.
-
-Q. 4.--"I want to know whether he stands to-day pledged to the abolition
-of slavery in the District of Columbia."
-
-A.--I do not stand to-day pledged to the abolition of slavery in the
-District of Columbia.
-
-Q. 5.--"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to the
-prohibition of the slave-trade between the different States."
-
-A.--I do not stand pledged to the prohibition of the slave-trade between
-the different States.
-
-Q. 6.--"I desire to know whether he stands pledged to prohibit slavery
-in all the Territories of the United States, north as well as south of
-the Missouri Compromise line."
-
-A.--I am impliedly, if not expressly, pledged to a belief in the right
-and duty of Congress to prohibit slavery in all the United States
-Territories. [Great applause.]
-
-Q 7.--"I desire him to answer whether he is opposed to the acquisition
-of any new territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein."
-
-A.--I am not generally opposed to honest acquisition of territory;
-and, in any given case, I would or would not oppose such acquisition,
-accordingly as I might think such acquisition would or would not agitate
-the slavery question among ourselves.
-
-Now, my friends, it will be perceived, upon an examination of these
-questions and answers, that so far I have only answered that I was
-not pledged to this, that, or the other. The judge has not framed his
-interrogatories to ask me any thing more than this, and I have answered
-in strict accordance with the interrogatories, and have answered truly
-that I am not pledged at all upon any of the points to which I have
-answered. But I am not disposed to hang upon the exact form of his
-interrogatory. I am rather disposed to take up at least some of these
-questions, and state what I really think upon them.
-
-As to the first one, in regard to the Fugitive-Slave Law, I have never
-hesitated to say, and I do not now hesitate to say, that I think, under
-the Constitution of the United States, the people of the Southern States
-are entitled to a congressional slave law. Having said that, I have had
-nothing to say in regard to the existing Fugitive-Slave Law, further
-than that I think it should have been framed so as to be free from some
-of the objections that pertain to it, without lessening its efficiency.
-And inasmuch as we are not now in an agitation in regard to an
-alteration or modification of that law, I would not be the man to
-introduce it as a new subject of agitation upon the general question of
-slavery.
-
-In regard to the other question, of whether I am pledged to the
-admission of any more Slave States into the Union, I state to you very
-frankly, that I would be exceedingly sorry ever to be put in a position
-of having to pass upon that question. I should be exceedingly glad to
-know that there would never be another Slave State admitted into
-the Union; but I must add, that, if slavery shall be kept out of the
-Territories during the Territorial existence of any one given Territory,
-and then the people shall, having a fair chance and a clear field, when
-they come to adopt the constitution, do such an extraordinary thing as
-to adopt a slave constitution, uninfluenced by the actual presence of
-the institution among them, I see no alternative, if we own the country,
-but to admit them into the Union. [Applause.]
-
-The third interrogatory is answered by the answer to the second, it
-being, as I conceive, the same as the second.
-
-The fourth one is in regard to the abolition of slavery in the District
-of Columbia. In relation to that, I have my mind very distinctly
-made up. I should be exceedingly glad to see slavery abolished in
-the District of Columbia. I believe that Congress possesses the
-constitutional power to abolish it. Yet, as a member of Congress, I
-should not, with my present views, be in favor of endeavoring to abolish
-slavery in the District of Columbia, unless it would be upon these
-conditions: First, that the abolition should be gradual; Second, That it
-should be on a vote of the majority of qualified voters in the District;
-and Third, That compensation should be made to unwilling owners. With
-these three conditions, I confess I would be exceedingly glad to see
-Congress abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, and, in the
-language of Henry Clay, "sweep from our capital that foul blot upon our
-nation."
-
-In regard to the fifth interrogatory, I must say here, that as to the
-question of the abolition of the slave-trade between the different
-States, I can truly answer, as I have, that I am pledged to nothing
-about it. It is a subject to which I have not given that mature
-consideration that would make me feel authorized to state a position so
-as to hold myself entirely bound by it. In other words, that question
-has never been prominently enough before me to induce me to investigate
-whether we really have the constitutional power to do it. I could
-investigate it if I had sufficient time to bring myself to a conclusion
-upon that subject; but I have not done so, and I say so frankly to you
-here and to Judge Douglas. I must say, however, that, if I should be of
-opinion that Congress does possess the constitutional power to abolish
-slave-trading among the different States, I should still not be in favor
-of the exercise of that power unless upon some conservative principle as
-I conceive it, akin to what I have said in relation to the abolition of
-slavery in the District of Columbia.
-
-My answer as to whether I desire that slavery should be prohibited in
-all Territories of the United States is full and explicit within itself,
-and cannot be made clearer by any comments of mine. So I suppose, in
-regard to the question whether I am opposed to the acquisition of any
-more territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein, my answer is
-such that I could add nothing by way of illustration, or making myself
-better understood, than the answer which I have placed in writing.
-
-Now, in all this the Judge has me, and he has me on the record. I
-suppose he had flattered himself that I was really entertaining one set
-of opinions for one place, and another set for another place,--that
-I was afraid to say at one place what I uttered at another. What I am
-saying here I suppose I say to a vast audience as strongly tending to
-abolitionism as any audience in the State of Illinois; and I believe
-I am saying that which, if it would be offensive to any persons, and
-render them enemies to myself, would be offensive to persons in this
-audience.
-
-Mr. Douglas had presented his interrogatories on the 21st of August,
-and Mr. Lincoln did not answer them until the 27th. They had no meetings
-between those days; and Mr. Lincoln had ample time to ponder his
-replies, and consult his friends. But he did more: he improved the
-opportunity to prepare a series of insidious questions, which he felt
-sure Mr. Douglas could not possibly answer without utterly ruining
-his political prospects. Mr. Lincoln struggled for a great prize,
-unsuspected by the common mind, but the thought of which was ever
-present to his own. Mr. Douglas was a standing candidate for the
-Presidency; but as yet Mr. Lincoln was a very quiet one, nursing hopes
-which his modesty prevented him from obtruding upon others. He was wise
-enough to keep the fact of their existence to himself, and in the
-mean time to dig pitfalls and lay obstructions in the way of his most
-formidable competitors. His present purpose was not only to defeat Mr.
-Douglas for the Senate, but to "kill him,"--to get him out of the way
-finally and forever. If he could make him evade the Dred-Scott Decision,
-and deny the right of a Southern man to take his negroes into a
-Territory, and keep them there while it was a Territory, he would
-thereby sever him from the body of the Democratic party, and leave him
-the leader of merely a little half-hearted antislavery faction. Under
-such circumstances, Mr. Douglas could never be the candidate of the
-party at large; but he might serve a very useful purpose by running on a
-separate ticket, and dividing the great majority of conservative votes,
-which would inevitably elect a single nominee.
-
-Mr. Lincoln went to Chicago, and there intimated to some of his friends
-what he proposed to do. They attempted to dissuade him, because, as
-they insisted, if Mr. Douglas should answer that the Dred-Scott Decision
-might be evaded by the people of a Territory, and slavery prohibited
-in the face of it, the answer would draw to him the sympathies of the
-antislavery voters, and probably, of itself, defeat Mr. Lincoln. But, so
-long as Mr. Douglas held to the decision in good faith, he had no hope
-of more aid from that quarter than he had already received. It was
-therefore the part of wisdom to let him alone as to that point. Mr.
-Lincoln, on the contrary, looked forward to 1860, and was determined
-that the South should understand the antagonism between Mr. Douglas's
-latest conception of "squatter sovereignty," on the one hand, and the
-Dred-Scott Decision, the Nebraska Bill, and all previous platforms of
-the party, on the other. Mr. Douglas taught strange doctrines and false
-ones; and Mr. Lincoln thought the faithful, far and near, should know
-it. If Mr. Douglas was a schismatic, there ought to be a schism, of
-which the Republicans would reap the benefit; and therefore he insisted
-upon his questions. "That is no business of yours," said his friends.
-"Attend exclusively to your senatorial race, and let the slaveholder and
-Douglas fight out that question among themselves and for themselves. If
-you put the question to him, he will answer that the Dred-Scott Decision
-is simply an abstract rule, having no practical application."--"If he
-answers that way, he's a dead cock in the pit," responded Mr. Lincoln.
-"But that," said they, "is none of your business: you are concerned
-only about the senator-ship."--"No," continued Mr. Lincoln, "not alone
-_exactly_: I am killing larger game. The great battle of 1860 is worth a
-thousand of this senatorial race."
-
-He did accordingly propound the interrogatories as follows:--
-
-1. If the people of Kansas shall, by means entirely unobjectionable in
-all other respects, adopt a State constitution, and ask admission into
-the Union under it, before they have the requisite number of inhabitants
-according to the English Bill,--some ninety-three thousand,--will you
-vote to admit them?
-
-2. Can the people of a United States Territory, in any lawful way,
-against the wish of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery
-from its limits?
-
-3. If the Supreme Court of the United States shall decide that
-States cannot exclude slavery from their limits, are you in favor of
-acquiescing in, adopting, and following such decision as a rule of
-political action?
-
-4. Are you in favor of acquiring additional territory, in disregard of
-how such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?
-
-The first and fourth questions Mr. Douglas answered substantially in the
-affirmative. To the third he replied, that no judge would ever be guilty
-of the "moral treason" of making such a decision. But to the second--the
-main question, to which all the others were riders and make-weights--he
-answered as he was expected to answer. "It matters not," said he, "what
-way the Supreme Court may hereafter decide as to the abstract
-question whether slavery may or may not go into a Territory under
-the Constitution: the people have the lawful means to introduce it or
-exclude it, as they please, for the reason that slavery cannot exist
-a day or an hour anywhere, unless it is supported by local police
-regulations. Those police regulations can only be established by the
-local Legislature; and, if the people are opposed to slavery, they will
-elect representatives to that body who will, by unfriendly legislation,
-effectually prevent the introduction of it into their midst."
-
-The reply was more than enough for Mr. Lincoln's purpose. It cut Mr.
-Douglas off from his party, and put him in a state of perfect antagonism
-to it. He firmly denied the power of Congress to restrict slavery; and
-he admitted, that, under the Dred-Scott Decision, all Territories were
-open to its entrance. But he held, that, the moment the slaveholder
-passed the boundary of a Territory, he was at the mercy of the
-squatters, a dozen or two of whom might get together in a legislature,
-and rob him of the property which the Constitution, the Supreme Court,
-and Mr. Douglas himself said he had an indefeasible right to take there.
-Mr. Lincoln knew that the Southern people would feel infinitely safer
-in the hands of Congress than in the hands of the squatters. If they
-regarded the Republican mode of excluding slavery as a barefaced
-usurpation, they would consider Mr. Douglas's system of confiscation by
-"unfriendly legislation" mere plain stealing. The Republicans said to
-them, "We will regulate the whole subject by general laws, which you
-participate with us in passing;" but Mr. Douglas offered them,
-as sovereign judges and legislators, the territorial settlers
-themselves,--squatters they might be,--whom the aid societies rushed
-into the new Territories for the very purpose of keeping slavery away.
-The new doctrine was admirably calculated to alarm and incense the
-South; and, following so closely Mr. Douglas's conduct in the Lecompton
-affair, it was very natural that he should now be universally regarded
-by his late followers as a dangerous heretic and a faithless turncoat.
-The result justified Mr. Lincoln's anticipations. Mr. Douglas did not
-fully develop his new theory, nor personally promulgate it as the fixed
-tenet of his faction, until the next year, when he embodied it in the
-famous article contributed by him to "Harper's Magazine." But it did
-its work effectually; and, when parties began to marshal for the great
-struggle of 1860, Mr. Douglas was found to be, not precisely what he had
-promised,--a Republican, "fighting their battles,"--but an independent
-candidate, upon an independent platform, dividing the opposition.
-
-Mr. Lincoln pointed out on the spot the wide difference between Mr.
-Douglas's present views and those he had previously maintained with such
-dogged and dogmatic persistence. "The new state of the case" had induced
-"the Judge to sheer away from his original ground." The new theory was
-false in law, and could have no practical application. The history of
-the country showed it to be a naked humbug, a demagogue's imposture.
-Slavery was established in all this country, without "local police
-regulations" to protect it. Dred Scott himself was held in a Territory,
-not only without "local police regulations" to favor his bondage, but in
-defiance of a general law which prohibited it. A man who believed that
-the Dred-Scott Decision was the true interpretation of the Constitution
-could not refuse to negro slavery whatever protection it needed in the
-Territories without incurring the guilt of perjury. To say that slave
-property might be constitutionally confiscated, destroyed, or driven
-away from a place where it was constitutionally protected, was such an
-absurdity as Mr. Douglas alone in this evil strait was equal to; the
-proposition meaning, as he said on a subsequent occasion, "no less than
-that a thing may lawfully be driven away from a place where it has a
-lawful right to be."
-
-"Of that answer at Freeport," as Mr. Herndon has it, Douglas "instantly
-died. The red-gleaming Southern tomahawk flashed high and keen. Douglas
-was removed out of Lincoln's way. The wind was taken out of Seward's
-sails (by the House-divided Speech), and Lincoln stood out prominent."
-
-The State election took place on the 2d of November, 1858. Mr. Lincoln
-had more than four thousand majority of the votes cast; but this was not
-enough to give him a majority in the Legislature. An old and inequitable
-apportionment law was still in operation; and a majority of the members
-chosen under it were, as it was intended by the law-makers they
-should be, Democrats. In the Senate were fourteen Democrats to
-eleven Republicans; and in the House, forty Democrats to thirty-five
-Republicans. Mr. Douglas was, of course, re-elected, and Mr. Lincoln
-bitterly disappointed. Some one asked Mr. Lincoln how he felt when the
-returns came in. He replied, "that he felt like the boy that stumped his
-toe,--'it hurt too bad to laugh, and he was too big to cry!'"
-
-In this canvass Mr. Lincoln earned a reputation as a popular debater
-second to that of no man in America,--certainly not second to that
-of his famous antagonist. He kept his temper; he was not prone to
-personalities; he indulged in few anecdotes, and those of a decent
-character; he was fair, frank, and manly; and, if the contest had shown
-nothing else, it would have shown, at least, that "Old Abe" could behave
-like a well-bred gentleman under very trying circumstances. His marked
-success in these discussions was probably no surprise to the people of
-the Springfield District, who knew him as well as, or better than, they
-did Mr. Douglas. But in the greater part of the State, and throughout
-the Union the series of brilliant victories successively won by an
-obscure man over an orator of such wide experience and renown was
-received with exclamations of astonishment, alike by listeners and
-readers. It is true that many believed, or pretended to believe, that he
-was privately tutored and "crammed" by politicians of greater note
-than himself; and, when the speeches were at last collected and printed
-together, it was alleged that Mr. Lincoln's had been re-written or
-extensively revised by Mr. Judd, Judge Logan, Judge Davis, or some one
-else of great and conceded abilities.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN the winter of 1858-9, Mr. Lincoln, having no political business on
-hand, appeared before the public in the character of lecturer, having
-prepared himself with much care. His lecture was, or might have been,
-styled, "All Creation is a mine, and every man a miner." He began with
-Adam and Eve, and the invention of the "fig-leaf apron," of which he
-gave a humorous description, and which he said was a "joint operation."
-The invention of letters, writing, printing, of the application of
-steam, of electricity, he classed under the comprehensive head of
-"inventions and discoveries," along with the discovery of America, the
-enactment of patent-laws, and the "invention of negroes, or the present
-mode of using them." Part of the lecture was humorous; a very small part
-of it actually witty; and the rest of it so commonplace that it was a
-genuine mortification to his friends. He delivered it at two or three
-points, and then declined all further invitations. To one of these he
-replied, in March, as follows: "Your note, inviting me to deliver a
-lecture in Gales-burgh, is received. I regret to say I cannot do so now:
-I must stick to the courts a while. I read a sort of a lecture to three
-different audiences during the last month and this; but I did so under
-circumstances which made it a waste of no time whatever."
-
-From the Douglas discussion many of the leaders of the Republican party
-believed, and the reader will agree had some foundation for the belief,
-that Mr. Lincoln was one of the greatest and best men in the party. It
-was natural, therefore, that many eyes should be turned towards him
-for the coming Presidential nomination. He had all the requisites of an
-available candidate: he had not been sufficiently prominent in national
-politics to excite the jealousies of powerful rivals; he was true,
-manly, able; he was pre-eminently a man of the people; he had sprung
-from a low family in the lowest class of society; he had been a
-rail-splitter, a flat-boatman, a grocery-keeper,--every thing that could
-commend him to the "popular heart." His manners, his dress, his stories,
-and his popular name and style of "Honest Old Abe," pointed to him as a
-man beside whose "running qualities" those of Taylor and Harrison were
-of slight comparison. That he knew all this, and thought of it a great
-deal, no one can doubt; and in the late campaign he had most adroitly
-opened the way for the realization of his hopes. But he knew very well
-that a becoming modesty in a "new man" was about as needful as any thing
-else. Accordingly, when a Mr. Pickett wrote him on the subject in March,
-1859, he replied as follows: "Yours of the 2d instant, inviting me to
-deliver my lecture on 'Inventions' in Rock Island, is at hand, and
-I regret to be unable from press of business to comply therewith. In
-regard to the other matter you speak of, I beg that you will not give it
-a further mention. I do not think I am fit for the Presidency."
-
-But in April the project began to be agitated in his own town. On
-the 27th of that month, he was in the office of "The Central Illinois
-Gazette," when the editor suggested his name. Mr. Lincoln, "with
-characteristic modesty, declined." But the editor estimated his "No"
-at its proper value; and he "was brought out in the next issue, May
-4." Thence the movement spread rapidly and strongly. Many Republicans
-welcomed it, and, appreciating the pre-eminent fitness of the
-nomination, saw in it the assurance of certain victory.
-
-The West was rapidly filling with Germans and other inhabitants of
-foreign birth. Dr. Canisius, a German, foreseeing Mr. Lincoln's
-strength in the near future, wrote to inquire what he thought about the
-restrictions upon naturalization recently adopted in Massachusetts, and
-whether he favored the fusion of all the opposition elements in the next
-canvass. He replied, that, as to the restrictions, he was wholly and
-unalterably opposed to them; and as to fusion, he was ready for it
-upon "Republican grounds," but upon no other. He would not lower "the
-Republican standard even by a hair's breadth." The letter undoubtedly
-had a good effect, and brought him valuable support from the foreign
-population.
-
-To a gentleman who desired his views about the tariff question, he
-replied cautiously and discreetly as follows:--
-
-Dr. Edward Wallace.
-
-My dear Sir,--I am here just now attending court. Yesterday, before
-I left Springfield, your brother, Dr. William S. Wallace, showed me a
-letter of yours, in which you kindly mention my name, inquire for my
-tariff-views, and suggest the propriety of my writing a letter upon the
-subject. I was an old Henry-Clay Tariff Whig. In old times I made more
-speeches on that subject than on any other.
-
-I have not since changed my views. I believe yet, if we could have a
-moderate, carefully adjusted, protective tariff, so far acquiesced in as
-not to be a perpetual subject of political strife, squabbles, changes,
-and uncertain, ties, it would be better for us. Still, it is my opinion,
-that, just now, the revival of that question will not _advance the cause
-itself, or the man who revives it._
-
-I have not thought much on the subject recently; but my general
-impression is, that the necessity for a protective tariff will ere long
-force its old opponents to take it up; and then its old friends can join
-in and establish it on a more firm and durable basis. We, the old Whigs,
-have been entirely beaten out on the tariff question; and we shall not
-be able to re-establish the policy until the absence of it shall have
-demonstrated the necessity for it in the minds of men heretofore opposed
-to it. With this view, I should prefer to not now write a public letter
-upon the subject.
-
-I therefore wish this to be considered confidential.
-
-I shall be very glad to receive a letter from you.
-
-In September Mr. Lincoln made a few masterly speeches in Ohio, where Mr.
-Douglas had preceded him on his new hobby of "squatter sovereignty," or
-"unfriendly legislation."
-
-Clinton, Oct. 11,1859.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-He spoke at Columbus, Cincinnati, and several other points, each
-time devoting the greater part of his address to Mr. Douglas and his
-theories, as if the habit of combating that illustrious chieftain was
-hard to break.
-
-In December he went to Kansas, speaking at Elwood, Don-aphan, Troy,
-Atchison, and twice at Leavenworth. Wherever he went, he was met by
-vast assemblages of people. His speeches were principally repetitions
-of those previously made in Illinois; but they were very fresh and
-captivating to his new audiences. These journeys, which turned out to be
-continuous ovations, spread his name and fame far beyond the limits to
-which they had heretofore been restricted.
-
-During the winter of 1859-60, he saw that his reputation had reached
-such a height, that he might honorably compete with such renowned men as
-Seward, Chase, and Bates, for the Presidential nomination. Mr. Jackson
-Grimshaw of Quincy urged him very strongly on the point. At length Mr.
-Lincoln consented to a conference with Grimshaw and some of his more
-prominent friends. It took place in a committee-room in the State
-House. Mr. Bushnell, Mr. Hatch (the Secretary of State), Mr. Judd
-(Chairman of the Republican State Central Committee), Mr. Peck, and
-Mr. Grimshaw were present,--all of them "intimate friends." They were
-unanimous in opinion as to the expediency and propriety of making him
-a candidate. But "Mr. Lincoln, with his characteristic modesty, doubted
-whether he could get the nomination, even if he wished it, and asked
-until the next morning to answer us.... The next day he authorized us
-to consider him, and work for him, if we pleased, as a candidate for the
-Presidency."
-
-It was in October, 1859, that Mr. Lincoln received an invitation to
-speak in New York. It enchanted him: no event of his life had given
-him more heartfelt pleasure. He went straight to his office, and, Mr.
-Herndon says, "looked pleased, not to say _tickled_. He said to me,
-'Billy, I am invited to deliver a lecture in New York. Shall I go?'--'By
-all means,' I replied; 'and it is a good opening too.'--'If you were in
-my fix, what subject would you choose?' said Lincoln. 'Why, a political
-one: that's your forte,' I answered." Mr. Herndon remembered his
-partner's previous "failure,--utter failure," as a lecturer, and, on
-this occasion, dreaded excessively his choice of a subject. "In the
-absence of a friend's advice, Lincoln would as soon take the Beautiful
-for a subject as any thing else, when he had absolutely no sense of it."
-He wrote in response to the invitation, that he would avail himself
-of it the coming February, provided he might be permitted to make a
-political speech, in case he found it inconvenient to get up one of
-another kind. He had purposely set the day far ahead, that he might
-thoroughly prepare himself; and it may safely be said, that no effort of
-his life cost him so much labor as this one. Some of the party managers
-who were afterwards put to work to verify its statements, and get it out
-as a campaign document, are alleged to have been three weeks in finding
-the historical records consulted by him.
-
-On the 25th of February, 1860, he arrived in New York. It was Saturday,
-and he spent the whole day in revising and retouching his speech. The
-next day he heard Beecher preach, and on Monday wandered about the city
-to see the sights. When the committee under whose auspices he was to
-speak waited upon him, they found him dressed in a sleek and shining
-suit of new black, covered with very apparent creases and wrinkles,
-acquired by being packed too closely and too long in his little valise.
-He felt uneasy in his new clothes and a strange place. His confusion
-was increased when the reporters called to get the printed slips of his
-speech in advance of its delivery. Mr. Lincoln knew nothing of such a
-custom among the orators, and had no slips. He was, in fact, not quite
-sure that the press would desire to publish his speech. When he reached
-the Cooper Institute, and was ushered into the vast hall, he was
-surprised to see the most cultivated men of the city awaiting him on
-the stand, and an immense audience assembled to hear him. Mr. Bryant
-introduced him as "an eminent citizen of the West, hitherto known to you
-only by reputation." Mr. Lincoln then began, in low, monotonous tones,
-which gradually became louder and clearer, the following speech:--
-
-Mr. President and Fellow-Citizens of New York,--The facts with which I
-shall deal this evening are mainly old and familiar; nor is there any
-thing new in the general use I shall make of them. If there shall be
-any novelty, it will be in the mode of presenting the facts, and the
-inferences and observations following that presentation.
-
-In his speech last autumn, at Columbus, Ohio, as reported in "The
-New-York Times," Senator Douglas said,--"Our fathers, when they framed
-the government under which we live, understood this question just as
-well, and even better than we do now."
-
-I fully indorse this, and I adopt it as a text for this discourse. I so
-adopt it, because it furnishes a precise and agreed starting-point for
-the discussion between Republicans and that wing of Democracy headed
-by Senator Douglas. It simply leaves the inquiry, "What was the
-understanding those fathers had of the questions mentioned?"
-
-What is the frame of government under which we live?
-
-The answer must be, "The Constitution of the United States." That
-Constitution consists of the original, framed in 1787 (and under
-which the present Government first went into operation), and twelve
-subsequently framed amendments, the first ten of which were framed in
-1789.
-
-Who were our fathers that framed the Constitution? I suppose the
-"thirty-nine" who signed the original instrument may be fairly called
-our fathers who framed that part of the present Government. It is almost
-exactly true to say they framed it; and it is altogether true to say
-they fairly represented the opinion and sentiment of the whole nation at
-that time. Their names, being familiar to nearly all, and accessible to
-quite all, need not now be repeated.
-
-I take these "thirty-nine," for the present, as being "our fathers, who
-framed the Government under which we live."
-
-What is the question which, according to the text, those fathers
-understood just as well, and even better than we do now?
-
-It is this: Does the proper division of local from Federal authority, or
-any thing in the Constitution, forbid our Federal Government control as
-to slavery in our Federal Territories?
-
-Upon this, Douglas holds the affirmative, and Republicans the negative.
-This affirmative and denial form an issue; and this issue, this
-question, is precisely what the text declares our fathers understood
-better than we.
-
-Let us now inquire whether the "thirty-nine," or any of them, ever acted
-upon this question; and, if they did, how they acted upon it,--how they
-expressed that better understanding.
-
-In 1784,--three years before the Constitution,--the United States then
-owning the North-western Territory, and no other, the Congress of the
-Confederation had before them the question of prohibiting slavery in
-that Territory; and four of the "thirty-nine" who afterward framed
-the Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on that question. Of
-these, Roger Sherman, Thomas Mifflin, and Hugh Williamson voted for
-the prohibition; thus showing, that, in their understanding, no line
-dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing else, properly
-forbade the Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal
-territory. The other of the four, James McHenry, voted against the
-prohibition, showing that, for some cause, he thought it improper to
-vote for it.
-
-In 1787--still before the Constitution, but while the Convention was in
-session framing it, and while the North-western Territory still was
-the only Territory owned by the United States--the same question of
-prohibiting slavery in the Territory again came before the Congress of
-the Confederation; and three more of the "thirty-nine" who afterward
-signed the Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on the
-question. They were William Blount, William Few, and Abraham Baldwin;
-and they all voted for the prohibition, thus showing that, in their
-understanding, no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor any
-thing else, properly forbids the Federal Government to control as to
-slavery in Federal territory. This time the prohibition became a law,
-being part of what is now well known as the Ordinance of '87.
-
-The question of Federal control of slavery in the Territories seems not
-to have been directly before the convention which framed the original
-Constitution; and hence it is not recorded that the "thirty-nine," or
-any of them, while engaged on that instrument, expressed any opinion on
-that precise question.
-
-In 1789, by the First Congress which sat under the Constitution, an act
-was passed to enforce the Ordinance of '87, including the prohibition
-of slavery in the North-western Territory. The bill for this act was
-reported by one of the "thirty-nine,"--Thomas Fitzsimmons, then a member
-of the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. It went through
-all its stages without a word of opposition, and finally passed both
-branches without yeas and nays, which is equivalent to a unanimous
-passage. In this Congress there were sixteen of the "thirty-nine"
-fathers who framed the original Constitution. They were John Langdon,
-Nicholas Gilman, William S. Johnson, Roger Sherman, Robert Morris,
-Thomas Fitzsimmons, William Few, Abraham Baldwin, Rufus King, William
-Patterson, George Clymer, Richard Bassett, George Read, Pierce Butler,
-Daniel Carrol, James Madison.
-
-This shows that, in their understanding, no line dividing local from
-Federal authority, nor any thing in the Constitution, properly forbade
-Congress to prohibit slavery in the Federal territory; else both
-their fidelity to correct principle, and their oath to support the
-Constitution, would have constrained them to oppose the prohibition.
-
-Again, George Washington, another of the "thirty-nine," was then
-President of the United States, and, as such, approved and signed the
-bill, thus completing its validity as a law, and thus showing, that, in
-his understanding, no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor
-any thing in the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control
-as to slavery in Federal territory.
-
-No great while after the adoption of the original Constitution, North
-Carolina ceded to the Federal Government the country now constituting
-the State of Tennessee; and a few years later Georgia ceded that which
-now constitutes the States of Mississippi and Alabama. In both deeds of
-cession it was made a condition by the ceding States that the Federal
-Government should not prohibit slavery in the ceded country. Besides
-this, slavery was then actually in the ceded country. Under these
-circumstances, Congress, on taking charge of these countries, did not
-absolutely prohibit slavery within them. But they did interfere with it,
-take control of it, even there, to a certain extent. In 1798, Congress
-organized the Territory of Mississippi. In the act of organization they
-prohibited the bringing of slaves into the Territory, from any place
-without the United States, by fine, and giving freedom to slaves so
-brought. This act passed both branches of Congress without yeas and
-nays. In that Congress were three of the "thirty-nine" who framed the
-original Constitution: they were John Langdon, George Read, and Abraham
-Baldwin. They all, probably, voted for it. Certainly they would have
-placed their opposition to it upon record, if, in their understanding,
-any line dividing local from Federal authority, or any thing in the
-Constitution, properly forbade the Federal Government to control as to
-slavery in Federal territory.
-
-In 1803 the Federal Government purchased the Louisiana country. Our
-former territorial acquisitions came from certain of our own States;
-but this Louisiana country was acquired from a foreign nation. In 1804
-Congress gave a territorial organization to that part of it which now
-constitutes the State of Louisiana. New Orleans, lying within that part,
-was an old and comparatively large city. There were other considerable
-towns and settlements, and slavery was extensively and thoroughly
-intermingled with the people. Congress did not, in the Territorial Act,
-prohibit slavery; but they did interfere with it, take control of it,
-in a more marked and extensive way than they did in the case of
-Mississippi. The substance of the provision therein made, in relation to
-slaves, was,--
-
-First, That no slave should be imported into the Territory from foreign
-parts.
-
-Second, That no slave should be carried into it who had been imported
-into the United States since the first day of May, 1798.
-
-Third, That no slave should be carried into it, except by the owner, and
-for his own use as a settler; the penalty in all the cases being a fine
-upon the violator of the law, and freedom to the slave.
-
-This act also was passed without yeas and nays. In the Congress which
-passed it there were two of the "thirty-nine:" they were Abraham
-Baldwin and Jonathan Dayton. As stated in the case of Mississippi, it is
-probable they both voted for it. They would not have allowed it to pass
-without recording their opposition to it, if, in their understanding, it
-violated either the line proper dividing local from Federal authority or
-any provision of the Constitution.
-
-In 1819-20 came and passed the Missouri question. Many votes were taken
-by yeas and nays, in both branches of Congress, upon the various phases
-of the general question. Two of the "thirty-nine"--Rufus King and
-Charles Pinckney--were members of that Congress. Mr. King steadily voted
-for slavery prohibition and against all compromises; while Mr.
-Pinckney as steadily voted against slavery prohibition and against all
-compromises. By this Mr. King showed, that, in his understanding,
-no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing in the
-Constitution, was violated by Congress prohibiting slavery in Federal
-territory; while Mr. Pinckney, by his votes, showed, that, in his
-understanding, there was some sufficient reason for opposing such
-prohibition in that case.
-
-The cases I have mentioned are the only acts of the "thirty-nine," or of
-any of them, upon the direct issue, which I have been able to discover.
-
-To enumerate the persons who thus acted as being four in 1784, three
-in 1787, seventeen in 1789, three in 1798, two in 1804, and two in
-1819-20,--there would be thirty-one of them. But this would be counting
-John Lang-don, Roger Sherman, William Few, Rufus King, and George Read
-each twice, and Abraham Baldwin four times. The true number of those
-of the "thirty-nine" whom I have shown to have acted upon the question,
-which, by the text, they understood better than we, is twenty-three,
-leaving sixteen not shown to have acted upon it in any way.
-
-Here, then, we have twenty-three out of our "thirty-nine" fathers, who
-framed the government under which we live, who have, upon their official
-responsibility and their corporal oaths, acted upon the very question
-which the text affirms they "understood just as well, and even better
-than we do now;" and twenty-one of them--a clear majority of the
-"thirty-nine"--so acting upon it as to make them guilty of gross
-political impropriety and wilful perjury if, in their understanding, any
-proper division between local and Federal authority, or any thing in the
-Constitution they had made themselves, and sworn to support, forbade the
-Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories.
-Thus the twenty-one acted; and, as actions speak louder than words, so
-actions under such responsibility speak still louder.
-
-Two of the twenty-three voted against congressional prohibition of
-slavery in the Federal Territories in the instances in which they acted
-upon the question; but for what reasons they so voted is not known. They
-may have done so because they thought a proper division of local from
-Federal authority, or some provision or principle of the Constitution,
-stood in the way; or they may, without any such question, have voted
-against the prohibition, on what appeared to them to be sufficient
-grounds of expediency. No one who has sworn to support the
-Constitution can conscientiously vote for what he understands to be an
-unconstitutional measure, however expedient he may think it; but one may
-and ought to vote against a measure which he deems constitutional if, at
-the same time, he deems it inexpedient. It, therefore, would be unsafe
-to set down even the two who voted against the prohibition as having
-done so because, in their understanding, any proper division of local
-from Federal authority, or any thing in the Constitution, forbade the
-Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal territory.
-
-The remaining sixteen of the "thirty-nine," so far as I have discovered,
-have left no record of their understanding upon the direct question of
-Federal control of slavery in the Federal Territories. But there is much
-reason to believe that their understanding upon that question would not
-have appeared different from that of their twenty-three compeers, had it
-been manifested at all.
-
-For the purpose of adhering rigidly to the text, I have purposely
-omitted whatever understanding may have been manifested by any person,
-however distinguished, other than the "thirty-nine" fathers who framed
-the original Constitution; and, for the same reason, I have also
-omitted whatever understanding may have been manifested by any of
-the "thirty-nine" even, on any other phase of the general question of
-slavery. If we should look into their acts and declarations on those
-other phases, as the foreign slave-trade, and the morality and policy of
-slavery generally, it would appear to us, that, on the direct question
-of Federal control of slavery in Federal Territories, the sixteen,
-if they had acted at all, would probably have acted just as the
-twenty-three did. Among that sixteen were several of the most noted
-antislavery men of those times,--as Dr. Franklin, Alexander Hamilton,
-and Gouverneur Morris; while there was not one now known to have been
-otherwise, unless it may be John Rutledge of South Carolina.
-
-The sum of the whole is, that of our "thirty-nine" fathers who
-framed the original Constitution, twenty-one--a clear majority of
-the whole--certainly understood that no proper division of local from
-Federal authority, nor any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal
-Government to control slavery in the Federal Territories; while all the
-rest probably had the same understanding. Such, unquestionably, was the
-understanding of our fathers who framed the original Constitution; and
-the text affirms that they understood the question better than we.
-
-But, so far, I have been considering the understanding of the question
-manifested by the framers of the original Constitution. In and by the
-original instrument, a mode was provided for amending it; and, as I
-have already stated, the present frame of government under which we live
-consists of that original, and twelve amendatory articles framed and
-adopted since. Those who now insist that Federal control of slavery in
-Federal Territories violates the Constitution point us to the provisions
-which they suppose it thus violates; and, as I understand, they all fix
-upon provisions in these amendatory articles, and not in the original
-instrument. The Supreme Court, in the Dred-Scott case, plant themselves
-upon the fifth amendment, which provides that "no person shall be
-deprived of property without due process of law;" while Senator Douglas
-and his peculiar adherents plant themselves upon the tenth amendment,
-providing that "the powers not granted by the Constitution are reserved
-to the States respectively and to the people."
-
-Now, it so happens that these amendments were framed by the first
-Congress which sat under the Constitution,--the identical Congress which
-passed the act already mentioned, enforcing the prohibition of slavery
-in the North-western Territory. Not only was it the same Congress, but
-they were the identical, same individual men, who, at the same time
-within the session, had under consideration, and in progress toward
-maturity, these constitutional amendments, and this act prohibiting
-slavery in all the territory the nation then owned. The constitutional
-amendments were introduced before, and passed after, the act enforcing
-the Ordinance of '87; so that, during the whole pendency of the act to
-enforce the Ordinance, the constitutional amendments were also pending.
-
-That Congress, consisting in all of seventy-six members, including
-sixteen of the framers of the original Constitution, as before stated,
-were preeminently our fathers who framed that part of the government
-under which we live, which is now claimed as forbidding the Federal
-Government to control slavery in the Federal Territories.
-
-Is it not a little presumptuous in any one at this day to affirm that
-the two things which that Congress deliberately framed, and earned to
-maturity at the same time, are absolutely inconsistent with each other?
-And does not such affirmation become impudently absurd when coupled with
-the other affirmation, from the same mouth, that those who did the two
-things alleged to be inconsistent understood whether they were really
-inconsistent better than we,--better than he who affirms that they are
-inconsistent?
-
-It is surely safe to assume that the "thirty-nine" framers of the
-original Constitution, and the seventy-six members of the Congress which
-framed the amendments thereto, taken together, do certainly include
-those who may be fairly called "our fathers who framed the government
-under which we live." And so assuming, I defy any man to show that
-any one of them ever, in his whole life, declared, that, in his
-understanding, any proper division of local from Federal authority, or
-any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control
-as to slavery in the Federal Territories. I go a step farther. I defy
-any one to show that any living man in the whole world ever did, prior
-to the beginning of the present century (and I might almost say prior to
-the beginning of the last half of the present century), declare,
-that, in his understanding, any proper division of local from Federal
-authority, or any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal
-Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories. To
-those who now so declare, I give, not only "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live," but with them all other living men
-within the century in which it was framed, among whom to search, and
-they shall not be able to find the evidence of a single man agreeing
-with them.
-
-Now, and here, let me guard a little against being misunderstood. I
-do not mean to say we are bound to follow implicitly in whatever our
-fathers did. To do so would be to discard all the lights of current
-experience,--to reject all progress,--all improvement. What I do say is,
-that, if we would supplant the opinions and policy of our fathers in
-any case, we should do so upon evidence so conclusive, and argument so
-clear, that even their great authority, fairly considered and weighed,
-cannot stand; and most surely not in a case whereof we ourselves declare
-they understood the question better than we.
-
-If any man, at this day, sincerely believes that a proper division of
-local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitution,
-forbids the Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal
-Territories, he is right to say so, and to enforce his position by all
-truthful evidence and fair argument which he can. But he has no right
-to mislead others, who have less access to history and less leisure
-to study it, into the false belief that "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live," were of the same opinion, thus
-substituting falsehood and deception for truthful evidence and fair
-argument. If any man at this day sincerely believes "our fathers, who
-framed the government under which we live," used and applied principles,
-in other cases, which ought to have led them to understand that a
-proper division of local from Federal authority, or some part of the
-Constitution, forbids the Federal Government to control as to slavery
-in the Federal Territories, he is right to say so. But he should, at the
-same time, brave the responsibility of declaring, that, in his opinion,
-he understands their principles better than they did themselves; and
-especially should he not shirk that responsibility by asserting that
-they "understood the question just as well, and even better than we do
-now."
-
-But enough. Let all who believe that "our fathers, who framed the
-government under which we live, understood this question just as well,
-and even better than we do now," speak as they spoke, and act as they
-acted upon it. This is all Republicans ask, all Republicans desire,
-in relation to slavery. As those fathers marked it, so let it be again
-marked, as an evil not to be extended, but to be tolerated and protected
-only because of and so far as its actual presence among us makes that
-toleration and protection a necessity. Let all the guaranties those
-fathers gave it be, not grudgingly, but fully and fairly maintained. For
-this Republicans contend, and with this, so far as I know or believe,
-they will be content.
-
-And now, if they would listen,--as I suppose they will not,--I would
-address a few words to the Southern people.
-
-I would say to them, You consider yourselves a reasonable and a just
-people; and I consider, that, in the general qualities of reason and
-justice, you are not inferior to any other people. Still, when you speak
-of us Republicans, you do so only to denounce us as reptiles, or, at the
-best, as no better than outlaws. You will grant a hearing to pirates
-or murderers, but nothing like it to "Black Republicans." In all
-your contentions with one another, each of you deems an unconditional
-condemnation of "Black Republicanism" as the first thing to be attended
-to. Indeed, such condemnation of us seems to be an indispensable
-prerequisite--license, so to speak--among you to be admitted or
-permitted to speak at all.
-
-Now can you, or not, be prevailed upon to pause and to consider whether
-this is quite just to us, or even to yourselves?
-
-Bring forward your charges and specifications, and then be patient long
-enough to hear us deny or justify.
-
-You say we are sectional. We deny it. That makes an issue; and the
-burden of proof is upon you. You produce your proof; and what is it?
-Why, that our party has no existence in your section,--gets no votes
-in your section. The fact is substantially true; but does it prove the
-issue? If it does, then in case we should, without change of principle,
-begin to get votes in your section, we should thereby cease to be
-sectional. You cannot escape this conclusion; and yet are you willing to
-abide by it? If you are, you will probably soon find that we have ceased
-to be sectional, for we shall get votes in your section this very year.
-You will then begin to discover, as the truth plainly is, that your
-proof does not touch the issue. The fact that we get no votes in your
-section is a fact of your making, and not of ours. And if there be fault
-in that fact, that fault is primarily yours, and remains so until you
-show that we repel you by some wrong principle or practice. If we do
-repel you by any wrong principle or practice, the fault is ours; but
-this brings us to where you ought to have started,--to a discussion of
-the right or wrong of our principle. If our principle, put in practice,
-would wrong your section for the benefit of ours, or for any other
-object, then our principle, and we with it, are sectional, and are
-justly opposed and denounced as such. Meet us, then, on the question of
-whether our principle, put in practice, would wrong your section; and so
-meet it as if it were possible that something may be said on our side.
-Do you accept the challenge? No? Then you really believe that the
-principle which our fathers, who framed the government under which we
-live, thought so clearly right as to adopt it, and indorse it again and
-again upon their official oaths, is, in fact, so clearly wrong as to
-demand your condemnation without a moment's consideration.
-
-Some of you delight to flaunt in our faces the warning against sectional
-parties given by Washington in his Farewell Address. Less than eight
-years before Washington gave that warning, he had, as President of the
-United States, approved and signed an act of Congress enforcing the
-prohibition of slavery in the North-western Territory, which act
-embodied the policy of the Government upon that subject up to and at the
-very moment he penned that warning; and about one year after he penned
-it he wrote Lafayette that he considered that prohibition a wise
-measure, expressing, in the same connection, his hope that we should
-some time have a confederacy of Free States.
-
-Bearing this in mind, and seeing that sectionalism has since arisen upon
-this same subject, is that warning a weapon in your hands against us, or
-in our hands against you? Could Washington himself speak, would he cast
-the blame of that sectionalism upon us, who sustain his policy, or upon
-you, who repudiate it? We respect that warning of Washington; and we
-commend it to you, together with his example pointing to the right
-application of it.
-
-But you say you are conservative,--eminently conservative; while we
-are revolutionary, destructive, or something of the sort. What is
-conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried against the new
-and untried? We stick to, contend for, the identical old-policy on the
-point in controversy which was adopted by our fathers who framed the
-government under which we live; while you, with one accord, reject
-and scout and spit upon that old policy, and insist upon substituting
-something new. True, you disagree among yourselves as to what that
-substitute shall be. You have considerable variety of new propositions
-and plans; but you are unanimous in rejecting and denouncing the
-old policy of the fathers. Some of you are for reviving the foreign
-slave-trade; some for a Congressional Slave-code for the Territories;
-some for Congress forbidding the Territories to prohibit slavery within
-their limits; some for maintaining slavery in the Territories through
-the judiciary; some for the "gur-reat pur-rinciple" that, "if one man
-would enslave another, no third man should object," fantastically called
-"popular sovereignty;" but never a man among you in favor of Federal
-prohibition of slavery in Federal Territories, according to the practice
-of our fathers, who framed the government under which we live. Not one
-of all your various plans can show a precedent or an advocate in the
-century within which our Government originated. Consider, then,
-whether your claim of conservatism for yourselves, and your charge
-of destructiveness against us, are based on the most clear and stable
-foundations.
-
-Again, you say we have made the slavery question more prominent than
-it formerly was. We deny it. We admit that it is more prominent, but we
-deny that we made it so. It was not we, but you, who discarded the old
-policy of the fathers. We resisted, and still resist, your innovation;
-and thence comes the greater prominence of the question. Would you have
-that question reduced to its former proportions? Go back to that old
-policy. What has been will be again, under the same conditions. If you
-would have the peace of the old times, re-adopt the precepts and policy
-of the old times.
-
-You charge that we stir up insurrections among your slaves. We deny it.
-And what is your proof? Harper's Ferry! John Brown! John Brown was no
-Republican; and you have failed to implicate a single Republican in his
-Harper's Ferry enterprise. If any member of our party is guilty in that
-matter, you know it, or you do not know it. If you do know it, you are
-inexcusable to not designate the man, and prove the fact. If you do not
-know it, you are inexcusable to assert it, and especially to persist
-in the assertion after you have tried and failed to make the proof. You
-need not be told that persisting in a charge which one does not know to
-be true is simply malicious slander.
-
-Some of you admit that no Republican designedly aided or encouraged
-the Harper's-Ferry affair, but still insist that our doctrines and
-declarations necessarily lead to such results. We do not believe it. We
-know we hold to no doctrine, and make no declarations, which were not
-held to and made by our fathers, who framed the government under which
-we live. You never deal fairly by us in relation to this affair. When it
-occurred, some important State elections were near at hand; and you were
-in evident glee with the belief, that, by charging the blame upon us,
-you could get an advantage of us in those elections. The elections came;
-and your expectations were not quite fulfilled. Every Republican man
-knew, that, as to himself at least, your charge was a slander, and he
-was not much inclined by it to cast his vote in your favor. Republican
-doctrines and declarations are accompanied with a continual protest
-against any interference whatever with your slaves, or with you about
-your slaves. Surely this does not encourage them to revolt. True, we
-do, in common with our fathers who framed the government under which we
-live, declare our belief that slavery is wrong; but the slaves do not
-hear us declare even this. For any thing we say or do, the slaves would
-scarcely know there is a Republican party. I believe they would not, in
-fact, generally know it but for your misrepresentations of us in their
-hearing. In your political contest among yourselves, each faction
-charges the other with sympathy with Black Republicanism; and then,
-to give point to the charge, defines Black Republicanism to simply be
-insurrection, blood, and thunder among the slaves.
-
-Slave insurrections are no more common now than they were before
-the Republican party was organized. What induced the Southampton
-Insurrection, twenty-eight years ago, in which, at least, three times as
-many lives were lost as at Harper's Ferry? You can scarcely stretch
-your very elastic fancy to the conclusion that Southampton was got up
-by Black Republicanism. In the present state of things in the United
-States, I do not think a general, or even a very extensive slave
-insurrection, is possible. The indispensable concert of action cannot
-be attained. The slaves have no means of rapid communication; nor can
-incendiary free men, black or white, supply it. The explosive materials
-are everywhere in parcels; but there neither are, nor can be supplied,
-the indispensable connecting trains.
-
-Much is said by Southern people about the affection of slaves for their
-masters and mistresses; and a part of it, at least, is true. A plot
-for an uprising could scarcely be devised and communicated to twenty
-individuals before some one of them, to save the life of a favorite
-master or mistress, would divulge it. This is the rule; and the slave
-revolution in Hayti was not an exception to it, but a case occurring
-under peculiar circumstances. The gunpowder plot of British history,
-though not connected with the slaves, was more in point. In that case,
-only about twenty were admitted to the secret; and yet one of them, in
-his anxiety to save a friend, betrayed the plot to that friend, and,
-by consequence, averted the calamity. Occasional poisoning from the
-kitchen, and open or stealthy assassinations in the field, and local
-revolts extending to a score or so, will continue to occur as the
-natural results of slavery; but no general insurrection of slaves, as I
-think, can happen in this country for a long time. Whoever much fears,
-or much hopes, for such an event will be alike disappointed.
-
-In the language of Mr. Jefferson, uttered many years ago, "It is still
-in our power to direct the process of emancipation and deportation
-peaceably, and in such slow degrees, as that the evil will wear off
-insensibly; and their places be, _pari passu_, filled up by free white
-laborers. If, on the contrary, it is left to force itself on, human
-nature must shudder at the prospect held up."
-
-Mr. Jefferson did not mean to say, nor do I, that the power of
-emancipation is in the Federal Government. He spoke of Virginia; and, as
-to the power of emancipation, I speak of the slaveholding States only.
-
-The Federal Government, however, as we insist, has the power of
-restraining the extension of the institution,--the power to insure that
-a slave insurrection shall never occur on any American soil which is now
-free from slavery.
-
-John Brown's effort was peculiar. It was not a slave insurrection. It
-was an attempt by white men to get up a revolt among slaves, in which
-the slaves refused to participate. In fact, it was so absurd that
-the slaves, with all their ignorance, saw plainly enough it could not
-succeed. 'That affair, in its philosophy, corresponds with the many
-attempts, related in history, at the assassination of kings and
-emperors. An enthusiast broods over the oppression of a people till he
-fancies himself commissioned by Heaven to liberate them. He ventures the
-attempt, which ends in little else than in his own execution. Orsini's
-attempt on Louis Napoleon, and John Brown's attempt at Harper's Ferry,
-were, in their philosophy, precisely the same. The eagerness to cast
-blame on old England in the one case, and on New England in the other,
-does not disprove the sameness of the two things.
-
-And how much would it avail you, if you could, by the use of John Brown,
-Helper's book, and the like, break up the Republican organization?
-Human action can be modified to some extent; but human nature cannot
-be changed. There is a judgment and a feeling against slavery in this
-nation, which cast at least a million and a half of votes. You cannot
-destroy that judgment and feeling, that sentiment, by breaking up the
-political organization which rallies around it. You can scarcely scatter
-and disperse an army which has been formed into order in the face
-of your heaviest fire; but, if you could, how much would you gain by
-forcing the sentiment which created it out of the peaceful channel of
-the ballot-box, into some other channel? What would that other channel
-probably be? Would the number of John Browns be lessened or enlarged by
-the operation?
-
-But you will break up the Union rather than submit to a denial of your
-constitutional rights.
-
-That has a somewhat reckless sound; but it would be palliated, if not
-fully justified, were we proposing by the mere force of numbers to
-deprive you of some right plainly written down in the Constitution. But
-we are proposing no such thing.
-
-When you make these declarations, you have a specific and
-well-under-stood allusion to an assumed constitutional right of yours
-to take slaves into the Federal Territories, and hold them there as
-property; but no such right is specifically written in the Constitution.
-That instrument is literally silent about any such right. We, on the
-contrary, deny that such a right has any existence in the Constitution,
-even by implication.
-
-Your purpose then, plainly stated, is, that you will destroy the
-government, unless you be allowed to construe and enforce the
-Constitution as you please on all points in dispute between you and us.
-You will rule or ruin in all events.
-
-This, plainly stated, is your language to us. Perhaps you will say the
-Supreme Court has decided the disputed constitutional question in your
-favor. Not quite so. But waiving the lawyer's distinction between dictum
-and decision, the courts have decided the question for you in a sort of
-way. The courts have substantially said, it is your constitutional right
-to take slaves into the Federal Territories, and to hold them there as
-property.
-
-When I say the decision was made in a sort of way, I mean it was made
-in a divided court by a bare majority of the judges, and they not quite
-agreeing with one another in the reasons for making it; that it is so
-made as that its avowed supporters disagree with one another about
-its meaning, and that it was mainly based upon a mistaken statement of
-fact,--the statement in the opinion that "the right of property in a
-slave is distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution."
-
-An inspection of the Constitution will show that the right of property
-in a slave is not distinctly and expressly affirmed in it. Bear in
-mind, the judges do not pledge their judicial opinion that such right is
-impliedly affirmed in the Constitution; but they pledge their veracity
-that it is distinctly and expressly affirmed there,--"distinctly," that
-is, not mingled with any thing else; "expressly," that is, in words
-meaning just that, without the aid of any inference, and susceptible of
-no other meaning.
-
-If they had only pledged their judicial opinion that such right is
-affirmed in the instrument by implication, it would be open to others to
-show that neither the word "slave" nor "slavery" is to be found in
-the Constitution, nor the word "property" even, in any connection with
-language alluding to the things slave or slavery, and that, wherever in
-that instrument the slave is alluded to, he is called a "person;" and
-wherever his master's legal right in relation to him is alluded to, it
-is spoken of as "service or labor due,"--as a "debt" payable in service
-or labor. Also it would be open to show, by contemporaneous history,
-that this mode of alluding to slaves and slavery, instead of speaking of
-them, was employed on purpose to exclude from the Constitution the idea
-that there could be property in man.
-
-To show all this is easy and certain.
-
-When this obvious mistake of the judges shall be brought to their
-notice, is it not reasonable to expect that they will withdraw the
-mistaken statement, and reconsider the conclusion based upon it?
-
-And then it is to be remembered that "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live,"--the men who made the
-Constitution,--decided this same constitutional question in our favor
-long ago,--decided it without a division among themselves, when making
-the decision; without division among themselves about the meaning of it
-after it was made, and, so far as any evidence is left, without basing
-it upon any mistaken statement of facts.
-
-Under all these circumstances, do you really feel yourselves justified
-to break up this Government, unless such a court decision as yours
-is shall be at once submitted to, as a conclusive and final rule of
-political action?
-
-But you will not abide the election of a Republican President. In that
-supposed event, you say, you will destroy the Union; and then, you say,
-the great crime of having destroyed it will be upon us!
-
-That is cool. A highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through
-his teeth, "Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you; and then you will be
-a murderer!"
-
-To be sure, what the robber demanded of me--my money--was my own; and I
-had a clear right to keep it; but it was no more my own than my vote
-is my own; and threat of death to me to extort my money, and threat
-of destruction to the Union to extort my vote, can scarcely be
-distinguished in principle.
-
-A few words now to Republicans. It is exceedingly desirable that all
-parts of this great Confederacy shall be at peace, and in harmony, one
-with another. Let us Republicans do our part to have it so. Even though
-much provoked, let us do nothing through passion and ill-temper. Even
-though the Southern people will not so much as listen to us, let us
-calmly consider their demands, and yield to them if, in our deliberate
-view of our duty, we possibly can. Judging by all they say and do,
-and by the subject and nature of their controversy with us, let us
-determine, if we can, what will satisfy them.
-
-Will they be satisfied if the Territories be unconditionally surrendered
-to them? We know they will not. In all their present complaints against
-us, the Territories are scarcely mentioned. Invasions and insurrections
-are the rage now. Will it satisfy them if, in the future, we have
-nothing to do with invasions and insurrections? We know it will not. We
-so know because we know we never had any thing to do with invasions and
-insurrections; and yet this total abstaining does not exempt us from the
-charge and the denunciation.
-
-The question recurs, what will satisfy them? Simply this: We must not
-only let them alone, but we must, somehow, convince them that we do let
-them alone. This we know by experience is no easy task. We have been so
-trying to convince them from the very beginning of our organization, but
-with no success. In all our platforms and speeches we have constantly
-protested our purpose to let them alone; but this has had no tendency to
-convince them. Alike unavailing to convince them is the fact that they
-have never detected a man of us in any attempt to disturb them.
-
-These natural, and apparently adequate means all failing, what will
-convince them? This, and this only: cease to call slavery _wrong_, and
-join them in calling it _right_. And this must be done thoroughly,--done
-in _acts_ as well as in _words_. Silence will not be tolerated: we must
-place ourselves avowedly with them. Douglas's new sedition law must
-be enacted and enforced, suppressing all declarations that slavery is
-wrong, whether made in politics, in presses, in pulpits, or in private.
-We must arrest and return their fugitive slaves with greedy pleasure. We
-must pull down our Free-State Constitutions. The whole atmosphere must
-be disinfected from all taint of opposition to slavery, before they will
-cease to believe that all their troubles proceed from us.
-
-I am quite aware they do not state their case precisely in this way.
-Most of them would probably say to us, "Let us alone, do nothing to us,
-and say what you please about slavery." But we do let them alone,
-have never disturbed them; so that, after all, it is what we say which
-dissatisfies them. They will continue to accuse us of doing until we
-cease saying.
-
-I am also aware they have not as yet, in terms, demanded the overthrow
-of our Free-State constitutions. Yet those constitutions declare the
-wrong of slavery with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings
-against it; and when all these other sayings shall have been silenced,
-the overthrow of these constitutions will be demanded, and nothing be
-left to resist the demand. It is nothing to the contrary, that they do
-not demand the whole of this just now. Demanding what they do, and for
-the reason they do, they can voluntarily stop nowhere short of this
-consummation. Holding, as they do, that slavery is morally right,
-and socially elevating, they cannot cease to demand a full national
-recognition of it, as a legal right and a social blessing.
-
-Nor can we justifiably withhold this on any ground, save our conviction
-that slavery is wrong. If slavery is right, all words, acts, laws, and
-constitutions against it are themselves wrong, and should be silenced
-and swept away. If it is right, we cannot justly object to its
-nationality, its universality; if it is wrong, they cannot justly insist
-upon its extension, its enlargement. All they ask, we could readily
-grant, if we thought slavery right; all we ask, they could as readily
-grant, if they thought it wrong. Their thinking it right, and our
-thinking it wrong, is the precise fact upon which depends the whole
-controversy. Thinking it right, as they do, they are not to blame for
-desiring its full recognition, as being right; but thinking it wrong, as
-we do, can we yield to them? Can we cast our votes with their view,
-and against our own? In view of our moral, social, and political
-responsibilities, can we do this?
-
-Wrong as we think slavery is, we can yet afford to let it alone where
-it is, because that much is due to the necessity arising from its actual
-presence in the nation; but can we, while our votes will prevent it,
-allow it to spread into the national Territories, and to overrun us here
-in these Free States?
-
-If our sense of duty forbids this, then let us stand by our duty
-fearlessly and effectively. Let us be diverted by none of those
-sophistical contrivances wherewith we are so industriously plied and
-belabored,--contrivances such as groping for some middle ground between
-the right and the wrong, vain as the search for a man who should be
-neither a living man nor a dead man,--such as a policy of "don't care"
-on a question about which all true men do care,--such as Union appeals
-beseeching true Union men to yield to Dis-unionists, reversing the
-divine rule, and calling, not the sinners, but the righteous, to
-repentance,--such as invocations to Washington, imploring men to unsay
-what Washington said, and undo what Washington did.
-
-Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against
-us, nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the Government,
-nor of dungeons to ourselves. 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.
-
-The next morning "The Tribune" presented a report of the speech, but,
-in doing so, said, "the tones, the gestures, the kindling eye, and the
-mirth-provoking look defy the reporter's skill.... No man ever before
-made such an impression on his first appeal to a New York audience."
-"The Evening Post" said, "We have made room for Mr. Lincoln's speech,
-notwithstanding the pressure of other matters; and our readers will see
-that it was well worthy of the deep attention with which it was heard."
-For the publication of such arguments the editor was "tempted to wish"
-that his columns "were indefinitely elastic." And these are but fair
-evidences of the general tone of the press.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was much annoyed, after his return home, by the allegation
-that he had sold a "political speech," and had been generally governed
-by mercenary motives in his Eastern trip. Being asked to explain it, he
-answered as follows:--
-
-Springfield, April 6, 1860.
-
-C. F. McNeill, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--Reaching home yesterday, I found yours of the 23d March,
-enclosing a slip from "The Middleport Press." It is not true that I ever
-charged any thing for a political speech in my life; but this much is
-true. Last October I was requested by letter to deliver some sort of
-speech in Mr. Beecher's church in Brooklyn,--$200 being offered in the
-first letter. I wrote that I could do it in February, provided they
-would take a political speech if I could find time to get up no other.
-They agreed; and subsequently I informed them the speech would have to
-be a political one. When I reached New York, I, for the first, learned
-that the place was changed to "Cooper Institute." I made the speech, and
-left for New Hampshire, where I have a son at school, neither asking for
-pay nor having any offered me. Three days after, a check for $200 was
-sent to me at N.H.; and I took it, _and did not know it was wrong_. My
-understanding now is, though I knew nothing of it at the time, that they
-did charge for admittance at the Cooper Institute, and that they took in
-more than twice $200.
-
-I have made this explanation to you as a friend; but I wish no
-explanation made to our enemies. What they want is a squabble and a
-fuss: and that they can have if we explain; and they cannot have it if
-we don't.
-
-When I returned through New York from New England, I was told by the
-gentlemen who sent me the check, that a drunken vagabond in the club,
-having learned something about the $200, made the exhibition out of
-which "The Herald" manufactured the article quoted by "The Press" of
-your town.
-
-My judgment is, and therefore my request is, that you give no denial,
-and no explanations.
-
-Thanking you for your kind interest in the matter, I remain
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-From New York Mr. Lincoln travelled into New England, to visit his
-son Robert, who was a student at Harvard; but he was overwhelmed with
-invitations to address Republican meetings. In Connecticut he spoke at
-Hartford, Norwich, New Haven, Meriden, and Bridgeport; in Rhode Island,
-at Woonsocket; in New Hampshire, at Concord and Manchester. Everywhere
-the people poured out in multitudes, and the press lavished encomiums.
-Upon his speech at Manchester, "The Mirror," a neutral paper, passed the
-following criticisms of his style of oratory,--criticisms familiar
-enough to the people of his own State: "He spoke an hour and a half with
-great fairness, great apparent candor, and with wonderful interest.
-He did not abuse the South, the administration, or the Democrats,
-or indulge in any personalities, with the exception of a few hits at
-Douglas's notions. He is far from prepossessing in personal appearance,
-and his voice is disagreeable; and yet he wins your attention and
-good-will from the start.... He indulges in no flowers of rhetoric, no
-eloquent passages. He is not a wit, a humorist, or a clown; yet so great
-a vein of pleasantry and good-nature pervades what he says, gilding over
-a deep current of practical argument, he keeps his hearers in a smiling
-mood, with their mouths open ready to swallow all he says. His sense of
-the ludicrous is very keen; and an exhibition of that is the clincher
-of all his arguments,--not the ludicrous acts of persons, but ludicrous
-ideas. Hence he is never offensive, and steals away willingly into his
-train of belief persons who were opposed to him. For the first half-hour
-his opponents would agree with every word he uttered; and from that
-point he began to lead them off little by little, until it seemed as
-if he had got them all into his fold. He displays more shrewdness, more
-knowledge of the masses of mankind, than any public speaker we have
-heard since Long Jim Wilson left for California."
-
-On the morning after the Norwich speech, Mr. Lincoln was met, or is
-said to have been met, in the cars by a preacher, one Gulliver,--a
-name suggestive of fictions. Gulliver says he told Mr. Lincoln that
-he thought his speech "the most remarkable one he ever heard." Lincoln
-doubted his sincerity; but Gulliver persisted. "Indeed, sir," said he,
-"I learned more of the art of public speaking last evening than I could
-from a whole course of lectures on rhetoric." Lincoln found he had in
-hand a clerical sycophant, and a little politician at that,--a class of
-beings whom he most heartily despised. Whereupon he began to quiz the
-fellow, and told him, for a most "remarkable circumstance," that the
-professors of Yale College were running all around after him, taking
-notes of his speeches, and lecturing about him to the classes. "Now,"
-continued he, "I should like very much to know what it was in my speech
-which you thought so remarkable, and which interested my friend the
-professor so much?" Gulliver was equal to the occasion, and answered
-with an opinion which Mr. Bunsby might have delivered, and died,
-leaving to the world a reputation perfected by that single saying. "The
-clearness of your statements," said Gulliver, "the unanswerable style
-of your reasoning, and especially your illustrations, which were romance
-and pathos, and fun and logic, all welded together." Gulliver closed the
-interview with the cant peculiar to his kind. "Mr. Lincoln," said he,
-"may I say one thing to you before we separate?"--"Certainly; any thing
-you please," replied the good-natured old Abe. "You have just spoken,"
-preached Gulliver, "of the tendency of political life in Washington
-to debase the moral convictions of our representatives there by
-the admixture of mere political expediency. You have become, by the
-controversy with Mr. Douglas, one of our leaders in this great struggle
-with slavery, which is undoubtedly the struggle of the nation and the
-age. What I would like to say is this, and I say it with a full heart:
-Be true to your principles; and we will be true to you, and God will be
-true to us all." To which modest, pious, and original observation, Mr.
-Lincoln responded, "I say Amen to that! Amen to that!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-IT was not until May 9 and 10 that the Republican State Convention of
-Illinois met at Decatur. Mr. Lincoln was present, and is said to have
-been there as a mere "spectator." He had no special interest in the
-proceedings, and appears to have had no notion that any business
-relating to him was to be transacted that day. It was a very large and
-spirited body, comprising an immense number of delegates, among whom
-were the most brilliant, as well as the shrewdest men in the party. It
-was evident that something of more than usual importance was expected to
-transpire. A few moments after the convention organized, "Old Abe" was
-seen squatting, or sitting on his heels, just within the door of the
-Wigwam. Gov. Oglesby rose and said amid increasing silence, "I am
-informed that a distinguished citizen of Illinois, and one whom Illinois
-will ever delight to honor, is present; and I wish to move that this
-body invite him to a seat on the stand." Here the governor paused, as if
-to tease and dally, and work curiosity up to the highest point; but at
-length he shouted the magic name "_Abraham Lincoln!_" Not a shout, but
-a roar of applause, long and deep, shook every board and joist of the
-Wigwam. The motion was seconded and passed. A rush was made for the hero
-that sat on his heels. He was seized, and jerked to his feet. An effort
-was made to "jam him through the crowd" to his place of honor on
-the stage; but the crowd was too dense, and it failed. Then he was
-"troosted,"--lifted up bodily,--and lay for a few seconds sprawling and
-kicking upon the heads and shoulders of the great throng. In this
-manner he was gradually pushed toward the stand, and finally reached
-it, doubtless to his great relief, "in the arms of some half-dozen
-gentlemen," who set him down in full view of his clamorous admirers.
-"The cheering was like the roar of the sea. Hats were thrown up by the
-Chicago delegation, as if hats were no longer useful." Mr. Lincoln rose,
-bowed, smiled, blushed, and thanked the assembly as well as he could
-in the midst of such a tumult. A gentleman who saw it all says, "I then
-thought him one of the most diffident and worst-plagued men I ever saw."
-
-At another stage of the proceedings, Gov. Oglesby rose again with
-another provoking and mysterious speech. "There was," he said, "an
-old Democrat outside who had something he wished to present to this
-Convention."--"Receive it!" "Receive it!" cried some. "What is it?"
-"What is it?" screamed some of the lower Egyptians, who had an idea the
-old Democrat might want to blow them up with an infernal machine. But
-the party for Oglesby and the old Democrat was the stronger, and carried
-the vote with a tremendous hurrah. The door of the Wigwam opened; and
-a fine, robust old fellow, with an open countenance and bronzed cheeks,
-marched into the midst of the assemblage, bearing on his shoulder
-"two small triangular heart rails," surmounted by a banner with this
-inscription:--
-
-TWO RAILS,
-
-FROM A LOT MADE BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND JOHN HANKS, IN THE SANGAMON
-BOTTOM, IN THE YEAR 1830.
-
-[Illustration: Uncle John Hanks 489]
-
-The sturdy bearer was old John Hanks himself, enjoying the great
-field-day of his life. He was met with wild and tumultuous cheers,
-prolonged through several minutes; and it was observed that the Chicago
-and Central-Illinois men put up the loudest and longest. The whole scene
-was for a time simply tempestuous and bewildering. But it ended at
-last; and now the whole body, those in the secret and those out of it,
-clamored like men beside themselves for a speech from Mr. Lincoln, who
-in the mean time "blushed, but seemed to shake with inward laughter." In
-response to the repeated appeals he rose and said,--
-
-"Gentlemen, I suppose you want to know something about those things"
-(pointing to old John and the rails). "Well, the truth is, John Hanks
-and I did make rails in the Sangamon Bottom. I don't know whether we
-made those rails or not; fact is, I don't think they are a credit to the
-makers" (laughing as he spoke). "But I do know this: I made rails then,
-and I think I could make better ones than these now."
-
-By this time the innocent Egyptians began to open their eyes: they saw
-plainly enough now the admirable Presidential scheme unfolded to their
-view. The result of it all was a resolution declaring that "Abraham
-Lincoln _is the first choice of the Republican party of Illinois for the
-Presidency, and instructing the delegates to the Chicago Convention to
-use all honorable means to secure his nomination, and to cast the vote
-of the State as a unit for him_."
-
-The crowd at Decatur, delegates and private citizens, who took part in
-these proceedings, was estimated at five thousand. Neither the numbers
-nor the enthusiasm was a pleasant sight to the divided and demoralized
-Democrats. They disliked to hear so much about "honest Old Abe," "the
-rail-splitter," "the flat-boatman," "the pioneer." These cries had an
-ominous sound in their ears. Leaving Decatur on the cars, an old man out
-of Egypt, devoted to the great principles of Democracy, and excessively
-annoyed by the demonstration in progress, approached Mr. Lincoln and
-said, "So you're Abe Lincoln?"--"That's my name, sir," answered Mr.
-Lincoln. "They say you're a self-made man," said the Democrat. "Well,
-yes," said Mr. Lincoln, "what there is of me is self-made."--"Well, all
-I've got to say," observed the old man, after a careful survey of the
-statesman before him, "is, that it was a d--n bad job."
-
-In the mean time Mr. Lincoln's claims had been attractively presented to
-the politicians of other States. So early as 1858, Mr. Herndon had been
-to Boston partly, if not entirely, on this mission; and latterly
-Judge Davis, Leonard Swett, and others had visited Ohio, Indiana,
-Pennsylvania, and Maryland in his behalf. Illinois was, of course,
-overwhelmingly and vociferously for him.
-
-On the 16th of May, the Republican Convention assembled at Chicago.
-The city was literally crammed with delegates, alternates, "outside
-workers," and spectators. No nominating convention had ever before
-attracted such multitudes to the scene of its deliberations.
-
-The first and second days were spent in securing a permanent
-organization, and the adoption of a platform. The latter set out by
-reciting the Declaration of Independence as to the equality of all men,
-not forgetting the usual quotation about the right to "life, liberty,
-and the pursuit of happiness." The third resolution denounced disunion
-in any possible event; the fourth declared the right of each State to
-"order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own
-judgment exclusively;" the fifth denounced the administration and its
-treatment of Kansas, as well as its general support of the supposed
-rights of the South under the Constitution; the sixth favored "economy;"
-the seventh denied the "new dogma, that the Constitution, of its own
-force, carries slavery into any or all of the Territories of the United
-States;" the eighth denied the "authority of Congress, of a Territorial
-Legislature, or of any individuals, to give legal existence to slavery
-in any Territory of the United States;" the ninth called the African
-slave-trade a "burning shame;" the tenth denounced the governors of
-Kansas and Nebraska for vetoing certain antislavery bills; the
-eleventh favored the admission of Kansas; the twelfth was a high-tariff
-manifesto, and a general stump speech to the mechanics; the thirteenth
-lauded the Homestead policy; the fourteenth opposed any Federal or State
-legislation "by which the rights of citizenship, hitherto accorded to
-immigrants from foreign lands, shall be abridged or impaired," with
-some pretty words, intended as a further bid for the foreign vote;
-the fifteenth declared for "river and harbor improvements," and
-the sixteenth for a "Pacific Railroad." It was a very comprehensive
-"platform;" and, if all classes for whom planks were provided should
-be kind enough to stand upon them, there could be no failure in the
-election.
-
-On the third day the balloting for a candidate was to begin. Up to the
-evening of the second day, Mr. Seward's prospects were far the best. It
-was certain that he would receive the largest vote on the first ballot;
-and outside of the body itself the "crowd" for him was more numerous
-and boisterous than for any other, except Mr. Lincoln. For Mr. Lincoln,
-however, the "pressure" from the multitude, in the Wigwam, in the
-streets, and in the hotels, was tremendous. It is sufficiently accounted
-for by the fact that the "spot" was Chicago, and the State Illinois.
-Besides the vast numbers who came there voluntarily to urge his claims,
-and to cheer for him, as the exigency demanded, his adherents had
-industriously "drummed up" their forces in the city and country, and
-were now able to make infinitely more noise than all the other parties
-put together. There was a large delegation of roughs there for Mr.
-Seward, headed by Tom Hyer, the pugilist. These, and others like them,
-filled the Wigwam toward the evening of the second day in expectation
-that the voting would begin. The Lincoln party found it out, and
-determined to call a check to that game. They spent the whole night in
-mustering and organizing their "loose fellows" from far and near, and
-at daylight the next morning "took charge" of the Wigwam, filling
-every available space, and much that they had no business to fill. As a
-result, the Seward men were unable to get in, and were forced to content
-themselves with curbstone enthusiasm.
-
-Mr. Lincoln seemed to be very sure, all along, that the contest would be
-ultimately between him and Mr. Seward. The "Bates men" were supposed to
-be conservative, that is, not Abolitionists; and the object of the move
-in favor of Mr. Bates was to lower the fanatical tone of the party, and
-save the votes of certain "Union men" who might otherwise be against
-it. But a Seward man had telegraphed to St. Louis, to the friends of Mr.
-Bates, to say that Lincoln was as bad as Seward, and to urge them to go
-for Mr. Seward in case their own favorite should fail. The despatch was
-printed in "The Missouri Democrat," but was not brought to Mr. Lincoln's
-attention until the meeting of the Convention. He immediately caught up
-the paper, and "wrote on its broad margin," "Lincoln agrees with Seward
-in his irrepressible-conflict idea, and in negro equality; but he is
-opposed to Seward's Higher Law." With this he immediately despatched a
-friend to Chicago, who handed it to Judge Davis or Judge Logan.
-
-Simon Cameron of Pennsylvania was nominally a candidate; but, in the
-language of Col. McClure, "it meant nothing:" it was a mere sham, got up
-to enable Cameron to make a bargain with some real candidate, and thus
-secure for himself and his friends the lion's share of the spoils in
-the event of a victory at the polls. The genuine sentiment of the
-Pennsylvania delegation was divided between Judge Bates and Judge
-McLean. But Cameron was in a fine position to trade, and his friends
-were anxious for business. On the evening of the second day, these
-gentlemen were gratified. A deputation of them--Casey, Sanderson,
-Reeder, and perhaps others--were invited to the Lincoln Head-quarters at
-the Tremont House, where they were met by Messrs. Davis, Swett, Logan,
-and Dole, on the part of Mr. Lincoln. An agreement was there made, that,
-if the Cameron men would go for Lincoln, and he should be nominated
-and elected, Cameron should have a seat in his Cabinet, _provided_ the
-Pennsylvania delegation could be got to recommend him. The bargain
-was fulfilled, but not without difficulty. Cameron's strength was
-more apparent than real. There was, however, "a certain class of the
-delegates under his immediate influence;" and these, with the aid of Mr.
-Wilmot and his friends, who were honestly for Lincoln, managed to carry
-the delegation by a very small majority,--"about six."
-
-About the same time a similar bargain was made with the friends of Caleb
-B. Smith of Indiana; and with these two contracts quietly ratified, the
-Lincoln men felt strong and confident on the morning of the third day.
-
-While the candidates were being named, and when the ballotings began,
-every mention of Mr. Lincoln's name was received with thundering shouts
-by the vast mass of his adherents by whom the building had been packed.
-In the phrase of the day, the "outside pressure" was all in his favor.
-On the first ballot, Mr. Seward had 173 1/2 votes; Mr. Lincoln, 102;
-Mr. Cameron, 50 1/2; Mr. Chase, 49; Mr. Bates, 48; Mr. Dayton, 14; Mr.
-McLean, 12; Mr. Collamer, 10; and 6 were scattered. Mr. Cameron's
-name was withdrawn on the second ballot, according to the previous
-understanding; Mr. Seward had 184 1/2; Mr. Lincoln, 181; Mr. Chase,
-42 1/2; Mr. Bates, 35; Mr. Dayton, 10; Mr. McLean, 8; and the rest
-scattered. It was clear that the nomination lay between Mr. Seward and
-Mr. Lincoln, and the latter was receiving great accessions of strength.
-The third ballot came, and Mr. Lincoln ran rapidly up to 231 1/2 votes;
-233 being the number required to nominate. Hundreds of persons were
-keeping the count; and it was well known, without any announcement, that
-Mr. Lincoln lacked but a vote and a half to make him the nominee. At
-this juncture, Mr. Cartter of Ohio rose, and changed four votes from
-Mr. Chase to Mr. Lincoln. He was nominated. The Wigwam shook to its
-foundation with the roaring cheers. The multitude in the streets
-answered the multitude within, and in a moment more all the holiday
-artillery of Chicago helped to swell the grand acclamation. After a
-time, the business of the convention proceeded amid great excitement.
-All the votes that had heretofore been cast against Mr. Lincoln were
-cast for him before this ballot concluded; and, upon motion, the
-nomination was made unanimous. The convention then adjourned for dinner,
-and in the afternoon finished its work by the nomination of Hannibal
-Hamlin of Maine for Vice-President.
-
-All that day and all the day previous Mr. Lincoln was in Springfield,
-trying to behave as usual, but watching the proceedings of the
-Convention, as they were reported by telegraph, with nervous anxiety.
-Mr. Baker, the friend who had taken "The Missouri Democrat" to Chicago
-with Mr. Lincoln's pregnant indorsement upon it, returned on the night
-of the 18th. Early in the morning, he and Mr. Lincoln went to the
-balll-alley to play at "fives;" but the alley was pre-engaged. They went
-to an "excellent and neat beer saloon" to play a game of billiards; but
-the table was occupied. In this strait they contented themselves with a
-glass of beer, and repaired to "The Journal" office for news.
-
-C. P. Brown says that Lincoln played ball a great deal that day,
-notwithstanding the disappointment when he went with Baker; and Mr. Zane
-informs us that he was engaged in the same way the greater part of the
-day previous. It is probable that he took this physical mode of working
-off or keeping down the unnatural excitement that threatened to possess
-him.
-
-About nine o'clock in the morning, Mr. Lincoln came to the office of
-Lincoln & Herndon. Mr. Zane was then conversing with a student, "Well,
-boys," said Mr. Lincoln, "what do you know?"--"Mr. Rosette," answered
-Zane, "who came from Chicago this morning, thinks your chances for the
-nomination are good." Mr. Lincoln wished to know what Mr. Rosette's
-opinion was founded upon; and, while Zane was explaining, Mr. Baker
-entered with a telegram, "which said the names of the candidates for
-nomination had been announced," and that Mr. Lincoln's had been received
-with more applause than any other. Mr. Lincoln lay down on a sofa to
-rest. Soon after, Mr. Brown entered; and Mr. Lincoln said to him, "Well,
-Brown, do you know any thing?" Brown did not know much; and so Mr.
-Lincoln, secretly nervous and impatient, rose and exclaimed, "Let's go
-to the telegraph-office." After waiting some time at the office, the
-result of the first ballot came over the wire. It was apparent to all
-present that Mr. Lincoln thought it very favorable. He believed that if
-Mr. Seward failed to get the nomination, or to "come very near it," on
-the first ballot, he would fail altogether. Presently the news of the
-second ballot arrived, and Mr. Lincoln showed by his manner that he
-considered the contest no longer doubtful. "I've got him," said he. He
-then went over to the office of "The Journal," where other friends were
-awaiting decisive intelligence. The local editor of that paper, Mr.
-Zane, and others, remained behind to receive the expected despatch. In
-due time it came: the operator was intensely excited; at first he threw
-down his pencil, but, seizing it again, wrote off the news that threw
-Springfield into a frenzy of delight. The local editor picked it up, and
-rushed to "The Journal" office. Upon entering the room, he called for
-three cheers for the next President. They were given, and then the
-despatch was read. Mr. Lincoln seemed to be calm, but a close observer
-could detect in his countenance the indications of deep emotion. In the
-mean time cheers for Lincoln swelled up from the streets, and began to
-be heard throughout the town. Some one remarked, "Mr. Lincoln, I suppose
-now we will soon have a book containing your life."--"There is not
-much," he replied, "in my past life about which to write a book, as it
-seems to me." Having received the hearty congratulations of the company
-in the office, he descended to the street, where he was immediately
-surrounded by "Irish and American citizens;" and, so long as he was
-willing to receive it, there was great handshaking and felicitating.
-"Gentlemen," said the great man with a happy twinkle in his eye, "you
-had better come up and shake my hand while you can: honors elevate some
-men, you know." But he soon bethought him of a person who was of more
-importance to him than all this crowd. Looking toward his house, he
-said, "Well, gentlemen, there is a little short woman at our house who
-is probably more interested in this despatch than I am; and, if you will
-excuse me, I will take it up and let her see it."
-
-During the day a hundred guns were fired at Springfield; and in the
-evening a great mass meeting "ratified" the nomination, and, after doing
-so, adjourned to the house of the nominee. Mr. Lincoln appeared, made a
-"model" speech, and invited into his house everybody that could get in.
-To this the immense crowd responded that they would give him a larger
-house the next year, and in the mean time beset the one he had until
-after midnight.
-
-On the following day the Committee of the Convention, with Mr. Ashmun,
-the president, at its head, arrived at Springfield to notify Mr. Lincoln
-of his nomination. Contrary to what might have been expected, he
-seemed sad and dejected. The re-action from excessive joy to deep
-despondency--a process peculiar to his constitution--had already set
-in. To the formal address of the Committee, he responded with admirable
-taste and feeling;--
-
-"Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee,--I tender to you, and
-through you to the Republican National Convention, and all the people
-represented in it, my profoundest thanks for the high honor done me,
-which you now formally announce. Deeply and even painfully sensible of
-the great responsibility which is inseparable from this high honor,--a
-responsibility which I could almost wish had fallen upon some one of the
-far more eminent men and experienced statesmen whose distinguished names
-were before the Convention, I shall, by your leave, consider more
-fully the resolutions of the Convention, denominated the platform,
-and, without unnecessary and unreasonable delay, respond to you, Mr.
-Chairman, in writing, not doubting that the platform will be found
-satisfactory, and the nomination gratefully accepted. And now I will not
-longer defer the pleasure of taking you, and each of you, by the hand."
-
-The Committee handed him a letter containing the official notice,
-accompanied by the resolutions of the Convention; and to this he replied
-on the 23d as follows:--
-
-Springfield, Ill, May 23,1860.
-
-Hon. George Ashmun, President of the Republican National Convention.
-
-Sir,--I accept the nomination tendered me by the Convention over which
-you presided, and of which I am formally apprised in the letter of
-yourself and others, acting as a Committee of the Convention for that
-purpose.
-
-The declaration of principles and sentiments which accompanies your
-letter meets my approval; and it shall be my care not to violate or
-disregard it in any part.
-
-Imploring the assistance of Divine Providence, and with due regard to
-the views and feelings of all who were represented in the Convention; to
-the rights of all the States and Territories, and people of the nation;
-to the inviolability of the Constitution, and the perpetual union,
-harmony, and prosperity of all,--I am most happy to co-operate for the
-practical success of the principles declared by the Convention.
-
-Your obliged friend and fellow-citizen,
-
-Abraham Lincoln.
-
-In the mean time the National Democratic Convention had met at
-Charleston, S.C., and split in twain. The South utterly repudiated Mr.
-Douglas's new heresy; and Mr. Douglas insisted that the whole party
-ought to become heretics with him, and, turning their backs on the
-Dred-Scott Decision and the Cincinnati Platform, give up slavery in
-the Territories to the tender mercies of "squatter sovereignty" and
-"unfriendly legislation." Neither party to the controversy would be
-satisfied with a simple re-affirmation of the Cincinnati Platform; for
-under it Mr. Douglas could go to the North and say that it meant
-"squatter sovereignty," and Mr. Breckinridge could go to the South and
-say that it meant Congressional protection to slavery. In fact, it meant
-neither, and said neither, but declared, in plain English words, that
-Congress had no power to interfere with slavery in the Territories; and
-that, when the Territories were about to become States, they had all
-power to settle the question for themselves. Gen. B. F. Butler of
-Massachusetts proposed to heal the ominous divisions in the Convention
-by the re-adoption of that clear and emphatic provision; but his voice
-was soon drowned in the clamors of the fiercer disputants. The
-differences were irreconcilable. Mr. Douglas's friends had come there
-determined to nominate him at any cost; and, in order to nominate him,
-they dared not concede the platform to the South. A majority of the
-Committee on Resolutions reported the Cincinnati Platform, with the
-Southern interpretation of it; and the minority reported the same
-platform with a recitation concerning the "differences of opinion" "in
-the Democratic party," and a pledge to abide by the decision of the
-Supreme Court "on the questions of constitutional law,"--a pledge
-supposed to be of little value, since those who gave it were that moment
-in the very act of repudiating the only decision the Court had ever
-rendered. The minority report was adopted after a protracted and
-acrimonious debate, by a vote of one hundred and sixty-five to one
-hundred and thirty-eight. Thereupon the Southern delegates, most of them
-under instructions from their State conventions, withdrew, and organized
-themselves into a separate convention. The remaining delegates, called
-"the rump" by their Democratic adversaries, proceeded to ballot for a
-candidate for President, and voted fifty-seven times without effecting a
-nomination. Mr. Douglas, of course, received the highest number of
-votes; but, the old two-thirds rule being in force, he failed of a
-nomination. Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky was his principal competitor; but at
-one time and another Mr. Hunter of Virginia, Gen. Lane of Oregon, and
-Mr. Johnson of Tennessee, received flattering and creditable votes.
-After the fifty-seventh ballot, the Convention adjourned to meet at
-Baltimore on the 18th of June.
-
-The seceders met in another hall, adopted the majority platform, as the
-adhering delegates had adopted the minority platform, and then adjourned
-to meet at Richmond on the second Monday in June. Faint hopes of
-accommodation were still entertained; and, when the seceders met at
-Richmond, they adjourned again to Baltimore, and the 28th of June.
-
-The Douglas Convention, assuming to be the regular one, had invited the
-Southern States to fill up the vacant seats which belonged to them; but,
-when the new delegates appeared, they were met with the apprehension
-that their votes might not be perfectly secure for Mr. Douglas, and were
-therefore, in many instances, lawlessly excluded. This was the signal
-for another secession: the Border States withdrew; Mr. Butler and the
-Massachusetts delegation withdrew; Mr. Cushing deserted the chair, and
-took that of the rival Convention. The "regular" Convention, it was
-said, was now "the rump of a rump."
-
-On the first ballot for a candidate, Mr. Douglas had 173 1/2 votes; Mr.
-Guthrie, 10; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and 3 were scattered. On the second
-ballot, Mr. Douglas had 181 1/2; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and Mr. Guthrie, 5
-1/2. It was plain that under the two-thirds rule no nomination could be
-made here. Neither Mr. Douglas nor any one else could receive two-thirds
-of a full convention. It was therefore resolved that Mr. Douglas,
-"having received two-thirds of all the votes _given in this
-Convention_," should be declared the nominee. Mr. Fitzpatrick of Alabama
-was nominated for Vice-President, but declined to stand; and Mr. Johnson
-of Georgia was substituted for him by the Douglas "National Committee."
-
-In the seceders' Convention, twenty-one States were represented more
-or less fully. It had no trouble in selecting a candidate. John C.
-Breckinridge of Kentucky and Joseph Lane of Oregon were unanimously
-nominated for the offices of President and Vice-President.
-
-In the mean time another party--the "Constitutional Union party"--had
-met in Baltimore on the 19th of May, and nominated John Bell of
-Tennessee for President, and Edward Everett of Massachusetts for
-Vice-President. Its platform was, in brief, "The Constitution of the
-Country, the Union of the States, and the Enforcement of the Laws."
-This body was composed for the most part of impenitent Know-Nothings and
-respectable old-line Whigs.
-
-The spring elections had given the democracy good reason to hope for
-success in the fall. The commercial classes, the shipping classes, and
-large numbers of the manufacturers, were thoroughly alarmed for the
-safety of the great trade dependent upon a political connection with
-the South. It seemed probable that a great re-action against antislavery
-agitations might take place. But the division at Charleston, the
-permanent organization of the two factions at Baltimore, and their
-mutual and rancorous hostility, completely reversed the delusive
-prospect. A majority of the whole people of the Union looked forward to
-a Republican victory with dread, and a large part with actual terror;
-and yet it was now clear that that majority was fatally bent upon
-wasting its power in the bitter struggles of the factions which composed
-it. Mr. Lincoln's election was assured; and for them there was nothing
-left but to put the house in order for the great convulsion which
-all our political fathers and prophets had predicted as the necessary
-consequence of such an event.
-
-On the 6th of November, Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the
-United States. He received 1,857,610 votes; Mr. Douglas had 1,291,574;
-Mr. Breckinridge, 850,082; Mr. Bell, 646,124. Against Mr. Lincoln there
-was a majority of 980,170 of all the votes cast. Of the electoral
-votes, Mr. Lincoln had 180; Mr. Breckinridge, 72; Mr. Bell, 30; and
-Mr. Douglas, 12. It is more than likely that Mr. Lincoln owed this, his
-crowning triumph, to the skill and adroitness with which he questioned
-Mr. Douglas in the canvass of 1858, and drew out of him those fatal
-opinions about "squatter sovereignty" and "unfriendly legislation" in
-the Territories. But for Mr. Douglas's committal to those opinions, it
-is not likely that. Mr. Lincoln would ever have been President.
-
-The election over, Mr. Lincoln was sorely beset by office-seekers.
-Individuals, deputations, "delegations," from all quarters, pressed
-in upon him in a manner that might have killed a man of less robust
-constitution. The hotels of Springfield were filled with gentlemen who
-came with, light baggage and heavy schemes. The party had never been in
-office: a "clean sweep" of the "ins" was expected; and all the "outs"
-were patriotically anxious to take the vacant places. It was a party
-that had never fed; and it was voraciously hungry. Mr. Lincoln and
-Artemus Ward saw a great deal of fun in it; and in all human probability
-it was the fun alone that enabled Mr. Lincoln to bear it.
-
-Judge Davis says that Mr. Lincoln had determined to appoint "Democrats
-and Republicans alike to office." Many things confirm this statement.
-Mr. Lincoln felt deeply the responsibility of his great trust; and he
-felt still more keenly the supposed impossibility of administering
-the government for the sole benefit of an organization which had no
-existence in one-half of the Union. He was therefore willing, not only
-to appoint Democrats to office, but to appoint them to the very highest
-offices within his gift. At this time he thought very highly of Mr.
-Stephens of Georgia, and would gladly have taken him into his Cabinet
-but for the fear that Georgia might secede, and take Mr. Stephens along
-with her. He did actually authorize his friend, Mr. Speed, to offer the
-Treasury Department to Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky; and Mr. Guthrie, for
-good reasons of his own, declined it. The full significance of this act
-of courageous magnanimity cannot be understood without reference to the
-proceedings of the Charleston Convention, where Mr. Guthrie was one
-of the foremost candidates. He considered the names of various other
-gentlemen from the Border States, each of them with good proslavery
-antecedents. He commissioned Thurlow Weed to place a seat in the Cabinet
-at the disposal of Mr. Gilmore of North Carolina; but Mr. Gilmore,
-finding that his State was likely to secede, was reluctantly compelled
-to decline it. He was, in fact, sincerely and profoundly anxious that
-the South should be honestly represented in his councils by men who had
-an abiding-place in the hearts of her people. To accomplish that high
-purpose, he was forced to go beyond the ranks of his own party; and
-he had the manliness to do it. He felt that his strength lay in
-conciliation at the outset: that was his ruling conviction during all
-those months of preparation for the great task before him. It showed
-itself, not only in the appointments which he sought to make, but in
-those which he did make. Harboring no jealousies, entertaining no fears
-concerning his personal interests in the future, he called around
-him the most powerful of his late rivals,--Seward, Chase, Bates,--and
-unhesitatingly gave into their hands powers which most presidents would
-have shrunk from committing to their equals, and much more to their
-superiors in the conduct of public affairs.
-
-The cases of Cameron and Smith, however, were very distressing. He had
-authorized no one to make such bargains for him as had been made with
-the friends of these men. He would gladly have repudiated the contracts,
-if it could have been done with honor and safety. For Smith he had great
-regard, and believed that he had rendered important services in the late
-elections. But his character was now grossly assailed; and it would have
-saved Mr. Lincoln serious embarrassments if he had been able to put him
-aside altogether, and select Mr. Lane or some other Indiana statesman
-in his place. He wavered long, but finally made up his mind to keep the
-pledge of his friends; and Smith was appointed.
-
-In Cameron's case the contest was fierce and more protracted. At
-Chicago, Cameron's agents had demanded that he should have the Treasury
-Department; but that was too much; and the friends of Mr. Lincoln,
-tried, pushed, and anxious as they were, declined to consider it. They
-would say that he should be appointed to a Cabinet position, but no
-more; and to secure this, he must get a majority of the Pennsylvania
-delegation to recommend him. Mr. Cameron was disposed to exact the
-penalty of his bond, hard as compliance might be on the part of Mr.
-Lincoln. But Cameron had many and formidable enemies, who alleged that
-he was a man notorious for his evil deeds, shameless in his rapacity
-and corruption, and even more shameless in his mean ambition to occupy
-exalted stations, for which he was utterly and hopelessly incompetent;
-that he had never dared to offer himself as a candidate before the
-people of Pennsylvania, but had more than once gotten high offices from
-the Legislature by the worst means ever used by a politician; and that
-it would be a disgrace, a shame, a standing offence to the country, if
-Mr. Lincoln should consent to put him into his Cabinet. On the other
-hand, Mr. Cameron had no lack of devoted friends to deny these charges,
-and to say that his was as "white a soul" as ever yearned for political
-preferment: they came out to Springfield in numbers,--Edgar Cowan, J. K.
-Moorehead, Alexander Cummins, Mr. Sanderson, Mr. Casey, and many
-others, besides Gen. Cameron himself. On the ground, of course, were the
-powerful gentlemen who had made the original contract on the part of
-Mr. Lincoln, and who, from first to last, strenuously insisted upon
-its fulfilment. It required a hard struggle to overcome Mr. Lincoln's
-scruples; and the whole force was necessarily mustered in order to
-accomplish it. "All that I am in the world," said he,--"the Presidency
-and all else,--I owe to that opinion of me which the people express
-when they call me 'honest Old Abe.' Now, what will they think of
-their _honest_ Abe, when he appoints Simon Cameron to be his familiar
-adviser?"
-
-In Pennsylvania it was supposed for a while that Cameron's audacity had
-failed him, and that he would abandon the attempt. But about the 1st
-of January Mr. Swett, one of the contracting parties, appeared at
-Harrisburg, and immediately afterwards Cameron and some of his
-friends took flight to Springfield. This circumstance put the vigilant
-opposition on the alert, and aroused them to a clear sense of the
-impending calamity. The sequel is a painful story; and it is, perhaps,
-better to give it in the words of a distinguished actor,--Col. Alexander
-K. McClure. "I do not know," says he, "that any went there to oppose
-the appointment but myself. When I learned that Cameron had started
-to Springfield, and that his visit related to the Cabinet, I at once
-telegraphed Lincoln that such an appointment would be most unfortunate.
-Until that time, no one outside a small circle of Cameron's friends
-dreamed of Lincoln's calling him to the Cabinet. Lincoln's character for
-honesty was considered a complete guaranty against such a suicidal act.
-No efforts had therefore been made to guard against it.
-
-"In reply to my telegram, Mr. Lincoln answered, requesting me to come to
-Springfield at once. I hastily got letters from Gov. Curtin, Secretary
-Slifer, Mr. Wilmot, Mr. Dayton, Mr. Stevens, and started. I took no
-affidavits with me, nor were any specific charges made against him by
-me, or by any of the letters I bore; but they all sustained me in the
-allegation, that the appointment would disgrace the administration
-and the country, because of the notorious incompetency and public and
-private villany of the candidate. I spent four hours with Mr. Lincoln
-alone; and the matter was discussed very fully and frankly. Although he
-had previously decided to appoint Cameron, he closed our interview by
-a reconsideration of his purpose, and the assurance that within
-twenty-four hours he would write me definitely on the subject. He wrote
-me, as he promised, and stated, that, if I would make specific charges
-against Mr. Cameron, and produce the proof, he would dismiss the
-subject. I answered, declining to do so for reasons I thought should be
-obvious to every one. I believe that affidavits were sent to him, but I
-had no hand in it.
-
-"Subsequently Cameron regarded his appointment as impossible, and he
-proposed to Stevens to join in pressing him. Stevens wrote me of the
-fact; and I procured strong letters from the State administration in his
-favor. A few days after Stevens wrote me a most bitter letter, saying
-that Cameron had deceived him, and was then attempting to enforce his
-own appointment. The bond was demanded of Lincoln; and that decided the
-matter."1
-
-1 As this was one of the few public acts which Mr. Lincoln performed
-with a bad conscience, the reader ought to know the consequences of it;
-and, because it may not be convenient to revert to them in detail at
-another place, we give them here, still retaining the language of the
-eye-witness, Col. McClure:--
-
-"I saw Cameron the night of the day that Lincoln removed him. We met in
-the room of a mutual friend, and he was very violent against Lincoln for
-removing him without consultation or notice. His denunciation against
-the President was extremely bitter, for attempting, as he said, his
-'personal as well as his political destruction.' He exhibited the
-letter, which was all in Mr. Lincoln's handwriting, and was literally as
-follows. I quote from carefully-treasured recollection:--
-
-"'Hon. Simon Cameron, Secretary of War.
-
-"Dear Sir,--I have this day nominated Hon. Edwin M. Stanton to be
-Secretary of War, and you to be Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia.
-
-"I am sure there is no material error in my quotation of the letter.
-
-"Cameron's chief complaint was, that he had no knowledge or intimation
-of the change until Chase delivered the letter. We were then, as ever
-before and since, and as we ever shall be, not in political sympathy,
-but our personal relations were ever kind. Had he been entirely
-collected, he would probably not have said and done what I heard and
-witnessed; but he wept like a child, and appealed to me to aid in
-protecting him against the President's attempt at personal degradation,
-assuring me that under like circumstances he would defend me. In my
-presence the proposition was made and determined upon to ask Lincoln
-to allow a letter of resignation to be antedated, and to write a kind
-acceptance of the same in reply. The effort was made, in which Mr. Chase
-joined, although perhaps ignorant of all the circumstances of the
-case; and it succeeded. The record shows that Mr. Cameron voluntarily
-resigned; while, in point of fact, he was summarily removed without
-notice.
-
-"In many subsequent conversations with Mr. Lincoln, he did not attempt
-to conceal the great misfortune of Cameron's appointment and the painful
-necessity of his removal."
-
-Very truly,
-
-A. LINCOLN.'
-
-As a slight relief to the miseries of his high position, and the doleful
-tales of the office-hunters, who assailed him morning, noon, and night,
-Mr. Lincoln ran off to Chicago, where he met with the same annoyances,
-and a splendid reception besides. Here, however, he enjoyed the great
-satisfaction of a long private conference with his old friend Speed; and
-it was then that he authorized him to invite Mr. Guthrie to the Cabinet.
-
-And now he began to think very tenderly of his friends and relatives in
-Coles County, especially of his good stepmother and her daughters. By
-the first of February, he concluded that he could not leave his home to
-assume the vast responsibilities that awaited him without paying them a
-visit. Accordingly, he left Springfield on the first day of that month,
-and went straight to Charleston, where Col. Chapman and family resided.
-He was accompanied by Mr. Marshall, the State Senator from that
-district, and was entertained at his house. The people crowded by
-hundreds to see him; and he was serenaded by "both the string and
-brass bands of the town, but declined making a speech." Early the next
-morning, he repaired "to his cousin, Dennis Hanks;" and our Jolly old
-friend Dennis had the satisfaction of seeing a grand levee under his own
-roof. It was all very pleasant to Mr. Lincoln to see such multitudes
-of familiar faces smiling upon his wonderful successes. But the chief
-object of his solicitude was not here; Mrs. Lincoln lived in the
-southern part of the county, and he was all impatience to see her. As
-soon, therefore, as he had taken a frugal breakfast with Dennis, he and
-Col. Chapman started off in a "two-horse buggy" toward Farmington, where
-his step-mother was living with her daughter, Mrs. Moore. They had much
-difficulty in crossing "the Kickapoo" River, which was running full of
-ice; but they finally made the dangerous passage, and arrived at
-Farmington in safety. The meeting between him and the old lady was of a
-most affectionate and tender character. She fondled him as her own
-"Abe," and he her as his own mother. It was soon arranged that she
-should return with him to Charleston, so that they might enjoy by the
-way the unrestricted and uninterrupted intercourse which they both
-desired above all things, but which they were not likely to have where
-the people could get at him. Then Mr. Lincoln and Col. Chapman drove to
-the house of John Hall, who lived "on the old Lincoln farm," where Abe
-split the celebrated rails, and fenced in the little clearing in 1830.
-Thence they went to the spot where old Tom Lincoln was buried. The grave
-was unmarked and utterly neglected. Mr. Lincoln said he wanted to "have
-it enclosed, and a suitable tombstone erected." He told Col. Chapman to
-go to a "marble-dealer," ascertain the cost of the work proposed, and
-write him in full. He would then send Dennis Hanks the money, and an
-inscription for the stone; and Dennis would do the rest. (Col. Chapman
-performed his part of the business, but Mr. Lincoln noticed it no
-further; and the grave remains in the same condition to this day.)
-
-"We then returned," says Col. Chapman, "to Farmington, where we found
-a large crowd of citizens--nearly all old acquaintances--waiting to see
-him. His reception was very enthusiastic, and appeared to gratify him
-very much. After taking dinner at his step-sister's (Mrs. Moore), we
-returned to Charleston, his step-mother coming with us.
-
-"Our conversation during the trip was mostly concerning family affairs.
-Mr. Lincoln spoke to me on the way down to Farmington of his step-mother
-in the most affectionate manner; said she had been his best friend in
-the world, and that no son could love a mother more than he loved her.
-He also told me of the condition of his father's family at the time he
-married his step-mother, and of the change she made in the family, and
-of the encouragement he (Abe) received from her.... He spoke of his
-father, and related some amusing incidents of the old man; of the
-bull-dogs' biting the old man on his return from New Orleans; of the
-old man's escape, when a boy, from an Indian who was shot by his uncle
-Mordecai. He spoke of his uncle Mordecai as being a man of very great
-natural gifts, and spoke of his step-brother, John
-
-D. Johnston, who had died a short time previous, in the most
-affectionate manner.
-
-"Arriving at Charleston on our return from Farmington, we proceeded to
-my residence. Again the house was crowded by persons wishing to see him.
-The crowd finally became so great, that he authorized me to announce
-that he would hold a public reception at the Town Hall that evening at
-seven o'clock; but that, until then, he wished to be left with relations
-and friends. After supper he proceeded to the Town Hall, where large
-numbers from the town and surrounding country, irrespective of party,
-called to see him.
-
-"He left this place Wednesday morning at four o'clock to return to
-Springfield.... Mr. Lincoln appeared to enjoy his visit here remarkably
-well. His reception by his old acquaintances appeared to be very
-gratifying to him. They all appeared so glad to see him, irrespective
-of party, and all appeared so anxious that his administration might be
-a success, and that he might have a pleasant and honorable career as
-President."
-
-The parting between Mr. Lincoln and his mother was very touching. She
-embraced him with deep emotion, and said she was sure she would never
-behold him again, for she felt that his enemies would assassinate him.
-He replied, "No, no, mamma: they will not do that. Trust in the Lord,
-and all will be well: we will see each other again." Inexpressibly
-affected by this new evidence of her tender attachment and deep concern
-for his safety, he gradually and reluctantly withdrew himself from the
-arms of the only mother he had ever known, feeling still more oppressed
-by the heavy cares which time and events were rapidly augmenting.
-
-The fear that Mr. Lincoln would be assassinated was not peculiar to his
-step-mother. It was shared by very many of his neighbors at Springfield;
-and the friendly warnings he received were as numerous as they were
-silly and gratuitous. Every conceivable precaution was suggested. Some
-thought the cars might be thrown from the track; some thought he would
-be surrounded and stabbed in some great crowd; others thought he
-might be shot from a house-top as he rode up Pennsylvania Avenue on
-inauguration day; while others still were sure he would be quietly
-poisoned long before the 4th of March. One gentleman insisted that
-he ought, in common prudence, to take his cook with him from
-Springfield,--one from "among his own female friends."
-
-Mingled with the thousands who came to see him were many of his old
-New-Salem and Petersburg friends and constituents; and among these was
-Hannah Armstrong, the wife of Jack and the mother of William. Hannah
-had been to see him once or twice before, and had thought there was
-something mysterious in his conduct. He never invited her to his house,
-or introduced her to his wife; and this circumstance led Hannah to
-suspect that "there was something wrong between him and her." On one
-occasion she attempted a sort of surreptitious entrance to his house
-by the kitchen door; but it ended very ludicrously, and poor Hannah was
-very much discouraged. On this occasion she made no effort to get upon
-an intimate footing with his family, but went straight to the State
-House, where he received the common run of strangers. He talked to her
-as he would have done in the days when he ran for the Legislature, and
-Jack was an "influential citizen." Hannah was perfectly charmed, and
-nearly beside herself with pride and pleasure. She, too, was filled with
-the dread of some fatal termination to all his glory. "Well," says she,
-"I talked to him some time, and was about to bid him good-by; had told
-him that it was the last time I should ever see him: something told me
-that I should never see him; they would kill him. He smiled, and said
-jokingly, 'Hannah, if they do kill me, I shall never die another death.'
-I then bade him good-by."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-IT was now but a few weeks until Mr. Lincoln was to become the
-constitutional ruler of one of the great nations of the earth, and to
-begin to expend appropriations, to wield armies, to apportion patronage,
-powers, offices, and honors, such as few sovereigns have ever had at
-command. The eyes of all mankind were bent upon him to see how he would
-solve a problem in statesmanship to which the philosophy of Burke and
-the magnanimity of Wellington might have been unequal. In the midst of
-a political canvass in his own State but a few years before, impressed
-with the gravity of the great issues which then loomed but just above
-the political horizon, he had been the first to announce, amid the
-objections and protestations of his friends and political associates,
-the great truth, that "a house divided against itself cannot stand;"
-that the perpetuity of the Union depended upon its becoming devoted
-either to the interests of freedom or slavery. And now, by a turn of
-fortune unparalleled in history, he had been chosen to preside over the
-interests of the nation; while, as yet unseen to him, the question that
-perplexed the founders of the government, which ever since had been a
-disturbing element in the national life, and had at last arrayed section
-against section, was destined to reach its final settlement through
-the fierce struggle of civil war. In many respects his situation was
-exceptionally trying. He was the first President of the United States
-elected by a strictly sectional vote. The party which elected him, and
-the parties which had been defeated, were inflamed by the heat of the
-canvass. The former, with faith in their principles, and a natural
-eagerness for the prizes now within their reach, were not disposed to
-compromise their first success by any lowering of their standard or any
-concession to the beaten; while many of the latter saw in the success
-of the triumphant party an attack on their most cherished rights, and
-refused in consequence to abide by the result of the contest. To meet so
-grave an exigency, Mr. Lincoln had neither precedents nor experience
-to guide him, nor could he turn elsewhere for greater wisdom than he
-possessed. The leaders of the new party were as yet untried in the great
-responsibilities which had fallen upon him and them. There were men
-among them who had earned great reputation as leaders of an opposition;
-but their eloquence had been expended upon a single subject of national
-concern. They knew how to depict the wrongs of a subject race, and also
-how to set forth the baleful effects of an institution like slavery on
-national character. But was it certain that they were equally able to
-govern with wisdom and prudence the mighty people whose affairs were now
-given to their keeping?
-
-Until the day of his overthrow at Chicago, Mr. Seward had been the
-recognized chief of the party; had, like Mr. Lincoln, taught the
-existence of an irrepressible conflict between the North and the South,
-and had also inculcated the idea of a law higher than the Constitution,
-which was of more binding force than any human enactment, until many of
-his followers had come to regard the Constitution with little respect.
-It was this Constitution which Mr. Lincoln, having sworn to preserve,
-protect, and defend, was to attempt to administer to the satisfaction
-of the minority which had elected him, and which was alone expected
-to support him. To moderate the passions of his own partisans, to
-conciliate his opponents in the North, and divide and weaken his enemies
-in the South, was a task which no mere politician was likely to perform,
-yet one which none but the most expert of politicians and wisest
-of statesmen was fitted to undertake. It required moral as well as
-intellectual qualities of the highest order. William of Orange, with a
-like duty and similar difficulties, was ready at one time and another
-to give up the effort in despair, although aided by "the divinity that
-hedges round a king." Few men believed that Mr. Lincoln possessed a
-single qualification for his great office. His friends had indicated
-what they considered his chief merit, when they insisted that he was
-a very common, ordinary man, just like the rest of "the people,"--"Old
-Abe," a rail-splitter and a story-teller. They said he was good and
-honest and well-meaning; but they took care not to pretend that he was
-great. He was thoroughly convinced that there was too much truth in this
-view of his character. He felt deeply and keenly his lack of experience
-in the conduct of public affairs. He spoke then and afterwards about the
-duties of the Presidency with much diffidence, and said, with a story
-about a justice of the peace in Illinois, that they constituted his
-"great first case misunderstood." He had never been a ministerial or an
-executive officer. His most intimate friends feared that he possessed
-no administrative ability; and in this opinion he seems to have shared
-himself, at least in his calmer and more melancholy moments.
-
-Having put his house in order, arranged all his private business, made
-over his interest in the practice of Lincoln & Herndon to Mr. Herndon,
-and requested "Billy," as a last favor, to leave his name on the old
-sign for four years at least, Mr. Lincoln was ready for the final
-departure from home and all familiar things. And this period of
-transition from private to public life--a period of waiting and
-preparing for the vast responsibilities that were to bow down his
-shoulders during the years to come--affords us a favorable opportunity
-to turn back and look at him again as his neighbors saw him from 1837 to
-1861.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was about six feet four inches high,--the length of his legs
-being out of all proportion to that of his body. When he sat down on a
-chair, he seemed no taller than an average man, measuring from the chair
-to the crown of his head; but his knees rose high in front, and a marble
-placed on the cap of one of them would roll down a steep descent to
-the hip. He weighed about a hundred and eighty pounds; but he was thin
-through the breast, narrow across the shoulders, and had the general
-appearance of a consumptive subject. Standing up, he stooped slightly
-forward; sitting down, he usually crossed his long legs, or threw them
-over the arms of the chair, as the most convenient mode of disposing of
-them. His "head was long, and tall from the base of the brain and the
-eyebrow;" his forehead high and narrow, but inclining backward as
-it rose. The diameter of his head from ear to ear was six and a half
-inches, and from front to back eight inches. The size of his hat
-was seven and an eighth. His ears were large, standing out almost at
-right-angles from his head; his cheek-bones high and prominent; his
-eyebrows heavy, and jutting forward over small, sunken blue eyes; his
-nose long, large, and blunt, the tip of it rather ruddy, and slightly
-awry toward the right-hand side; his chin, projecting far and sharp,
-curved upward to meet a thick, material, lower lip, which hung downward;
-his cheeks were flabby, and the loose skin fell in wrinkles, or folds;
-there was a large mole on his right cheek, and an uncommonly prominent
-Adam's apple on his throat; his hair was dark brown in color, stiff,
-unkempt, and as yet showing little or no sign of advancing age or
-trouble; his complexion was very dark, his skin yellow, shrivelled,
-and "leathery." In short, to use the language of Mr. Herndon, "he was a
-thin, tall, wiry, sinewy, grizzly, raw-boned man," "looking woe-struck."
-His countenance was haggard and careworn, exhibiting all the marks of
-deep and protracted suffering. Every feature of the man--the hollow
-eyes, with the dark rings beneath; the long, sallow, cadaverous face,
-intersected by those peculiar deep lines; his whole air; his walk; his
-long, silent reveries, broken at long intervals by sudden and startling
-exclamations, as if to confound an observer who might suspect the nature
-of his thoughts--showed he was a man of sorrows,--not sorrows of to-day
-or yesterday, but long-treasured and deep,--bearing with him a continual
-sense of weariness and pain.
-
-He was a plain, homely, sad, weary-looking man, to whom one's heart
-warmed involuntarily, because he seemed at once miserable and kind.
-
-On a winter's morning, this man could be seen wending his way to the
-market, with a basket on his arm, and a little boy at his side, whose
-small feet rattled and pattered over the ice-bound pavement, attempting
-to make up by the number of his short steps for the long strides of his
-father. The little fellow jerked at the bony hand which held his, and
-prattled and questioned, begged and grew petulant, in a vain effort to
-make his father talk to him. But the latter was probably unconscious of
-the other's existence, and stalked on, absorbed in his own reflections.
-He wore on such occasions an old gray shawl, rolled into a coil, and
-wrapped like a rope around his neck. The rest of his clothes were in
-keeping. "He did not walk cunningly,--Indian-like,--but cautiously and
-firmly." His tread was even and strong. He was a little pigeon-toed; and
-this, with another peculiarity, made his walk very singular. He set his
-whole foot flat on the ground, and in turn lifted it all at once,--not
-resting momentarily upon the toe as the foot rose, nor upon the heel as
-it fell. He never wore his shoes out at the heel and the toe more,
-as most men do, than at the middle of the sole; yet his gait was not
-altogether awkward, and there was manifest physical power in his step.
-As he moved along thus silent, abstracted, his thoughts dimly reflected
-in his sharp face, men turned to look after him as an object of sympathy
-as well as curiosity: "his melancholy," in the words of Mr. Herndon,
-"dripped from him as he walked." If, however, he met a friend in the
-street, and was roused by a loud, hearty "Good-morning, Lincoln!" he
-would grasp the friend's hand with one or both of his own, and, with his
-usual expression of "Howdy, howdy," would detain him to hear a story:
-something reminded him of it; it happened in Indiana, and it must be
-told, for it was wonderfully pertinent.
-
-After his breakfast-hour, he would appear at his office, and go about
-the labors of the day with all his might, displaying prodigious industry
-and capacity for continuous application, although he never was a fast
-worker. Sometimes it happened that he came without his breakfast; and
-then he would have in his hands a piece of cheese, or Bologna sausage,
-and a few crackers, bought by the way. At such times he did not speak
-to his partner or his friends, if any happened to be present: the tears
-were, perhaps, struggling into his eyes, while his pride was struggling
-to keep them back. Mr. Herndon knew the whole story at a glance: there
-was no speech between them; but neither wished the visitors to the
-office to witness the scene; and, therefore, Mr. Lincoln retired to the
-back office, while Mr. Herndon locked the front one, and walked away
-with the key in his pocket. In an hour or more the latter would return,
-and perhaps find Mr. Lincoln calm and collected; otherwise he went out
-again, and waited until he was so. Then the office was opened, and every
-thing went on as usual.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln had a speech to write, which happened very often,
-he would put down each thought, as it struck him, on a small strip of
-paper, and, having accumulated a number of these, generally carried them
-in his hat or his pockets until he had the whole speech composed in this
-odd way, when he would sit down at his table, connect the fragments,
-and then write out the whole speech on consecutive sheets in a plain,
-legible handwriting.
-
-His house was an ordinary two-story frame-building, with a stable and a
-yard: it was a bare, cheerless sort of a place. He planted no fruit or
-shade trees, no shrubbery or flowers. He did on one occasion set out a
-few rose-bushes in front of his house; but they speedily perished, or
-became unsightly for want of attention. Mrs. Wallace, Mrs. Lincoln's
-sister, undertook "to hide the nakedness" of the place by planting some
-flowers; but they soon withered and died. He cultivated a small garden
-for a single year, working in it himself; but it did not seem to
-prosper, and that enterprise also was abandoned. He had a horse and a
-cow: the one was fed and curried, and the other fed and milked, by his
-own hand. When at home, he chopped and sawed all the wood that was used
-in his house. Late one night he returned home, after an absence of a
-week or so. His neighbor, Webber, was in bed; but, hearing an axe in use
-at that unusual hour, he rose to see what it meant. The moon was high;
-and by its light he looked down into Lincoln's yard, and there saw him
-in his shirt-sleeves "cutting wood to cook his supper with." Webber
-turned to his watch, and saw that it was one o'clock. Besides this house
-and lot, and a small sum of money, Mr. Lincoln had no property, except
-some wild land in Iowa, entered for him under warrants, received for his
-service in the Black Hawk War.
-
-Mrs. Wallace thinks "Mr. Lincoln was a domestic man by nature." He was
-not fond of other people's children, but was extremely fond of his own:
-he was patient, indulgent, and generous with them to a fault. On Sundays
-he often took those that were large enough, and walked with them into
-the country, and, giving himself up entirely to them, rambled through
-the green fields or the cool woods, amusing and instructing them for a
-whole day at a time. His method of reading is thus quaintly described.
-"He would read, generally aloud (couldn't read otherwise),--would read
-with great warmth, all funny or humorous things; read Shakspeare that
-way. He was a sad man, an abstracted man. He would lean back, his
-head against the top of a rocking-chair; sit abstracted that way for
-minutes,--twenty, thirty minutes,--and all at once would burst out into
-a joke."
-
-Mrs. Col. Chapman, daughter of Dennis Hanks, and therefore a relative
-of Mr. Lincoln, made him a long visit previous to her marriage. "You
-ask me," says she, "how Mr. Lincoln acted at home. I can say, and that
-truly, he was all that a husband, father, and neighbor should be,--kind
-and affectionate to his wife and child ('Bob' being the only one they
-had when I was with them), and very pleasant to all around him. Never
-did I hear him utter an unkind word. For instance: one day he undertook
-to correct his child, and his wife was determined that he should not,
-and attempted to take it from him; but in this she failed. She then
-tried tongue-lashing, but met with the same fate; for Mr. Lincoln
-corrected his child as a father ought to do, in the face of his wife's
-anger, and that, too, without even changing his countenance or making
-any reply to his wife.
-
-"His favorite way of reading, when at home, was lying down on the floor.
-I fancy I see him now, lying full-length in the hall of his old house
-reading. When not engaged reading law-books, he would read literary
-works, and was very fond of reading poetry, and often, when he would
-be, or appear to be, in deep study, commence and repeat aloud some piece
-that he had taken a fancy to, such as the one you already have in print,
-and 'The Burial of Sir John Moore,' and so on. He often told laughable
-jokes and stories when he thought we were looking gloomy."
-
-[Illustration: Mr. Lincoln's Home in Springfield, Ill. 519]
-
-Mr. Lincoln was not supremely happy in his domestic relations: the
-circumstances of his courtship and marriage alone made that impossible.
-His engagement to Miss Todd was one of the great misfortunes of his life
-and of hers. He realized the mistake too late; and when he was brought
-face to face with the lie he was about to enact, and the wrong he was
-about to do, both to himself and an innocent woman, he recoiled with
-horror and remorse. For weeks together, he was sick, deranged, and on
-the verge of suicide,--a heavy care to his friends, and a source of
-bitter mortification to the unfortunate lady, whose good fame depended,
-in a great part, upon his constancy. The wedding garments and the
-marriage feast were prepared, the very hour had come when the solemn
-ceremony was to be performed; and the groom failed to appear! He was
-no longer a free agent: he was restrained, carefully guarded, and soon
-after removed to a distant place, where the exciting causes of his
-disease would be less constant and active in their operation. He
-recovered slowly, and at length returned to Springfield. He spoke out
-his feelings frankly and truly to the one person most interested in
-them. But he had been, from the beginning, except in the case of Ann
-Rutledge, singularly inconstant and unstable in his relations with
-the few refined and cultivated women who had been the objects of his
-attention. He loved Miss Rutledge passionately, and the next year
-importuned Miss Owens to be his wife. Failing in his suit, he wrote an
-unfeeling letter about her, apparently with no earthly object but to
-display his levity and make them both ridiculous. He courted Miss
-Todd, and at the moment of success fell in love with her relative, and,
-between the two, went crazy, and thought of ending all his woes with a
-razor or a pocket-knife. It is not impossible that the feelings of such
-a man might have undergone another and more sudden change. Perhaps they
-did. At all events, he was conscientious and honorable and just. There
-was but one way of repairing the injury he had done Miss Todd, and
-he adopted it. They were married; but they understood each other, and
-suffered the inevitable consequences, as other people do under similar
-circumstances. But such troubles seldom fail to find a tongue; and it is
-not strange, that, in this case, neighbors and friends, and ultimately
-the whole country, came to know the state of things in that house. Mr.
-Lincoln scarcely attempted to conceal it, but talked of it with little
-or no reserve to his wife's relatives, as well as his own friends. Yet
-the gentleness and patience with which he bore this affliction from day
-to day, and from year to year, was enough to move the shade of Socrates.
-It touched his acquaintances deeply, and they gave it the widest
-publicity. They made no pause to inquire, to investigate, and to
-apportion the blame between the parties, according to their deserts.
-Almost ever since Mr. Lincoln's death, a portion of the press has never
-tired of heaping brutal reproaches upon his wife and widow; whilst a
-certain class of his friends thought they were honoring his memory by
-multiplying outrages and indignities upon her, at the very moment when
-she was broken by want and sorrow, defamed, defenceless, in the hands of
-thieves, and at the mercy of spies. If ever a woman grievously expiated
-an offence not her own, this woman did. In the Herndon manuscripts,
-there is a mass of particulars under this head; but Mr. Herndon sums
-them all up in a single sentence, in a letter to one of Mr. Lincoln's
-biographers: "All that I know ennobles both."
-
-It would be very difficult to recite all the causes of Mr. Lincoln's
-melancholy disposition. That it was partly owing to physical causes
-there can be no doubt. Mr. Stuart says, that in some respects he was
-totally unlike other people, and was, in fact, a "mystery." Blue-pills
-were the medicinal remedy which he affected most. But whatever the
-history or the cause,--whether physical reasons, the absence of domestic
-concord, a series of painful recollections of his mother, of his father
-and master, of early sorrows, blows, and hardships, of Ann Rutledge and
-fruitless hopes, or all these combined, Mr. Lincoln was the saddest and
-gloomiest man of his time. "I do not think that he knew what happiness
-was for twenty years," says Mr. Herndon. "Terrible" is the word which
-all his friends use to describe him in the black mood. "It was terrible!
-It was terrible!" says one and another.
-
-His mind was filled with gloomy forebodings and strong apprehensions of
-impending evil, mingled with extravagant visions of personal grandeur
-and power. His imagination painted a scene just beyond the veil of the
-immediate future, gilded with glory yet tarnished with blood. It was his
-"destiny,"--splendid but dreadful, fascinating but terrible. His case
-bore little resemblance to those of religious enthusiasts like Bunyan,
-Cowper, and others. His was more like the delusion of the fatalist,
-conscious of his star. At all events, he never doubted for a moment but
-that he was formed for "some great or miserable end." He talked about
-it frequently and sometimes calmly. Mr. Herndon remembers many of these
-conversations in their office at Springfield, and in their rides around
-the circuit. Mr. Lincoln said the impression had grown in him "all
-his life;" but Mr. Herndon thinks it was about 1840 that it took the
-character of a "religious conviction." He had then suffered much, and,
-considering his opportunities, achieved great things. He was already a
-leader among men, and a most brilliant career had been promised him
-by the prophetic enthusiasm of many friends. Thus encouraged and
-stimulated, and feeling himself growing gradually stronger and stronger,
-in the estimation of "the plain people," whose voice was more potent
-than all the Warwicks, his ambition painted the rainbow of glory in
-the sky, while his morbid melancholy supplied the clouds that were to
-overcast and obliterate it with the wrath and ruin of the tempest. To
-him it was fate, and there was no escape or defence. The presentiment
-never deserted him: it was as clear, as perfect, as certain, as any
-image conveyed by the senses. He had now entertained it so long, that it
-was as much a part of his nature as the consciousness of identity. All
-doubts had faded away, and he submitted humbly to a power which he could
-neither comprehend nor resist. He was to fall,--fall from a lofty place,
-and in the performance of a great work. The star under which he was
-born was at once brilliant and malignant: the horoscope was cast, fixed,
-irreversible; and he had no more power to alter or defeat it in the
-minutest particular than he had to reverse the law of gravitation.
-
-After the election, he conceived that he would not "last" through his
-term of office, but had at length reached the point where the sacrifice
-would take place. All precautions against assassination he considered
-worse than useless. "If they want to kill me," said he, "there is
-nothing to prevent." He complained to Mr. Gillespie of the small
-body-guard which his counsellors had forced upon him, insisting that
-they were a needless encumbrance. When Mr. Gillespie urged the ease and
-impunity with which he might be killed, and the value of his life to
-the country, he said, "What is the use of putting up the _gap_ when the
-fence is down all around?"
-
-"It was just after my election in 1860," said Mr. Lincoln to his
-secretary, John Hay, "when the news had been coming in thick and fast
-all day, and there had been a great 'hurrah boys!' so that I was well
-tired out, and went home to rest, throwing myself upon a lounge in my
-chamber.
-
-"Opposite to where I lay was a bureau with a swinging glass upon it; and,
-in looking in that glass, I saw myself reflected nearly at full length;
-but my face, I noticed, had two separate and distinct images, the tip
-of the nose of one being about three inches from the tip of the other.
-I was a little bothered, perhaps startled, and got up and looked in the
-glass; but the illusion vanished. On lying down again, I saw it a second
-time,--plainer, if possible, than before; and then I noticed that one of
-the faces was a little paler--say five shades--than the other. I got up,
-and the thing melted away; and I went off, and in the excitement of the
-hour forgot all about it,--nearly, but not quite, for the thing would
-once in a while come up, and give me a little pang, as though something
-uncomfortable had happened. When I went home, I told my wife about it:
-and a few days after I tried the experiment again, when, sure enough,
-the thing came back again; but I never succeeded in bringing the ghost
-back after that, though I once tried very industriously to show it to
-my wife, who was worried about it somewhat. She thought it was 'a
-sign' that I was to be elected to a second term of office, and that
-the paleness of one of the faces was an omen that I should not see life
-through the last term."
-
-In this morbid and dreamy state of mind, Mr. Lincoln passed the greater
-part of his life. But his "sadness, despair, gloom," Mr. Herndon says,
-"were not of the kind that leads a badly-balanced mind into misanthropy
-and universal hate and scorn. His humor would assert itself from the
-hell of misanthropy: it would assert its independence every third hour
-or day or week. His abstractedness, his continuity of thought, his
-despair, made him, twice in his life, for two weeks at a time, walk that
-narrow line that divides sanity from insanity.... This peculiarity of
-his nature, his humor, his wit, kept him alive in his mind.... It was
-those good sides of his nature that made, to him, his life bearable. Mr.
-Lincoln was a weak man and a strong man by turns."
-
-Some of Mr. Lincoln's literary tastes indicated strongly his prevailing
-gloominess of mind. He read Byron extensively, especially "Childe
-Harold," "The Dream," and "Don Juan." Burns was one of his earliest
-favorites, although there is no evidence that he appreciated highly the
-best efforts of Burns. On the contrary, "Holy Willie's Prayer" was the
-only one of his poems which Mr. Lincoln took the trouble to memorize. He
-was fond of Shakspeare, especially "King Lear," and "The Merry Wives of
-Windsor." But whatever was suggestive of death, the grave, the sorrows
-of man's days on earth, charmed his disconsolate spirit, and captivated
-his sympathetic heart. Solemn-sounding rhymes, with no merit but the sad
-music of their numbers, were more enchanting to him than the loftiest
-songs of the masters. Of these were, "Why should the Spirit of Mortal be
-Proud?" and a pretty commonplace little piece, entitled "The Inquiry."
-One verse of Holmes's "Last Leaf" he thought was "inexpressibly
-touching." This verse we give the reader:--
-
- "The mossy marbles rest
- On the lips that he has pressed
- In their bloom;
- And the names he loved to hear
- Have been carved for many a year On the tomb."
-
-Mr. Lincoln frequently said that he lived by his humor, and would have
-died without it. His manner of telling a story was irresistibly comical,
-the fun of it dancing in his eyes and playing over every feature. His
-face changed in an instant: the hard lines faded out of it, and the
-mirth seemed to diffuse itself all over him, like a spontaneous tickle.
-You could see it coming long before he opened his mouth, and he began
-to enjoy the "point" before his eager auditors could catch the faintest
-glimpse of it. Telling and hearing ridiculous stories was one of his
-ruling passions. He would go a long way out of his road to tell a grave,
-sedate fellow a broad story, or to propound to him a conundrum that was
-not particularly remarkable for its delicacy. If he happened to hear of
-a man who was known to have something fresh in this line, he would hunt
-him up, and "swap jokes" with him. Nobody remembers the time when
-his fund of anecdotes was not apparently inexhaustible. It was so
-in Indiana; it was so in New Salem, in the Black-Hawk War, in the
-Legislature, in Congress, on the circuit, on the stump,--everywhere.
-The most trifling incident "reminded" him of a story, and that story
-reminded him of another, until everybody marvelled "that one small head
-could carry all he knew." The "good things" he said were repeated at
-second-hand, all over the counties through which he chanced to travel;
-and many, of a questionable flavor, were attributed to him, not because
-they were his in fact, but because they were like his. Judges, lawyers,
-jurors, and suitors carried home with them select budgets of his
-stories, to be retailed to itching ears as "Old Abe's last." When the
-court adjourned from village to village, the taverns and the groceries
-left behind were filled with the sorry echoes of his "best." He
-generally located his little narratives with great precision,--in
-Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois; and if he was not personally "knowing" to
-the facts himself, he was intimately acquainted with a gentleman who
-was.
-
-Mr. Lincoln used his stories variously,--to illustrate or convey
-an argument; to make his opinions clear to another, or conceal them
-altogether; to cut off a disagreeable conversation, or to end an
-unprofitable discussion; to cheer his own heart, or simply to amuse
-his friends. But most frequently he had a practical object in view, and
-employed them simply "as labor-saving contrivances."
-
-It was Judge Davis's opinion, that Mr. Lincoln's hilarity was mainly
-simulated, and that "his stories and jokes were intended to whistle
-off sadness." "The groundwork of his social nature was sad," says Judge
-Scott; "but for the fact that he studiously cultivated the humorous, it
-would have been very sad indeed. His mirth to me always seemed to be
-put on, and did not properly belong there. Like a plant produced in the
-hot-bed, it had an unnatural and luxuriant growth."
-
-Although Mr. Lincoln's walk among men was remarkably pure, the same
-cannot be said of his conversation. He was endowed by nature with a
-keen sense of humor, and he found great delight in indulging it. But his
-humor was not of a delicate quality; it was chiefly exercised in
-hearing and telling stories of the grosser sort. In this tendency he was
-restrained by no presence and no occasion. It was his opinion that the
-finest wit and humor, the best jokes and anecdotes, emanated from the
-lower orders of the country people. It was from this source that he
-had acquired his peculiar tastes and his store of materials. The
-associations which began with the early days of Dennis Hanks continued
-through his life at New Salem and his career at the Illinois Bar,
-and did not desert him when, later in life, he arrived at the highest
-dignities.
-
-Mr. Lincoln indulged in no sensual excesses: he ate moderately, and
-drank temperately when he drank at all. For many years he was an ardent
-agitator against the use of intoxicating beverages, and made speeches,
-far and near, in favor of total abstinence. Some of them were printed;
-and of one he was not a little proud. He abstained himself, not so much
-upon principle, as because of a total lack of appetite. He had no taste
-for spirituous liquors; and, when he took them, it was a punishment to
-him, not an indulgence. But he disliked sumptuary laws, and would
-not prescribe by statute what other men should eat or drink. When the
-temperance men ran to the Legislature to invoke the power of the State,
-his voice--the most eloquent among them--was silent. He did not oppose
-them, but quietly withdrew from the cause, and left others to manage it.
-In 1854 he was induced to join the order called Sons of Temperance, but
-never attended a single meeting after the one at which he was initiated.
-
-Morbid, moody, meditative, thinking much of himself and the things
-pertaining to himself, regarding other men as instruments furnished to
-his hand for the accomplishment of views which he knew were important to
-him, and, therefore, considered important to the public, Mr. Lincoln
-was a man apart from the rest of his kind, unsocial, cold,
-impassive,--neither a "good hater" nor a fond friend. He unbent in the
-society of those who gave him new ideas, who listened to and admired
-him, whose attachment might be useful, or whose conversation amused him.
-He seemed to make boon-companions of the coarsest men on the list of
-his acquaintances,--"low, vulgar, unfortunate creatures;" but, as Judge
-Davis has it, "he used such men as tools,--things to satisfy him, to
-feed his desires." He felt sorry for them, enjoyed them, extracted from
-them whatever service they were capable of rendering, discarded and
-forgot them. If one of them, presuming upon the past, followed him to
-Washington with a view to personal profit, Mr. Lincoln would probably
-take him to his private room, lock the doors, revel in reminiscences
-of Illinois, new stories and old, through an entire evening, and then
-dismiss his enchanted crony with nothing more substantial than his
-blessing. It was said that "he had no heart;" that is, no personal
-attachments warm and strong enough to govern his actions. It was seldom
-that he praised anybody; and, when he did, it was not a rival or an
-equal in the struggle for popularity and power. His encomiums were
-more likely to be satirical than sincere, and sometimes were artfully
-contrived as mere stratagems to catch the applause he pretended to
-bestow, or at least to share it in equal parts. No one knew better how
-to "damn with faint praise," or to divide the glory of another by being
-the first and frankest to acknowledge it. Fully alive to the fact that
-no qualities of a public man are so charming to the people as simplicity
-and candor, he made simplicity and candor the mask of deep feelings
-carefully concealed, and subtle plans studiously veiled from all eyes
-but one. He had no reverence for great men, followed no leader with
-blind devotion, and yielded no opinion to mere authority. He felt that
-he was as great as anybody, and could do what another did. It was,
-however, the supreme desire of his heart to be right, and to do justice
-in all the relations of life. Although some of his strongest passions
-conflicted more or less directly with this desire, he was conscious of
-them, and strove to regulate them by self-imposed restraints. He was
-not avaricious, never appropriated a cent wrongfully, and did not think
-money for its own sake a fit object of any man's ambition. But he knew
-its value, its power, and liked to keep it when he had it. He gave
-occasionally to individual mendicants, or relieved a case of great
-destitution at his very door; but his alms-giving was neither profuse
-nor systematic. He never made donations to be distributed to the poor
-who were not of his acquaintance and very near at hand. There were few
-entertainments at his house. People were seldom asked to dine with him.
-To many he seemed inhospitable; and there was something about his house,
-an indescribable air of exclusiveness, which forbade the entering guest.
-It is not meant to be said that this came from mere economy. It was not
-at home that he wished to see company. He preferred to meet his friends
-abroad,--on a street-corner, in an office, at the Court House, or
-sitting on nail-kegs in a country store.
-
-Mr. Lincoln took no part in the promotion of local enterprises,
-railroads, schools, churches, asylums. The benefits he proposed for his
-fellow-men were to be accomplished by political means alone. Politics
-were his world,--a world filled with hopeful enchantments. Ordinarily
-he disliked to discuss any other subject. "In his office," says Mr.
-Herndon, "he sat down, or spilt himself, on his lounge, read aloud,
-told stories, talked politics,--never science, art, literature, railroad
-gatherings, colleges, asylums, hospitals, commerce, education, progress,
-nothing that interested the world generally," except politics. He seldom
-took an active part in local or minor elections, or wasted his power to
-advance a friend. He did nothing out of mere gratitude, and forgot the
-devotion of his warmest partisans as soon as the occasion for their
-services had passed. What they did for him was quietly appropriated
-as the reward of superior merit, calling for no return in kind. He was
-always ready to do battle for a principle, after a discreet fashion,
-but never permitted himself to be strongly influenced by the claims of
-individual men. When he was a candidate himself, he thought the whole
-canvass and all the preliminaries ought to be conducted with reference
-to his success. He would say to a man, "Your continuance in the field
-injures me" and be quite sure that he had given a perfect reason for his
-withdrawal. He would have no "obstacles" in his way; coveted honors,
-was eager for power, and impatient of any interference that delayed or
-obstructed his progress. He worked hard enough at general elections,
-when he could make speeches, have them printed, and "fill the speaking
-trump of fame" with his achievements; but in the little affairs about
-home, where it was all work and no glory, his zeal was much less
-conspicuous. Intensely secretive and cautious, he shared his secrets
-with no man, and revealed just enough of his plans to allure support,
-and not enough to expose their personal application. After Speed left,
-he had no intimates to whom he opened his whole mind. This is the
-unanimous testimony of all who knew him. Feeling himself perfectly
-competent to manage his own affairs, he listened with deceptive patience
-to the views of others, and then dismissed the advice with the adviser.
-Judge Davis was supposed to have great influence over him; but he
-declares that he had literally none. "Once or twice," says he, "he asked
-my advice about the almighty dollar, but never about any thing else."
-
-Notwithstanding his overweening ambition, and the breathless eagerness
-with which he pursued the objects of it, he had not a particle of
-sympathy with the great mass of his fellow-citizens who were engaged in
-similar scrambles for place. "If ever," said he, "American society and
-the United States Government are demoralized and overthrown, it will
-come from the voracious desire of office,--this wriggle to live without
-toil, work, and labor, from which I am not free myself." Mr. Lincoln was
-not a demagogue or a trimmer. He never deserted a party in disaster, or
-joined one in triumph. Nearly the whole of his public life was spent in
-the service of a party which struggled against hopeless odds, which met
-with many reverses and few victories. It is true, that about the time
-he began as a politician, the Whigs in his immediate locality, at first
-united with the moderate Democrats, and afterwards by themselves, were
-strong enough to help him to the Legislature as often as he chose to go.
-But, if the fact had been otherwise, it is not likely that he would have
-changed sides, or even altered his position in any essential particular,
-to catch the popular favor. Subsequently he suffered many defeats,--for
-Congress, for Commissioner of the Land Office, and twice for Senator;
-but on this account he never faltered in devotion to the general
-principles of the party, or sought to better his fortune by an alliance
-with the common enemy. It cannot be denied, that, when he was first a
-candidate for the Legislature, his views of public policy were a little
-cloudy, and that his addresses to the people were calculated to make
-fair weather with men of various opinions; nor that, when first a
-candidate for United States Senator, he was willing to make a secret
-bargain with the extreme Abolitionists, and, when last a candidate, to
-make some sacrifice of opinion to further his own aspirations for the
-Presidency. The pledge to Lovejoy and the "House-divided Speech" were
-made under the influence of personal considerations, without reference
-to the views or the success of those who had chosen and trusted him as a
-leader for a far different purpose. But this was merely steering between
-sections of his own party, where the differences were slight and easily
-reconciled,--manoeuvring for the strength of one faction today and
-another to-morrow, with intent to unite them and lead them to a victory,
-the benefits of which would inure to all. He was not one to be last in
-the fight and first at the feast, nor yet one to be first in the fight
-and last at the feast. He would do his whole duty in the field, but
-had not the slightest objection to sitting down at the head of the
-table,--an act which he would perform with a modest, homely air, that
-disarmed envy, and silenced the master when he would say, "Friend, go
-down lower." His "master" was the "plain people." To be popular was to
-him the greatest good in life. He had known what it was to be without
-popularity, and he had known what it was to enjoy it. To gain it or
-to keep it, he considered no labor too great, no artifice misused
-or misapplied. His ambition was strong; yet it existed in strict
-subordination to his sense of party fidelity, and could by no chance or
-possibility lure him into downright social or political treasons. His
-path may have been a little devious, winding hither and thither, in
-search of greater convenience of travel, or the security of a larger
-company; but it always went forward in the same general direction, and
-never ran off at right-angles toward a hostile camp. The great body of
-men who acted with him in the beginning acted with him at the last.
-
-On the whole, he was an honest, although a shrewd, and by no means an
-unselfish politician. He
-
- ................."Foresaw
- Which way the world began to draw,"
-
-and instinctively drew with it. He had convictions, but preferred to
-choose his time to speak. He was not so much of a Whig that he could not
-receive the support of the "nominal" Jackson men, until party lines were
-drawn so tight that he was compelled to be one thing or the other. He
-was not so much of a Whig that he could not make a small diversion
-for White in 1836, nor so much of a White man that he could not lead
-Harrison's friends in the Legislature during the same winter. He was a
-firm believer in the good policy of high "protective tariffs;" but, when
-importuned to say so in a public letter, he declined on the ground that
-it would do him no good. He detested Know-Nothingism with all his heart;
-but, when Know-Nothingism swept the country, he was so far from being
-obtrusive with his views, that many believed he belonged to the order.
-He was an anti-slavery man from the beginning of his service in the
-Legislature; but he was so cautious and moderate in the expression of
-his sentiments, that, when the anti-Nebraska party disintegrated, the
-ultra-Republicans were any thing but sure of his adherence; and even
-after the Bloomington Convention he continued to pick his way to the
-front with wary steps, and did not take his place among the boldest of
-the agitators until 1858, when he uttered the "House-divided Speech,"
-just in time to take Mr. Seward's place on the Presidential ticket of
-1860.
-
-Any analysis of Mr. Lincoln's character would be defective that did not
-include his religious opinions. On such matters he thought deeply; and
-his opinions were positive. But perhaps no phase of his character has
-been more persistently misrepresented and variously misunderstood, than
-this of his religious belief. Not that the conclusive testimony of many
-of his intimate associates relative to his frequent expressions on such
-subjects has ever been wanting; but his great prominence in the world's
-history, and his identification with some of the great questions of our
-time, which, by their moral import, were held to be eminently religious
-in their character, have led many good people to trace in his motives
-and actions similar convictions to those held by themselves. His
-extremely general expressions of religious faith called forth by the
-grave exigencies of his public life, or indulged in on occasions of
-private condolence, have too often been distorted out of relation to
-their real significance or meaning to suit the opinions or tickle the
-fancies of individuals or parties.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was never a member of any church, nor did he believe in the
-divinity of Christ, or the inspiration of the Scriptures in the sense
-understood by evangelical Christians. His theological opinions were
-substantially those expounded by Theodore Parker. Overwhelming testimony
-out of many mouths, and none stronger than that out of his own, place
-these facts beyond controversy.
-
-When a boy, he showed no sign of that piety which his many biographers
-ascribe to his manhood. His stepmother--herself a Christian, and longing
-for the least sign of faith in him--could remember no circumstance that
-supported her hope. On the contrary, she recollected very well that he
-never went off into a corner, as has been said, to ponder the sacred
-writings, and to wet the page with his tears of penitence. He was fond
-of music; but Dennis Hanks is clear to the point that it was songs of a
-very questionable character that cheered his lonely pilgrimage through
-the woods of Indiana. When he went to church at all, he went to mock,
-and came away to mimic. Indeed, it is more than probable that the
-sort of "religion" which prevailed among the associates of his boyhood
-impressed him with a very poor opinion of the value of the article. On
-the whole, he thought, perhaps, a person had better be without it.
-
-When he came to New Salem, he consorted with freethinkers, joined with
-them in deriding the gospel history of Jesus, read Volney and Paine,
-and then wrote a deliberate and labored essay, wherein he reached
-conclusions similar to theirs. The essay was burnt, but he never denied
-or regretted its composition. On the contrary, he made it the subject
-of free and frequent conversations with his friends at Springfield, and
-stated, with much particularity and precision, the origin, arguments,
-and objects of the work.
-
-It was not until after Mr. Lincoln's death, that his alleged orthodoxy
-became the principal topic of his eulogists; but since then the effort
-on the part of some political writers and speakers to impress the
-public mind erroneously seems to have been general and systematic. It is
-important that the question should be finally determined; and, in order
-to do so, the names of some of his nearest friends are given below,
-followed by clear and decisive statements, for which they are separately
-responsible. Some of them are gentlemen of distinction, and all of
-them men of high character, who enjoyed the best opportunities to form
-correct opinions.
-
-James H. Matheny says in a letter to Mr. Herndon:--
-
-"I knew Mr. Lincoln as early as 1834-7; know he was an infidel. He and
-W. D. Herndon used to talk infidelity in the clerk's office in this
-city, about the years 1837-40. Lincoln attacked the Bible and the
-New Testament on two grounds: first, from the inherent or apparent
-contradictions under its lids; second, from the grounds of reason.
-Sometimes he ridiculed the Bible and New Testament, sometimes seemed
-to scoff it, though I shall not use that word in its full and literal
-sense. I never heard that Lincoln changed his views, though his personal
-and political friend from 1834 to 1860. Sometimes Lincoln bordered on
-atheism. He went far that way, and often shocked me. I was then a young
-man, and believed what my good mother told me. Stuart & Lincoln's office
-was in what was called Hoffman's Row, on North Fifth Street, near the
-public square. It was in the same building as the clerk's office, and on
-the same floor. Lincoln would come into the clerk's office, where I and
-some young men--Evan Butler, Newton Francis, and others--were writing or
-staying, and would bring the Bible with him; would read a chapter; argue
-against it. Lincoln then had a smattering of geology, if I recollect it.
-Lincoln often, if not wholly, was an atheist; at least, bordered on it.
-Lincoln was enthusiastic in his infidelity. As he grew older, he grew
-more discreet, didn't talk much before strangers about his religion; but
-to friends, close and bosom ones, he was always open and avowed, fair
-and honest; but to strangers, he held them off from policy. Lincoln used
-to quote Burns. Burns helped Lincoln to be an infidel, as I think; at
-least, he found in Burns a like thinker and feeler. Lincoln quoted 'Tam
-O'Skanter.' 'What! send one to heaven, and ten to hell!' &c.
-
-"From what I know of Mr. Lincoln and his views of Christianity, and from
-what I know as honest and well-founded rumor; from what I have heard his
-best friends say and regret for years; from what he never denied when
-accused, and from what Lincoln has hinted and intimated, to say no
-more,--he did write a little book on infidelity at or near New Salem, in
-Menard County, about the year 1834 or 1835. I have, stated these things
-to you often. Judge Logan, John T. Stuart, yourself, know what I know,
-and some of you more.
-
-"Mr. Herndon, you insist on knowing something which you know I possess,
-and got as a secret, and that is, about Lincoln's little book on
-infidelity. Mr. Lincoln did tell me that he did write a little book
-on infidelity. This statement I have avoided heretofore; but, as you
-strongly insist upon it,--probably to defend yourself against charges of
-misrepresentations,--I give it you as I got it from Lincoln's mouth."
-
-From Hon. John T. Stuart:--
-
-"I knew Mr. Lincoln when he first came here, and for years afterwards.
-He was an avowed and open infidel, sometimes bordered on atheism. I
-have often and often heard Lincoln and one W. D. Herndon, who was
-a freethinker, talk over this subject. Lincoln went further against
-Christian beliefs and doctrines and principles than any man I ever
-heard: he shocked me. I don't remember the exact line of his argument:
-suppose it was against the inherent defects, so called, of the Bible,
-and on grounds of reason. Lincoln always denied that Jesus was the
-Christ of God,--denied that Jesus was the Son of God, as understood
-and maintained by the Christian Church. The Rev. Dr. Smith, who wrote
-a letter, tried to convert Lincoln from infidelity so late as 1858, and
-couldn't do it."
-
-William H. Herndon, Esq.:--
-
-"As to Mr. Lincoln's religious views, he was, in short, an infidel,... a
-theist. He did not believe that Jesus was God, nor the Son of God,--was
-a fatalist, denied the freedom of the will. Mr. Lincoln told me a
-thousand times, that he did not believe the Bible was the revelation of
-God, as the Christian world contends. The points that Mr. Lincoln tried
-to demonstrate (in his book) were: First, That the Bible was not God's
-revelation; and, Second, That Jesus was not the Son of God. I assert
-this on my own knowledge, and on my veracity. Judge Logan, John T.
-Stuart, James H. Matheny, and others, will tell you the truth. I say
-they will confirm what I say, with this exception,--they all make it
-blacker than I remember it. Joshua F. Speed of Louisville, I think, will
-tell you the same thing."
-
-Hon. David Davis:--
-
-"I do not know any thing about Lincoln's religion, and do not think
-anybody knew. The idea that Lincoln talked to a stranger about his
-religion or religious views, or made such speeches, remarks, &c., about
-it as are published, is to me absurd. I knew the man so well: he was
-the most reticent, secretive man I ever saw, or expect to see. He had
-no faith, in the Christian sense of the term,--had faith in laws,
-principles, causes, and effects--philosophically: you [Herndon] know
-more about his religion than any man. You ought to know it, of course."
-
-William H. Hannah, Esq.:--
-
-"Since 1856 Mr. Lincoln told me that he was a kind of immortalist; that
-he never could bring himself to believe in eternal punishment; that
-man lived but a little while here; and that, if eternal punishment were
-man's doom, he should spend that little life in vigilant and ceaseless
-preparation by never-ending prayer."
-
-Mrs. Lincoln:--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln had no hope and no faith in the usual acceptance of those
-words."
-
-Dr. C. H. Ray:--
-
-"I do not know how I can aid you. You [Herndon] knew Mr. Lincoln far
-better than I did, though I knew him well; and you have served up his
-leading characteristics in a way that I should despair of doing, if
-I should try. I have only one thing to ask: that you do not give
-Calvinistic theology a chance to claim him as one of its saints and
-martyrs. He went to the Old-School Church; but, in spite of that outward
-assent to the horrible dogmas of the sect, _I have reason from, himself_
-to know that his 'vital purity' if that means belief in the impossible,
-was of a negative sort."
-
-I. W. Keys, Esq.:--
-
-"In my intercourse with Mr. Lincoln, I learned that he believed in a
-Creator of all things, who had neither beginning nor end, and possessing
-all power and wisdom, established a principle, in obedience to which
-worlds move, and are upheld, and animal and vegetable life come into
-existence. A reason he gave for his belief was, that, in view of the
-order and harmony of all nature which we behold, it would have been more
-miraculous to have come about by chance than to have been created and
-arranged by some great thinking power. As to the Christian theory, that
-Christ is God, or equal to the Creator, he said that it had better be
-taken for granted; for, by the test of reason, we might become infidels
-on that subject, for evidence of Christ's divinity came to us in a
-somewhat doubtful shape; but that the system of Christianity was an
-ingenious one at least, and perhaps was calculated to do good."
-
-Mr. Jesse W. Fell of Illinois, who had the best opportunities of knowing
-Mr. Lincoln intimately, makes the following statement of his religious
-opinions, derived from repeated conversations with him on the subject:--
-
-"Though every thing relating to the character and history of this
-extraordinary personage is of interest, and should be fairly stated to
-the world, I enter upon the performance of this duty--for so I regard
-it--with some reluctance, arising from the fact, that, in stating
-my convictions on the subject, I must necessarily place myself in
-opposition to quite a number who have written on this topic before me,
-and whose views largely pre-occupy the public mind. This latter fact,
-whilst contributing to my embarrassment on this subject, is, perhaps,
-the strongest reason, however, why the truth in this matter should be
-fully disclosed; and I therefore yield to your request. If there were
-any traits of character that stood out in bold relief in the person
-of Mr. Lincoln, they were those of truth and candor. He was utterly
-incapable of insincerity, or professing views on this or any other
-subject he did not entertain. Knowing such to be his true character,
-that insincerity, much more duplicity, were traits wholly foreign to his
-nature, many of his old friends were not a little surprised at finding,
-in some of the biographies of this great man, statements concerning his
-religious opinions so utterly at variance with his known sentiments.
-True, he may have changed or modified those sentiments after his removal
-from among us, though this is hardly reconcilable with the history
-of the man, and his entire devotion to public matters during his four
-years' residence at the national capital. It is possible, however, that
-this may be the proper solution of this conflict of opinions; or, it may
-be, that, with no intention on the part of any one to mislead the
-public mind, those who have represented him as believing in the
-popular theological views of the times may have misapprehended him, as
-experience shows to be quite common where no special effort has been
-made to attain critical accuracy on a subject of this nature. This is
-the more probable from the well-known fact, that Mr. Lincoln seldom
-communicated to any one his views on this subject. But, be this as it
-may, I have no hesitation whatever in saying, that, whilst he held many
-opinions in common with the great mass of Christian believers, _he did
-not believe_ in what are regarded as the orthodox or evangelical views
-of Christianity.
-
-"On the innate depravity of man, the character and office of the great
-Head of the Church, the atonement, the infallibility of the written
-revelation, the performance of miracles, the nature and design of
-present and future rewards and punishments (as they are popularly
-called), and many other subjects, he held opinions utterly at variance
-with what are usually taught in the Church. I should say that his
-expressed views on these and kindred topics were such as, in the
-estimation of most believers, would place him entirely outside the
-Christian pale. Yet, to my mind, such was not the true position, since
-his principles and practices and the spirit of his whole life were of
-the very kind we universally agree to call Christian; and I think this
-conclusion is in no wise affected by the circumstance that he never
-attached himself to any religious society whatever.
-
-"His religious views were eminently practical, and are summed up, as
-I think, in these two propositions: 'the Fatherhood of God, and
-the brotherhood of man.' He fully believed in a superintending and
-overruling Providence, that guides and controls the operations of the
-world, but maintained that law and order, and not their violation
-or suspension, are the appointed means by which this providence is
-exercised.
-
-"I will not attempt any specification of either his belief or disbelief
-on various religious topics, as derived from conversations with him
-at different times during a considerable period; but, as conveying a
-general view of his religious or theological opinions, will state
-the following facts. Some eight or ten years prior to his death, in
-conversing with him upon this subject, the writer took occasion to
-refer, in terms of approbation, to the sermons and writings generally of
-Dr. W. E. Channing; and, finding he was considerably interested in the
-statement I made of the opinions held by that author, I proposed to
-present him (Lincoln) a copy of Channing's entire works, which I soon
-after did. Subsequently, the contents of these volumes, together with
-the writings of Theodore Parker, furnished him, as he informed me, by
-his friend and law-partner, Mr. Herndon, became naturally the topics of
-conversation with us; and though far from believing there was an entire
-harmony of views on his part with either of those authors, yet they were
-generally much admired and approved by him.
-
-"No religious views with him seemed to find any favor, except of the
-practical and rationalistic order; and if, from my recollections on
-this subject, I was called upon to designate an author whose views
-most nearly represented Mr. Lincoln's on this subject, I would say that
-author was Theodore Parker.
-
-"As you have asked from me a candid statement of my recollections on
-this topic, I have thus briefly given them, with the hope that they may
-be of some service in rightly settling a question about which--as I have
-good reason to believe--the public mind has been greatly misled.
-
-"Not doubting that they will accord, substantially, with your own
-recollections, and that of his other intimate and confidential friends,
-and with the popular verdict after this matter shall have been properly
-canvassed, I submit them."
-
-John G. Nicolay, his private secretary at the White House:--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln did not, to my knowledge, in any way change his religious
-views, opinions, or beliefs, from the time he left Springfield to the
-day of his death. I do not know just what they were, never having
-heard him explain them in detail; but I am very sure he gave no outward
-indication of his mind having undergone any change in that regard while
-here."
-
-The following letter from Mr. Herndon was, about the time of its date,
-extensively published throughout the United States, and met with no
-contradiction from any responsible source.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 18, 1870.
-
-Mr. Abbott,---Some time since I promised you that I would send a letter
-in relation to Mr. Lincoln's religion. I do so now. Before entering on
-that question, one or two preliminary remarks will help us to understand
-why he disagreed with the Christian world in its principles, as well
-as in its theology. In the first place, Mr. Lincoln's mind was a purely
-logical mind; secondly, Mr. Lincoln was purely a practical man. He
-had no fancy or imagination, and not much emotion. He was a realist
-as opposed to an idealist. As a general rule, it is true that a purely
-logical mind has not much hope, if it ever has _faith in the unseen and
-unknown_. Mr. Lincoln had not much hope and no faith in things that
-lie outside of the domain of demonstration: he was so constituted, so
-organized, that he could believe nothing unless his senses or logic
-could reach it. I have often read to him a law point, a decision, or
-something I fancied: he could not understand it until he took the
-book out of my hand, and read the thing for himself. He was terribly,
-vexatiously sceptical. He could scarcely understand any thing, unless he
-had time and place fixed in his mind.
-
-I became acquainted with Mr. Lincoln in 1834, and I think I knew him
-well to the day of his death. His mind, when a boy in Kentucky, showed a
-certain gloom, an unsocial nature, a peculiar abstractedness, a bold and
-daring scepticism. In Indiana, from 1817 to 1830, it manifested the same
-qualities or attributes as in Kentucky: it only intensified, developed
-itself, along those lines, in Indiana. He came to Illinois in 1830, and,
-after some little roving, settled in New Salem, now in Menard County and
-State of Illinois. This village lies about twenty miles north-west of
-this city. It was here that Mr. Lincoln became acquainted with a class
-of men the world never saw the like of before or since. They were large
-men,--large in body and large in mind; hard to whip, and never to be
-fooled. They were a bold, daring, and reckless sort of men; they were
-men of their own minds,--believed what was demonstrable; were men of
-great common sense. With these men Mr. Lincoln was thrown; with them
-he lived, and with them he moved, and almost had his being. They were
-sceptics all,--scoffers some. These scoffers were good men, and their
-scoffs were protests against theology,--loud protests against the
-follies of Christianity: they had never heard of theism and the
-newer and better religious thoughts of this age. Hence, being natural
-sceptics, and being bold, brave men, they uttered their thoughts freely:
-they declared that Jesus was an illegitimate child.... They were on all
-occasions, when opportunity offered, debating the various questions of
-Christianity among themselves: they took their stand on common sense and
-on their own souls; and, though their arguments were rude and rough, no
-man could overthrow their homely logic. They riddled all divines, and
-not unfrequently made them sceptics,--disbelievers as bad as themselves.
-They were a jovial, healthful, generous, social, true, and manly set of
-people.
-
-It was here, and among these people, that Mr. Lincoln was thrown. About
-the year 1834, he chanced to come across Volney's "Ruins," and some
-of Paine's theological works. He at once seized hold of them, and
-assimilated them into his own being. Volney and Paine became a part of
-Mr. Lincoln from 1834 to the end of his life. In 1835 he wrote out a
-small work on "Infidelity," and intended to have it published. The book
-was an attack upon the whole grounds of Christianity, and especially
-was it an attack upon the idea that Jesus was the Christ, the true and
-only-begotten Son of God, as the Christian world contends. Mr. Lincoln
-was at that time in New Salem, keeping store for Mr. Samuel Hill,
-a merchant and postmaster of that place. Lincoln and Hill were very
-friendly. Hill, I think, was a sceptic at that time. Lincoln, one day
-after the book was finished, read it to Mr. Hill, his good friend. Hill
-tried to persuade him not to make it public, not to publish it. Hill
-at that time saw in Mr. Lincoln a rising man, and wished him success.
-Lincoln refused to destroy it, said it should be published. Hill
-swore it should never see light of day. He had an eye, to Lincoln's
-popularity,--his present and future success; and believing, that if the
-book were published, it would kill Lincoln forever, he snatched it from
-Lincoln's hand, when Lincoln was not expecting it, and ran it into
-an old-fashioned tin-plate stove, heated as hot as a furnace; and so
-Lincoln's book went up to the clouds in smoke. It is confessed by all
-who heard parts of it, that it was at once able and eloquent; and, if I
-may judge of it from Mr. Lincoln's subsequent ideas and opinions, often
-expressed to me and to others in my presence, it was able, strong,
-plain, and fair. His argument was grounded on the internal mistakes of
-the Old and New Testaments, and on reason, and on the experiences and
-observations of men. The criticisms from internal defects were sharp,
-strong, and manly.
-
-Mr. Lincoln moved to this city in 1837, and here became acquainted
-with various men of his own way of thinking. At that time they called
-themselves _free-thinkers, or free-thinking men_. I remember all these
-things distinctly; for I was with them, heard them, and was one of them.
-Mr. Lincoln here found other works,--Hume, Gibbon, and others,--and
-drank them in: he made no secret of his views, no concealment of his
-religion. He boldly avowed himself an infidel. When Mr. Lincoln was a
-candidate for our Legislature, he was accused of being an infidel, and
-of having said that Jesus Christ was an illegitimate child: he never
-denied his opinions, nor flinched from his religious views; he was a
-true man, and yet it may be truthfully said, that in 1837 his religion
-was low indeed. In his moments of gloom he would _doubt, if he did
-not sometimes deny, God_. He made me once erase the name of God from a
-speech which I was about to make in 1854; and he did this in the city
-of Washington to one of his friends. I cannot now name the man, nor the
-place he occupied in Washington: it will be known sometime. I have the
-evidence, and intend to keep it.
-
-Mr. Lincoln ran for Congress, against the Rev. Peter Cartwright, in the
-year 1847 or 1848. In that contest he was accused of being an infidel,
-if not an atheist; he never denied the charge; would not; "_would die
-first_:" in the first place, because he knew it could and would be
-proved on him; and in the second place he was too true to his own
-convictions, to his own soul, to deny it. From what I know of Mr.
-Lincoln, and from what I have heard and verily believe, I can say,
-First, That he _did not believe in a special creation, his idea being
-that all creation was an evolution under law_; Secondly, That he did
-not believe that the Bible was a special revelation from God, as the
-Christian world contends; Thirdly, He did not believe in miracles, as
-understood by the Christian world; Fourthly, He believed in universal
-inspiration and miracles under law; Fifthly, He did not believe that
-Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God, as the Christian world contends;
-Sixthly, He believed that all things, both matter and mind, were
-governed by laws, universal, absolute, and eternal. All his speeches and
-remarks in Washington conclusively prove this. _Law was to Lincoln every
-thing, and special interferences shams and delusions_. I know whereof I
-speak. I used to loan him Theodore Parker's works: I loaned him Emerson
-sometimes, and other writers; and he would sometimes read, and sometimes
-would not, as I suppose,--nay, know.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln left this city for Washington, I know he had undergone
-no change in his religious opinions or views. He held many of the
-Christian ideas in abhorrence, and among them there was this one;
-namely, that God would forgive the sinner for a violation of his laws.
-_Lincoln maintained that God could not forgive; that punishment has to
-follow the sin; that Christianity was wrong in teaching forgiveness_;
-that it tended to make man sin in the hope that God would excuse, and
-so forth. Lincoln contended that the minister should teach that God has
-affixed punishment to sin, and that _no repentance could bribe him to
-remit it_. In one sense of the word, Mr. Lincoln was a Universalist,
-and in another sense he was a Unitarian; but he was a theist, as we now
-understand that word: he was so fully, freely, unequivocally, boldly,
-and openly, when asked for his views. Mr. Lincoln was supposed, by many
-people in this city, to be an atheist; and some still believe it. I can
-put that supposition at rest forever. I hold a letter of Mr. Lincoln in
-my hand, addressed to his step-brother, John D. Johnston, and dated
-the twelfth day of January, 1851. He had heard from Johnston that his
-father, Thomas Lincoln, was sick, and that no hopes of his recovery were
-entertained. Mr. Lincoln wrote back to Mr. Johnston these words:--
-
-"I sincerely hope that father may yet recover his health; but, at all
-events, tell him to remember to call upon and confide in One great
-and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any
-extremity. He notes the fall of a sparrow, and numbers the hairs of our
-heads; and he will not forget the dying man who puts his trust in him.
-Say to him, that, if we could meet now, it is doubtful whether it would
-not be more painful than pleasant; but that, if it be his lot to go now,
-he will soon have a joyous meeting with many loved ones gone before,
-and where the rest of us, through the help of God, hope ere long to join
-them.
-
-"A. Lincoln."
-
-So it seems that Mr. Lincoln believed in God and immortality as well as
-heaven,--a place. He believed in no hell and no punishment in the future
-world. It has been said to me that Mr. Lincoln wrote the above letter
-to an old man simply to cheer him up in his last moments, and that the
-writer did not believe what he said. The question is, Was Mr. Lincoln
-an honest and truthful man? If he was, he wrote that letter honestly,
-believing it. It has to me the sound, the ring, of an honest utterance.
-I admit that Mr. Lincoln, in his moments of melancholy and
-terrible gloom, was living on the borderland between theism and
-atheism,--sometimes quite wholly dwelling in atheism. In his happier
-moments he would swing back to theism, and dwell lovingly there. It is
-possible that Mr. Lincoln was not always responsible for what he said
-or thought, so deep, so intense, so terrible, was his melancholy. I send
-you a lecture of mine which will help you to see what I mean. I maintain
-that Mr. Lincoln was a deeply-religious man at all times and places, in
-spite of his transient doubts.
-
-Soon after Mr. Lincoln was assassinated, Mr. Holland came into my
-office, and made some inquiries about him, stating to me his purpose
-of writing his life. I freely told him what he asked, and much more. He
-then asked me what I thought about Mr. Lincoln's religion, meaning
-his views of Christianity. I replied, "The less said, the better."
-Mr. Holland has recorded my expression to him (see Holland's "Life of
-Lincoln," p. 241). I cannot say what Mr. Holland said to me, as that
-was private. It appears that he went and saw Mr. Newton Bateman,
-Superintendent of Public Instruction in this State. It appears that Mr.
-Bateman told Mr. Holland many things, if he is correctly represented in
-Holland's "Life of Lincoln" (pp. 236-241, inclusive). I doubt whether
-Mr. Bateman said in full what is recorded there: I doubt a great deal
-of it. I know the whole story is untrue,--untrue in substance, untrue
-in fact and spirit. As soon as the "Life of Lincoln" was out, on reading
-that part here referred to, I instantly sought Mr. Bateman, and found
-him in his office. I spoke to him politely and kindly, and he spoke to
-me in the same manner. I said substantially to him that Mr. Holland, in
-order to make Mr. Lincoln a technical Christian, made him a hypocrite;
-and so his "Life of Lincoln" quite plainly says. I loved Mr. Lincoln,
-and was mortified, if not angry, to see him made a hypocrite. I cannot
-now detail what Mr. Bateman said, as it was a private conversation, and
-I am forbidden to make use of it in public. If some good gentleman can
-only get the seal of secrecy removed, I can show what was said and done.
-On my word, the world may take it for granted that Holland is wrong,
-that he does not state Mr. Lincoln's views correctly. Mr. Bateman, if
-correctly represented in Holland's "Life of Lincoln," is the only man,
-the sole and only man, who dare say that Mr. Lincoln believed in Jesus
-as the Christ of God, as the Christian world represents. This is not
-a pleasant situation for Mr. Bateman. I have notes and dates of our
-conversation; and the world will sometime know who is truthful, and
-who is otherwise. I doubt whether Bateman is correctly represented
-by Holland. My notes bear date Dec. 3, 12, and 28, 1866. Some of our
-conversations were in the spring of 1866 and the fall of 1865.
-
-I do not remember ever seeing the words Jesus or Christ in print, as
-uttered by Mr. Lincoln. If he has used these words, they can be found.
-He uses the word God but seldom. I never heard him use the name of
-Christ or Jesus but to confute the idea that he was the Christ, the only
-and truly begotten Son of God, as the Christian world understands it.
-The idea that Mr. Lincoln carried the New Testament or Bible in his
-bosom or boots, to draw on his opponent in debate, is ridiculous.
-
-My dear sir, I now have given you my knowledge, speaking from my own
-experience, of Mr. Lincoln's religious views. I speak likewise from the
-evidences, carefully gathered, of his religious opinions. I likewise
-speak from the ears and mouths of many in this city; and, after all
-careful examination, I declare to your numerous readers, that Mr.
-Lincoln is correctly represented here, so far as I know what truth is,
-and how it should be investigated.
-
-If ever there was a moment when Mr. Lincoln might have been expected to
-express his faith in the atonement, his trust in the merits of a living
-Redeemer, it was when he undertook to send a composing and comforting
-message to a dying man. He knew, moreover, that his father had been
-"converted" time and again, and that no exhortation would so effectually
-console his weak spirit in the hour of dismay and dissolution as one
-which depicted, in the strongest terms, the perfect sufficiency of Jesus
-to save the perishing soul. But he omitted it wholly: he did not even
-mention the name of Jesus, or intimate the most distant suspicion of
-the existence of a Christ. On the contrary, he is singularly careful to
-employ the word "One" to qualify the word "Maker." It is the Maker, and
-not the Saviour, to whom he directs the attention of a sinner in the
-agony of death.
-
-While it is very clear that Mr. Lincoln was at all times an infidel in
-the orthodox meaning of the term, it is also very clear that he was not
-at all times equally willing that everybody should know it. He never
-offered to purge or recant; but he was a wily politician, and did not
-disdain to regulate his religious manifestations with some reference to
-his political interests. As he grew older, he grew more cautious; and
-as his New Salem associates, and the aggressive deists with whom he
-originally united at Springfield, gradually dispersed, or fell away from
-his side, he appreciated more and more keenly the violence and extent of
-the religious prejudices which freedom in discussion from his standpoint
-would be sure to arouse against him. He saw the immense and augmenting
-power of the churches, and in times past had practically felt it. The
-imputation of infidelity had seriously injured him in several of his
-earlier political contests; and, sobered by age and experience, he was
-resolved that that same imputation should injure him no more. Aspiring
-to lead religious communities, he foresaw that he must not appear as an
-enemy within their gates; aspiring to public honors under the auspices
-of a political party which persistently summoned religious people to
-assist in the extirpation of that which is denounced as the "nation's
-sin," he foresaw that he could not ask their suffrages whilst aspersing
-their faith. He perceived no reason for changing his convictions, but he
-did perceive many good and cogent reasons for not making them public.
-
-Col. Matheny alleges, that, from 1854 to 1860, Mr. Lincoln "played a
-sharp game" upon the Christians of Springfield, "treading their toes,"
-and saying, "Come and convert me." Mr. Herndon is inclined to coincide
-with Matheny; and both give the obvious explanation of such conduct;
-that is to say, his morbid ambition; coupled with a mortal fear that his
-popularity would suffer by an open avowal of his deistic convictions.
-At any rate, Mr. Lincoln permitted himself to be misunderstood and
-misrepresented by some enthusiastic ministers and exhorters with whom he
-came in contact. Among these was the Rev. Mr. Smith, then pastor of
-the First Presbyterian Church of Springfield, and afterwards Consul at
-Dundee, in Scotland, under Mr. Lincoln's appointment. The abilities of
-this gentleman to discuss such a topic to the edification of a man
-like Mr. Lincoln seem to have been rather slender; but the chance of
-converting so distinguished a person inspired him with a zeal which he
-might not have felt for the salvation of an obscurer soul. Mr. Lincoln
-listened to his exhortations in silence, apparently respectful, and
-occasionally sat out his sermons in church with as much patience as
-other people. Finding these oral appeals unavailing, Mr. Smith composed
-a heavy tract out of his own head to suit the particular case. "The
-preparation of that work," says he, "cost me long and arduous labor;"
-but it does not appear to have been read. Mr. Lincoln took the "work" to
-his office, laid it down without writing his name on it, and never took
-it up again to the knowledge of a man who inhabited that office with
-him, and who saw it lying on the same spot every day for months.
-Subsequently Mr. Smith drew from Mr. Lincoln an acknowledgment that
-his argument was unanswerable,--not a very high compliment under the
-circumstances, but one to which Mr. Smith often referred afterwards
-with great delight. He never asserted, as some have supposed, that Mr.
-Lincoln was converted from the error of his ways; that he abandoned his
-infidel opinions, or that he united himself with any Christian church.
-On the contrary, when specially interrogated on these points by Mr.
-Herndon, he refused to answer, on the ground that Mr. Herndon
-was not a proper person to receive such a communication from
-Mr. Newton Bateman is reported to have said that a few days before the
-Presidential election of 1860, Mr. Lincoln came into his office, closed
-the door against intrusion, and proposed to examine a book which had
-been furnished him, at his own request, "containing a careful canvass of
-the city of Springfield, showing the candidate for whom each citizen
-had declared his intention to vote at the approaching election.
-He ascertained that only three ministers of the gospel, out of
-twenty-three, would vote for him, and that, of the prominent
-church-members, a very large majority were against him." Mr. Bateman
-does not say so directly, but the inference is plain that Mr. Lincoln
-had not previously known what were the sentiments of the Christian
-people who lived with him in Springfield: he had never before taken
-the trouble to inquire whether they were for him or against him. At
-all events, when he made the discovery out of the book, he wept, and
-declared that he "did not understand it at all." He drew from his bosom
-a pocket New Testament, and, "with a trembling voice and his cheeks wet
-with tears," quoted it against his political opponents generally, and
-especially against Douglas. He professed to believe that the opinions
-adopted by him and his party were derived from the teachings of Christ;
-averred that Christ was God; and, speaking of the Testament which
-he carried in his bosom, called it "this rock, on which him
-I stand." When Mr. Bateman expressed surprise, and told him that his
-friends generally were ignorant that he entertained such sentiments,
-he gave this answer quickly: "I know they are: I am obliged to appear
-different to them." Mr. Bateman is a respectable citizen, whose general
-reputation for truth and veracity is not to be impeached; but his story,
-as reported in Holland's Life, is so inconsistent with Mr. Lincoln's
-whole character, that it must be rejected as altogether incredible.
-From the time of the Democratic split in the Baltimore Convention, Mr.
-Lincoln, as well as every other politician of the smallest sagacity,
-knew that his success was as certain as any future event could be. At
-the end of October, most of the States had clearly voted in a way which
-left no lingering doubts of the final result of November. If there ever
-was a time in his life when ambition charmed his whole heart,--if it
-could ever be said of him that "hope elevated and joy brightened his
-crest," it was on the eve of that election which he saw was to lift him
-at last to the high place for which he had sighed and struggled so long.
-It was not then that he would mourn and weep because he was in danger
-of not getting the votes of the ministers and members of the churches he
-had known during many years for his steadfast opponents: he did not need
-them, and had not expected them. Those who understood him best are very
-sure that he never, under any circumstances, could have fallen into
-such weakness--not even when his fortunes were at the lowest point
-of depression--as to play the part of a hypocrite for their support.
-Neither is it possible that he was at any loss about the reasons which
-religious men had for refusing him their support; and, if he said that
-he could not understand it at all, he must have spoken falsely. But the
-worst part of the tale is Mr. Lincoln's acknowledgment that his "friends
-generally were deceived concerning his religious sentiments, and that he
-was obliged to appear different to them."
-
-According to this version, which has had considerable currency, he
-carried a Testament in his bosom, carefully hidden from his intimate
-associates: he believed that Christ was God; yet his friends understood
-him to deny the verity of the gospel: he based his political doctrines
-on the teachings of the Bible; yet before all men, except Mr. Bateman,
-he habitually acted the part of an unbeliever and reprobate, because he
-was "obliged to appear different to them." How obliged? What compulsion
-required him to deny that Christ was God if he really believed him to be
-divine? Or did he put his political necessities above the obligations
-of truth, and oppose Christianity against his convictions, that he
-might win the favor of its enemies? It may be that his mere silence
-was sometimes misunderstood; but he never made an express avowal of
-any religious opinion which he did not entertain. He did not "appear
-different" at one time from what he was at another, and certainly
-he never put on infidelity as a mere mask to conceal his Christian
-character from the world. There is no dealing with Mr. Bateman, except
-by a flat contradiction. Perhaps his memory was treacherous, or his
-imagination led him astray, or, peradventure, he thought a fraud no
-harm if it gratified the strong desire of the public for proofs of Mr.
-Lincoln's orthodoxy. It is nothing to the purpose that Mr. Lincoln said
-once or twice that he thought this or that portion of the Scripture was
-the product of divine inspiration; for he was one of the class who hold
-that all truth is inspired, and that every human being with a mind and a
-conscience is a prophet. He would have agreed much more readily with one
-who taught that Newton's discoveries, or Bacon's philosophy, or one of
-his own speeches, were the works of men divinely inspired above their
-fellows.1
-
- 1 "As we have bodily senses to lay hold on matter, and
- supply bodily wants, through which we obtain, naturally, all
- needed material things; so we have spiritual faculties to
- lay hold on God and supply spiritual wants: through them we
- obtain all needed spiritual things. As we observe the
- conditions of the body, we have nature on our side: as we
- observe the law of the soul, we have God on our side. He
- imparts truth to all men who observe these conditions: we
- have direct access to him through reason, conscience, and
- the religious faculty, just as we have direct access to
- nature through the eye, the ear, or the hand. Through these
- channels, and by means of a law, certain, regular, and
- universal as gravitation, God inspires men, makes revelation
- of truth; for is not truth as much a phenomenon of God as
- motion of matter? Therefore, if God be omnipresent and
- omniactive, this inspiration is no miracle, but a regular
- mode of God's action on conscious spirit, as gravitation on
- unconscious matter. It is not a rare condescension of God,
- but a universal uplifting of man. To obtain a knowledge of
- duty, a man is not sent away, outside of himself, to ancient
- documents: for the only rule of faith and practice, the
- Word, is very nigh him, even in his heart, and by this Word
- he is to try all documents whatsoever. Inspiration, like
- God's omnipresence, is not limited to the few writers
- claimed by the Jews, Christians, or Mohammedans, but is co-
- extensive with the race. As God fills all space, so all
- spirit; as he influences and constrains unconscious and
- necessitated matter, so he inspires and helps free,
- unconscious man.
-
- "This theory does not make God limited, partial, or
- capricious: it exalts man. While it honors the excellence of
- a religious genius of a Moses or a Jesus, it does not
- pronounce their character monstrous, as the supernatural,
- nor fanatical, as the rationalistic theory; but natural,
- human, and beautiful, revealing the possibility of mankind.
- Prayer--whether voluntative or spontaneous, a word or a
- feeling, felt in gratitude, or penitence, or joy, or
- resignation--is not a soliloquy of the man, not a
- physiological function, nor an address to a deceased man,
- but a sally into the infinite spiritual world, whence we
- bring back light and truth. There are windows towards God,
- as towards the world. There is no intercessor, angel,
- mediator, between man and God; for man can speak, and God
- hear, each for himself. He requires no advocate to plead for
- men, who need not pray by attorney. Each man stands close to
- the omnipresent God; may feel his beautiful presence, and
- have familiar access to the All-Father; get truth at first
- hand from its Author. Wisdom, righteousness, and love are
- the Spirit of God in the soul of man: wherever these are,
- and just in proportion to their power, there is inspiration
- from God. Thus God is not the author of confusion, but
- concord. Faith and knowledge and revelation and reason tell
- the same tale, and so legitimate and confirm each one
- another.
-
- "God's action on matter and on man is, perhaps, the same
- thing to him, though it appear differently modified to us.
- But it is plain, from the nature of things, that there can
- be but one kind of inspiration, as of truth, faith, or love:
- it is the direct and intuitive perception of some truth,
- either of thought or of sentiment. There can be but one mode
- of inspiration: it is the action of the Highest within the
- soul, the divine presence imparting light; this presence, as
- truth, justice, holiness, love, infusing itself into the
- soul, giving it new life; the breathing-in of the Deity; the
- in-come of God to the soul, in the form of truth through the
- reason, of right through the conscience, of love and faith
- through the affections and religious element. Is inspiration
- confined to theological matter alone? Most certainly not."--
- --Parker's Discourse pertaining to Religion.
-
-But he never told any one that he accepted Jesus as the Christ, or
-performed a single one of the acts which necessarily follow upon such
-a conviction. At Springfield and at Washington he was beset on the one
-hand by political priests, and on the other by honest and prayerful
-Christians. He despised the former, respected the latter, and had use
-for both. He said with characteristic irreverence, that he would not
-undertake to "run the churches by military authority;" but he was,
-nevertheless, alive to the importance of letting the churches "run"
-themselves in the interest of his party. Indefinite expressions about
-"Divine Providence," the "justice of God," "the favor of the Most High,"
-were easy, and not inconsistent with his religious notions. In this,
-accordingly, he indulged freely; but never in all that time did he let
-fall from his lips or his pen an expression which remotely implied the
-slightest faith in Jesus as the Son of God and the Saviour of men.
-
-The effect of Mr. Lincoln's unbelief did not affect his constitutional
-love of justice. Though he rejected the New Testament as a book of
-divine authority, he accepted the practical part of its precepts as
-binding upon him by virtue of the natural law. The benevolence of his
-impulses served to keep him, for the most part, within the limits to
-which a Christian is confined by the fear of God. It is also true
-beyond doubt that he was greatly influenced by the reflected force of
-Christianity. If he did not believe it, the masses of the "plain people"
-did; and no one ever was more anxious to do "whatsoever was of good
-report among men." To qualify himself as a witness or an officer it was
-frequently necessary that he should take oaths; and he always appealed
-to the Christian's God either by laying his hand upon the Gospels, or
-by some other form of invocation common among believers. Of course the
-ceremony was superfluous, for it imposed no religious obligation upon
-him; but his strong innate sense of right was sufficient to make him
-truthful without that high and awful sanction which faith in divine
-revelation would have carried with it.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was by no means free from a kind of belief in the
-supernatural. While he rejected the great facts of Christianity,
-as wanting the support of authentic evidence, his mind was readily
-impressed with the most absurd superstitions.1 He lived constantly in
-the serious conviction that he was himself the subject of a special
-decree, made by some unknown and mysterious power, for which he had
-no name. The birth and death of Christ, his wonderful works, and his
-resurrection as "the first-fruits of them that slept," Mr. Lincoln
-denied, because they seemed naturally improbable, or inconsistent with
-his "philosophy so called;" but his perverted credulity terrified him
-when he saw two images of himself in a mirror.
-
- 1 "He had great faith in the strong sense of country people;
- and he gave them credit for greater intelligence than most
- men do. If he found an idea prevailing generally amongst
- them, he believed there was something in it, although it
- might not harmonize with science.
-
- "He had great faith in the virtues of the 'mad-stone'
- although he could give no reason for it, and confessed that
- it looked like superstition. But, he said, he found the
- people in the neighborhood of these stones fully impressed
- with a belief in their virtues from actual experiment; and
- that was about as much as we could ever know of the
- properties of medicines."--Gillespie.
-
- "When his son 'Bob' was supposed to have been bitten by a
- rabid dog, Mr. Lincoln took him to Terre Haute, La., where
- there was a mad-stone, with the intention of having it
- applied, and, it is presumed, did so."--Mrs. Wallace.
-
-It is very probable that much of Mr. Lincoln's unhappiness, the
-melancholy that "dripped from him as he walked," was due to his want
-of religious faith. When the black fit was on him, he suffered as
-much mental misery as Bunyan or Cowper in the deepest anguish of their
-conflicts with the evil one. But the unfortunate conviction fastened
-upon him by his early associations, that there was no truth in the
-Bible, made all consolation impossible, and penitence useless. To a
-man of his temperament, predisposed as it was to depression of spirits,
-there could be no chance of happiness, if doomed to live without hope
-and without God in the world. He might force himself to be merry with
-his chosen comrades; he might "banish sadness" in mirthful conversation,
-or find relief in a jest; gratified ambition might elevate his feelings,
-and give him ease for a time: but solid comfort and permanent peace
-could come to him only through "a correspondence fixed with heaven." The
-fatal misfortune of his life, looking at it only as it affected him
-in this world, was the influence at New Salem and Springfield which
-enlisted him on the side of unbelief. He paid the bitter penalty in a
-life of misery.
-
- "It was a grievous sin in Cæsar;
- And grievously hath Cæsar answered it."
-
-Very truly,
-
-W. H. Herndon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-ON the 11th of February, 1861, the arrangements for Mr. Lincoln's
-departure from Springfield were completed. It was intended to occupy the
-time remaining between that date and the 4th of March with a grand tour
-from State to State and city to city. One Mr. Wood, "recommended by
-Senator Seward," was the chief manager. He provided special trains to be
-preceded by pilot engines all the way through.
-
-It was a gloomy day: heavy clouds floated overhead, and a cold rain was
-falling. Long before eight o'clock, a great mass of people had collected
-at the station of the Great Western Railway to witness the event of the
-day. At precisely five minutes before eight, Mr. Lincoln, preceded by
-Mr. Wood, emerged from a private room in the dépôt building, and passed
-slowly to the car, the people falling back respectfully on either side,
-and as many as possible shaking his hands. Having finally reached the
-train, he ascended the rear platform, and, facing about to the throng
-which had closed around him, drew himself up to his full height, removed
-his hat, and stood for several seconds in profound silence. His eye
-roved sadly over that sea of upturned faces; and he thought he read in
-them again the sympathy and friendship which he had often tried, and
-which he never needed more than he did then. There was an unusual quiver
-in his lip, and a still more unusual tear on his shrivelled cheek. His
-solemn manner, his long silence, were as full of melancholy eloquence
-as any words he could have uttered. What did he think of? Of the mighty
-changes which had lifted him from the lowest to the highest estate on
-earth? Of the weary road which had brought him to this lofty summit?
-Of his poor mother lying beneath the tangled underbrush in a distant
-forest? Of that other grave in the quiet Concord cemetery? Whatever
-the particular character of his thoughts, it is evident that they were
-retrospective and painful. To those who were anxiously waiting to catch
-words upon which the fate of the nation might hang, it seemed long until
-he had mastered his feelings sufficiently to speak. At length he began
-in a husky tone of voice, and slowly and impressively delivered his
-farewell to his neighbors. Imitating his example, every man in the crowd
-stood with his head uncovered in the fast-falling rain.
-
-"Friends,--No one who has never been placed in a like position can
-understand my feelings at this hour, nor the oppressive sadness I feel
-at this parting. For more than a quarter of a century I have lived among
-you, and during all that time I have received nothing but kindness at
-your hands. Here I have lived from my youth, until now I am an old man.
-Here the most sacred ties of earth were assumed. Here all my children
-were born; and here one of them lies buried. To you, dear friends, I owe
-all that I have, all that I am. All the strange, checkered past seems to
-crowd now upon my mind. To-day I leave you. I go to assume a task more
-difficult than that which devolved upon Washington. Unless the great
-God, who assisted him, shall be with and aid me, I must fail; but if the
-same omniscient mind and almighty arm that directed and protected him
-shall guide and support me, I shall not fail,--I shall succeed. Let us
-all pray that the God of our fathers may not forsake us now. To him I
-commend you all. Permit me to ask, that, with equal security and faith,
-you will invoke his wisdom and guidance for me. With these few words I
-must leave you: for how long I know not. Friends, one and all, I must
-now bid you an affectionate farewell."
-
-"It was a most impressive scene," said the editor of "The Journal." "We
-have known Mr. Lincoln for many years; we have heard him speak upon
-a hundred different occasions; but we never saw him so profoundly
-affected, nor did he ever utter an address which seemed to us so full
-of simple and touching eloquence, so exactly adapted to the occasion, so
-worthy of the man and the hour."
-
-At eight o'clock the train rolled out of Springfield amid the cheers of
-the populace. Four years later a funeral train, covered with the emblems
-of splendid mourning, rolled into the same city, bearing a discolored
-corpse, whose obsequies were being celebrated in every part of the
-civilized world.
-
-Along with Mr. Lincoln's family in the special car were Gov. Yates,
-Ex-Gov. Moore, Dr. Wallace (Mr. Lincoln's brother-in-law), Mr. Judd,
-Mr. Browning, Judge Davis, Col. Ellsworth, Col. Lamon, and private
-secretaries Nicolay and Hay.
-
-It has been asserted that an attempt was made to throw the train off the
-track between Springfield and Indianapolis, and also that a hand-grenade
-was found on board at Cincinnati, but no evidence of the fact is given
-in either case, and none of the Presidential party ever heard of these
-murderous doings until they read of them in some of the more imaginative
-reports of their trip.
-
-Full accounts of this journey were spread broadcast over the country
-at the time, and have been collected and printed in various books. But,
-except for the speeches of the President elect, those accounts possess
-no particular interest at this day; and of the speeches we shall present
-here only such extracts as express his thoughts and feelings about the
-impending civil war.
-
-In the heat of the late canvass, he had written the following private
-letter:--
-
-Springfield, Ill., Aug. 15, 1860.
-
-John B. Fry, Esq.
-
-My dear Sir,--Yours of the 9th, enclosing the letter of Hon. John M.
-Botts, was duly received. The latter is herewith returned, according to
-your request. It contains one of the many assurances I receive from
-the South, that in no probable event will there be any very formidable
-effort to break up the Union. The people of the South have too much of
-good sense and good temper to attempt the ruin of the government, rather
-than see it administered as it was administered by the men who made it.
-At least, so I hope and believe.
-
-I thank you both for your own letter and a sight of that of Mr. Botts.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The opinion expressed in the letter as to the probability of war does
-not appear to have undergone any material change or modification during
-the eventful months which had intervened; for he expressed it in much
-stronger terms at almost every stage of his progress to Washington.
-
-At Toledo he said,--
-
-"I am leaving you on an errand of national importance, attended, as you
-are aware, with considerable difficulties. Let us believe, as some poet
-has expressed it, 'Behind the cloud the sun is shining still.'"
-
-At Indianapolis:--
-
-"I am here to thank you for this magnificent welcome, and still more for
-the very generous support given by your State to that political cause,
-which, I think, is the true and just cause of the whole country, and the
-whole world. Solomon says, 'There is a time to keep silence;' and when
-men wrangle by the mouth, with no certainty that they mean the same
-thing while using the same words, it perhaps were as well if they would
-keep silence.
-
-"The words 'coercion' and 'invasion' are much used in these days, and
-often with some temper and hot blood. Let us make sure, if we can, that
-we do not misunderstand the meaning of those who use them. Let us get
-the exact definitions of these words, not from dictionaries, but from
-the men themselves, who certainly deprecate the things they would
-represent by the use of the words.
-
-"What, then, is coercion? What is invasion? Would the marching of an
-army into South Carolina, without the consent of her people, and with
-hostile intent toward them, be invasion? I certainly think it would;
-and it would be coercion also, if the South Carolinians were forced to
-submit. But if the United States should merely hold and retake its
-own forts and other property, and collect the duties on foreign
-importations, or even withhold the mails from places where they were'
-habitually violated, would any or all of these things be invasion or
-coercion? Do our professed lovers of the Union, who spitefully resolve
-that they will resist coercion and invasion, understand that such
-things as these, on the part of the United States, would be coercion or
-invasion of a State? If so, their idea of means to preserve the object
-of their great affection would seem to be exceedingly thin and airy. If
-sick, the little pills of the homoeopathist would be much too large for
-them to swallow. In their view, the Union, as a family relation,
-would seem to be no regular marriage, but rather a sort of 'free-love'
-arrangement, to be maintained on passional attraction."
-
-At Columbus:--
-
-"Allusion has been made to the interest felt in relation to the policy
-of the new administration. In this, I have received from some a degree
-of credit for having kept silence, from others some depreciation. I
-still think I was right. In the varying and repeatedly-shifting scenes
-of the present, _without a precedent which could enable me to judge
-for the past_, it has seemed fitting, that, before speaking upon the
-difficulties of the country, I should have gained a view of the whole
-field. To be sure, after all, I would be at liberty to modify and change
-the course of policy as future events might make a change necessary.
-
-"I have not maintained silence from any want of real anxiety. _It is
-a good thing that there is no more than anxiety, for there is nothing
-going wrong. It is a consoling circumstance, that when we look out there
-is nothing that really hurts anybody. We entertain different views upon
-political questions; but nobody is suffering any thing. This is a most
-consoling circumstance, and from it I judge that all we want is time
-and patience, and a reliance on that God who has never forsaken this
-people_."
-
-At Pittsburg:--
-
-"Notwithstanding the troubles across the river, _there is really no
-crisis springing from any thing in the Government itself. In plain
-words, there is really no crisis, except an artificial one._ What is
-there now to warrant the condition of affairs presented by our friends
-'over the river'? Take even their own view of the questions involved,
-and there is nothing to justify the course which they are pursuing. _I
-repeat it, then, there is no crisis, except such a one as may be gotten
-up at any time by turbulent men, aided by designing politicians_. My
-advice, then, under such circumstances, is _to keep cool. If the great
-American people will only keep their temper on both sides of the line,
-the trouble will come to an end, and the question which now distracts
-the country will be settled just as surely as all other difficulties
-of like character which have originated in this Government have been
-adjusted. Let the people on both sides keep their self-possession, and,
-just as other clouds have cleared away in due time, so will this; and
-this great nation shall continue to prosper as heretofore_."
-
-At Cleveland:--
-
-"Frequent allusion is made to the excitement at present existing in our
-national politics, and it is as well that I should also allude to it
-here. _I think that there is no occasion for any excitement. The crisis,
-as it is called, is altogether an artificial crisis.... As I said
-before, this crisis is all artificial! It has no foundation in fact. It
-was not 'argued up,' as the saying is, and cannot be argued down. Let it
-alone, and it will go down itself_."
-
-Before the Legislature of New York:--
-
-"When the time comes, according to the custom of the Government, I shall
-speak, and speak as well as I am able for the good of the present and of
-the future of this country,--for the good of the North and of the South,
-for the good of one and of the other, and of all sections of it. In the
-mean time, _if we have patience, if we maintain our equanimity, though
-some may allow themselves to run off in a burst of passion_, I still
-have confidence that the Almighty Ruler of the Universe, through the
-instrumentality of this great and intelligent people, can and will bring
-us through this difficulty, as he has heretofore brought us through
-all preceding difficulties of the country. Relying upon this, and
-again thanking you, as I forever shall, in my heart, for this generous
-reception you have given me, I bid you farewell."
-
-In response to the Mayor of New York City, who had said, "To you,
-therefore, chosen under the forms of the Constitution, as the head
-of the Confederacy, we look for a restoration of fraternal relations
-between the States,--only to be accomplished by peaceful and
-conciliatory means, aided by the wisdom of Almighty God," Mr. Lincoln
-said,--
-
-"In regard to the difficulties that confront us at this time, and of
-which you have seen fit to speak so becomingly and so justly, I can only
-say that I agree with the sentiments expressed."
-
-At Trenton:--
-
-"I shall endeavor to take the ground I deem most just to the North, the
-East, the West, the South, and the whole country. I take it, I hope, in
-good temper,--certainly with no malice towards any section. _I shall do
-all that may be in my power to promote a peaceful settlement of all our
-difficulties. The man does not live who is more devoted to peace than
-I am,--none who would do more to preserve it. But it maybe necessary to
-put the foot down firmly_. And if I do my duty, and do right, you
-will sustain me: will you not? Received, as I am, by the members of
-a legislature, the majority of whom do not agree with me in political
-sentiments, I trust that I may have their assistance in piloting the
-Ship of State through this voyage, surrounded by perils as it is; for,
-if it should suffer shipwreck now, there will be no pilot ever needed
-for another voyage."
-
-At Philadelphia:--
-
-"It is true, as your worthy mayor has said, that there is anxiety
-among the citizens of the United States at this time. I deem it a happy
-circumstance that this dissatisfied portion of our fellow-citizens do
-not point us to any thing in which they are being injured, or are about
-to be injured; _for which reason I have felt all the while justified in
-concluding that the crisis, the panic, the anxiety, of the country at
-this time is artificial._ If there be those who differ with me upon
-this subject, they have not pointed out the substantial difficulty
-that exists. I do not mean to say that an artificial panic may not do
-considerable harm: that it has done such I do not deny. The hope that
-has been expressed by your mayor, that I may be able to restore peace,
-harmony, and prosperity to the country, is most worthy of him; and happy
-indeed will I be if I shall be able to verify and fulfil that hope. I
-promise you, in all sincerity, that I bring to the work a sincere heart.
-Whether I will bring a head equal to that heart, will be for future
-times to determine. It were useless for me to speak of details or plans
-now: I shall speak officially next Monday week, if ever. If I should not
-speak then, it were useless for me to do so now."
-
-At Philadelphia again:--
-
-"Now, in my view of the present aspect of affairs, there need be no
-bloodshed or war. _There is no necessity for it. I am not in favor of
-such a course: and I may say, in advance, that there will be no blood
-shed unless it be forced upon the Government; and then it will be
-compelled to act in self-defence._"
-
-At Harrisburg:--
-
-"I recur for a moment but to repeat some words uttered at the hotel
-in regard to what has been said about the military support which the
-General Government may expect from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in a
-proper emergency. _To guard against any possible mistake, do I recur
-to this. It is not with any pleasure that I contemplate the possibility
-that a necessity may arise in this country for the use of the military
-arm_. While I am exceedingly gratified to see the manifestation upon
-your streets of your military force here, and exceedingly gratified at
-your promise here to use that force upon a proper emergency; while I
-make these acknowledgments, I desire to repeat, in order to _preclude
-any possible misconstruction, that I do most sincerely hope that we
-shall have no use for them; that it will never become their duty to
-shed Hood, and most especially never to shed fraternal blood_. I promise
-that, so far as I have wisdom to direct, if so painful a result shall in
-any wise be brought about, it shall be through no fault of mine."
-
-Whilst Mr. Lincoln, in the midst of his suite and attendants, was being
-borne in triumph through the streets of Philadelphia, and a countless
-multitude of people were shouting themselves hoarse, and jostling
-and crushing each other around his carriage-wheels, Mr. Felton, the
-President of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railway, was
-engaged with a private detective discussing the details of an alleged
-conspiracy to murder him at Baltimore. Some months before, Mr. Felton,
-apprehending danger to the bridges along his line, had taken this man
-into his pay, and sent him to Baltimore to spy out and report any plot
-that might be found for their destruction. Taking with him a couple of
-other men and a woman, the detective went about his business with the
-zeal which necessarily marks his peculiar profession. He set up as a
-stock-broker, under an assumed name, opened an office, and became
-a vehement Secessionist. His agents were instructed to act with the
-duplicity which such men generally use, to be rabid on the subject of
-"Southern rights," to suggest all manner of crimes in vindication of
-them; and if, by these arts, corresponding sentiments should be elicited
-from their victims, the "job" might be considered as prospering. Of
-course they readily found out what everybody else knew,--that Maryland
-was in a state of great alarm; that her people were forming military
-associations, and that Gov. Hicks was doing his utmost to furnish them
-with arms, on condition that the arms, in case of need, should be turned
-against the Federal Government. Whether they detected any plan to burn
-bridges or not, the chief detective does not relate; but it appears
-that he soon deserted that inquiry, and got, or pretended to get, upon a
-scent that promised a heavier reward. Being intensely ambitious to
-shine in the professional way, and something of a politician besides,
-it struck him that it would be a particularly fine thing to discover a
-dreadful plot to assassinate the President elect; and he discovered it
-accordingly. It was easy to get that far: to furnish tangible proofs of
-an imaginary conspiracy was a more difficult matter. But Baltimore was
-seething with political excitement; numerous strangers from the far
-South crowded its hotels and boarding-houses; great numbers of mechanics
-and laborers out of employment encumbered its streets; and everywhere
-politicians, merchants, mechanics, laborers, and loafers were engaged
-in heated discussions about the anticipated war, and the probability of
-Northern troops being marched through Maryland to slaughter and pillage
-beyond the Potomac. It would seem like an easy thing to beguile a few
-individuals of this angry and excited multitude into the expression of
-some criminal desire; and the opportunity was not wholly lost, although
-the limited success of the detective under such favorable circumstances
-is absolutely wonderful. He put his "shadows" upon several persons, whom
-it suited his pleasure to suspect; and the "shadows" pursued their work
-with the keen zest and the cool treachery of their kind. They reported
-daily to their chief in writing, as he reported in turn to his employer.
-These documents are neither edifying nor useful: they prove nothing
-but the baseness of the vocation which gave them existence. They were
-furnished to Mr. Herndon in full, under the impression that partisan
-feeling had extinguished in him the love of truth, and the obligations
-of candor, as it had in many writers who preceded him on the same
-subject-matter. They have been carefully and thoroughly read, analyzed,
-examined, and Compared, with an earnest and conscientious desire to
-discover the truth, if, perchance, any trace of truth might be in them.
-The process of investigation began with a strong bias in favor of the
-conclusion at which the detective had arrived. For ten years the author
-implicitly believed in the reality of the atrocious plot which these
-spies were supposed to have detected and thwarted; and for ten years he
-had pleased himself with the reflection that he also had done something
-to defeat the bloody purpose of the assassins. It was a conviction which
-could scarcely have been overthrown by evidence less powerful than the
-detective's weak and contradictory account of his own case. In that
-account there is literally nothing to sustain the accusation, and much
-to rebut it. It is perfectly manifest that there was no conspiracy,--no
-conspiracy of a hundred, of fifty, of twenty, of three; no definite
-purpose in the heart of even one man to murder Mr. Lincoln at Baltimore.
-
-The reports are all in the form of personal narratives, and for the most
-relate when the spies went to bed, when they rose, where they ate, what
-saloons and brothels they visited, and what blackguards they met and
-"drinked" with. One of them "shadowed" a loud-mouthed, drinking fellow,
-named Luckett, and another, a poor scapegrace and braggart, named
-Hilliard. These wretches "drinked" and talked a great deal, hung about
-bars, haunted disreputable houses, were constantly half-drunk, and
-easily excited to use big and threatening words by the faithless
-protestations and cunning management of the spies. Thus Hilliard was
-made to say that he thought a man who should act the part of Brutus in
-these times would deserve well of his country; and Luckett was induced
-to declare that he knew a man who would kill Lincoln. At length the
-great arch-conspirator--the Brutus, the Orsini, of the New World, to
-whom Luckett and Hilliard, the "national volunteers," and all such, were
-as mere puppets--condescended to reveal himself in the most obliging and
-confiding manner. He made no mystery of his cruel and desperate scheme.
-He did not guard it as a dangerous secret, or choose his confidants with
-the circumspection which political criminals, and especially assassins,
-have generally thought proper to observe. Very many persons knew what
-he was about, and levied on their friends for small sums--five, ten, and
-twenty dollars--to further the "captain's" plan. Even Luckett was deep
-enough in the awful plot to raise money for it; and when he took one of
-the spies to a public bar-room, and introduced him to the "captain," the
-latter sat down and talked it all over without the slightest reserve.
-When was there ever before such a loud-mouthed conspirator, such a
-trustful and innocent assassin! His name was Ferrandina, his occupation
-that of a barber, his place of business beneath Barnum's Hotel, where
-the sign of the bloodthirsty villain still invites the unsuspecting
-public to come in for a shave.
-
-"Mr. Luckett," so the spy relates, "said that he was not going home this
-evening; and if I would meet him at Barr's saloon, on South Street, he
-would introduce me to Ferrandina.
-
-"This was unexpected to me; but I determined to take the chances, and
-agreed to meet Mr. Luckett at the place named at 7, p.m. Mr. Luckett
-left about 2.30, p.m.; and I went to dinner.
-
-"I was at the office in the afternoon in hopes that Mr. Felton might
-call, but he did not; and at 6.15, p.m., I went to supper. After
-supper, I went to Barr's saloon, and found Mr. Luckett and several
-other gentlemen there. He asked me to drink, and introduced me to Capt.
-Ferrandina and Capt. Turner. He eulogized me very highly as a neighbor
-of his, and told Ferrandina that I was the gentleman who had given the
-twenty-five dollars he (Luckett) had given to Ferrandina.
-
-"The conversation at once got into politics; and Ferrandina, who is
-a fine-looking, intelligent-appearing person, became very excited.
-He shows the Italian in, I think, a very marked degree; and, although
-excited, yet was cooler than what I had believed was the general
-characteristic of Italians. He has lived South for many years, and is
-thoroughly imbued with the idea that the South must rule; that they
-(Southerners) have been outraged in their rights by the election of
-Lincoln, and freely justified resorting to any means to prevent Lincoln
-from taking his seat; and, as he spoke, his eyes fairly glared and
-glistened, and his whole frame quivered, but he was fully conscious
-of all he was doing. He is a man well calculated for controlling and
-directing the ardent-minded: he is an enthusiast, and believes, that, to
-use his own words, 'murder of any kind is justifiable and right to
-save the rights of the Southern people.' In all his views he was ably
-seconded by Capt. Turner.
-
-"Capt. Turner is an American; but although very much of a gentleman, and
-possessing warm Southern feelings, he is not by any means so dangerous a
-man as Ferrandina, as his ability for exciting others is less powerful;
-but that he is a bold and proud man there is no doubt, as also that he
-is entirely under the control of Ferrandina. In fact, it could not be
-otherwise: for even I myself felt the influence of this man's strange
-power; and, wrong though I knew him to be, I felt strangely unable to
-keep my mind balanced against him.
-
-"Ferrandina said, 'Never, never, shall Lincoln be President. His life
-(Ferrandina's) was of no consequence: he was willing to give it up for
-Lincoln's; he would sell it for that Abolitionist's; and as Orsini had
-given his life for Italy, so was he (Ferrandina) ready to die for his
-country, and the rights of the South; and, said Ferrandina, turning to
-Capt. Turner, 'We shall all die together: we shall show the North that
-we fear them not. Every man, captain,' said he, 'will on that day prove
-himself a hero. The first shot fired, the main traitor (Lincoln) dead,
-and all Maryland will be with us, and the South shall be free; and the
-North must then be ours.'--'Mr. Hutchins,' said Ferrandina, 'if I alone
-must do it, I shall: Lincoln shall die in this city.'
-
-"Whilst we were thus talking, we (Mr. Luckett, Turner, Ferrandina, and
-myself) were alone in one corner of the barroom; and, while talking,
-two strangers had got pretty near us. Mr. Luckett called Ferrandina's
-attention to this, and intimated that they were listening; and we went
-up to the bar, drinked again at my expense, and again retired to another
-part of the room, at Ferrandina's request, to see if the strangers would
-again follow us: whether by accident or design, they again got near
-us; but of course we were not talking of any matter of consequence.
-Ferrandina said he suspected they were spies, and suggested that he had
-to attend a secret meeting, and was apprehensive that the two strangers
-might follow him; and, at Mr. Luckett's request, I remained with him
-(Luckett) to watch the movements of the strangers. I assured Ferrandina,
-that, if they would attempt to follow him, that we would whip them.
-
-"Ferrandina and Turner left to attend the meeting; and, anxious as I was
-to follow them myself, I was obliged to remain with Mr. Luckett to watch
-the strangers, which we did for about fifteen minutes, when Mr. Luckett
-said that he should go to a friend's to stay over night, and I left for
-my hotel, arriving there at about 9, p.m., and soon retired."
-
-It is in a secret communication between hireling spies and paid
-informers that these ferocious sentiments are attributed to the poor
-knight of the soap-pot. No disinterested person would believe the
-story upon such evidence; and it will appear hereafter, that even the
-detective felt that it was too weak to mention among his strong points
-at that decisive moment, when he revealed all he knew to the President
-and his friends. It is probably a mere fiction. If it had had any
-foundation in fact, we are inclined to believe that the sprightly and
-eloquent barber would have dangled at a rope's end long since. He would
-hardly have been left to shave and plot in peace, while the members of
-the Legislature, the police-marshal, and numerous private gentlemen,
-were locked up in Federal prisons. When Mr. Lincoln was actually slain,
-four years later, and the cupidity of the detectives was excited
-by enormous rewards, Ferrandina was totally unmolested. But even if
-Ferrandina really said all that is here imputed to him, he did no more
-than many others around him were doing at the same time. He drank and
-talked, and made swelling speeches; but he never took, nor seriously
-thought of taking, the first step toward the frightful tragedy he is
-said to have contemplated.
-
-The detectives are cautious not to include in the supposed plot to
-murder any person of eminence, power, or influence. Their game is all
-of the smaller sort, and, as they conceived, easily taken,--witless
-vagabonds like Hilliard and Luckett, and a barber, whose calling
-indicates his character and associations. They had no fault to find with
-the governor of the State: he was rather a lively trimmer, to be sure,
-and very anxious to turn up at last on the winning side; but it was
-manifestly impossible that one in such exalted station could meditate
-murder. Yet, if they had pushed their inquiries with an honest desire to
-get at the truth, they might have found much stronger evidence against
-the governor than that which they pretend to have found against the
-barber. In the governor's case the evidence is documentary, written,
-authentic,--over his own hand, clear and conclusive as pen and ink could
-make it. As early as the previous November, Gov. Hicks had written the
-following letter; and, notwithstanding its treasonable and murderous
-import, the writer became conspicuously loyal before spring, and lived
-to reap splendid rewards and high honors under the auspices of the
-Federal Government, as the most patriotic and devoted Union man in
-Maryland. The person to whom the letter was addressed was equally
-fortunate; and, instead of drawing out his comrades in the field to
-"kill Lincoln and his men," he was sent to Congress by power exerted
-from Washington at a time when the administration selected the
-representatives of Maryland, and performed all his duties right loyally
-and acceptably. Shall one be taken, and another left? Shall Hicks go to
-the Senate, and Webster to Congress, while the poor barber is held to
-the silly words which he is alleged to have sputtered out between drinks
-in a low groggery, under the blandishments and encouragements of an
-eager spy, itching for his reward?
-
-State of Maryland, Executive Chamber, Annapolis, Nov. 9, 1860.
-
-Hon. E. H. Webster.
-
-My dear Sir,--I have pleasure in acknowledging receipt of your favor
-introducing a very clever gentleman to my acquaintance (though a
-Demo'). I regret to say that we have, at this time, no arms on hand to
-distribute, but assure you at the earliest possible moment your company
-shall have arms: they have complied with all required on their part. We
-have some delay, in consequence of contracts with Georgia and Alabama,
-ahead of us: we expect at an early day an additional supply, and of
-first received your people shall be furnished. Will they be good men to
-send out to kill Lincoln and his men? if not, suppose the arms would be
-better sent South.
-
-How does late election sit with you? 'Tis too bad. Harford, nothing to
-reproach herself for.
-
-Your obedient servant,
-
-Thos. H. Hicks.
-
-With the Presidential party was Hon. Norman B. Judd: he was supposed
-to exercise unbounded influence over the new President; and with him,
-therefore, the detective opened communications. At various places along
-the route, Mr. Judd was given vague hints of the impending danger,
-accompanied by the usual assurances of the skill and activity of the
-patriots who were perilling their lives in a rebel city to save that of
-the Chief Magistrate. When he reached New York, he was met by the woman
-who had originally gone with the other spies to Baltimore. She had
-urgent messages from her chief,--messages that disturbed Mr. Judd
-exceedingly. The detective was anxious to meet Mr. Judd and the
-President; and a meeting was accordingly arranged to take place at
-Philadelphia.
-
-Mr. Lincoln reached Philadelphia on the afternoon of the 21st. The
-detective had arrived in the morning, and improved the interval to
-impress and enlist Mr. Felton. In the evening he got Mr. Judd and Mr.
-Felton into his room at the St. Louis Hotel, and told them all he
-had learned. He dwelt at large on the fierce temper of the Baltimore
-Secessionists; on the loose talk he had heard about "fire-balls or
-hand-grenades;" on a "privateer" said to be moored somewhere in the
-bay; on the organization called National Volunteers; on the fact, that,
-eaves-dropping at Barnum's Hotel, he had overheard Marshal Kane intimate
-that he would not supply a police-force on some undefined occasion, but
-what the occasion was he did not know. He made much of his miserable
-victim, Hilliard, whom he held up as a perfect type of the class from
-which danger was to be apprehended; but, concerning "Captain" Ferrandina
-and his threats, he said, according to his own account, not a single
-word. He had opened his case, his whole case, and stated it as strongly
-as he could. Mr. Judd was very much startled, and was sure that it would
-be extremely imprudent for Mr. Lincoln to pass through Baltimore in
-open daylight, according to the published programme. But he thought the
-detective ought to see the President himself; and, as it was wearing
-toward nine o'clock, there was no time to lose. It was agreed that the
-part taken by the detective and Mr. Felton should be kept secret from
-every one but the President. Mr. Sanford, President of the American
-Telegraph Company, had also been co-operating in the business; and the
-same stipulation was made with regard to him.
-
-Mr. Judd went to his own room at the Continental, and the detective
-followed. The crowd in the hotel was very dense, and it took some time
-to get a message to Mr. Lincoln. But it finally reached him, and he
-responded in person. Mr. Judd introduced the detective; and the latter
-told his story over again, with a single variation: this time he
-mentioned the name of Ferrandina along with Hilliard's, but gave no more
-prominence to one than to the other.
-
-Mr. Judd and the detective wanted Lincoln to leave for Washington that
-night. This he flatly refused to do. He had engagements with the people,
-he said,--to raise a flag over Independence Hall in the morning, and to
-exhibit himself at Harrisburg in the afternoon; and these engagements
-he would not break in any event. But he would raise the flag, go to
-Harrisburg, "get away quietly" in the evening, and permit himself to be
-carried to Washington in the way they thought best. Even this, however,
-he conceded with great reluctance. He condescended to cross-examine the
-detective on some parts of his narrative, but at no time did he seem in
-the least degree alarmed. He was earnestly requested not to communicate
-the change of plan to any member of his party, except Mr. Judd, nor
-permit even a suspicion of it to cross the mind of another. To this
-he replied, that he would be compelled to tell Mrs. Lincoln; "and he
-thought it likely that she would insist upon W. H. Lamon going with him;
-but, aside from that, no one should know."
-
-In the mean time, Mr. Seward had also discovered the conspiracy. He
-despatched his son to Philadelphia to warn the President elect of the
-terrible plot into whose meshes he was about to run. Mr. Lincoln turned
-him over to Judd, and Judd told him they already knew all about it.
-He went away with just enough information to enable his father to
-anticipate the exact moment of Mr. Lincoln's surreptitious arrival in
-Washington.
-
-Early on the morning of the 22d, Mr. Lincoln raised the flag over
-Independence Hall, and departed for Harrisburg. On the way, Mr. Judd
-"gave him a full and precise detail of the arrangements that had been
-made" the previous night. After the conference with the detective, Mr.
-Sanford, Col. Scott, Mr. Felton, railroad and telegraph officials, had
-been sent for, and came to Mr. Judd's room. They occupied nearly the
-whole of the night in perfecting the plan. It was finally understood
-that about six o'clock the next evening Mr. Lincoln should slip away
-from the Jones Hotel, at Harrisburg, in company with a single member
-of his party. A special car and engine would be provided for him on
-the track outside the dépôt. All other trains on the road would be
-"sidetracked" until this one had passed. Mr. Sanford would forward
-skilled "telegraph-climbers," and see that all the wires leading out
-of Harrisburg were cut at six o'clock, and kept down until it was known
-that Mr. Lincoln had reached Washington in safety. The detective would
-meet Mr. Lincoln at the West Philadelphia dépôt with a carriage, and
-conduct him by a circuitous route to the Philadelphia, Wilmington,
-and Baltimore dépôt. Berths for four would be pre-engaged in the
-sleeping-car attached to the regular midnight train for Baltimore. This
-train Mr. Felton would cause to be detained until the conductor should
-receive a package, containing important "government despatches,"
-addressed to "E. J. Allen, Willard's Hotel, Washington." This package
-was made up of old newspapers, carefully wrapped and sealed, and
-delivered to the detective to be used as soon as Mr. Lincoln was
-lodged in the car. Mr. Lincoln approved of the plan, and signified his
-readiness to acquiesce. Then Mr. Judd, forgetting the secrecy which the
-spy had so impressively enjoined, told Mr. Lincoln that the step he was
-about to take was one of such transcendent importance, that he thought
-"it should be communicated to the other gentlemen of the party." Mr.
-Lincoln said, "You can do as you like about that." Mr. Judd now changed
-his seat; and Mr. Nicolay, whose suspicions seem to have been aroused by
-this mysterious conference, sat down beside him, and said, "Judd,
-there is something up. What is it, if it is proper that I should
-know?"--"George," answered Judd, "there is no necessity for your knowing
-it. One man can keep a matter better than two."
-
-Arrived at Harrisburg, and the public ceremonies and speech-making over,
-Mr. Lincoln retired to a private parlor in the Jones House; and Mr. Judd
-summoned to meet him Judge Davis, Col. Lamon, Col. Sumner, Major Hunter,
-and Capt. Pope. The three latter were officers of the regular army,
-and had joined the party after it had left Springfield. Judd began the
-conference by stating the alleged fact of the Baltimore conspiracy,
-how it was detected, and how it was proposed to thwart it by a midnight
-expedition to Washington by way of Philadelphia. It was a great surprise
-to most of those assembled. Col. Sumner was the first to break silence.
-"That proceeding," said he, "will be a damned piece of cowardice." Mr.
-Judd considered this a "pointed hit," but replied that "that view of
-the case had already been presented to Mr. Lincoln." Then there was a
-general interchange of opinions, which Sumner interrupted by saying,
-"I'll get a squad of cavalry, sir, and _cut_ our way to Washington,
-sir!"--"Probably before that day comes," said Mr. Judd, "the
-inauguration day will have passed. It is important that Mr. Lincoln
-should be in Washington that day." Thus far Judge Davis had expressed no
-opinion, but "had put various questions to test the truthfulness of the
-story." He now turned to Mr. Lincoln, and said, "You personally heard
-the detective's story. You have heard this discussion. What is your
-judgment in the matter?"--"I have listened," answered Mr. Lincoln,
-"to this discussion with interest. I see no reason, no good reason, to
-change the programme; and I am for carrying it out as arranged by Judd."
-There was no longer any dissent as to the plan itself; but one question
-still remained to be disposed of. Who should accompany the President on
-his perilous ride? Mr. Judd again took the lead, declaring that he and
-Mr. Lincoln had previously determined that but one man ought to go, and
-that Col. Lamon had been selected as the proper person. To this Sumner
-violently demurred. "_I_ have undertaken," he exclaimed, "to see Mr.
-Lincoln to Washington."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was hastily dining when a close carriage was brought to the
-side-door of the hotel. He was called, hurried to his room, changed his
-coat and hat, and passed rapidly through the hall and out of the door.
-As he was stepping into the carriage, it became manifest that Sumner was
-determined to get in also. "Hurry with him," whispered Judd to Lamon,
-and at the same time, placing his hand on Sumner's shoulder, said aloud,
-"One moment, colonel!" Sumner turned around; and, in that moment, the
-carriage drove rapidly away. "A madder man," says Mr. Judd, "you never
-saw."
-
-Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon got on board the car without discovery or
-mishap. Besides themselves, there was no one in or about the car but Mr.
-Lewis, general superintendent of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad,
-and Mr. Franciscus, superintendent of the division over which they were
-about to pass. As Mr. Lincoln's dress on this occasion has been much
-discussed, it may be as well to state that he wore a soft, light felt
-hat, drawn down over his face when it seemed necessary or convenient,
-and a shawl thrown over his shoulders, and pulled up to assist in
-disguising his features when passing to and from the carriage. This was
-all there was of the "Scotch cap and cloak," so widely celebrated in the
-political literature of the day.
-
-At ten o'clock they reached Philadelphia, and were met by the detective,
-and one Mr. Kinney, an under-official of the Philadelphia, Wilmington,
-and Baltimore Railroad. Lewis and Franciscus bade Mr. Lincoln adieu. Mr.
-Lincoln, Col. Lamon, and the detective seated themselves in a carriage,
-which stood in waiting, and Mr. Kinney got upon the box with the driver.
-It was a full hour and a half before the Baltimore train was to start;
-and Mr. Kinney found it necessary "to consume the time by driving
-northward in search of some imaginary person."
-
-On the way through Philadelphia, Mr. Lincoln told his companions about
-the message he had received from Mr. Seward. This new discovery was
-infinitely more appalling than the other. Mr. Seward had been informed
-"that about _fifteen thousand men_ were organized to prevent his
-(Lincoln's) passage through Baltimore, and that arrangements were made
-by these parties _to blow up the railroad track, fire the train._" &c.
-In view of these unpleasant circumstances, Mr. Seward recommended a
-change of route. Here was a plot big enough to swallow up the little
-one, which we are to regard as the peculiar property of Mr. Felton's
-detective. Hilliard, Ferrandina, and Luckett disappear among the
-"fifteen thousand;" and their maudlin and impotent twaddle about the
-"abolition tyrant" looks very insignificant beside the bloody massacre,
-conflagration, and explosion now foreshadowed.
-
-As the moment for the departure of the Baltimore train drew near, the
-carriage paused in the dark shadows of the dépôt building. It was not
-considered prudent to approach the entrance. The spy passed in first,
-and was followed by Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon. An agent of the former
-directed them to the sleeping-car, which they entered by the rear door.
-Mr. Kinney ran forward, and delivered to the conductor the "important
-package" prepared for the purpose; and in three minutes the train was
-in motion. The tickets for the whole party had been procured beforehand.
-Their berths were ready, but had only been preserved from invasion
-by the statement, that they were retained for a sick man and his
-attendants. The business had been managed very adroitly by the female
-spy, who had accompanied her employer from Baltimore to Philadelphia to
-assist him in this the most delicate and important affair of his life.
-Mr. Lincoln got into his bed immediately; and the curtains were drawn
-together. When the conductor came around, the detective handed him the
-"sick man's" ticket; and the rest of the party lay down also. None of
-"our party appeared to be sleepy," says the detective; "but we all
-lay quiet, and nothing of importance transpired." "Mr. Lincoln is very
-homely," said the woman in her "report," "and so very tall, that he
-could not lay straight in his berth." During the night Mr. Lincoln
-indulged in a joke or two, in an undertone; but, with that exception,
-the "two sections" occupied by them were perfectly silent. The detective
-said he had men stationed at various places along the road to let
-him know "if all was right;" and he rose and went to the platform
-occasionally to observe their signals, but returned each time with a
-favorable report.
-
-At thirty minutes after three, the train reached Baltimore. One of the
-spy's assistants came on board, and informed him "in a whisper that all
-was right." The woman got out of the car. Mr. Lincoln lay close in his
-berth; and in a few moments the car was being slowly drawn through the
-quiet streets of the city toward the Washington dépôt. There again there
-was another pause, but no sound more alarming than the noise of shifting
-cars and engines. The passengers, tucked away on their narrow shelves,
-dozed on as peacefully as if Mr. Lincoln had never been born, until
-they were awakened by the loud strokes of a huge club against a
-night-watchman's box, which stood within the dépôt and close to the
-track. It was an Irishman, trying to arouse a sleepy ticket-agent,
-comfortably ensconced within. For twenty minutes the Irishman pounded
-the box with ever-increasing vigor, and, at each report of his blows,
-shouted at the top of his voice, "Captain! it's four o'clock! it's four
-o'clock!" The Irishman seemed to think that time had ceased to run at
-four o'clock, and, making no allowance for the period consumed by his
-futile exercises, repeated to the last his original statement that it
-was four o'clock. The passengers were intensely amused; and their jokes
-and laughter at the Irishman's expense were not lost upon the occupants
-of the "two sections" in the rear. "Mr. Lincoln," says the detective,
-appeared "to enjoy it very much, and made several witty remarks, showing
-that he was as full of fun as ever."
-
-In due time the train sped out of the suburbs of Baltimore; and the
-apprehensions of the President and his friends diminished with each
-welcome revolution of the wheels. At six o'clock the dome of the Capitol
-came in sight; and a moment later they rolled into the long, unsightly
-building, which forms the Washington dépôt. They passed out of the car
-unobserved, and pushed along with the living stream of men and women
-toward the outer door. One man alone in the great crowd seemed to watch
-Mr. Lincoln with special attention. Standing a little on one side, he
-"looked very sharp at him," and, as he passed, seized hold of his hand,
-and said in a loud tone of voice, "Abe, you can't play that on me." The
-detective and Col. Lamon were instantly alarmed. One of them raised his
-fist to strike the stranger; but Mr. Lincoln caught his arm, and said,
-"Don't strike him! don't strike him! It is Washburne. Don't you know
-him?" Mr. Seward had given to Mr. Washburne a hint of the information
-received through his son; and Mr. Washburne knew its value as well as
-another. For the present, the detective admonished him to keep quiet;
-and they passed on together. Taking a hack, they drove towards Willard's
-Hotel. Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Washburne, and the detectives got out in the
-street, and approached the ladies' entrance; while Col. Lamon drove on
-to the main entrance, and sent the proprietor to meet his distinguished
-guest at the side door. A few minutes later Mr. Seward arrived, and
-was introduced to the company by Mr. Washburne. He spoke in very strong
-terms of the great danger which Mr. Lincoln had so narrowly escaped, and
-most heartily applauded the wisdom of the "secret passage." "I informed
-Gov. Seward of the nature of the information I had," says the detective,
-"and that I had no information of any large organization in Baltimore;
-but the Governor reiterated that he had conclusive evidence of this."
-
-It soon became apparent that Mr. Lincoln wished to be left alone.
-He said he was "rather tired;" and, upon this intimation, the party
-separated. The detective went to the telegraph-office, and loaded the
-wires with despatches, containing the pleasing intelligence that "Plums"
-had brought "Nuts" through in safety. In the spy's cipher the President
-elect was reduced to the undignified title of "Nuts."
-
-That same day Mr. Lincoln's family and suite passed through Baltimore on
-the special train intended for him. They saw no sign of any disposition
-to burn them alive, or to blow them up with gunpowder, but went their
-way unmolested and very happy.
-
-Mr. Lincoln soon learned to regret the midnight ride. His friends
-reproached him, his enemies taunted him. He was convinced that he
-had committed a grave mistake in yielding to the solicitations of a
-professional spy and of friends too easily alarmed. He saw that he
-had fled from a danger purely imaginary, and felt the shame and
-mortification natural to a brave man under such circumstances. But
-he was not disposed to take all the responsibility to himself, and
-frequently upbraided the writer for having aided and assisted him to
-demean himself at the very moment in all his life when his behavior
-should have exhibited the utmost dignity and composure.
-
-The news of his surreptitious entry into Washington occasioned much and
-varied comment throughout the country; but important events followed it
-in such rapid succession, that its real significance was soon lost sight
-of. Enough that Mr. Lincoln was safely at the capital, and in a few days
-would in all probability assume the power confided to his hands.
-
-If before leaving Springfield he had become weary of the pressure upon
-him for office, he found no respite on his arrival at the focus of
-political intrigue and corruption. The intervening days before his
-inauguration were principally occupied in arranging the construction
-of his Cabinet. He was pretty well determined on this subject before he
-reached Washington; but in the minds of the public, beyond the generally
-accepted fact, that Mr. Seward was to be the Premier of the new
-administration, all was speculation and conjecture. From the
-circumstances of the case, he was compelled to give patient ear to
-the representations which were made him in favor of or against various
-persons or parties, and to hold his final decisions till the last
-moment, in order that he might decide with a full view of the
-requirements of public policy and party fealty.
-
-The close of this volume is not the place to enter into a detailed
-history of the circumstances which attended the inauguration of Mr.
-Lincoln's administration, nor of the events which signalized the close
-of Mr. Buchanan's. The history of the former cannot be understood
-without tracing its relation to that of the latter, and both demand more
-impartial consideration than either has yet received.
-
-The 4th of March, 1861, at last arrived; and at noon on that day the
-administration of James Buchanan was to come to a close, and that of
-Abraham Lincoln was to take its place. Mr. Lincoln's feelings, as the
-hour approached which was to invest him with greater responsibilities
-than had fallen upon any of his predecessors, may readily be imagined by
-the readers of the foregoing pages. If he saw in his elevation another
-step towards the fulfilment of that destiny which at times he believed
-awaited him, the thought served but to tinge with a peculiar, almost
-poetic sadness, the manner in which he addressed himself to the solemn
-duties of the hour.
-
-[Illustration: Norman B. Judd 579]
-
-The morning opened pleasantly. At an early hour he gave his inaugural
-address its final revision. Extensive preparations had been made to
-render the occasion as impressive as possible. By nine o'clock the
-procession had begun to form, and at eleven o'clock it commenced to move
-toward Willard's Hotel. Mr. Buchanan was still at the Capitol, signing
-bills till the official term of his office expired. At half-past twelve
-he called for Mr. Lincoln; and, after a delay of a few moments, both
-descended, and entered the open barouche in waiting for them. Shortly
-after, the procession took up its line of march for the Capitol.
-
-Apprehensions existed, that possibly some attempt might be made to
-assassinate Mr. Lincoln; and accordingly his carriage was carefully
-surrounded by the military and the Committee of Arrangements. By order
-of Gen. Scott, troops were placed at various points about the city,
-as well as on the tops of some of the houses along the route of the
-procession.
-
-The Senate remained in session till twelve o'clock, when Mr.
-Breckinridge, in a few well-chosen words, bade the senators farewell,
-and then conducted his successor, Mr. Hamlin, to the chair. At this
-moment, members and members elect of the House of Representatives, and
-the Diplomatic Corps, entered the chamber. At thirteen minutes to one,
-the Judges of the Supreme Court were announced; and on their entrance,
-headed by the venerable Chief-Justice Taney, all on the floor arose,
-while they moved slowly to the seats assigned them at the right of
-the Vice-President, bowing to that officer as they passed. At fifteen
-minutes past one, the Marshal-in-Chief entered the chamber ushering in
-the President and President elect. Mr. Lincoln looked pale, and wan, and
-anxious. In a few moments, the Marshal led the way to the platform at
-the eastern portico of the Capitol, where preparations had been made
-for the inauguration ceremony; and he was followed by the Judges of
-the Supreme Court, Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, the Committee
-of Arrangements, the President and President elect, Vice-President,
-Secretary of the Senate, Senators, Diplomatic Corps, Heads of
-Departments, and others in the chamber.
-
-On arriving at the platform, Mr. Lincoln was introduced to the assembly,
-by the Hon. E. D. Baker, United States Senator from Oregon. Stepping
-forward, in a manner deliberate and impressive, he read in a clear,
-penetrating voice, the following
-
-
-INAUGURAL ADDRESS.
-
-Fellow-Citizens of the United States:--
-
-In compliance with a custom as old as the Government itself, I appear
-before you to address you briefly, and to take, in your presence, the
-oath prescribed by the Constitution of the United States to be taken by
-the President before he enters on the execution of his office.
-
-I do not consider it necessary, at present, for me to discuss those
-matters of administration about which there is no special anxiety or
-excitement. Apprehension seems to exist among the people of the Southern
-States, that, by the accession of a Republican administration, their
-property and their peace and personal security are to be endangered.
-There has never been any reasonable cause for such apprehension. Indeed,
-the most ample evidence to the contrary has all the while existed, and
-been open to their inspection. It is found in nearly all the published
-speeches of him who now addresses you. I do but quote from one of
-those speeches, when I declare, that "I have no purpose, directly or
-indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States
-where it exists." I believe I have no lawful right to do so; and I have
-no inclination to do so. Those who nominated and elected me did so with
-the full knowledge that I had made this and many similar declarations,
-and had never recanted them. And, more than this, they placed in the
-platform, for my acceptance, and as a law to themselves and to me, the
-clear and emphatic resolution which I now read:--
-
-"Resolved, That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States,
-and especially the right of each State to order and control its own
-domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, is
-essential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance
-of our political fabric depend; and we denounce the lawless invasion by
-armed force of the soil of any State or Territory, no matter under what
-pretext, as among the gravest of crimes."
-
-I now reiterate these sentiments; and, in doing so, I only press upon
-the public attention the most conclusive evidence of which the case is
-susceptible, that the property, peace, and security of no section are to
-be in any wise endangered by the now incoming administration.
-
-I add, too, that all the protection which, consistently with the
-Constitution and the laws, can be given, will be cheerfully given to all
-the States, when lawfully demanded, for whatever cause, as cheerfully to
-one section as to another.
-
-There is much controversy about the delivering up of fugitives from
-service or labor. The clause I now read is as plainly written in the
-Constitution as any other of its provisions:--
-
-"No person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof,
-escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation
-therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be
-delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be
-due."
-
-It is scarcely questioned that this provision was intended by those
-who made it for the reclaiming of what we call fugitive slaves; and the
-intention of the lawgiver is the law.
-
-All members of Congress swear their support to the whole
-Constitution,--to this provision as well as any other. To the
-proposition, then, that slaves whose cases come within the terms of this
-clause "shall be delivered up," their oaths are unanimous. Now, if they
-would make the effort in good temper, could they not, with nearly equal
-unanimity, frame and pass a law by means of which to keep good that
-unanimous oath?
-
-There is some difference of opinion whether this clause should be
-enforced by national or by State authority; but surely that difference
-is not a very material one. If the slave is to be surrendered, it can be
-of but little consequence to him or to others by which authority it is
-done; and should any one in any case be content that this oath shall go
-unkept on a merely unsubstantial controversy as to how it shall be kept?
-
-Again, in any law upon this subject, ought not all the safeguards of
-liberty known in civilized and humane jurisprudence to be introduced, so
-that a free man be not, in any case, surrendered as a slave? And might
-it not be well at the same time to provide by law for the enforcement of
-that clause in the Constitution which guarantees that "the citizens of
-each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of
-citizens in the several States"?
-
-I take the official oath to-day with no mental reservations, and with no
-purpose to construe the Constitution or laws by any hypercritical rules;
-and, while I do not choose now to specify particular acts of Congress as
-proper to be enforced, I do suggest, that it will be much safer for all,
-both in official and private stations, to conform to and abide by all
-those acts which stand unrepealed, than to violate any of them, trusting
-to find impunity in having them held to be unconstitutional.
-
-It is seventy-two years since the first inauguration of a President
-under our national Constitution. During that period, fifteen different
-and very distinguished citizens have in succession administered the
-executive branch of the government. They have conducted it through many
-perils, and generally with great success. Yet, with all this scope for
-precedent, I now enter upon the same task, for the brief constitutional
-term of four years, under great and peculiar difficulties.
-
-A disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore only menaced, is now
-formidably attempted. I hold, that, in the contemplation of universal
-law and of the Constitution, the Union of these States is perpetual.
-Perpetuity is implied, if not expressed, in the fundamental law of all
-national governments. It is safe to assert that no government proper
-ever had a provision in its organic law for its own termination.
-Continue to execute all the express provisions of our national
-Constitution, and the Union will endure forever; it being impossible
-to destroy it, except by some action not provided for in the instrument
-itself.
-
-Again, if the United States be not a government proper, but an
-association of States in the nature of a contract merely, can it, as a
-contract, be peaceably unmade by less than all the parties who made it?
-One party to a contract may violate it,--break it, so to speak; but does
-it not require all to lawfully rescind it? Descending from these general
-principles, we find the proposition that in legal contemplation the
-Union is perpetual confirmed by the history of the Union itself.
-
-The Union is much older than the Constitution. It was formed, in fact,
-by the Articles of Association in 1774. It was matured and continued in
-the Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was further matured, and
-the faith of all the then thirteen States expressly plighted and engaged
-that it should be perpetual, by the Articles of Confederation, in 1778;
-and, finally, in 1787, one of the declared objects for ordaining and
-establishing the Constitution was to form a more perfect Union. But, if
-the destruction of the Union by one or by a part only of the States
-be lawfully possible, the Union is less than before, the Constitution
-having lost the vital element of perpetuity.
-
-It follows from these views that no State, upon its own mere motion,
-can lawfully get out of the Union; that resolves and ordinances to that
-effect are legally void; and that acts of violence within any State or
-States against the authority of the United States, are insurrectionary
-or revolutionary according to circumstances.
-
-I therefore consider, that, in view of the Constitution and the laws,
-the Union is unbroken; and, to the extent of my ability, I shall take
-care, as the Constitution itself expressly enjoins upon me, that the
-laws of the Union shall be faithfully executed in all the States.
-Doing this, which I deem to be only a simple duty on my part, I shall
-perfectly perform it, so far as is practicable, unless my rightful
-masters, the American people, shall withhold the requisite power, or in
-some authoritative manner direct the contrary.
-
-I trust this will not be regarded as a menace, but only as the declared
-purpose of the Union that it will constitutionally defend and maintain
-itself.
-
-In doing this, there need be no bloodshed or violence; and there shall
-be none unless it is forced upon the national authority.
-
-The power confided to me _will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the
-property and places belonging to the government_, and collect the duties
-and imposts; but, beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there
-will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the people
-anywhere.
-
-Where hostility to the United States shall be so great and so universal
-as to prevent competent resident citizens from holding the Federal
-offices, there will be no attempt to force obnoxious strangers among the
-people for that object. While the strict legal right may exist of the
-Government to enforce the exercise of these offices, the attempt to do
-so would be so irritating, and so nearly impracticable withal, that I
-deem it better to forego for the time the uses of such offices.
-
-The mails, unless repelled, will continue to be furnished in all parts
-of the Union.
-
-So far as possible, the people everywhere shall have that sense of
-perfect security which is most favorable to calm thought and reflection.
-
-The course here indicated will be followed, unless current events and
-experience shall show a modification or change to be proper; and in
-every case and exigency my best discretion will be exercised according
-to the circumstances actually existing, and with a view and hope of
-a peaceful solution of the national troubles, and the restoration of
-fraternal sympathies and affections.
-
-That there are persons, in one section or another, who seek to destroy
-the Union at all events, and are glad of any pretext to do it, I will
-neither affirm nor deny. But, if there be such, I need address no word
-to them.
-
-To those, however, who really love the Union, may I not speak? Before
-entering upon so grave a matter as the destruction of our national
-fabric, with all its benefits, its memories, and its hopes, would it not
-be well to ascertain why we do it? Will you hazard so desperate a step,
-while any portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence? Will
-you, while the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real
-ones you fly from? Will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
-All profess to be content in the Union if all constitutional rights can
-be maintained. Is it true, then, that any right, plainly written in the
-Constitution, has been denied? I think not. Happily the human mind is so
-constituted, that no party can reach to the audacity of doing this.
-
-Think, if you can, of a single instance in which a plainly written
-provision of the Constitution has ever been denied. If, by the mere
-force of numbers, a majority should deprive a minority of any clearly
-written constitutional right, it might, in a moral point of view,
-justify revolution: it certainly would, if such right were a vital one.
-But such is not our case.
-
-All the vital rights of minorities and of individuals are so plainly
-assured to them by affirmations and negations, guaranties and
-prohibitions, in the Constitution, that controversies never arise
-concerning them. But no organic law can ever be framed with a provision
-specifically applicable to every question which may occur in practical
-administration. No foresight can anticipate, nor any document of
-reasonable length contain, express provisions for all possible
-questions. Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by National or by
-State authority? The Constitution does not expressly say. Must Congress
-protect slavery in the Territories? The Constitution does not expressly
-say. From questions of this class spring all our constitutional
-controversies, and we divide upon them into majorities and minorities.
-
-If the minority will not acquiesce, the majority must, or the government
-must cease. There is no alternative for continuing the government but
-acquiescence on the one side or the other. If a minority, in such a
-case, will secede rather than acquiesce, they make a precedent which in
-turn will ruin and divide them; for a minority of their own will secede
-from them, whenever a majority refuses to be controlled by such a
-minority. For instance, why not any portion of a new confederacy, a year
-or two hence, arbitrarily secede again, precisely as portions of the
-present Union now claim to secede from it? All who cherish disunion
-sentiments are now being educated to the exact temper of doing this. Is
-there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose
-a new Union as to produce harmony only, and prevent renewed secession?
-Plainly, the central idea of secession is the essence of anarchy.
-
-A majority held in restraint by constitutional check and limitation, and
-always changing easily with deliberate changes of popular opinions and
-sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people. Whoever rejects
-it does, of necessity, fly to anarchy or to despotism. Unanimity is
-impossible: the rule of a minority, as a permanent arrangement, is
-wholly inadmissible; so that, rejecting the majority principle, anarchy
-or despotism in some form is all that is left.
-
-I do not forget the position assumed by some, that constitutional
-questions are to be decided by the Supreme Court, nor do I deny that
-such decisions must be binding in any case upon the parties to a suit,
-as to the object of that suit; while they are also entitled to very high
-respect and consideration in all parallel cases by all other departments
-of the government; and, while it is obviously possible that such
-decision may be erroneous in any given case, still, the evil effect
-following it, being limited to that particular case, with the chance
-that it may be overruled and never become a precedent for other cases,
-can better be borne than could the evils of a different practice.
-
-At the same time, the candid citizen must confess, that, if the policy
-of the government upon the vital questions affecting the whole people
-is to be irrevocably fixed by the decisions of the Supreme Court the
-instant they are made, as in ordinary litigation between parties in
-personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own masters,
-having to that extent practically resigned their government into the
-hands of that eminent tribunal.
-
-Nor is there in this view any assault upon the court or the judges.
-It is a duty from which they may not shrink, to decide cases properly
-brought before them; and it is no fault of theirs if others seek to
-turn their decisions to political purposes. One section of our country
-believes slavery is right and ought to be extended, while the other
-believes it is wrong and ought not to be extended; and this is the only
-substantial dispute: and the fugitive-slave clause of the Constitution,
-and the law for the suppression of the foreign slave-trade, are each as
-well enforced, perhaps, as any law can ever be in a community where the
-moral sense of the people imperfectly supports the law itself. The great
-body of the people abide by the dry, legal obligation in both cases, and
-a few break over in each. This, I think, cannot be perfectly cured; and
-it would be worse in both cases after the separation of the sections
-than before. The foreign slave-trade, now imperfectly suppressed,
-would be ultimately revived, without restriction, in one section;
-while fugitive slaves, now only partially surrendered, would not be
-surrendered at all by the other.
-
-Physically speaking, we cannot separate: we cannot remove our respective
-sections from each other, nor build an impassable wall between them. A
-husband and wife may be divorced, and go out of the presence and beyond
-the reach of each other; but the different parts of our country cannot
-do this. They cannot but remain face to face; and intercourse, either
-amicable or hostile, must continue between them. Is it possible, then,
-to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after
-separation than before? Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can
-make laws? Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than
-laws can among friends? Suppose you go to war, you cannot fight always;
-and when, after much loss on both sides, and no gain on either, you
-cease fighting, the identical questions as to terms of intercourse are
-again upon you.
-
-This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit
-it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can
-exercise their constitutional right of amending, or their revolutionary
-right to dismember or overthrow it. I cannot be ignorant of the fact,
-that many worthy and patriotic citizens are desirous of having the
-national Constitution amended. While I make no recommendation of
-amendment, I fully recognize the full authority of the people over the
-whole subject, to be exercised in either of the modes prescribed in the
-instrument itself; and I should, under existing circumstances, favor
-rather than oppose a fair opportunity being afforded the people to act
-upon it.
-
-I will venture to add, that to me the convention mode seems preferable,
-in that it allows amendments to originate with the people themselves,
-instead of only permitting them to take or reject propositions
-originated by others not especially chosen for the purpose, and which
-might not be precisely such as they would wish either to accept or
-refuse. I understand that a proposed amendment to the Constitution
-(which amendment, however, I have not seen) has passed Congress, to
-the effect that the Federal Government shall never interfere with the
-domestic institutions of States, including that of persons held to
-service. To avoid misconstruction of what I have said, I depart from my
-purpose not to speak of particular amendments so far as to say, that,
-holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no
-objection to its being made express and irrevocable.
-
-The chief magistrate derives all his authority from the people, and they
-have conferred none upon him to fix the terms for the separation of the
-States. The people themselves, also, can do this if they choose; but the
-Executive, as such, has nothing to do with it. His duty is to administer
-the present government as it came to his hands, and to transmit it
-unimpaired by him to his successor. Why should there not be a patient
-confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? Is there any better
-or equal hope in the world? In our present differences, is either party
-without faith of being in the right? If the Almighty Ruler of nations,
-with his eternal truth and justice, be on your side of the North, or on
-yours of the South, that truth and that justice will surely prevail by
-the judgment of this great tribunal,--the American people. By the frame
-of the government under which we live, this same people have wisely
-given their public servants but little power for mischief, and have with
-equal wisdom provided for the return of that little to their own hands
-at very short intervals. While the people retain their virtue and
-vigilance, no administration, by any extreme wickedness or folly, can
-very seriously injure the Government in the short space of four years.
-
-My countrymen, one and all, think calmly and well upon this whole
-subject. Nothing valuable can be lost by taking time.
-
-If there be an object to hurry any of you, in hot haste, to a step which
-you would never take deliberately, that object will be frustrated by
-taking time; but no good object can be frustrated by it.
-
-Such of you as are now dissatisfied still have the old Constitution
-unimpaired, and, on the sensitive point, the laws of your own framing
-under it; while the new administration will have no immediate power, if
-it would, to change either.
-
-If it were admitted that you who are dissatisfied hold the right side
-in the dispute, there is still no single reason for precipitate action.
-Intelligence, patriotism, Christianity, and a firm reliance on Him who
-has never yet forsaken this favored land, are still competent to adjust,
-in the best way, all our present difficulties.
-
-In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine, is
-the momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you.
-
-You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You
-can have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government; while I
-shall have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend" it.
-
-I am loah to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be
-enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds
-of affection.
-
-The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and
-patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad
-land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as
-surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.
-
-This address, so characteristic of its author, and so full of the
-best qualities of Mr. Lincoln's nature, was well received by the
-large audience which heard it. Having finished, Mr. Lincoln turned to
-Chief-Justice Taney, who, with much apparent agitation and emotion,
-administered to him the following oath:--
-
-"I, Abraham Lincoln, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute
-the office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of
-my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United
-States."
-
-The ceremony concluded, Mr. Lincoln, as President of the United States,
-in charge of the Committee of Arrangements, was accompanied by Mr.
-Buchanan back to the Senate- Chamber, and from there to the Executive
-Mansion. Here Mr. Buchanan took leave of him, invoking upon his
-administration a peaceful and happy result; and here for the present we
-leave him. In another volume we shall endeavor to trace his career as
-the nation's Chief Magistrate during the ensuing four years.
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography1 588]
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography2 590]
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography3 592]
-
-THE circumstances under which the original of the accompanying
-_facsimile_ was written are explained in the following letter:--
-
-National Hotel, Washington, D.C., Feb. 19, 1872. Colonel Ward H. Lamon.
-
-Dear Sir,--In compliance with your request, I place in your hands a copy
-of a manuscript in my possession written by Abraham Lincoln, giving
-a brief account of his early history, and the commencement of that
-political career which terminated in his election to the Presidency.
-
-It may not be inappropriate to say, that some time preceding the writing
-of the enclosed, finding, in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, a laudable
-curiosity in the public mind to know more about the early history of
-Mr. Lincoln, and looking, too, to the possibilities of his being
-an available candidate for the Presidency in 1860, I had on several
-occasions requested of him this information, and that it was not without
-some hesitation he placed in my hands even this very modest account of
-himself, which he did in the month of December, 1859.
-
-To this were added, by myself, other facts bearing upon his legislative
-and political history, and the whole forwarded to a friend residing
-in my native county (Chester, Pa.),--the Hon. Joseph J. Lewis, former
-Commissioner of Internal Revenue,--who made them the basis of an
-ably-written and somewhat elaborate memoir of the late President, which
-appeared in the Pennsylvania and other papers of the country in January,
-1860, and which contributed to prepare the way for the subsequent
-nomination at Chicago the following June.
-
-Believing this brief and unpretending narrative, written by himself in
-his own peculiar vein,--and injustice to him I should add, without
-the remotest expectation of its ever appearing in public,--with the
-attending circumstances, may be of interest to the numerous admirers of
-that historic and truly great man, I place it at your disposal.
-
-I am truly yours,
-
-Jesse W. Fell.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
-
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- <head>
- <title>
- The Life of Lincoln by Ward H. Lamon.
- </title>
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-
- body { margin:5%; text-align:justify}
- P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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- <body>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Life Of Abraham Lincoln
- From His Birth To His Inauguration As President
-
-Author: Ward H. Lamon
-
-Illustrator: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2012 [EBook #40977]
-Last Updated: November 10, 2012
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN;
- </h1>
- <h2>
- FROM HIS BIRTH TO HIS INAUGURATION AS PRESIDENT.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <h2>
- ByWard H. Lamon.
- </h2>
- <h3>
- <br /> With Illustrations. <br /><br /> Boston: <br /><br /> James R. Osgood
- And Company, <br /><br /> 1872. <br /> <br />
- </h3>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <a name="image-0001" id="image-0001">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="Frontispiece " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0002" id="image-0002">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/titlepage.jpg" alt="Titlepage " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- PREFACE.
- </h2>
- <p>
- IN the following pages I have endeavored to give the life of Abraham
- Lincoln, from his birth to his inauguration as President of the United
- States. The reader will judge the character of the performance by the work
- itself: for that reason I shall spare him the perusal of much prefatory
- explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time of Mr. Lincoln's death, I determined to write his history, as
- I had in my possession much valuable material for such a purpose. I did
- not then imagine that any person could have better or more extensive
- materials than I possessed. I soon learned, however, that Mr. William H.
- Herndon of Springfield, Ill., was similarly engaged. There could be no
- rivalry between us; for the supreme object of both was to make the real
- history and character of Mr. Lincoln as well known to the public as they
- were to us. He deplored, as I did, the many publications pretending to be
- biographies which came teeming from the press, so long as the public
- interest about Mr. Lincoln excited the hope of gain. Out of the mass of
- works which appeared, of one only&mdash;Dr. Holland's&mdash;is it possible
- to speak with any degree of respect.
- </p>
- <p>
- Early in 1869, Mr. Herndon placed at my disposal his remarkable collection
- of materials,&mdash;the richest, rarest, and fullest collection it was
- possible to conceive. Along with them came an offer of hearty
- co-operation, of which I have availed myself so extensively, that no art
- of mine would serve to conceal it. Added to my own collections, these
- acquisitions have enabled me to do what could not have been done before,&mdash;prepare
- an authentic biography of Mr. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Herndon had been the partner in business and the intimate personal
- associate of Mr. Lincoln for something like a quarter of a century; and
- Mr. Lincoln had lived familiarly with several members of his family long
- before their individual acquaintance began. New Salem, Springfield, the
- old judicial circuit, the habits and friends of Mr. Lincoln, were as well
- known to Mr. Herndon as to himself. With these advantages, and from the
- numberless facts and hints which had dropped from Mr. Lincoln during the
- confidential intercourse of an ordinary lifetime, Mr. Herndon was able to
- institute a thorough system of inquiry for every noteworthy circumstance
- and every incident of value in Mr. Lincoln's career.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fruits of Mr. Herndon's labors are garnered in three enormous volumes
- of original manuscripts and a mass of unarranged letters and papers. They
- comprise the recollections of Mr. Lincoln's nearest friends; of the
- surviving members of his family and his family-connections; of the men
- still living who knew him and his parents in Kentucky; of his
- schoolfellows, neighbors, and acquaintances in Indiana; of the better part
- of the whole population of New Salem; of his associates and relatives at
- Springfield; and of lawyers, judges, politicians, and statesmen
- everywhere, who had any thing of interest or moment to relate. They were
- collected at vast expense of time, labor, and money, involving the
- employment of many agents, long journeys, tedious examinations, and
- voluminous correspondence. Upon the value of these materials it would be
- impossible to place an estimate. That I have used them conscientiously and
- justly is the only merit to which I lay claim.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a general thing, my text will be found to support itself; but whether
- the particular authority be mentioned or not, it is proper to remark, that
- each statement of fact is fully sustained by indisputable evidence
- remaining in my possession. My original plan was to verify every important
- statement by one or more appropriate citations; but it was early
- abandoned, not because it involved unwelcome labor, but because it
- encumbered my pages with a great array of obscure names, which the reader
- would probably pass unnoticed.
- </p>
- <p>
- I dismiss this volume into the world, with no claim for it of literary
- excellence, but with the hope that it will prove what it purports to be,&mdash;a
- faithful record of the life of Abraham Lincoln down to the 4th of March,
- 1861.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ward H. Lamon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington City, May, 1872.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p class="toc">
- <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_TOC"> TABLE OF CONTENTS. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_APPE"> APPENDIX. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <big><b>ILLUSTRATIONS</b></big>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0001"> Frontispiece </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0002"> Titlepage </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0003"> Mrs. Sarah Lincoln, Mother of the President </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0004"> Dennis Hanks </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0005"> Mr. Lincoln As a Flatboatman </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0006"> Map of New Salem </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0007"> Black Hawk, Indian Chief </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0008"> Joshua F. Speed </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0009"> Judge David Davis </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0010"> Stephen T. Logan </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0011"> John T. Stuart </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0012"> William Herndon </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0013"> Uncle John Hanks </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0014"> Mr. Lincoln's Home in Springfield, Ill. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0015"> Norman B. Judd </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0016"> Facsimile of Autobiography 1 </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0017"> Facsimile of Autobiography 2 </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#image-0018"> Facsimile of Autobiography 3 </a>
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- TABLE OF CONTENTS.
- </h2>
- <blockquote>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER I. <br /> Birth.&mdash;His father and mother.&mdash;History of
- Thomas Lincoln and his family <br /> a necessary part of Abraham
- Lincoln's biography.&mdash;Thomas Lincoln's <br /> ancestors.&mdash;Members
- of the family remaining in Virginia.&mdash;Birth of <br /> Thomas
- Lincoln.&mdash;Removal to Kentucky.&mdash;Life in the Wilderness.&mdash;Lincolns
- <br /> settle in Mercer County.&mdash;Thomas Lincoln's father shot by
- <br /> Indians.&mdash;Widow and family remove to Washington County.&mdash;Thomas
- <br /> poor.&mdash;Wanders into Breckinridge County.&mdash;Goes to Hardin
- County.&mdash;Works <br /> at the carpenter's trade.&mdash;Cannot read or
- write.&mdash;Personal <br /> appearance.&mdash;Called "Linckhom," or
- "Linckhera."&mdash;Thomas Lincoln as <br /> a carpenter.&mdash;Marries
- Nancy Hanks.&mdash;Previously courted Sally <br /> Bush.&mdash;Character
- of Sally Bush.&mdash;The person and character of Nancy <br /> Hanks.&mdash;Thomas
- and Nancy Lincoln go to live in a shed.&mdash;Birth of a <br /> daughter.&mdash;They
- remove to Nolin Creek.&mdash;Birth of Abraham.&mdash;Removal to <br />
- Knob Creek.&mdash;Little Abe initiated into wild sports.&mdash;His
- sadness.&mdash;Goes <br /> to school.&mdash;Thomas Lincoln concludes to
- move.&mdash;Did not fly from the <br /> taint of slavery.&mdash;Abraham
- Lincoln always reticent about the history and <br /> character of his
- family.&mdash;Record in his Bible... 1 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER II. <br /> Thomas Lincoln builds a boat.&mdash;Floats down to the
- Ohio.&mdash;Boat <br /> capsizes.&mdash;Lands in Perry County, Indiana.&mdash;Selects
- a location.&mdash;Walks <br /> back to Knob Creek for wife and children.&mdash;Makes
- his way through <br /> the wilderness.&mdash;Settles between the two
- Pigeon Creeks.&mdash;Gentry <br /> ville.&mdash;Selects a site.&mdash;Lincoln
- builds a half-faced camp.&mdash;Clears <br /> ground and raises a small
- crop.&mdash;Dennis Hanks.&mdash;Lincoln builds a <br /> cabin.&mdash;State
- of the country.&mdash;Indiana admitted to the Union.&mdash;Rise <br /> of
- Gentryville.&mdash;Character of the people.&mdash;Lincoln's patent for
- his <br /> land.&mdash;His farm, cabin, furniture.&mdash;The
- milk-sickness.&mdash;Death of Nancy <br /> Hanks Lincoln.&mdash;Funeral
- discourse by David Elkin.&mdash;Grave.&mdash;Tom Lincoln <br /> marries
- Sally Bush.&mdash;Her goods and chattels.&mdash;Her surprise at the
- <br /> poverty of the Lincoln cabin.&mdash;Clothes and comforts Abe and
- his <br /> sister.&mdash;Abe leads a new life.&mdash;Is sent to school.&mdash;Abe's
- appearance and <br /> dress.&mdash;Learning "manners"&mdash;Abe's essays.&mdash;Tenderness
- for animals.&mdash;The <br /> last of school.&mdash;Abe excelled the
- masters.&mdash;Studied privately.&mdash;Did not <br /> like to work.&mdash;Wrote
- on wooden shovel and boards.&mdash;How Abe studied.&mdash;The <br />
- books he read.&mdash;The "Revised Statute of Indiana."&mdash;Did not
- read the <br /> Bible.&mdash;No religious opinions.&mdash;How he behaved
- at home.&mdash;Touching <br /> recital by Mrs. Lincoln.&mdash;Abe's
- memory.&mdash;Mimicks the preachers.&mdash;Makes <br /> "stump-speeches"
- in the field.&mdash;Cruelly maltreated by his father.&mdash;Works <br />
- out cheerfully.&mdash;Universal favorite.&mdash;The kind of people he
- lived <br /> amongst.&mdash;Mrs. Crawford's reminiscences.&mdash;Society
- about Gentryville. <br /> &mdash;His step-mother.&mdash;His sister.&mdash;The
- Johnstons and Hankses.&mdash;Abe a <br /> ferryman and farm-servant.&mdash;His
- work and habits.&mdash;Works for Josiah <br /> Crawford.&mdash;Mrs.
- Crawford's account of him.&mdash;Crawford's books.&mdash;Becomes <br /> a
- wit and a poet.&mdash;Abe the tallest and strongest man in the <br />
- settlement.&mdash;Hunting in the Pigeon Creek region.&mdash;His
- activity.&mdash;Love of <br /> talking and reading.&mdash;Fond of rustic
- sports.&mdash;Furnishes the <br /> literature.&mdash;Would not be
- slighted.&mdash;His satires.&mdash;Songs and <br /> chronicles.&mdash;Gentryville
- as "a centre of business."&mdash;Abe and other <br /> boys loiter about
- the village.&mdash;Very temperate.&mdash;"Clerks" for Col. <br /> Jones.&mdash;Abe
- saves a drunken man's life.&mdash;Fond of music.&mdash;Marriage of his
- <br /> sister Nancy.&mdash;Extracts from his copy-book.&mdash;His
- Chronicles.&mdash;Fight with <br /> the Grigs-bys.&mdash;Abe "the big
- buck of the lick."&mdash;"Speaking meetings" <br /> at Gentryville.&mdash;Dennis
- Hanks's account of the way he and Abe became so <br /> learned.&mdash;Abe
- attends a court.&mdash;Abe expects to be President.&mdash;Going <br /> to
- mill.&mdash;Kicked in the head by a horse.&mdash;Mr. Wood.&mdash;Piece
- on <br /> temperance.&mdash;On national politics.&mdash;Abe tired of
- home.&mdash;Works for <br /> Mr. Gentry.&mdash;Knowledge of astronomy and
- geography.&mdash;Goes to New <br /> Orleans.&mdash;Counterfeit money.&mdash;Fight
- with negroes.&mdash;Scar on his face. <br /> &mdash;An apocryphal
- story...........19 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER III. <br /> Abe's return from New Orleans.&mdash;Sawing planks
- for a new house.&mdash;The <br /> milk-sickness.&mdash;Removal to
- Illinois.&mdash;Settles near Decatur.&mdash;Abe leaves <br /> home.&mdash;Subsequent
- removals and death of Thomas Lincoln.&mdash;Abe's relations <br /> to the
- family.&mdash;Works with John Hanks after leaving home.&mdash;Splitting
- <br /> rails.&mdash;Makes a speech on the improvement of the Sangamon
- River.&mdash;Second <br /> voyage to New Orleans.&mdash;Loading and
- departure of the boat.&mdash;"Sticks" on <br /> New Salem dam.&mdash;Abe's
- contrivance to get her off.&mdash;Model in the Patent <br /> Office.&mdash;Arrival
- at New Orleans.&mdash;Negroes chained.&mdash;Abe touched by the <br />
- sight.&mdash;Returns on a steamboat.&mdash;Wrestles with Daniel
- Needham.........73 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER IV. <br /> The site of New Salem.&mdash;The village as it
- existed.&mdash;The <br /> first store.&mdash;Number of inhabitants.&mdash;Their
- <br /> houses.&mdash;Springfield.&mdash;Petersburg.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln
- appears a second time <br /> at New Salem.&mdash;Clerks at an election.&mdash;Pilots
- a boat to <br /> Beardstown.&mdash;Country store.&mdash;Abe as "first
- clerk."&mdash;"Clary's Grove <br /> Boys."&mdash;Character of Jack
- Armstrong.&mdash;He and Abe become intimate <br /> friends.&mdash;Abe's
- popularity.&mdash;Love of peace.&mdash;Habits of study.&mdash;Waylaying
- <br /> strangers for information.&mdash;Pilots the steamer "Talisman" up
- and down <br /> the Sangamon.......85 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER V. <br /> Offutt's business gone to ruin.&mdash;The Black Hawk
- War.&mdash;Black Hawk crosses <br /> the Mississippi.&mdash;Deceived by
- his allies.&mdash;The governor's call for <br /> troops.&mdash;Abe
- enlists&mdash;Elected captain.&mdash;A speech.&mdash;Organization of the
- <br /> army.&mdash;Captain Lincoln under arrest.&mdash;The march.&mdash;Captain
- Lincoln's <br /> company declines to form.&mdash;Lincoln under arrest.&mdash;Stillman's
- <br /> defeat.&mdash;Wasting rations.&mdash;Hunger.&mdash;Mutiny.&mdash;March
- to Dixon.&mdash;Attempt <br /> to capture Black Hawk's pirogues.&mdash;Lincoln
- saves the life of <br /> an Indian.&mdash;Mutiny.&mdash;Lincoln's novel
- method of quelling <br /> it.&mdash;Wrestling.&mdash;His magnanimity.&mdash;Care
- of his men.&mdash;Dispute with a <br /> regular officer.&mdash;Reach
- Dixon.&mdash;Move to Fox River.&mdash;A stampede.&mdash;Captain <br />
- Lincoln's efficiency as an officer.&mdash;Amusements of the camp.&mdash;Captain
- <br /> Lincoln re-enlists as a private.&mdash;Independent spy company.&mdash;Progress
- of <br /> the war.&mdash;Capture of Black Hawk.&mdash;Release.&mdash;Death.&mdash;Grave.&mdash;George
- <br /> W. Harrison's recollections.&mdash;Duties of the spy company.&mdash;Company
- <br /> disbanded.&mdash;Lincoln's horse stolen.&mdash;They start home on
- foot.&mdash;Buy <br /> a canoe.&mdash;Feast on a raft.&mdash;Sell the
- boat.&mdash;Walk again.&mdash;Arrive at <br /> Petersburg.&mdash;A sham
- battle........98 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER VI. <br /> The volunteers from Sangamon return shortly before the
- State <br /> election.&mdash;Abe a candidate for the Legislature.&mdash;Mode
- of bringing <br /> forward candidates.&mdash;Parties and party names.&mdash;State
- and national <br /> politics.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's position.&mdash;Old way
- of conducting <br /> elections.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's first stump-speech.&mdash;"A
- general fight."&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln's part in it.&mdash;His dress
- and appearance.&mdash;Speech at Island <br /> Grove.&mdash;His stories.&mdash;A
- third speech.&mdash;Agrees with the Whigs in the <br /> policy of
- internal improvements.&mdash;His own hobby.&mdash;Prepares an address to
- <br /> the people.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln defeated.&mdash;Received every vote
- but three cast <br /> in his own precinct....121 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER VII. <br /> Results of the canvass.&mdash;An opening in business.&mdash;The
- firm of Lincoln <br /> &amp; Berry.&mdash;How they sold liquor.&mdash;What
- Mr. Douglas said.&mdash;The store a <br /> failure.&mdash;Berry's bad
- habits.&mdash;The credit system.&mdash;Lincoln's debts.&mdash;He <br />
- goes to board at the tavern.&mdash;Studies law.&mdash;Walks to
- Springfield for <br /> books.&mdash;Progress in the law.&mdash;Does
- business for his neighbors.&mdash;Other <br /> studies.&mdash;Reminiscences
- of J. Y. Ellis.&mdash;Shy of ladies.&mdash;His <br /> apparel.&mdash;Fishing,
- and spouting Shakspeare and Burns.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln <br /> annoyed by
- company.&mdash;Retires to the country.&mdash;Bowlin Greene.&mdash;Mr.
- <br /> Lincoln's attempt to speak a funeral discourse.&mdash;John
- Calhoun.&mdash;Lincoln <br /> studies surveying.&mdash;Gets employment.&mdash;Lincoln
- appointed postmaster.&mdash;How <br /> he performed the duties.&mdash;Sale
- of Mr. Lincoln's personal property under <br /> execution.&mdash;Bought
- by James Short.&mdash;Lincoln's visits.&mdash;Old Hannah.&mdash;Ah.
- <br /> Trent.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln as a peacemaker.&mdash;His great
- strength.&mdash;The <br /> judicial quality.&mdash;Acting second in
- fights.&mdash;A candidate for the <br /> Legislature.&mdash;Elected.&mdash;Borrows
- two hundred dollars from Coleman <br /> Smoot.&mdash;How they got
- acquainted.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln writes a little book on <br /> infidelity.&mdash;It
- is burnt by Samuel Hill........135 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER VIII. <br /> James Rutledge.&mdash;His family.&mdash;Ann
- Rutledge.&mdash;John McNeil.&mdash;Is engaged <br /> to Ann.&mdash;His
- strange story.&mdash;The loveliness of Ann's person <br /> and character.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln courts her.&mdash;They are engaged to be <br /> married.&mdash;Await
- the return of McNeil.&mdash;Ann dies of a broken <br /> heart.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln goes crazy.&mdash;Cared for by Bowlin Greene.&mdash;The poem
- <br /> "Immortality."&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's melancholy broodings.&mdash;Interviews
- with <br /> Isaac Cogdale after his election to the Presidency.&mdash;Mr.
- Herndon's <br /> interview with McNamar.&mdash;Ann's grave.&mdash;The
- Concord cemetery...159 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER IX. <br /> Bennett Able and family.&mdash;Mary Owens.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln falls in love with <br /> her.&mdash;What she thought of him.&mdash;A
- misunderstanding.&mdash;Letters from Miss <br /> Owens.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's letters to her.&mdash;Humorous account of the affair in <br />
- a letter from Mr. Lincoln to another lady......172 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER X. <br /> Mr. Lincoln takes his seat in the Legislature.&mdash;Schemes
- of internal <br /> improvement.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln a silent member.&mdash;Meets
- Stephen A. <br /> Douglas.&mdash;Log-rolling.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln a
- candidate for re-election.&mdash;The <br /> canvass.&mdash;"The Long
- Nine."&mdash;Speech at Mechanicsburg.&mdash;Fight.&mdash;Reply to <br />
- Dr. Early.&mdash;Reply to George Forquer.&mdash;Trick on Dick Taylor.&mdash;Attempts
- <br /> to create a third party.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln elected.&mdash;Federal
- and State <br /> politics.&mdash;The Bank of the United States.&mdash;Suspension
- of specie <br /> payments.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln wishes to be the De Witt
- Clinton of <br /> Illinois.&mdash;The internal-improvement system.&mdash;Capital
- located <br /> at Springfield.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's conception of the duty
- of a <br /> representative.&mdash;His part in passing the "system."&mdash;Begins
- <br /> his antislavery record.&mdash;Public sentiment against the <br />
- Abolitionists.&mdash;History of antislavery in Illinois.&mdash;The <br />
- Covenanters.&mdash;Struggle to amend the Constitution.&mdash;The "black
- <br /> code."&mdash;Death of Elijah P. Lovejoy.&mdash;Protest against
- proslavery <br /> resolutions.&mdash;No sympathy with extremists.&mdash;Suspension
- of <br /> specie payments.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln re-elected in 1838.&mdash;Candidate
- for <br /> Speaker.&mdash;Finances.&mdash;Utter failure of the
- internal-improvement <br /> "system."&mdash;Mr. Lincoln re-elected in
- 1840.&mdash;He introduces a bill.&mdash;His <br /> speech.&mdash;Financial
- expedients.&mdash;Bitterness of feeling.&mdash;Democrats seek <br /> to
- hold a quorum.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln jumps out of a window.&mdash;Speech by
- Mr. <br /> Lincoln.&mdash;The alien question.&mdash;The Democrats
- undertake to "reform" the <br /> judiciary.&mdash;Mr. Douglas a leader.&mdash;Protest
- of Mr. Lincoln and <br /> other Whigs.&mdash;Reminiscences of a
- colleague.&mdash;Dinner to "The Long <br /> Nine."&mdash;"Abraham Lincoln
- one of nature's noblemen."..........184 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XI. <br /> Capital removed to Springfield.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln
- settles there to practise <br /> law.&mdash;First case.&mdash;Members of
- the bar.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's partnership with <br /> John T. Stuart.&mdash;Population
- and condition of Springfield.&mdash;Lawyers <br /> and politicians.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's intense ambition.&mdash;Lecture before the <br /> Springfield
- Lyceum.&mdash;His style.&mdash;Political discussions run <br /> high.&mdash;Joshua
- F. Speed his most intimate friend.&mdash;Scene in Speed's <br /> store.&mdash;Debate.&mdash;Douglas,
- Calhoun, Lamborn, and Thomas, against Lincoln, <br /> Logan, Baker, and
- Browning.&mdash;Presidential elector in 1840.&mdash;Stumping <br /> for
- Harrison.&mdash;Scene between Lincoln and Douglas in the Court-House.&mdash;A
- <br /> failure.&mdash;Redeems himself.&mdash;Meets Miss Mary Todd.&mdash;She
- takes Mr. Lincoln <br /> captive.&mdash;She refuses Douglas.&mdash;Engaged.&mdash;Miss
- Matilda Edwards.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln undergoes a change of heart.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln reveals to Mary the <br /> state of his mind.&mdash;She releases
- him.&mdash;A reconciliation.&mdash;Every thing <br /> prepared for the
- wedding.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln fails to appear.&mdash;Insane.&mdash;Speed
- <br /> takes him to Kentucky.&mdash;Lines on "Suicide."&mdash;His gloom.&mdash;Return
- <br /> to Springfield.&mdash;Secret meetings with Miss Todd.&mdash;Sudden
- <br /> marriage.&mdash;Correspondence with Mr. Speed on delicate
- subjects.&mdash;Relics <br /> of a great man and a great agony.&mdash;Miss
- Todd attacks James Shields in <br /> certain witty and sarcastic letters.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's name "given up" <br /> as the author.&mdash;Challenged by
- Shields.&mdash;A meeting and an <br /> explanation.&mdash;Correspondence.&mdash;Candidate
- for Congressional <br /> nomination.&mdash;Letters to Speed and Morris.&mdash;Defeat..
- 223 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XII. <br /> Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector in 1844.&mdash;Debates
- with <br /> Calhoun.&mdash;Speaks in Illinois and Indiana.&mdash;At
- Gentryville.&mdash;Lincoln, <br /> Baker, Logan, Hardin, aspirants for
- Congress.&mdash;Supposed <br /> bargain.&mdash;Canvass for Whig
- nomination in 1846.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln <br /> nominated.&mdash;Opposed by
- Peter Cartwright.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln called a <br /> deist.&mdash;Elected.&mdash;Takes
- his seat.&mdash;Distinguished members.&mdash;Opposed <br /> to the
- Mexican War.&mdash;The "Spot Resolutions."&mdash;Speech of Mr. <br />
- Lincoln.&mdash;Murmurs of disapprobation.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln for "Old
- Rough" in <br /> 1848.&mdash;Defections at home.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's
- campaign.&mdash;Speech.&mdash;Passage <br /> not generally published.&mdash;Letter
- to his father.&mdash;Second session.&mdash;The <br /> "Gott Resolution."&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's substitute..............274 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XIII. <br /> Mr. Lincoln in his character of country lawyer.&mdash;Public
- feeling at <br /> the time of his death.&mdash;Judge Davis's address at a
- bar-meeting.&mdash;Judge <br /> Drummond's address.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's
- partnership with John T. <br /> Stuart.&mdash;With Stephen. T. Logan.&mdash;With
- William H. Herndon.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln "a case-lawyer."&mdash;Slow.&mdash;Conscientious.&mdash;Henry
- McHenry's <br /> case.&mdash;Circumstantial evidence.&mdash;A startling
- case.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's <br /> account of it.&mdash;His first case in
- the Supreme Court.&mdash;Could not defend a <br /> bad case.&mdash;Ignorance
- of technicalities.&mdash;The Eighth Circuit.&mdash;Happy <br /> on the
- circuit.&mdash;Style of travelling.&mdash;His relations.&mdash;Young
- Johnson <br /> indicted.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's kindness.&mdash;Jack
- Armstrong's son tried <br /> for murder.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln defends him.&mdash;Alleged
- use of a false <br /> almanac.&mdash;Prisoner discharged.&mdash;Old
- Hannah's account of it.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln's suit against Illinois
- Central Railway Company.&mdash;McCormick <br /> Reaping Machine case.&mdash;Treatment
- by Edwin M. Stanton........311 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XIV. <br /> Mr. Lincoln not a candidate for re-election.&mdash;Judge
- Logan's defeat.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln an applicant for Commissioner of
- the Land Office.&mdash;Offered the <br /> Governorship of Oregon.&mdash;Views
- concerning the Missouri Compromise <br /> and Compromise of 1850.&mdash;Declines
- to be a candidate for Congress in <br /> 1850.&mdash;Death of Thomas
- Lincoln.&mdash;Correspondence between Mr. Lincoln <br /> and John
- Johnston.&mdash;Eulogy on Henry Clay.&mdash;In favor of voluntary <br />
- emancipation and colonization.&mdash;Answer to Mr. Douglas's Richmond
- <br /> speech.&mdash;Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's views <br /> concerning slavery.&mdash;Opposed to conferring
- political privileges <br /> upon negroes.&mdash;Aroused by the repeal of
- the Missouri <br /> Compromise.&mdash;Anti-Nebraska party.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln the leader.&mdash;Mr. Douglas <br /> speaks at Chicago.&mdash;At
- Springfield.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln replies.&mdash;A <br /> great speech.&mdash;Mr.
- Douglas rejoins.&mdash;The Abolitionists.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Herndon.&mdash;Determined
- to make Mr. Lincoln an Abolitionist.&mdash;They refuse <br /> to enter
- the Know-Nothing lodges.&mdash;The Abolitionists desire to force <br />
- Mr. Lincoln to take a stand.&mdash;He runs away from Springfield.&mdash;He
- <br /> is requested to "follow up" Mr. Douglas.&mdash;Speech at <br />
- Peoria.&mdash;Extract.&mdash;Slavery and popular sovereignty.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln and <br /> Mr. Douglas agree not to speak any more.&mdash;The
- election.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln <br /> announced for the Legislature by Wm.
- Jayne.&mdash;Mrs. Lincoln withdraws his <br /> name.&mdash;Jayne restores
- it.&mdash;He is elected.&mdash;A candidate for United-States <br />
- Senator.&mdash;Resigns his seat.&mdash;Is censured.&mdash;Anti-Nebraska
- majority in <br /> the Legislature.&mdash;The balloting.&mdash;Danger of
- Governor Matteson's <br /> election.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln advises his
- friends to vote for Judge <br /> Trumbull.&mdash;Trumbull elected.&mdash;Charges
- of conspiracy and corrupt <br /> bargain.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's denial.&mdash;Mr.
- Douglas imputes to Mr. Lincoln <br /> extreme Abolitionist views.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's answer.............333 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XV. <br /> The struggle in Kansas.&mdash;The South begins the
- struggle.&mdash;The North meets <br /> it.&mdash;The Missourians and
- other proslavery forces.&mdash;Andrew H. Reeder <br /> appointed
- governor.&mdash;Election frauds.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's views on <br />
- Kansas.&mdash;Gov. Shannon arrives in the Territory.&mdash;The Free
- State men <br /> repudiate the Legislature.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's "little
- speech" to the <br /> Abolitionists of Illinois.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's
- party relations.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln <br /> agrees to meet the
- Abolitionists.&mdash;Convention at Bloomington.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln
- considered a convert.&mdash;His great speech.&mdash;Conservative <br />
- resolutions.&mdash;Ludicrous failure of a ratification meeting at <br />
- Springfield.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's remarks.&mdash;Plot to break up the
- Know-Nothing <br /> party.&mdash;"National" Republican Convention.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln receives <br /> a hundred and ten votes for Vice-President.&mdash;National
- Democratic <br /> Convention.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector.&mdash;His
- <br /> canvass.&mdash;Confidential letter.&mdash;Imperfect fellowship
- with the <br /> Abolitionists.&mdash;Mr. Douglas's speech on Kansas in
- June, 1857.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln's reply.&mdash;Mr. Douglas committed
- to support of the Lecompton <br /> Constitution.&mdash;The Dred Scott
- Decision discussed.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln <br /> against negro equality.&mdash;Affairs
- in Kansas.&mdash;Election of a new <br /> Legislature.&mdash;Submission
- of the Lecompton Constitution to <br /> the people.&mdash;Method of
- voting on it.&mdash;Constitution finally <br /> rejected.&mdash;Conflict
- in Congress.&mdash;Mr. Douglas's defection.&mdash;Extract from <br /> a
- speech by Mr. Lincoln........366 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XVI. <br /> Mr. Douglas opposes the Administration.&mdash;His
- course in <br /> Congress.&mdash;Squatter sovereignty in full operation.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's <br /> definition of popular sovereignty and squatter
- sovereignty.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Douglas's private conferences with
- Republicans.&mdash;"Judge Trumbull's <br /> opinion.&mdash;Mr. Douglas
- nominated for senator by a Democratic <br /> Convention.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's idea of what Douglas might accomplish at <br /> Charleston.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln writing a celebrated speech.&mdash;He is nominated <br /> for
- senator.&mdash;A startling doctrine.&mdash;A council of friends.&mdash;Same
- <br /> doctrine advanced at Bloomington.&mdash;The "house-divided"
- speech.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln promises to explain.&mdash;What Mr.
- Lincoln thought of Mr. <br /> Douglas.&mdash;What Mr. Douglas thought of
- Mr. Lincoln.&mdash;Popular canvass for <br /> senator.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln
- determines to "kill Douglas" as a <br /> Presidential aspirant.&mdash;Adroit
- plan to draw him out on squatter <br /> sovereignty.&mdash;Absurdities of
- Mr. Douglas.&mdash;The election.&mdash;Success of Mr. <br /> Douglas.&mdash;Reputation
- acquired by Mr. Lincoln..................389 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XVII. <br /> Mr. Lincoln writes and delivers a lecture.&mdash;The
- Presidency.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln's "running qualities."&mdash;He
- thinks himself unfit.&mdash;Nominated by <br /> "Illinois Gazette."&mdash;Letter
- to Dr. Canisius.&mdash;Letter to Dr. Wallace <br /> on the protective
- tariff policy.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln in Ohio and Kansas.&mdash;A <br />
- private meeting of his friends.&mdash;Permitted to use his name for
- <br /> the Presidency.&mdash;An invitation to speak in New York.&mdash;Choosing
- a <br /> subject.&mdash;Arrives in New York.&mdash;His embarrassments.&mdash;Speech
- in Cooper <br /> Institute.&mdash;Comments of the press.&mdash;He is
- charged with mercenary <br /> conduct.&mdash;Letter concerning the
- charge.&mdash;Visits New England.&mdash;Style <br /> and character of his
- speeches.&mdash;An amusing encounter with a clerical <br />
- politician...421 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XVIII. <br /> Meeting of the Republican State Convention.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln present.&mdash;John <br /> Hanks and the rails.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's speech.&mdash;Meeting of the Republican <br /> National
- Convention at Chicago.&mdash;The platform.&mdash;Combinations to secure
- <br /> Mr. Lincoln's nomination.&mdash;The balloting.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln
- nominated.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Lincoln at Springfield waiting the results of
- the Convention.&mdash;How <br /> he received the news.&mdash;Enthusiasm
- at Springfield.&mdash;Official <br /> notification.&mdash;The
- "Constitutional Union" party.&mdash;The Democratic <br /> Conventions at
- Charleston and Baltimore.&mdash;The election.&mdash;The <br /> principle
- upon which Mr. Lincoln proposed to make appointments.&mdash;Mr. <br />
- Stephens.&mdash;Mr. Gilmore.&mdash;Mr. Guthrie.&mdash;Mr. Seward.&mdash;Mr.
- Chase.&mdash;Mr. <br /> Bates.&mdash;The cases of Smith and Cameron.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's visit <br /> to Chicago.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's visit to his
- relatives in Coles <br /> County.&mdash;Apprehensions about
- assassination.&mdash;A visit from Hannah <br /> Armstrong... 444 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XIX. <br /> Difficulties and peculiarities of Mr. Lincoln's
- position.&mdash;A general <br /> review of his character.&mdash;His
- personal appearance and habits.&mdash;His house <br /> and other
- property.&mdash;His domestic relations.&mdash;His morbid melancholy
- <br /> and superstition.&mdash;Illustrated by his literary tastes.&mdash;His
- humor.&mdash;His <br /> temperate habits and abstinence from sensual
- pleasures.&mdash;His <br /> ambition.&mdash;Use of politics for personal
- advancement.&mdash;Love of power <br /> and place.&mdash;Of justice.&mdash;Not
- a demagogue or a trimmer.&mdash;His religious <br /> views.&mdash;Attempt
- of the Rev. Mr. Smith to convert him.&mdash;Mr. Bateman's <br /> story as
- related by Dr. Holland.&mdash;Effect of his belief upon his mind and
- <br /> character...........466 <br />
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- CHAPTER XX. <br /> Departure of the Presidential party from Springfield.&mdash;Affecting
- address <br /> by Mr. Lincoln to his friends and neighbors.&mdash;His
- opinions concerning <br /> the approaching civil war.&mdash;Discovery of
- a supposed plot to murder <br /> him at Baltimore.&mdash;Governor Hicks's
- proposal to "kill Lincoln and his <br /> men."&mdash;The plan formed to
- defeat the conspiracy.&mdash;The midnight ride <br /> from Harrisburg to
- Washington.&mdash;Arrival in Washington.&mdash;Before the <br />
- Inauguration.&mdash;Inauguration Day.&mdash;Inaugural Address.&mdash;Mr.
- Lincoln's <br /> Oath.&mdash;Mr. Lincoln President of the United States.&mdash;Mr.
- Buchanan bids <br /> him farewell............505 <br />
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <br /> <br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
- </h1>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.
- </h2>
- <p>
- ABRAHAM LINCOLN was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809. His
- father's name was Thomas Lincoln, and his mother's maiden name was Nancy
- Hanks. At the time of his birth, they are supposed to have been married
- about three years. Although there appears to have been but little sympathy
- or affection between Thomas and Abraham Lincoln, they were nevertheless
- connected by ties and associations which make the previous history of
- Thomas Lincoln and his family a necessary part of any reasonably full
- biography of the great man who immortalized the name by wearing it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thomas Lincoln's ancestors were among the early settlers of Rockingham
- County in Virginia; but exactly whence they came, or the precise time of
- their settlement there, it is impossible to tell. They were manifestly of
- English descent; but whether emigrants directly from England to Virginia,
- or an offshoot of the historic Lincoln family in Massachusetts, or of the
- highly-respectable Lincoln family in Pennsylvania, are questions left
- entirely to conjecture. We have absolutely no evidence by which to
- determine them, Thomas Lincoln himself stoutly denied that his progenitors
- were either Quakers or Puritans; but he furnished nothing except his own
- word to sustain his denial: on the contrary, some of the family (distant
- relatives of Thomas Lincoln) who remain in Virginia believe themselves to
- have sprung from the New-England stock. They found their opinion solely on
- the fact that the Christian names given to the sons of the two families
- were the same, though only in a few cases, and at different times. But
- this might have arisen merely from that common religious sentiment which
- induces parents of a devotional turn to confer scriptural names on their
- children, or it might have been purely accidental. Abrahams, Isaacs, and
- Jacobs abound in many other families who claim no kindred on that account.
- In England, during the ascendency of the Puritans, in times of fanatical
- religious excitement, the children were almost universally baptized by the
- names of the patriarchs and Old-Testament heroes, or by names of their own
- pious invention, signifying what the infant was expected to do and to
- suffer in the cause of the Lord. The progenitors of all the American
- Lincolns were Englishmen, and they may have been Puritans. There is,
- therefore, nothing unreasonable in the supposition that they began the
- practice of conferring such names before the emigration of any of them;
- and the names, becoming matters of family pride and family tradition, have
- continued to be given ever since. But, if the fact that Christian names of
- a particular class prevailed among the Lincolns of Massachusetts and the
- Lincolns of Virginia at the same time is no proof of consanguinity, the
- identity of the surname is entitled to even less consideration. It is
- barely possible that they may have had a common ancestor; but, if they
- had, he must have lived and died so obscurely, and so long ago, that no
- trace of him can be discovered. It would be as difficult to prove a blood
- relationship between all the American Lincolns, as it would be to prove a
- general cousinship among all the Smiths or all the Joneses.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 At the end of this volume will be found a very interesting account of
- the family, given by Mr. Lincoln himself. The original is in his own
- handwriting, and is here reproduced in fac-simile.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- A patronymic so common as Lincoln, derived from a large geographical
- division of the old country, would almost certainly be taken by many who
- had no claim to it by reason of descent from its original possessors.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dr. Holland, who, of all Mr. Lincoln's biographers, has entered most
- extensively into the genealogy of the family, says that the father of
- Thomas was named Abraham; but he gives no authority for his statement, and
- it is as likely to be wrong as to be right. The Hankses&mdash;John and
- Dennis&mdash;who passed a great part of their lives in the company of
- Thomas Lincoln, tell us that the name of his father was Mordecai; and so
- also does Col. Chapman, who married Thomas Lincoln's step-daughter. The
- rest of those who ought to know are unable to assign him any name at all.
- Dr. Holland says further, that this Abraham (or Mordecai) had four
- brothers,&mdash;Jacob, John, Isaac, and Thomas; that Isaac went to
- Tennessee, where his descendants are now; that Thomas went to Kentucky
- after his brother Abraham; but that Jacob and John "are supposed to have"
- remained in Virginia.1 This is doubtless true, at least so far as it
- relates to Jacob and John; for there are at this day numerous Lincolns
- residing in Rockingham County,&mdash;the place from which the Kentucky
- Lincolns emigrated. One of their ancestors, Jacob,&mdash;who seems to be
- the brother referred to,&mdash;was a lieutenant in the army of the
- Revolution, and present at the siege of Yorktown. His military services
- were made the ground of a claim against the government, and Abraham
- Lincoln, whilst a representative in Congress from Illinois, was applied to
- by the family to assist them in prosecuting it. A correspondence of some
- length ensued, by which the presumed relationship of the parties was fully
- acknowledged on both sides. But, unfortunately, no copy of it is now in
- existence. The one preserved by the Virginians was lost or destroyed
- during the late war. The family, with perfect unanimity, espoused the
- cause of the Confederate States, and suffered many losses in consequence,
- of which these interesting papers may have been one.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The Life of Abraham Lincoln, by J. G. Holland, p. 20.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abraham (or Mordecai) the father of Thomas Lincoln, was the owner of a
- large and fertile tract of land on the waters of Linnville's Creek, about
- eight miles north of Harrisonburg, the court-house town of Rockingham
- County. It is difficult to ascertain the precise extent of this
- plantation, or the history of the title to it, inasmuch as all the records
- of the county were burnt by Gen. Hunter in 1864. It is clear, however,
- that it had been inherited by Lincoln, the emigrant to Kentucky, and that
- four, if not all, of his children were born upon it. At the time Gen.
- Sheridan received the order "to make the Valley of the Shenandoah a barren
- waste," this land was well improved and in a state of high cultivation;
- but under the operation of that order it was ravaged and desolated like
- the region around it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln, the emigrant, had three sons and two daughters. Thomas was the
- third son and the fourth child. He was born in 1778; and in 1780, or a
- little later, his father removed with his entire family to Kentucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kentucky was then the paradise of the borderer's dreams. Fabulous tales of
- its sylvan charms and pastoral beauties had for years been floating about,
- not only along the frontiers of Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North
- Carolina, but farther back in the older settlements. For a while it had
- been known as the "Cane Country," and then as the "Country of Kentucky."
- Many expeditions were undertaken to explore it; two or three adventurers,
- and occasionally only one at a time, passing down the Ohio in canoes. But
- they all stopped short of the Kentucky River. The Indians were terrible;
- and it was known that they would surrender any other spot of earth in
- preference to Kentucky. The canes that were supposed to indicate the
- promised land&mdash;those canes of wondrous dimensions, that shot up, as
- thick as they could stand, from a soil of inestimable fertility&mdash;were
- forever receding before those who sought them. One party after another
- returned to report, that, after incredible dangers and hardships, they had
- met with no better fortune than that which had attended the efforts of
- their predecessors, and that they had utterly failed to find the "canes."
- At last they were actually found by Simon Kenton, who stealthily planted a
- little patch of corn, to see how the stalk that bore the yellow grain
- would grow beside its "brother" of the wilderness. He was one day leaning
- against the stem of a great tree, watching his little assemblage of
- sprouts, and wondering at the strange fruitfulness of the earth which fed
- them, when he heard a footstep behind him. It was the great Daniel
- Boone's. They united their fortunes for the present, but subsequently each
- of them became the chief of a considerable settlement. Kenton's trail had
- been down the Ohio, Boone's from North Carolina; and from both those
- directions soon came hunters, warriors, and settlers to join them. But the
- Indians had no thought of relinquishing their fairest hunting-grounds
- without a long and desperate struggle. The rich carpet of natural grasses
- which fed innumerable herds of buffalo, elk, and deer, all the year round;
- the grandeur of its primeval forests, its pure fountains, and abundant
- streams,&mdash;made it even more desirable to them than to the whites.
- They had long contended for the possession of it; and no tribe, or
- confederacy of tribes, had ever been able to hold it to the exclusion of
- the rest. Here, from time immemorial, the northern and southern, the
- eastern and western Indians had met each other in mortal strife, mutually
- shedding the blood which ought to have been husbanded for the more deadly
- conflict with a common foe. The character of this savage warfare had
- earned for Kentucky the appellation of "the dark and bloody ground;" and,
- now that the whites had fairly begun their encroachments upon it, the
- Indians were resolved that the phrase should lose none of its old
- significance. White settlers might therefore count upon fighting for their
- lives as well as their lands.
- </p>
- <p>
- Boone did not make his final settlement till 1775. The Lincolns came about
- 1780. This was but a year or two after Clark's expedition into Illinois;
- and it was long, long before St. Clair's defeat and Wayne's victory.
- Nearly the whole of the north-west territory was then occupied by hostile
- Indians. Kentucky volunteers had yet before them many a day of hot and
- bloody work on the Ohio, the Muskingum, and the Miami, to say nothing of
- the continual surprises to which they were subjected at home. Every man's
- life was in his hand. From cabin to cabin, from settlement to settlement,
- his trail was dogged by the eager savage. If he went to plough, he was
- liable to be shot down between the handles; if he attempted to procure
- subsistence by hunting, he was hunted himself. Unless he abandoned his
- "clearing" and his stock to almost certain devastation, and shut up
- himself and his family in a narrow "fort," for months at a time, he might
- expect every hour that their roof would be given "to the flames, and their
- flesh to the eagles."
- </p>
- <p>
- To make matters worse, "the western country," and particularly Kentucky,
- had become the rendezvous of Tories, runaway conscripts, deserters,
- debtors, and criminals. Gen. Butler, who went there as a Commissioner from
- Congress, to treat with certain Indian tribes, kept a private journal, in
- which he entered a very graphic, but a very appalling description of the
- state of affairs in Kentucky. At the principal "points," as they were
- called, were collected hungry speculators, gamblers, and mere desperadoes,&mdash;these
- distinctions being the only divisions and degrees in society. Among other
- things, the journal contains a statement about land-jobbing and the
- traffic in town lots, at Louisville, beside which the account of the same
- business in "Martin Chuzzlewit" is absolutely tame. That city, now one of
- the most superb in the Union, was then a small collection of cabins and
- hovels, inhabited by a class of people of whom specimens might have been
- found a few months ago at Cheyenne or Promontory Point. Notwithstanding
- the high commissions borne by Gen. Butler and Gen. Parsons, the motley
- inhabitants of Louisville flatly refused even to notice them. They would
- probably have sold them a "corner lot" in a swamp, or a "splendid business
- site" in a mud-hole; but for mere civilities there was no time. The whole
- population were so deeply engaged in drinking, card-playing, and selling
- town lots to each other, that they persistently refused to pay any
- attention to three men who were drowning in the river near by, although
- their dismal cries for help were distinctly heard throughout the "city."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the journey out, the Lincolns are said to have endured many hardships
- and encountered all the usual dangers, including several skirmishes with
- the Indians. They settled in Mercer County, but at what particular spot is
- uncertain. Their house was a rough log-cabin, their farm a little clearing
- in the midst of a vast forest. One morning, not long after their
- settlement, the father took Thomas, his youngest son, and went to build a
- fence, a short distance from the house; while the other brothers, Mordecai
- and Josiah, were sent to another field, not far away. They were all intent
- about their work, when a shot from a party of Indians in ambush broke the
- "listening stillness" cf the woods. The father fell dead; Josiah ran to a
- stockade two or three miles off; Mordecai, the eldest boy, made his way to
- the house, and, looking out from the loophole in the loft, saw an Indian
- in the act of raising his little brother from the ground. He took
- deliberate aim at a silver ornament on the breast of the Indian, and
- brought him down. Thomas sprang toward the cabin, and was admitted by his
- mother, while Mordecai renewed his fire at several other Indians that rose
- from the covert of the fence or thicket. It was not long until Josiah
- returned from the stockade with a party of settlers; but the Indians had
- fled, and none were found but the dead one, and another who was wounded
- and had crept into the top of a fallen tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- When this tragedy was enacted, Mordecai, the hero of it, was a well-grown
- boy. He seems to have hated Indians ever after with a hatred which was
- singular for its intensity, even in those times. Many years afterwards,
- his neighbors believed that he was in the habit of following peaceable
- Indians, as they passed through the settlements, in order to get
- surreptitious shots at them; and it was no secret that he had killed more
- than one in that way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Immediately after the death of her husband, the widow abandoned the scene
- of her misfortunes, and removed to Washington County, near the town of
- Springfield, where she lived until the youngest of her children had grown
- up. Mor-decai and Josiah remained there until late in life, and were
- always numbered among the best people in the neighborhood. Mordecai was
- the eldest son of his father; and under the law of primogeniture, which
- was still a part of the Virginia code, he inherited some estate in lands.
- One of the daughters wedded a Mr. Krume, and the other a Mr. Brumfield.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thomas seems to have been the only member of the family whose character
- was not entirely respectable. He was idle, thriftless, poor, a hunter, and
- a rover. One year he wandered away off to his uncle, on the Holston, near
- the confines of Tennessee. Another year he wandered into Breckinridge
- County, where his easy good-nature was overcome by a huge bully, and he
- performed the only remarkable achievement of his life, by whipping him. In
- 1806, we find him in Hardin County, trying to learn the carpenter's trade.
- Until then, he could neither read nor write; and it was only after his
- marriage that his ambition led him to seek accomplishments of this sort.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thomas Lincoln was not tall and thin, like Abraham, but comparatively
- short and stout, standing about five feet ten inches in his shoes. His
- hair was dark and coarse, his complexion brown, his face round and full,
- his eyes gray, and his nose large and prominent. He weighed, at different
- times, from one hundred and seventy to one hundred and ninety-six. He was
- built so "tight and compact," that Dennis Hanks declares he never could
- find the points of separation between his ribs, though he felt for them
- often. He was a little stoop-shouldered, and walked with a slow, halting
- step. But he was sinewy and brave, and, his habitually peaceable
- disposition once fairly overborne, was a tremendous man in a
- rough-and-tumble fight. He thrashed the monstrous bully of Breckinridge
- County in three minutes, and came off without a scratch.
- </p>
- <p>
- His vagrant career had supplied him with an inexhaustible fund of
- anecdotes, which he told cleverly and well. He loved to sit about at
- "stores," or under shade-trees, and "spin yarns,"&mdash;a propensity which
- atoned for many sins, and made him extremely popular. In politics, he was
- a Democrat,&mdash;a Jackson Democrat. In religion he was nothing at times,
- and a member of various denominations by turns,&mdash;a Free-Will Baptist
- in Kentucky, a Presbyterian in Indiana, and a Disciple&mdash;vulgarly
- called Campbellite&mdash;in Illinois. In this latter communion he seems to
- have died.
- </p>
- <p>
- It ought, perhaps, to be mentioned, that both in Virginia and Kentucky his
- name was commonly pronounced "Linck-horn," and in Indiana, "Linckhern."
- The usage was so general, that Tom Lincoln came very near losing his real
- name altogether. As he never wrote it at all until after his marriage, and
- wrote it then only mechanically, it was never spelled one way or the
- other, unless by a storekeeper here and there, who had a small account
- against him. Whether it was properly "Lincoln," "Linckhorn," or
- "Linckhern," was not definitely settled until after Abraham began to
- write, when, as one of the neighbors has it, "he remodelled the spelling
- and corrected the pronunciation."
- </p>
- <p>
- By the middle of 1806, Lincoln had acquired a very limited knowledge of
- the carpenter's trade, and set up on his own account; but his achievements
- in this line were no better than those of his previous life. He was
- employed occasionally to do rough work, that requires neither science nor
- skill; but nobody alleges that he ever built a house, or pretended to do
- more than a few little odd jobs connected with such an undertaking. He
- soon got tired of the business, as he did of every thing else that
- required application and labor. He was no boss, not even an average
- journeyman, nor a steady hand. When he worked at the trade at all, he
- liked to make common benches, cupboards, and bureaus; and some specimens
- of his work of this kind are still extant in Kentucky and Indiana, and
- bear their own testimony to the quality of their workmanship.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some time in the year 1806 he married Nancy Hanks. It was in the shop of
- her uncle, Joseph Hanks, at Elizabethtown, in Hardin County, that he had
- essayed to learn the trade. We have no record of the courtship, but any
- one can readily imagine the numberless occasions that would bring together
- the niece and the apprentice. It is true that Nancy did not live with her
- uncle; but the Hankses were all very clannish, and she was doubtless a
- welcome and frequent guest at his house. It is admitted by all the old
- residents of the place that they were honestly married, but precisely when
- or how no one can tell. Diligent and thorough searches by the most
- competent persons have failed to discover any trace of the fact in the
- public records of Hardin and the adjoining counties. The license and the
- minister's return in the case of Lincoln and Sarah Johnston, his second
- wife, were easily found in the place where the law required them to be;
- but of Nancy Hanks's marriage there exists no evidence but that of mutual
- acknowledgment and cohabitation. At the time of their union, Thomas was
- twenty-eight years of age, and Nancy about twenty-three.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln had previously courted a girl named Sally Bush, who lived in the
- neighborhood of Elizabethtown; but his suit was unsuccessful, and she
- became the wife of Johnston, the jailer. Her reason for rejecting Lincoln
- comes down to us in no words of her own; but it is clear enough that it
- was his want of character, and the "bad luck," as the Hankses have it,
- which always attended him. Sally Bush was a modest and pious girl, in all
- things pure and decent. She was very neat in her personal appearance, and,
- because she was particular in the selection of her gowns and company, had
- long been accounted a "proud body," who held her head above common folks.
- Even her own relatives seem to have participated in this mean accusation;
- and the decency of her dress and behavior appear to have made her an
- object of common envy and backbiting. But she had a will as well as
- principles of her own, and she lived to make them both serviceable to the
- neglected and destitute son of Nancy Hanks. Thomas Lincoln took another
- wife, but he always loved Sally Bush as much as he was capable of loving
- anybody; and years afterwards, when her husband and his wife were both
- dead, he returned suddenly from the wilds of Indiana, and, representing
- himself as a thriving and prosperous farmer, induced her to marry him. It
- will be seen hereafter what value was to be attached to his
- representations of his own prosperity.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nancy Hanks, who accepted the honor which Sally Bush refused, was a
- slender, symmetrical woman, of medium stature, a brunette, with dark hair,
- regular features, and soft, sparkling hazel eyes. Tenderly bred she might
- have been beautiful; but hard labor and hard usage bent her handsome form,
- and imparted an unnatural coarseness to her features long before the
- period of her death. Toward the close, her life and her face were equally
- sad; and the latter habitually wore the wo-ful expression which afterwards
- distinguished the countenance of her son in repose.
- </p>
- <p>
- By her family, her understanding was considered something wonderful. John
- Hanks spoke reverently of her "high and intellectual forehead," which he
- considered but the proper seat of faculties like hers. Compared with the
- mental poverty of her husband and relatives, her accomplishments were
- certainly very great; for it is related by them with pride and delight
- that she could actually read and write. The possession of these arts
- placed her far above her associates, and after a little while even Tom
- began to meditate upon the importance of acquiring them. He set to work
- accordingly, in real earnest, having a competent mistress so near at hand;
- and with much effort she taught him what letters composed his name, and
- how to put them together in a stiff and clumsy fashion. Henceforth he
- signed no more by making his mark; but it is nowhere stated that he ever
- learned to write any thing else, or to read either written or printed
- letters.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nancy Hanks was the daughter of Lucy Hanks. Her mother was one of four
- sisters,&mdash;Lucy, Betsy, Polly, and Nancy. Betsy married Thomas
- Sparrow; Polly married Jesse Friend, and Nancy, Levi Hall. Lucy became the
- wife of Henry Sparrow, and the mother of eight children. Nancy the younger
- was early sent to live with her uncle and aunt, Thomas and Betsy Sparrow.
- Nancy, another of the four sisters, was the mother of that Dennis F. Hanks
- whose name will be frequently met with in the course of this history. He
- also was brought up, or was permitted to come up, in the family of Thomas
- Sparrow, where Nancy found a shelter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Little Nancy became so completely identified with Thomas and Betsy Sparrow
- that many supposed her to have been their child. They reared her to
- womanhood, followed her to Indiana, dwelt under the same roof, died of the
- same disease, at nearly the same time, and were buried close beside her.
- They were the only parents she ever knew; and she must have called them by
- names appropriate to that relationship, for several persons who saw them
- die, and carried them to their graves, believe to this day that they were,
- in fact, her father and mother. Dennis Hanks persists even now in the
- assertion that her name was Sparrow; but Dennis was pitiably weak on the
- cross-examination: and we shall have to accept the testimony of Mr.
- Lincoln himself, and some dozens of other persons, to the contrary.
- </p>
- <p>
- All that can be learned of that generation of Hankses to which Nancy's
- mother belonged has now been recorded as fully as is compatible with
- circumstances. They claim that their ancestors came from England to
- Virginia, whence they migrated to Kentucky with the Lincolns, and settled
- near them in Mercer County. The same, precisely, is affirmed of the
- Sparrows. Branches of both families maintained a more or less intimate
- connection with the fortunes of Thomas Lincoln, and the early life of
- Abraham was closely interwoven with theirs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln took Nancy to live in a shed on one of the alleys of
- Elizabethtown. It was a very sorry building, and nearly bare of furniture.
- It stands yet, or did stand in 1866, to witness for itself the wretched
- poverty of its early inmates. It is about fourteen feet square, has been
- three times removed, twice used as a slaughter-house, and once as a
- stable. Here a daughter was born on the tenth day of February, 1807, who
- was called Nancy during the life of her mother, and after her death Sarah.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Lincoln soon wearied of Elizabethtown and carpenter-work. He thought
- he could do better as a farmer; and, shortly after the birth of Nancy (or
- Sarah), removed to a piece of land on the south fork of Nolin Creek, three
- miles from Hodgensville, within the present county of La Rue, and about
- thirteen miles from Elizabethtown. What estate he had, or attempted to
- get, in this land, is not clear from the papers at hand. It is said he
- bought it, but was unable to pay for it. It was very poor, and the
- landscape of which it formed a part was extremely desolate. It was then
- nearly destitute of timber, though it is now partially covered in spots by
- a young and stunted growth of post-oak and hickory. On every side the eye
- rested only upon weeds and low bushes, and a kind of grass which the
- present owner of the farm describes as "barren grass." It was, on the
- whole, as bad a piece of ground as there was in the neighborhood, and
- would hardly have sold for a dollar an acre. The general appearance of the
- surrounding country was not much better. A few small but pleasant streams&mdash;Nolin
- Creek and its tributaries&mdash;wandered through the valleys. The land was
- generally what is called "rolling;" that is, dead levels interspersed by
- little hillocks. Nearly all of it was arable; but, except the margins of
- the watercourses, not much of it was sufficiently fertile to repay the
- labor of tillage. It had no grand, un violated forests to allure the
- hunter, and no great bodies of deep and rich soils to tempt the
- husbandman. Here it was only by incessant labor and thrifty habits that an
- ordinary living could be wrung from the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The family took up their residence in a miserable cabin, which stood on a
- little knoll in the midst of a barren glade.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few stones tumbled down, and lying about loose, still indicate the site
- of the mean and narrow tenement which sheltered the infancy of one of the
- greatest political chieftains of modern times. Near by, a "romantic
- spring" gushed from beneath a rock, and sent forth a slender but silvery
- stream, meandering through those dull and unsightly plains. As it
- furnished almost the only pleasing feature in the melancholy desert
- through which it flowed, the place was called after it, "Rock Spring
- Farm." In addition to this single natural beauty, Lincoln began to think,
- in a little while, that a couple of trees would look well, and might even
- be useful, if judiciously planted in the vicinity of his bare house-yard.
- This enterprise he actually put into execution; and three decayed
- pear-trees, situated on the "edge" of what was lately a rye-field,
- constitute the only memorials of him or his family to be seen about the
- premises. They were his sole permanent improvement.
- </p>
- <p>
- In that solitary cabin, on this desolate spot, the illustrious Abraham
- Lincoln was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Lincolns remained on Nolin Creek until Abraham was four years old.
- They then removed to a place much more picturesque, and of far greater
- fertility. It was situated about six miles from Hodgensville, on Knob
- Creek, a very clear stream, which took its rise in the gorges of Muldrews
- Hill, and fell into the Rolling Fork two miles above the present town of
- New Haven. The Rolling Fork emptied into Salt River, and Salt River into
- the Ohio, twenty-four miles below Louisville. This farm was well timbered,
- and more hilly than the one on Nolin Creek. It contained some rich
- valleys, which promised such excellent yields, that Lincoln bestirred
- himself most vigorously, and actually got into cultivation the whole of
- six acres, lying advantageously up and down the branch. This, however, was
- not all the work he did, for he still continued to pother occasionally at
- his trade; but, no matter what he turned his hand to, his gains were
- equally insignificant. He was satisfied with indifferent shelter, and a
- diet of "corn-bread and milk" was all he asked. John Hanks naively
- observes, that "happiness was the end of life with him." The land he now
- lived upon (two hundred and thirty-eight acres) he had pretended to buy
- from a Mr. Slater. The deed mentions a consideration of one hundred and
- eighteen pounds. The purchase must have been a mere speculation, with all
- the payments deferred, for the title remained in Lincoln but a single
- year. The deed was made to him Sept. 2, 1813; and Oct. 27, 1814, he
- conveyed two hundred acres to Charles Milton for one hundred pounds,
- leaving thirty-eight acres of the tract unsold. No public record discloses
- what he did with the remainder. If he retained any interest in it for-the
- time, it was probably permitted to be sold for taxes. The last of his
- voluntary transactions, in regard to this land, took place two years
- before his removal to Indiana; after which, he seems to have continued in
- possession as the tenant of Milton.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time, Dennis Hanks endeavored to initiate young Abraham, now
- approaching his eighth year, in the mysteries of fishing, and led him on
- numerous tramps up and down the picturesque branch,&mdash;the branch whose
- waters were so pure that a white pebble could be seen in a depth of ten
- feet. On Nolin he had hunted ground-hogs with an older boy, who has since
- become the Rev. John Duncan, and betrayed a precocious zest in the sport.
- On Knob Creek, he dabbled in the water, or roved the hills and climbed the
- trees, with a little companion named Gallaher. On one occasion, when
- attempting to "coon" across the stream, by swinging over on a
- sycamore-tree, Abraham lost his hold, and, tumbling into deep water, was
- saved only by the utmost exertions of the other boy. But, with all this
- play, the child was often serious and sad. With the earliest dawn of
- reason, he began to suffer and endure; and it was that peculiar moral
- training which developed both his heart and his intellect with such
- singular and astonishing rapidity. It is not likely that Tom Lincoln cared
- a straw about his education. He had none himself, and is said to have
- admired "muscle" more than mind. Nevertheless, as Abraham's sister was
- going to school for a few days at a time, he was sent along, as Dennis
- Hanks remarks, more to bear her company than with any expectation or
- desire that he would learn much himself. One of the masters, Zachariah
- Riney, taught near the Lincoln cabin. The other, Caleb Hazel, kept his
- school nearly four miles away, on the "Friend" farm; and the hapless
- children were compelled to trudge that long and weary distance with
- spelling-book and "dinner,"&mdash;the latter a lunch of corn-bread, Tom
- Lincoln's favorite dish. Hazel could teach reading and writing, after a
- fashion, and a little arithmetic. But his great qualification for his
- office lay in the strength of his arm, and his power and readiness to
- "whip the big boys."
- </p>
- <p>
- But, as time wore on, the infelicities of Lincoln's life in this
- neighborhood became insupportable. He was gaining neither riches nor
- credit; and, being a wanderer by natural inclination, began to long for a
- change. His decision, however, was hastened by certain troubles which
- culminated in a desperate combat between him and one Abraham Enlow. They
- fought like savages; but Lincoln obtained a signal and permanent advantage
- by biting off the nose of his antagonist, so that he went bereft all the
- days of his life, and published his audacity and its punishment wherever
- he showed his face. But the affray, and the fame of it, made Lincoln more
- anxious than ever to escape from Kentucky. He resolved, therefore, to
- leave these scenes forever, and seek a roof-tree beyond the Ohio.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has pleased some of Mr. Lincoln's biographers to represent this removal
- of his father as a flight from the taint of slavery. Nothing could be
- further from the truth. There were not at the time more than fifty slaves
- in all Hardin County, which then composed a vast area of territory. It was
- practically a free community. Lincoln's more fortunate relatives in other
- parts of the State were slaveholders; and there is not the slightest
- evidence that he ever disclosed any conscientious scruples concerning the
- "institution."
- </p>
- <p>
- The lives of his father and mother, and the history and character of the
- family before their settlement in Indiana, were topics upon which Mr.
- Lincoln never spoke but with great reluctance and significant reserve.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his family Bible he kept a register of births, marriages, and deaths,
- every entry being carefully made in his own handwriting. It contains the
- date of his sister's birth and his own; of the marriage and death of his
- sister; of the death of his mother; and of the birth and death of Thomas
- Lincoln. The rest of the record is almost wholly devoted to the Johnstons
- and their numerous descendants and connections. It has not a word about
- the Hankses or the Sparrows. It shows the marriage of Sally Bush, first
- with Daniel Johnston, and then with Thomas Lincoln; but it is entirely
- silent as to the marriage of his own mother. It does not even give the
- date of her birth, but barely recognizes her existence and demise, to make
- the vacancy which was speedily filled by Sarah Johnston.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The leaf of the Bible which contains these entries is in the
- possession of Col. Chapman.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- An artist was painting his portrait, and asked him for a sketch of his
- early life. He gave him this brief memorandum: "I was born Feb. 12,1809,
- in the then Hardin County, Kentucky, at a point within the now county of
- La Rue, a mile or a mile and a half from where Hodgens Mill now is. My
- parents being dead, and my own memory not serving, I know of no means of
- identifying the precise locality. It was on Nolin Creek."
- </p>
- <p>
- To the compiler of the "Dictionary of Congress" he gave the following:
- "Born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. Education defective.
- Profession, a lawyer. Have been a captain of volunteers in the 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."
- </p>
- <p>
- To a campaign biographer who applied for particulars of his early history,
- he replied that they could be of no interest; that they were but
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "The short and simple annals of the poor."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- "The chief difficulty I had to encounter," writes this latter gentleman,
- "was to induce him to communicate the homely facts and incidents of his
- early life. He seemed to be painfully impressed with the extreme poverty
- of his early surroundings, the utter absence of all romantic and heroic
- elements; and I know he thought poorly of the idea of attempting a
- biographical sketch for campaign purposes.... Mr. Lincoln communicated
- some facts to me about his ancestry, which he did not wish published, and
- which I have never spoken of or alluded to before. I do not think,
- however, that Dennis Hanks, if he knows any thing about these matters,
- would be very likely to say any thing about them."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II.
- </h2>
- <p>
- THOMAS LINCOLN was something of a waterman. In the frequent changes of
- occupation, which had hitherto made his life so barren of good results, he
- could not resist the temptation to the career of a flat-boatman. He had
- accordingly made one, or perhaps two trips to New Orleans, in the company
- and employment of Isaac Bush, who was probably a near relative of Sally
- Bush. It was therefore very natural, that when, in the fall of 1816, he
- finally determined to emigrate, he should attempt to transport his goods
- by water. He built himself a boat, which seems to have been none of the
- best, and launched it on the Rolling Fork, at the mouth of Knob Creek, a
- half-mile from his cabin. Some of his personal property, including
- carpenter's tools, he put on board, and the rest he traded for four
- hundred gallons of whiskey. With this crazy boat and this singular cargo,
- he put out into the stream alone, and floating with the current down the
- Rolling Fork, and then down Salt River, reached the Ohio without any
- mishap. Here his craft proved somewhat rickety when contending with the
- difficulties of the larger stream, or perhaps there was a lack of force in
- the management of her, or perhaps the single navigator had consoled
- himself during the lonely voyage by too frequent applications to a portion
- of his cargo: at all events, the boat capsized, and the lading went to the
- bottom. He fished up a few of the tools "and most of the whiskey," and,
- righting the little boat, again floated down to a landing at Thompson's
- Ferry, two and a half miles west of Troy, in Perry County, Indiana. Here
- he sold his treacherous boat, and, leaving his remaining property in the
- care of a settler named Posey, trudged off on foot to select "a location"
- in the wilderness. He did not go far, but found a place that he thought
- would suit him only sixteen miles distant from the river. He then turned
- about, and walked all the way back to Knob Creek, in Kentucky, where he
- took a fresh start with his wife and her children. Of the latter there
- were only two,&mdash;Nancy (or Sarah), nine years of age, and Abraham,
- seven. Mrs. Lincoln had given birth to another son some years before, but
- he had died when only three days old. After leaving Kentucky, she had no
- more children.
- </p>
- <p>
- This time Lincoln loaded what little he had left upon two horses, and
- "packed through to Posey's." Besides clothing and bedding, they carried
- such cooking utensils as would be needed by the way, and would be
- indispensable when they reached their destination. The stock was not
- large. It consisted of "one oven and lid, one skillet and lid, and some
- tin-ware." They camped out during the nights, and of course cooked their
- own food. Lincoln's skill as a hunter must now have stood him in good
- stead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Where he got the horses used upon this occasion, it is impossible to say;
- but they were likely borrowed from his brother-in-law, Krume, of
- Breckinridge County, who owned such stock, and subsequently moved Sarah
- Johnston's goods to Indiana, after her marriage with Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- When they got to Posey's, Lincoln hired a wagon, and, loading on it the
- whiskey and other things he had stored there, went on toward the place
- which has since become famous as the "Lincoln Farm." He was now making his
- way through an almost untrodden wilderness. There was no road, and for a
- part of the distance not even a foot-trail. He was slightly assisted by a
- path of a few miles in length, which had been "blazed out" by an earlier
- settler named Hoskins. But he was obliged to suffer long delays, and cut
- out a passage for the wagon with his axe. At length, after many detentions
- and difficulties he reached the point where he intended to make his future
- home. It was situated between the forks of Big Pigeon and Little Pigeon
- Creeks, a mile and a half east of Gentryville, a village which grew up
- afterwards, and now numbers about three hundred inhabitants. The whole
- country was covered with a dense forest of oaks, beeches, walnuts,
- sugar-maples, and nearly all the varieties of trees that flourish in North
- America. The woods were usually open, and devoid of underbrush; the trees
- were of the largest growth, and beneath the deep shades they afforded was
- spread out a rich greensward. The natural grazing was very good, and hogs
- found abundant sustenance in the prodigious quantity of mast. There was
- occasionally a little glade or prairie set down in the midst of this vast
- expanse of forest. One of these, not far from the Lincoln place, was a
- famous resort for the deer, and the hunters knew it well for its numerous
- "licks." Upon this prairie the militia "musters" were had at a later day,
- and from it the south fork of the Pigeon came finally to be known as the
- "Prairie Fork."
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln laid off his curtilage on a gentle hillock having a slope on every
- side. The spot was very beautiful, and the soil was excellent. The
- selection was wise in every respect but one. There was no water near,
- except what was collected in holes in the ground after a rain; but it was
- very foul, and had to be strained before using. At a later period we find
- Abraham and his step-sister carrying water from a spring situated a mile
- away. Dennis Hanks asserts that Tom Lincoln "riddled his land like a
- honeycomb," in search of good water, and was at last sorely tempted to
- employ a Yankee, who came around with a divining-rod, and declared that
- for the small consideration of five dollars in cash, he would make his rod
- point to a cool, flowing spring beneath the surface.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here Lincoln built "a half-faced camp,"&mdash;a cabin enclosed on three
- sides and open on the fourth. It was built, not of logs, but of poles, and
- was therefore denominated a "camp," to distinguish it from a "cabin." It
- was about fourteen feet square, and had no floor. It was no larger than
- the first house he lived in at Elizabethtown, and on the whole not as good
- a shelter. But Lincoln was now under the influence of a transient access
- of ambition, and the camp was merely preliminary to something better. He
- lived in it, however, for a whole year, before he attained to the dignity
- of a residence in a cabin. "In the mean time he cleaned some land, and
- raised a small crop of corn and vegetables."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the fall of 1817, Thomas and Betsy Sparrow came out from Kentucky, and
- took up their abode in the old camp which the Lincolns had just deserted
- for the cabin. Betsy was the aunt who had raised Nancy Hanks. She had done
- the same in part for our friend Dennis Hanks, who was the offspring of
- another sister, and she now brought him with her. Dennis thus became the
- constant companion of young Abraham; and all the other members of that
- family, as originally settled in Indiana, being dead, Dennis remains a
- most important witness as to this period of Mr. Lincoln's life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln's second house was a "rough, rough log" one: the timbers were not
- hewed; and until after the arrival of Sally Bush, in 1819, it had neither
- floor, door, nor window. It stood about forty yards from what Dennis Hanks
- calls that "darned little half-faced camp," which was now the dwelling of
- the Sparrows. It was "right in the bush,"&mdash;in the heart of a virgin
- wilderness. There were only seven or eight older settlers in the
- neighborhood of the two Pigeon Creeks. Lincoln had had some previous
- acquaintance with one of them,&mdash;a Mr. Thomas Carter; and it is highly
- probable that nothing but this trivial circumstance induced him to settle
- here.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The principal authorities for this part of our narrative are
- necessarily Dennis and John Hanks; but their statements have been
- carefully collated with those of other persons, both in Kentucky and
- Indiana.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The nearest town was Troy, situated on the Ohio, about half a mile from
- the mouth of Anderson Creek. Gentryville had as yet no existence.
- Travelling was on horseback or on foot, and the only resort of commerce
- was to the pack-horse or the canoe. But a prodigious immigration was now
- sweeping into this inviting country. Harrison's victories over the Indians
- had opened it up to the peaceful settler; and Indiana was admitted into
- the Union in 1816, with a population of sixty-five thousand. The county in
- which Thomas Lincoln settled was Perry, with the county-seat at Troy; but
- he soon found himself in the new county of Spencer, with the court-house
- at Rockport, twenty miles south of him, and the thriving village of
- Gentryville within a mile and a half of his door.
- </p>
- <p>
- A post-office was established at Gentryville in 1824 or 1825. Dennis Hanks
- helped to hew the logs used to build the first storeroom. The following
- letter from Mr. David Turnham, now of Dale, Spencer County, presents some
- interesting and perfectly authentic information regarding the village and
- the settlements around it in those early times:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yours of the 5th inst. is at hand. As you wish me to answer several
- questions, I will give you a few items of the early settlement of Indiana.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When my father came here in the spring of 1819, he settled in Spencer
- County, within one mile of Thomas Lincoln, then a widower. The chance for
- schooling was poor; but, such as it was, Abraham and myself attended the
- same schools.
- </p>
- <p>
- "We first had to go seven miles to mill; and then it was a hand-mill that
- would grind from ten to fifteen bushels of corn in a day. There was but
- little wheat grown at that time; and, when we did have wheat, we had to
- grind it on the mill described, and use it without bolting, as there were
- no bolts in the country. In the course of two or three years, a man by the
- name of Huffman built a mill on Anderson River, about twelve miles
- distant. Abe and I had to do the milling on horseback, frequently going
- twice to get one grist. Then they began building horse-mills of a little
- better quality than the hand-mills.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The country was very rough, especially in the low lands, so thick with
- bush that a man could scarcely get through on foot. These places were
- called Roughs. The country abounded in game, such as bears, deer, turkeys,
- and the smaller game.
- </p>
- <p>
- "About the time Huffman built his mill, there was a road laid out from
- Corydon to Evansville, running by Mr. Lincoln's farm, and through what is
- now Gentryville. Corydon was then the State capital.
- </p>
- <p>
- "About the year 1823, there was another road laid out from Rockport to
- Bloomington, crossing the aforesaid at right angles, where Gentryville now
- stands. James Gentry entered the land; and in about a year Gideon Romine
- brought goods there, and shortly after succeeded in getting a post-office,
- by the name of Gentryville Post-office. Then followed the laying out of
- lots, and the selling of them, and a few were improved. But for some cause
- the lots all fell back to the original owner. The lots were sold in 1824
- or 1825. Romine kept goods there a short time, and sold out to Gentry, but
- the place kept on increasing slowly. William Jones came in with a store,
- that made it improve a little faster, but Gentry bought him out. Jones
- bought a tract of land one-half mile from Gentryville, moved to it, went
- into business there, and drew nearly all the custom. Gentry saw that it
- was ruining his town: he compromised with Jones, and got him back to
- Gentryville; and about the year 1847 or 1848 there was another survey of
- lots, which remains.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This is as good a history of the rise of Gentryville as I can give, after
- consulting several of the old settlers.
- </p>
- <p>
- "At that time there were a great many deer-licks; and Abe and myself would
- go to those licks sometimes, and watch of nights to kill deer, though Abe
- was not so fond of a gun as I was. There were ten or twelve of these licks
- in a small prairie on the creek, lying between Mr. Lincoln's and Mr.
- Wood's (the man you call Moore). This gave it the name of Prairie Fork of
- Pigeon Creek.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The people in the first settling of this country were very sociable,
- kind, and accommodating; but there was more drunkenness and stealing on a
- small scale, more immorality, less religion, less well-placed confidence."
- </p>
- <p>
- The steps taken by Lincoln to complete his title to the land upon which he
- settled are thus recited by the Commissioner of the General Land Office:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In reply to the letter of Mr. W. H. Herndon, who is writing the biography
- of the late President, dated June 19, 1865, herewith returned, I have the
- honor to state, pursuant to the Secretary's reference, that on the 15th of
- October, 1817, Mr. Thomas Lincoln, then of Perry County, Indiana, entered
- under the old credit system,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "1. The South-West Quarter of Section 82, in Township 4, South of Range 5
- West, lying in Spencer County, Indiana.
- </p>
- <p>
- "2. Afterwards the said Thomas Lincoln relinquished to the United States
- the East half of said South-West Quarter; and the amount paid thereon was
- passed to his credit to complete payment of the West half of said
- South-West Quarter of Section 32, in Township 4, South of Range 5 West;
- and accordingly a patent was issued to said Thomas Lincoln for the latter
- tract. The patent was dated June 6, 1827, and was signed by John Quincy
- Adams, then President of the United States, and countersigned by George
- Graham, then Commissioner of the General Land Office." 1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The patent was issued to Thomas Lincoln alias Linckhern the other half
- he never paid, and finally lost the whole of the land.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It will be observed, that, although Lincoln squatted upon the land in the
- fall of 1816, he did not enter it until October of the next year; and that
- the patent was not issued to him until June, 1827, but a little more than
- a year before he left it altogether. Beginning by entering a full quarter
- section, he was afterwards content with eighty acres, and took eleven
- years to make the necessary payments upon that. It is very probable that
- the money which finally secured the patent was furnished by Gentry or
- Aaron Grigsby, and the title passed out of Lincoln in the course of the
- transaction. Dennis Hanks says, "He settled on a piece of government land,&mdash;eighty
- acres. This land he afterwards bought under the Two-Dollar Act; was to pay
- for it in instalments; one-half he paid."
- </p>
- <p>
- For two years Lincoln continued to live along in the old way. He did not
- like to farm, and he never got much of his land under cultivation. His
- principal crop was corn; and this, with the game which a rifleman so
- expert would easily take from the woods around him, supplied his table. It
- does not appear that he employed any of his mechanical skill in completing
- and furnishing his own cabin. It has already been stated that the latter
- had no window, door, or floor. But the furniture&mdash;if it may be called
- furniture&mdash;was even worse than the house. Three-legged stools served
- for chairs. A bedstead was made of poles stuck in the cracks of the logs
- in one corner of the cabin, while the other end rested in the crotch of a
- forked stick sunk in the earthen floor. On these were laid some boards,
- and on the boards a "shake-down" of leaves covered with skins and old
- petticoats. The table was a hewed puncheon, supported by four legs. They
- had a few pewter and tin dishes to eat from, but the most minute inventory
- of their effects makes no mention of knives or forks. Their cooking
- utensils were a Dutch oven and a skillet. Abraham slept in the loft, to
- which he ascended by means of pins driven into holes in the wall.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1818, the Pigeon-Creek settlements were visited by a
- fearful disease, called, in common parlance, "the milk-sickness." It swept
- off the cattle which gave the milk, as well as the human beings who drank
- it. It seems to have prevailed in the neighborhood from 1818 to 1829; for
- it is given as one of the reasons for Thomas Lincoln's removal to Illinois
- at the latter date. But in the year first mentioned its ravages were
- especially awful. Its most immediate effects were severe retchings and
- vomitings; and, while the deaths from it were not necessarily sudden, the
- proportion of those who finally died was uncommonly large.1 Among the
- number who were attacked by it, and lingered on for some time in the midst
- of great sufferings, were Thomas and Betsy Sparrow and Mrs. Nancy Lincoln.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The peculiar disease which carried off so many of Abraham's family,
- and induced the removal of the remainder to Illinois, deserves more than
- a passing allusion. The following, regarding its nature and treatment,
- is from the pen of an eminent physician of Danville, Illinois:&mdash;
- Ward H. Lamon, Esq. Dear Sir,&mdash;Your favor of the 17th inst. has
- been received. You request me to present you with my theory in relation
- to the origin of the disease called "milk-sickness," and also a "general
- statement of the best treatment of the disease," and the proportion of
- fatal cases. I have quite a number of cases of the so-called disease in
- Danville, Ill., and its vicinity; but perhaps you are not aware, that,
- between the great majority of the medical faculty in this region of
- country and myself, there is quite a discrepancy of opinion. They
- believe in the existence of the disease in Vermilion County; while, on
- the contrary, I am firmly of opinion, that, instead of genuine milk-
- sickness, it is only a modified form of malarial fever with which we
- here have to contend. Though sceptical of its existence in this part of
- the country, we have too much evidence from different intelligent
- sources to doubt, for a moment, that, in many parts of the West and
- South-west, there is a distinct malady, witnessed more than fifty years
- ago, and different from every other heretofore recognized in any system
- of Nosology. In the opinion of medical men, as well as in that of the
- people in general, where milk-sickness prevails, cattle, sheep, and
- horses contract the disease by feeding on wild pasture-lands; and, when
- those pastures have been enclosed and cultivated, the cause entirely
- disappears. This has also been the observation of the farmers and
- physicians of Vermilion County, Illinois. From this it might be inferred
- that the disease had a vegetable origin. But it appears that it prevails
- as early in the season as March and April in some localities; and I am
- informed that, in an early day, say thirty-five or forty years ago, it
- showed itself in the winter-time in this county. This seems to argue
- that it may be produced by water holding some mineral substance in
- solution. Even in this case, however, some vegetable producing the
- disease may have been gathered and preserved with the hay on which the
- cattle were fed at the time; for in that early day the farmers were in
- the habit of cutting wild grass for their stock. On the whole, I am
- inclined to attribute the cause to a vegetable origin. The symptoms of
- what is called milk-sickness in this county&mdash; and they are similar
- to those described by authors who have written on the disease in other
- sections of the Western country&mdash;are a whitish coat on the tongue,
- burning sensation of the stomach severe vomiting, obstinate constipation
- of the bowels, coolness of the extremities, great restlessness and
- jactitation, pulse rather small, somewhat more frequent than natural,
- and slightly corded. In the course of the disease, the coat on the
- tongue becomes brownish and dark, the countenance dejected, and the
- prostration of the patient is great. A fatal termination may take place
- in sixty hours, or life may be prolonged for a period of fourteen days.
- These are the symptoms of the acute form of the disease. Sometimes it
- runs into the chronic form, or it may assume that form from the
- commencement; and, after months or years, the patient may finally die,
- or recover only a partial degree of health. The treatment which I have
- found most successful is pills composed of calomel and opium, given at
- intervals of two, three, or four hours, so as to bring the patient
- pretty strongly under the influence of opium by the time the second or
- third dose had been administered; some effervescing mixture, pro re
- nata; injections; castor oil, when the stomach will retain it; blisters
- to the stomach; brandy or good whiskey freely administered throughout
- the disease; and quinine after the bowels have been moved. Under the
- above treatment, modified according to the circumstances, I would not
- expect to lose more than one case in eight or ten, as the disease
- manifests itself in this county.... As ever, Theo. Lemon.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It was now found expedient to remove the Sparrows from the wretched
- "half-faced camp," through which the cold autumn winds could sweep almost
- unobstructed, to the cabin of the Lincolns, which in truth was then very
- little better. Many in the neighborhood had already died, and Thomas
- Lincoln had made all their coffins out of "green lumber cut with a
- whip-saw." In the mean time the Sparrows and Nancy were growing alarmingly
- worse. There was no physician in the county,&mdash;not even a pretender to
- the science of medicine; and the nearest regular practitioner was located
- at Yellow Banks, Ky., over thirty miles distant. It is not probable that
- they ever secured his services. They would have been too costly, and none
- of the persons who witnessed and describe these scenes speak of his having
- been there. At length, in the first days of October, the Sparrows died;
- and Thomas Lincoln sawed up his green lumber, and made rough boxes to
- enclose the mortal remains of his wife's two best and oldest friends. A
- day or two after, on the 5th of October, 1818, Nancy Hanks Lincoln rested
- from her troubles. Thomas Lincoln took to his green wood again, and made a
- box for Nancy. There were about twenty persons at her funeral. They took
- her to the summit of a deeply-wooded knoll, about half a mile south-east
- of the cabin, and laid her beside the Sparrows. If there were any burial
- ceremonies, they were of the briefest. But it happened that a few months
- later an itinerant preacher, named David Elkin, whom the Lincolns had
- known in Kentucky, wandered into the settlement; and he either volunteered
- or was employed to preach a sermon, which should commemorate the many
- virtues and pass in silence the few frailties of the poor woman who slept
- in the forest. Many years later the bodies of Levi Hall and his wife,
- Nancy Hanks, were deposited in the same earth with that of Mrs. Lincoln.
- The graves of two or three children belonging to a neighbor's family are
- also near theirs. They are all crumbled in, sunken, and covered with wild
- vines in deep and tangled mats. The great trees were originally cut away
- to make a small cleared space for this primitive graveyard; but the young
- dogwoods have sprung up unopposed in great luxuriance, and in many
- instances the names of pilgrims to the burial-place of the great Abraham
- Lincoln's mother are carved in their bark. With this exception, the spot
- is wholly unmarked. Her grave never had a stone, nor even a board, at its
- head or its foot; and the neighbors still dispute as to which one of those
- unsightly hollows contains the ashes of Nancy Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thirteen months after the burial of Nancy Hanks, and nine or ten months
- after the solemnities conducted by Elkin, Thomas Lincoln appeared at
- Elizabethtown, Ky., in search of another wife. Sally Bush had married
- Johnston, the jailer, in the spring of the same year in which Lincoln had
- married Nancy Hanks. She had then rejected him for a better match, but was
- now a widow. In 1814 many persons in and about Elizabethtown had died of a
- disease which the people called the "cold plague," and among them the
- jailer. Both parties being free again, Lincoln came back, very
- unexpectedly to Mrs. Johnston, and opened his suit in an exceedingly
- abrupt manner. "Well, Miss Johnston," said he, "I have no wife, and you
- have no husband. I came a purpose to marry you: I knowed you from a gal,
- and you knowed me from a boy. I have no time to lose; and, if you are
- willin', let it be done straight off." To this she replied, "Tommy, I know
- you well, and have no objection to marrying you; but I cannot do it
- straight off, as I owe some debts that must first be paid." "The next
- morning," says Hon. Samuel Haycraft, the clerk of the courts and the
- gentleman who reports this quaint courtship, "I issued his license, and
- they were married <i>straight</i> off on that day, and left, and I never
- saw her or Tom Lincoln since." From the death of her husband to that day,
- she had been living, "an honest, poor widow," "in a round log-cabin,"
- which stood in an "alley" just below Mr. Haycraft's house. Dennis Hanks
- says that it was only "on the earnest solicitation of her friends" that
- Mrs. Johnston consented to marry Lincoln. They all liked Lincoln, and it
- was with a member of her family that he had made several voyages to New
- Orleans. Mr. Helm, who at that time was doing business in his uncle's
- store at Elizabethtown, remarks that "life among the Hankses, the
- Lincolns, and the Enlows was a long ways below life among the Bushes."
- Sally was the best and the proudest of the Bushes; but, nevertheless, she
- appears to have maintained some intercourse with the Lincolns as long as
- they remained in Kentucky. She had a particular kindness for little Abe,
- and had him with her on several occasions at Helm's store, where, strange
- to say, he sat on a nail-keg, and ate a lump of sugar, "just like any
- other boy."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Johnston has been denominated a "poor widow;" but she possessed
- goods, which, in the eyes of Tom Lincoln, were of almost unparalleled
- magnificence. Among other things, she had a bureau that cost forty
- dollars; and he informed her, on their arrival in Indiana, that, in his
- deliberate opinion, it was little less than sinful to be the owner of such
- a thing. He demanded that she should turn it into cash, which she
- positively refused to do. She had quite a lot of other articles, however,
- which he thought well enough in their way, and some of which were sadly
- needed in his miserable cabin in the wilds of Indiana. Dennis Hanks speaks
- with great rapture of the "large supply of household goods" which she
- brought out with her. There was "one fine bureau, one table, one set of
- chairs, one large clothes-chest, cooking utensils, knives, forks, bedding,
- and other articles." It was a glorious day for little Abe and Sarah and
- Dennis when this wondrous collection of rich furniture arrived in the
- Pigeon Creek settlement. But all this wealth required extraordinary means
- of transportation; and Lincoln had recourse to his brother-in-law, Ralph
- Krume, who lived just over the line, in Breckinridge County. Krume came
- with a four-horse team, and moved Mrs. Johnston, now Mrs. Lincoln, with
- her family and effects, to the home of her new husband in Indiana. When
- she got there, Mrs. Lincoln was much "surprised" at the contrast between
- the glowing representations which her husband had made to her before
- leaving Kentucky and the real poverty and meanness of the place. She had
- evidently been given to understand that the bridegroom had reformed his
- old Kentucky ways, and was now an industrious and prosperous farmer. She
- was scarcely able to restrain the expression of her astonishment and
- discontent; but, though sadly overreached in a bad bargain, her lofty
- pride and her high sense of Christian duty saved her from hopeless and
- useless repinings.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the contrary, she set about mending what was amiss with all her
- strength and energy. Her own goods furnished the cabin with tolerable
- decency. She made Lincoln put down a floor, and hang windows and doors. It
- was in the depth of winter; and the children, as they nestled in the warm
- beds she provided them, enjoying the strange luxury of security from the
- cold winds of December, must have thanked her from the bottoms of their
- newly-comforted hearts. She had brought a son and two daughters of her
- own,&mdash;John, Sarah, and Matilda; but Abe and his sister Nancy (whose
- name was speedily changed to Sarah), the ragged and hapless little
- strangers to her blood, were given an equal place in her affections. They
- were half naked, and she clad them from the stores of clothing she had
- laid up for her own. They were dirty, and she washed them; they had been
- ill-used, and she treated them with motherly tenderness. In her own modest
- language, she "made them look a little more human." "In fact," says Dennis
- Hanks, "in a few weeks all had changed; and where every thing was wanting,
- now all was snug and comfortable. She was a woman of great energy of
- remarkable good sense, very industrious and saving, and also very neat and
- tidy in her person and manners, and knew exactly how to manage children.
- She took an especial liking to young Abe. Her love for him was warmly
- returned, and continued to the day of his death. But few children loved
- their parents as he loved his step-mother. She soon dressed him up in
- entire new clothes, <i>and from that time on he appeared to lead a new
- life</i>. He was encouraged by her to study, and any wish on his part was
- gratified when it could be done. The two sets of children got along finely
- together, as if they had all been the children of the same parents. Mrs.
- Lincoln soon discovered that young Abe was a boy of uncommon natural
- talents, and that, if rightly trained, a bright future was before him, and
- she did all in her power to develop those talents." When, in after years,
- Mr. Lincoln spoke of his "saintly mother," and of his "angel of a mother,"
- he referred to this noble woman,1 who first made him feel "like a human
- being,"&mdash;whose goodness first touched his childish heart, and taught
- him that blows and taunts and degradation were not to be his only portion
- in the world.2
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The author has many times heard him make the application. While he
- seldom, if ever, spoke of his own mother, he loved to dwell on the
- beautiful character of Sally Bush. 2 The following description of her
- personal appearance is from the pen of her granddaughter, the daughter
- of Dennis Hanks:&mdash; "When I landed in Indiana," says Mrs. Lincoln,
- "Abe was about nine years old, and the country was wild and desolate. It
- is certain enough that her presence took away much that was desolate in
- his lot. She clothed him decently, and had him sent to school as soon as
- there was a school to send him to. But, notwithstanding her
- determination to do the best for him, his advantages in this respect
- were very limited. He had already had a few days', or perhaps a few
- weeks' experience, under the discipline of Riney and Hazel, in Kentucky;
- and, as he was naturally quick in the acquisition of any sort of
- knowledge, it is likely that by this time he could read and write a
- little. He was now to have the benefit of a few months more of public
- instruction; but the poverty of the family, and the necessity for his
- being made to work at home in the shop and on the farm, or abroad as a
- hired boy, made his attendance at school, for any great length of time,
- a thing impossible. Accordingly, all his school-days added together
- would not make a single year in the aggregate. "His wife, my
- grandmother, is a very tall woman; straight as an Indian, fair
- complexion, and was, when I first remember her, very handsome,
- sprightly, talkative, and proud; wore her hair curled till gray; is
- kind-hearted and very charitable, and also very industrious."&mdash;Mrs.
- H. A, Chapman.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abraham began his irregular attendance at the nearest school very soon
- after he fell under the care of the second Mrs. Lincoln. It was probably
- in the winter of 1819, she having come out in the December of that year.
- It has been seen that she was as much impressed by his mental precocity as
- by the good qualities of his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hazel Dorsey was his first master.1 He presided in a small house near the
- Little Pigeon Creek meeting-house, a mile and a half from the Lincoln
- cabin. It was built of unhewn logs, and had "holes for windows," in which
- "greased paper" served for glass. The roof was just high enough for a man
- to stand erect. Here he was taught reading, writing, and ciphering. They
- spelled in classes, and "trapped" up and down. These juvenile contests
- were very exciting to the participants; and it is said by the survivors,
- that Abe was even then the equal, if not the superior, of any scholar in
- his class.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The account of the schools is taken from the Grigsbys, Turnham, and
- others, who attended them along with Abe, as well as from the members of
- his own family.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The next teacher was Andrew Crawford. Mrs. Gentry says he began pedagogue
- in the neighborhood in the winter of 1822-3, whilst most of his other
- scholars are unable to fix an exact date. He "kept" in the same little
- schoolhouse which had been the scene of Dorsey's labors, and the windows
- were still adorned with the greased leaves of old copybooks that had come
- down from Dorsey's time. Abe was now in his fifteenth year, and began to
- exhibit symptoms of gallantry toward the weaker sex, as we shall presently
- discover. He was growing at a tremendous rate, and two years later
- attained his full height of six feet four inches. He was long, wiry, and
- strong; while his big feet and hands, and the length of his legs and arms,
- were out of all proportion to his small trunk and head. His complexion was
- very swarthy, and Mrs. Gentry says that his skin was shrivelled and yellow
- even then. He wore low shoes, buckskin breeches, linsey-woolsey shirt, and
- a cap made of the skin of an opossum or a coon. The breeches clung close
- to his thighs and legs, but failed by a large space to meet the tops of
- his shoes. Twelve inches remained uncovered, and exposed that much of
- "shinbone, sharp, blue, and narrow."1 "He would always come to school
- thus, good-humoredly and laughing," says his old friend, Nat Grigsby. "He
- was always in good health, never was sick, had an excellent constitution,
- and took care of it."
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "They had no woollen clothing in the family until about the year
- 1824."&mdash;Dennis Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Crawford taught "manners." This was a feature of backwoods education to
- which Dorsey had not aspired, and Crawford had doubtless introduced it as
- a refinement which would put to shame the humbler efforts of his
- predecessor. One of the scholars was required to retire, and re-enter as a
- polite gentleman is supposed to enter a drawing-room. He was received at
- the door by another scholar, and conducted from bench to bench, until he
- had been introduced to all the "young ladies and gentlemen" in the room.
- Abe went through the ordeal countless times. If he took a serious view of
- the business, it must have put him to exquisite torture; for he was
- conscious that he was not a perfect type of manly beauty, with his long
- legs and blue shins, his small head, his great ears, and shrivelled skin.
- If, however, it struck him as at all funny, it must have filled him with
- unspeakable mirth, and given rise to many antic tricks and sly jokes, as
- he was gravely led about, shamefaced and gawky, under the very eye of the
- precise Crawford, to be introduced to the boys and girls of his most
- ancient acquaintance.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, though Crawford inculcated manners, he by no means neglected
- spelling. Abe was a good speller, and liked to use his knowledge, not only
- to secure honors for himself, but to help his less fortunate schoolmates
- out of their troubles, and he was exceedingly ingenious in the selection
- of expedients for conveying prohibited hints. One day Crawford gave out
- the difficult word <i>defied</i>. A large class was on the floor, but they
- all provokingly failed to spell it. D-e-f-i-d-e, said one; d-e-f-y-d-e,
- said another; d-e-f-y-d,&mdash;d-e-f-y-e-d, cried another and another. But
- it was all wrong: it was shameful, that, among all these big boys and
- girls, nobody could spell "<i>defied</i>;" Crawford's wrath gathered in
- clouds over his terrible brow. He made the helpless culprits shake with
- fear. He declared he would keep the whole class in all day and all night,
- if "<i>defied</i>" was not spelled. There was among them a Miss Roby, a
- girl fifteen years of age, whom we must suppose to have been pretty, for
- Abe was evidently half in love with her. "I saw Lincoln at the window,"
- says she: "he had his finger in his <i>eye</i>, and a smile on his face; I
- instantly took the hint, that I must change the letter <i>y</i> into an <i>i</i>.
- Hence I spelled the word,&mdash;the class let out. I felt grateful to
- Lincoln for this simple thing."
- </p>
- <p>
- Nat Grigsby tells us, with unnecessary particularity, that "essays and
- poetry were not taught in this school." "Abe took it (them) up on his own
- account." He first wrote short sentences against "cruelty to animals," and
- at last came forward with a regular "composition" on the subject. He was
- very much annoyed and pained by the conduct of the boys, who were in the
- habit of catching terrapins, and putting coals of fire on their backs. "He
- would chide us," says Nat, "tell us it was wrong, and would write against
- it."
- </p>
- <p>
- The third and last school to which Abe went was taught by a Mr. Swaney, in
- 1826. To get there, he had to travel four and a half miles; and this going
- back and forth so great a distance occupied entirely too much of his time.
- His attendance was therefore only at odd times, and was speedily broken
- off altogether. The schoolhouse was much like the other one near the
- Pigeon Creek meeting-house, except that it had two chimneys instead of
- one. The course of instruction was precisely the same as under Dorsey and
- Crawford, save that Swaney, like Dorsey, omitted the great department of
- "manners." "Here," says John Hoskins, the son of the settler who had
- "blazed out" the trail for Tom Lincoln, "we would choose up, and spell as
- in old times every Friday night." Hoskins himself tore down "the old
- schoolhouse" long since, and built a stable with the logs. He is now half
- sorry for his haste, and reverently presented Mr. Herndon a piece of the
- wood as a precious memento of his old friend Abe. An oak-tree, blackened
- and killed by the smoke that issued from the two chimneys, spreads its
- naked arms over the spot where the schoolhouse stood. Among its roots is a
- fine, large spring, over whose limpid waters Abe often bent to drink, and
- laughed at the reflection of his own homely face.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe never went to school again in Indiana or elsewhere. Mr. Turnham tells
- us, that he had excelled all his masters, and it was "no use" for him to
- attempt to learn any thing from them. But he continued his studies at
- home, or wherever he was hired out to work, with a perseverance which
- showed that he could scarcely live without some species of mental
- excitement. He was by no means fond of the hard manual labor to which his
- own necessities and those of his family compelled him. Many of his
- acquaintances state this fact with strong emphasis,&mdash;among them
- Dennis Hanks and Mrs. Lincoln. His neighbor, John Romine, declares that
- Abe was "awful lazy. He worked for me; was always reading and thinking;
- used to get mad at him. He worked for me in 1829, pulling fodder. I say
- Abe was awful lazy: he would laugh and talk and crack jokes and tell
- stories all the time; didn't love work, but did dearly love his pay. He
- worked for me frequently, a few days only at a time.... Lincoln said to me
- one day, that his father taught him to work, but never learned him to love
- it."
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Whenever Mrs. Sarah Lincoln speaks, we follow her implicitly.
- Regarding Abe's habits and conduct at home, her statement is a very full
- one. It is, however, confirmed and supplemented by all the other members
- of the family who were alive in 1866.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abe loved to lie under a shade-tree, or up in the loft of the cabin, and
- read, cipher, and scribble. At night he sat by the chimney "jamb," and
- ciphered, by the light of the fire, on the wooden fire-shovel. When the
- shovel was fairly covered, he would shave it off with Tom Lincoln's
- drawing-knife, and begin again. In the daytime he used boards for the same
- purpose, out of doors, and went through the shaving process everlastingly.
- His step-mother1 repeats often, that "he read every book he could lay his
- hand on." She says, "Abe read diligently.... He read every book he could
- lay his hands on; and, when he came across a passage that struck him, he
- would write it down on boards if he had no paper, and keep it there until
- he did get paper. Then he would re-write it, look at it, repeat it. He had
- a copy-book, a kind of scrapbook, in which he put down all things, and
- thus preserved them."
- </p>
- <p>
- John Hanks came out from Kentucky when Abe was fourteen years of age, and
- lived four years with the Lincolns. We cannot describe some of Abe's
- habits better than John has described them for us: "When Lincoln&mdash;Abe
- and I&mdash;returned to the house from work, he would go to the cupboard,
- snatch a piece of corn-bread, take down a book, sit down on a chair, cock
- his legs up high as his head, and read. He and I worked barefooted,
- grubbed it, ploughed, mowed, and cradled together; ploughed corn, gathered
- it, and shucked corn. Abraham read constantly when he had an opportunity."
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the books upon which Abe "laid his hands" were "Æsop's Fables,"
- "Robinson Crusoe," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," a "History of the United
- States," and Weems's "Life of Washington." All these he read many times,
- and transferred extracts from them to the boards and the scrapbook. He had
- procured the scrap-book because most of his literature was borrowed, and
- he thought it profitable to take copious notes from the books before he
- returned them. David Turnham had bought a volume of "The Revised Statutes
- of Indiana;" but, as he was "acting constable" at the time, he could not
- lend it to Abe. But Abe was not to be baffled in his purpose of going
- through and through every book in the neighborhood; and so, says Mr.
- Turnham, "he used to come to my house and sit and read it." 1 Dennis Hanks
- would fain have us believe that he himself was the purchaser of this book,
- and that he had stood as a sort of first preceptor to Abe in the science
- of law. "I had like to forgot," writes Dennis, with his usual modesty,
- "How did Abe get his knowledge of law? This is the fact about it. I bought
- the 'Statute of Indiana,' and from that he learned the principles of law,
- and also myself. Every man should become acquainted of the principles of
- law." The Bible, according to Mrs. Lincoln, was not one of his studies:
- "he sought more congenial books." At that time he neither talked nor read
- upon religious subjects. If he had any opinions about them, he kept them
- to himself.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 He also read at Turnham's house Scott's Lessons and Sindbad the
- Sailor.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abraham borrowed Weems's "Life of Washington" from his neighbor, old
- Josiah Crawford,&mdash;not Andrew Crawford, the school-teacher, as some of
- his biographers have it. The "Life" was read with great avidity in the
- intervals of work, and, when not in use, was carefully deposited on a
- shelf, made of a clapboard laid on two pins. But just behind the shelf
- there was a great crack between the logs of the wall; and one night, while
- Abe was dreaming in the loft, a storm came up, and the rain, blown through
- the opening, soaked his precious book from cover to cover. Crawford was a
- sour and churlish fellow at best, and flatly refused to take the damaged
- book back again. He said, that, if Abe had no money to pay for it, he
- could work it out. Of course, there was no alternative; and Abe was
- obliged to discharge the debt by "pulling fodder" three days, at
- twenty-five cents a day. Crawford afterwards paid dearly for his
- churlishness.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0003" id="image-0003">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/061.jpg"
- alt="Mrs. Sarah Lincoln, Mother of the President. 061 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- At home, with his step-mother and the children, he was the most agreeable
- fellow in the world. "He was always ready to do every thing for
- everybody." When he was not doing some special act of kindness, he told
- stories or "cracked jokes." "He was as full of his yarns in Indiana as
- ever he was in Illinois." Dennis Hanks was a clever hand at the same
- business, and so was old Tom Lincoln. Among them they must have made
- things very lively, during the long winter evenings, for John Johnston and
- the good old lady and the girls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Lincoln was never able to speak of Abe's conduct to her without
- tears. In her interview with Mr. Herndon, when the sands of her life had
- nearly run out, she spoke with deep emotion of her own son, but said she
- thought that Abe was kinder, better, truer, than the other. Even the
- mother's instinct was lost as she looked back over those long years of
- poverty and privation in the Indiana cabin, when Abe's grateful love
- softened the rigors of her lot, and his great heart and giant frame were
- always at her command. "Abe was a poor boy," said she; "and I can say what
- scarcely one woman&mdash;a mother&mdash;can say in a thousand. Abe never
- gave me a cross word or look, and never refused, in fact or appearance, to
- do any thing I requested him. I never gave him a cross word in all my
- life.... His mind and mine&mdash;what little I had&mdash;seemed to run
- together.... He was here after he was elected President." (At this point
- the aged speaker turned away to weep, and then, wiping her eyes with her
- apron, went on with the story). "He was dutiful to me always. I think he
- loved me truly. I had a son, John, who was raised with Abe. Both were good
- boys; but I must say, both now being dead, that Abe was the best boy I
- ever saw, or expect to see. I wish I had died when my husband died. I did
- not want Abe to run for President; did not want him elected; was afraid
- somehow,&mdash;felt in my heart; and when he came down to see me, after he
- was elected President, I still felt that something told me that something
- would befall Abe, and that I should see him no more."
- </p>
- <p>
- Is there any thing in the language we speak more touching than that simple
- plaint of the woman whom we must regard as Abraham Lincoln's mother? The
- apprehension in her "heart" was well grounded. She "saw him no more." When
- Mr. Herndon rose to depart, her eyes again filled with tears; and,
- wringing his hands as if loath to part with one who talked so much of her
- beloved Abe, she said, "Good-by, my good son's friend. Farewell."
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe had a very retentive memory. He frequently amused his young companions
- by repeating to them long passages from the books he had been reading. On
- Monday mornings he would mount a stump, and deliver, with a wonderful
- approach to exactness, the sermon he had heard the day before. His taste
- for public speaking appeared to be natural and irresistible. His
- step-sister, Matilda Johnston, says he was an indefatigable "preacher."
- "When father and mother would go to church, Abe would take down the Bible,
- read a verse, give out a hymn, and we would sing. Abe was about fifteen
- years of age. He preached, and we would do the crying. Sometimes he would
- join in the chorus of tears. One day my brother, John Johnston, caught a
- land terrapin, brought it to the place where Abe was preaching, threw it
- against the tree, and crushed the shell. It suffered much,&mdash;quivered
- all over. Abe then preached against cruelty to animals, contending that an
- ant's life was as sweet to it as ours to us."
- </p>
- <p>
- But this practice of "preaching" and political speaking, into which Abe
- had fallen, at length became a great nuisance to old, Tom. It distracted
- everybody, and sadly interfered with the work. If Abe had confined his
- discourses to Sunday preaching, while the old folks were away, it would
- not have been so objectionable. But he knew his power, liked to please
- everybody, and would be sure to set up as an orator wherever he found the
- greatest number of people together. When it was announced that Abe had
- taken the "stump" in the harvest-field, there was an end of work. The
- hands flocked around him, and listened to his curious speeches with
- infinite delight. "The sight of such a thing amused all," says Mrs.
- Lincoln; though she admits that her husband was compelled to break it up
- with the strong hand; and poor Abe was many times dragged from the
- platform, and hustled off to his work in no gentle manner.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 We are told by Col. Chapman that Abe's father habitually treated him
- with great barbarity. Dennis Hanks insists that he loved him sincerely,
- but admits that he now and then knocked him from the fence for merely
- answering traveller's questions about the roads.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abe worked occasionally with Tom Lincoln in the shop; but he did it
- reluctantly, and never intended to learn even so much of the trade as
- Lincoln was able to teach him. The rough work turned out at that shop was
- far beneath his ambition, and he had made up his mind to lead a life as
- wholly unlike his father's as he could possibly make it. He therefore
- refused to be a carpenter. But he could not afford to be idle; and, as
- soon as he was able to earn wages, he was hired out among the neighbors.
- He worked for many of them a few months at a time, and seemed perfectly
- willing to transfer his services wherever they were wanted, so that his
- father had no excuse for persecuting him with entreaties about learning to
- make tables and cupboards.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe was now becoming a man, and was, in fact, already taller than any man
- in the neighborhood. He was a universal favorite, and his wit and humor
- made him heartily welcome at every cabin between the two Pigeon Creeks.
- Any family was glad when "Abe Linkern" was hired to work with them; for he
- did his work well, and made them all merry while he was about it. The
- women were especially pleased, for Abe was not above doing any kind of
- "chores" for them. He was always ready to make a fire, carry water, or
- nurse a baby. But what manner of people were these amongst whom he passed
- the most critical part of his life? We must know them if we desire to know
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- There lived in the neighborhood of Gentryville a Mrs. Elizabeth Crawford,
- wife to the now celebrated Josiah with the sour temper and the blue nose.
- Abe was very fond of her, and inclined to "let himself out" in her
- company. She fortunately possessed a rare memory, and Mr. Herndon's rich
- collection of manuscripts was made richer still by her contributions. We
- have from her a great mass of valuable, and sometimes extremely amusing,
- information. Among it is the following graphic, although rude, account of
- the Pigeon Creek people in general:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "You wish me to tell you how the people used to go to meeting,&mdash;how
- far they went. At that time we thought it nothing to go eight or ten
- miles. The old ladies did not stop for the want of a shawl, or cloak, or
- riding-dress, or two horses, in the winter-time; but they would put on
- their husbands' old overcoats, and wrap up their little ones, and take one
- or two of them up on their beasts, and their husbands would walk, and they
- would go to church, and stay in the neighborhood until the next day, and
- then go home. The old men would start out of their fields from their work,
- or out of the woods from hunting, with their guns on their shoulders, and
- go to church. Some of them dressed in deer-skin pants and moccasins,
- hunting-shirts with a rope or leather strap around them. They would come
- in laughing, shake hands all around, sit down and talk about their game
- they had killed, or some other work they had done, and smoke their pipes
- together with the old ladies. If in warm weather, they would kindle up a
- little fire out in the meeting-house yard, to light their pipes. If in
- winter-time, they would hold church in some of the neighbors' houses. At
- such times they were always treated with the utmost of kindness: a bottle
- of whiskey, a pitcher of water, sugar and glass, were set out, or a basket
- of apples, or turnips, or some pies and cakes. Apples were scarce them
- times. Sometimes potatoes were used as a treat. (I must tell you that the
- first treat I ever received in old Mr. Linkern's house, that was our
- President's father's house, was a plate of potatoes, washed and pared very
- nicely, and handed round. It was something new to me, for I never had seen
- a raw potato eaten before. I looked to see how they made use of them. They
- took off a potato, and ate them like apples.) Thus they spent the time
- till time for preaching to commence, then they would all take their seats:
- the preacher would take his stand, draw his coat, open his shirt-collar,
- commence service by singing and prayer; take his text and preach till the
- sweat would roll off in great drops. Shaking hands and singing then ended
- the service. The people seemed to enjoy religion more in them days than
- they do now. They were glad to see each other, and enjoyed themselves
- better than they do now."
- </p>
- <p>
- Society about Gentryville was little different from that of any other
- backwoods settlement of the same day. The houses were scattered far apart;
- but the inhabitants would travel long distances to a log-rolling, a
- house-raising, a wedding, or any thing else that might be turned into a
- fast and furious frolic. On such occasions the young women carried their
- shoes in their hands, and only put them on when about to join the company.
- The ladies drank whiskey-toddy, while the men took it straight; and both
- sexes danced the live-long night, barefooted, on puncheon floors.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fair sex wore "cornfield bonnets, scoop-shaped, flaring in front, and
- long though narrow behind." Shoes were the mode when entering the
- ball-room; but it was not at all fashionable to scuff them out by walking
- or dancing in them. "Four yards of linsey-woolsey, a yard in width, made a
- dress for any woman." The waist was short, and terminated just under the
- arms, whilst the skirt was long and narrow. "Crimps and puckering frills"
- it had none. The coats of the men were home-made; the materials, jeans or
- linsey-woolsey. The waists were short, like the frocks of the women, and
- the long "claw-hammer" tail was split up to the waist. This, however, was
- company dress, and the hunting-shirt did duty for every day. The breeches
- were of buck-skin or jeans; the cap was of coon-skin; and the shoes of
- leather tanned at home. If no member of the family could make shoes, the
- leather was taken to some one who could, and the customer paid the maker a
- fair price in some other sort of labor.
- </p>
- <p>
- The state of agriculture was what it always is where there is no market,
- either to sell or buy; where the implements are few and primitive, and
- where there are no regular mechanics. The Pigeon Creek farmer "tickled"
- two acres of ground in a day with his old shovel-plough, and got but half
- a crop. He cut one acre with his sickle, while the modern machine lays
- down in neat rows ten. With his flail and horse tramping, he threshed out
- fifteen bushels of wheat; while the machine of to-day, with a few more
- hands, would turn out three hundred and fifty. He "fanned" and "cleaned
- with a sheet." When he wanted flour, he took his team and went to a
- "horse-mill," where he spent a whole day in converting fifteen bushels of
- grain.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "Size of the fields from ten, twelve, sixteen, twenty. Raised corn
- mostly; some wheat,&mdash;enough for a cake on Sunday morning. Hogs and
- venison hams were legal tender, and coon-skins also. We raised sheep and
- cattle, but they did not fetch much. Cows and calves were only worth six
- dollars; corn, ten cents; wheat, twenty-five cents at that time."&mdash;
- Dennis Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The minds of these people were filled with superstitions, which most
- persons imagine to be, at least, as antiquated as witch-burning. They
- firmly believed in witches and all kind of witch-doings. They sent for
- wizards to cure sick cattle. They shot the image of the witch with a
- silver ball, to break the spell she was supposed to have laid on a human
- being. If a dog ran directly across a man's path whilst he was hunting, it
- was terrible "luck," unless he instantly hooked his two little fingers
- together, and pulled with all his might, until the dog was out of sight.
- There were wizards who took charmed twigs in their hands, and made them
- point to springs of water and all kinds of treasure beneath the earth's
- surface. There were "faith doctors," who cured diseases by performing
- mysterious ceremonies and muttering cabalistic words. If a bird alighted
- in a window, one of the family would speedily die. If a horse breathed on
- a child, the child would have the whooping-cough. Every thing must be done
- at certain "times and seasons," else it would be attended with "bad luck."
- They must cut trees for rails in the early part of the day, and in "the
- light of the moon." They must make fence in "the light of the moon;"
- otherwise, the fence would sink. Potatoes and other roots were to be
- planted in the "dark of the moon," but trees, and plants which bore their
- fruits above ground, must be "put out in the light of the moon." The moon
- exerted a fearful influence, either kindly or malignant, as the good old
- rules were observed or not. It was even required to make soap "in the
- light of the moon," and, moreover, it must be stirred only one way, and by
- one person. Nothing of importance was to be begun on Friday. All
- enterprises inaugurated on that day went fatally amiss. A horse-colt could
- be begotten only "in the dark of the moon," and animals treated otherwise
- than "according to the signs in the almanac" were nearly sure to die.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such were the people among whom Abe grew to manhood. With their sons and
- daughters he went to school. Upon their farms he earned his daily bread by
- daily toil. From their conversation he formed his earliest opinions of men
- and things, the world over. Many of their peculiarities became his; and
- many of their thoughts and feelings concerning a multitude of subjects
- were assimilated with his own, and helped to create that unique character,
- which, in the eyes of a great host of the American people, was only less
- curious and amusing than it was noble and august.
- </p>
- <p>
- His most intimate companions were of course, for a long time, the members
- of his own family. The reader already knows something of Thomas Lincoln,
- and that pre-eminently good woman, Sally Bush. The latter, we know,
- washed, clothed, loved, and encouraged Abe in well-doing, from the moment
- he fell in her way. How much he owed to her goodness and affection, he was
- himself never able to estimate. That it was a great debt, fondly
- acknowledged and cheerfully repaid as far as in him lay, there can be no
- doubt. His own sister, the child of Nancy Hanks, was warmly attached to
- him. Her face somewhat resembled his. In repose it had the gravity which
- they both, perhaps, inherited from their mother; but it was capable of
- being lighted almost into beauty by one of Abe's ridiculous stories or
- rapturous sallies of humor. She was a modest, plain, industrious girl, and
- is kindly remembered by all who knew her. She was married to Aaron Grigsby
- at eighteen, and a year after died in child-bed. Like Abe, she
- occasionally worked out at the houses of the neighbors, and at one time
- was employed in Mrs. Crawford's kitchen, while her brother was a laborer
- on the same farm. She lies buried, not with her mother, but in the yard of
- the old Pigeon Creek meeting-house. It is especially pleasing to read the
- encomiums lavished upon her memory by the Grigsbys; for between the
- Grigsbys on one side, and Abe and his step-brother on the other, there
- once subsisted a fierce feud.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0004" id="image-0004">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/070.jpg" alt="Dennis Hanks 070 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- As we have already learned from Dennis Hanks, the two families&mdash;the
- Johnstons and the Lincolns&mdash;"got along finely together." The
- affectionate relations between Abe and his two step-sisters were the
- subject of common remark throughout the neighborhood. One of them married
- Dennis Hanks, and the other Levi Hall, or, as he is better known, Squire
- Hall,&mdash;a cousin of Abe. Both these women (the latter now Mrs. Moore)
- furnished Mr. Herndon very valuable memoirs of Abe's life whilst he dwelt
- under the same roof with them; and they have given an account of him which
- shows that the ties between them were of the strongest and tenderest kind.
- But what is most remarkable in their statements is, that they never opened
- their lips without telling how worthy of everybody's love their mother
- was, and how Abe revered her as much as they did. They were interesting
- girls, and became exemplary women.
- </p>
- <p>
- John D. Johnston, the only son of Mrs. Lincoln, was not the best boy, and
- did not grow to be the best man, in all the Pigeon Creek region. He had no
- positive vice, except idleness, and no special virtue but good temper. He
- was not a fortunate man; never made money; was always needy, and always
- clamoring for the aid of his friends. Mr. Lincoln, all through John's
- life, had much trouble to keep him on his legs, and succeeded
- indifferently in all his attempts. In a subsequent chapter a letter will
- be given from him, which indirectly portrays his step-brother's character
- much better than it can be done here. But, as youths, the intimacy between
- them was very close; and in another place it will appear that Abe
- undertook his second voyage to New Orleans only on condition that John
- would go along.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the most constant of his companions was his jolly cousin, Dennis
- Hanks. Of all the contributors to Mr. Herndon's store of information,
- good, bad, and indifferent, concerning this period of Mr. Lincoln's life,
- Dennis is the most amusing, insinuating, and prolific. He would have it
- distinctly understood that the well of his memory is the only proper
- source whence any thing like truth may be drawn.1 He has covered countless
- sheets of paper devoted to indiscriminate laudations of Abe and all his
- kindred. But in all this he does not neglect to say a word for himself.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The following random selections from his writings leave us no room to
- doubt Dennis's opinion of his own value:&mdash; "William, let in, don't
- keep any thing back, for I am in for the whole hog sure; for I know
- nobody can do any for you much, for all they know is from me at last.
- Every thing you see is from my notes,&mdash;this you can tell yourself.
- "I have in my possession a little book, the private life of A. Lincoln,
- comprising a full life of his early years, and a succinct record of his
- career as statesman and President, by O. J. Victor, author of Lives of
- Garibaldi, Winfield Scott, John Paul Jones, &amp;c., New York, Beadle
- and Company, publishers, No. 118 Williams Street. Now, sir, I find a
- great many things pertaining to Abe Lincoln's life that is not true. If
- you would like to have the book, I will mail it to you. I will say this
- much to you: if you don't have my name very frequently in your book, it
- won't go at all; for I have been East for two months, have seen a great
- many persons in that time, stating to them that there would be a book,
- 'The Life of A. Lincoln,' published, giving a full account of the
- family, from England to this country. Now, William, if there be any
- thing you want to know, let me know: I will give you all the information
- I can. "I have seen a letter that you wrote to my daughter, Harriet
- Chapman, of inquiry about some things. I thought you were informed all
- about them. I don't know what she has stated to you about your
- questions; but you had better consult me about them. "Billy, it seems to
- me, from the letters that you write to me asking questions, that you ask
- the same questions over several times. How is this? Do you forget, or
- are you like the lawyer, trying to make me cross my path, or not? Now, I
- will. Look below for the answer."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- At one place, "his cousin, Dennis Hanks," is said to have taught Abe to
- read and write. At another, he is represented as the benevolent purchaser
- of the volumes from which Abe (and Dennis too) derived a wonderfully clear
- and accurate conception of the science of law. In all studies their minds
- advanced <i>pari passu</i>. Whenever any differences are noted (and they
- are few and slight), Dennis is a step ahead, benignantly extending a
- helping hand to the lagging pupil behind. But Dennis's heart is big and
- kind: he defames no one; he is merely a harmless romancer. In the gallery
- of family portraits painted by Dennis, every face looks down upon us with
- the serenity of innocence and virtue. There is no spot on the fame of any
- one of them. No family could have a more vigorous or chivalrous defender
- than he, or one who repelled with greater scorn any rumor to their
- discredit. That Enlow story! Dennis almost scorned to confute it; but,
- when he did get at it, he settled it by a magnificent exercise of
- inventive genius. He knew "this Abe Enlow" well, he said, and he had been
- dead precisely fifty-five years. But, whenever the truth can be told
- without damage to the character of a Lincoln or a Hanks, Dennis will tell
- it candidly enough, provided there is no temptation to magnify himself.
- His testimony, however, has been sparingly used throughout these pages;
- and no statement has been taken from him unless it was more or less
- directly corroborated by some one else. The better part of his evidence
- Mr. Herndon took the precaution of reading carefully to John Hanks, who
- pronounced it substantially true; and that circumstance gives it
- undeniable value.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Thomas and Betsy Sparrow died in the fall of 1818, Dennis was taken
- from the "little half-faced camp," and became one of the Lincoln family.
- Until Thomas Lincoln's second marriage, Dennis, Abe, and Sarah were all
- three poor, ragged, and miserable together. After that, Dennis got along
- better, as well as the rest. He was a lively, volatile, sympathetic
- fellow, and Abe liked him well from the beginning. They fished, hunted,
- and worked in company; loafed at the grocery, where Dennis got drunk, and
- Abe told stories; talked politics with Col. Jones; "swapped jokes" with
- Baldwin the blacksmith; and faithfully attended the sittings of the
- nearest justice of the peace, where both had opportunities to correct and
- annotate the law they thought they had learned from the "Statute of
- Indiana." Dennis was kind, genial, lazy, brimming over with humor, and
- full of amusing anecdotes. He revelled in song, from the vulgarest ballad
- to the loftiest hymn of devotion; from "The turbaned Turk, that scorns the
- world," to the holiest lines of Doctor Watts. These qualities marked him
- wherever he went; and in excessive good-nature, and in the ease with which
- he passed from the extreme of rigor to the extreme of laxity, he was
- distinguished above the others of his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was one Hanks, however, who was not like Dennis, or any other Hanks
- we know any thing about: this was "old John," as he is familiarly called
- in Illinois,&mdash;a sober, honest, truthful man, with none of the wit and
- none of the questionable accomplishments of Dennis. He was the son of
- Joseph, the carpenter with whom Tom Lincoln learned the trade. He went to
- Indiana to live with the Lincolns when Abe was fourteen years of age, and
- remained there four years. He then returned to Kentucky, and subsequently
- went to Illinois, where he was speedily joined by the old friends he had
- left in Indiana. When Abe separated from the family, and went in search of
- individual fortune, it was in company with "old John." Together they split
- the rails that did so much to make Abe President; and "old John" set the
- ball in motion by carrying a part of them into the Decatur Convention on
- his own broad shoulders. John had no education whatever, except that of
- the muscles and the heart. He could neither read nor write; but his
- character was pure and respectable, and Lincoln esteemed him as a man, and
- loved him as a friend and relative.
- </p>
- <p>
- About six years after the death of the first Mrs. Lincoln, Levi Hall and
- his wife and family came to Indiana, and settled near the Lincolns. Mrs.
- Hall was Nancy Hanks, the mother of our friend Dennis, and the aunt of
- Nancy Hanks, the mother of Abraham Lincoln. She had numerous children by
- her husband. One of them, Levi, as already mentioned, married one of Abe's
- step-sisters, while Dennis, his half-brother, married the other one. The
- father and mother of the Halls speedily died of the milk-sickness, but
- Levi was for many years a constant companion of Abe and Dennis.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1825 Abraham was employed by James Taylor, who lived at the mouth of
- Anderson's Creek. He was paid six dollars a month, and remained for nine
- months. His principal business was the management of a ferry-boat which
- Mr. Taylor had plying across the Ohio, as well as Anderson's Creek. But,
- in addition to this, he was required to do all sorts of farm-work, and
- even to perform some menial services about the house. He was hostler,
- ploughman, ferryman, out of doors, and man-of-all-work within doors. He
- ground corn with a hand-mill, or "grated" it when too young to be ground;
- rose early, built fires, put on the water in the kitchen, "fixed around
- generally," and had things prepared for cooking before the mistress of the
- house was stirring. He slept up stairs with young Green Taylor, who says
- that he usually read "till near midnight," notwithstanding the necessity
- for being out of his bed before day. Green was somewhat disposed to
- ill-use the poor hired boy, and once struck him with an ear of hard corn,
- and cut a deep gash over his eye. He makes no comment upon this generous
- act, except that "Abe got mad," but did not thrash him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe was a hand much in demand in "hog-killing time." He butchered not only
- for Mr. Taylor, but for John Woods, John Duthan, Stephen McDaniels, and
- others. At this he earned thirty-one cents a day, as it was considered
- "rough work."
- </p>
- <p>
- For a long time there was only one person in the neighborhood for whom Abe
- felt a decided dislike; and that was Josiah Crawford, who had made him
- "pull fodder," to pay for the Weems's "Washington." On that score he was
- "hurt" and "mad," and often declared "he would have revenge." But being a
- poor boy,&mdash;a circumstance of which Crawford had already taken
- shameful advantage to extort three days' labor,&mdash;he was glad to get
- work any place, and frequently "hired to his old adversary." Abe's first
- business in his employ was daubing his cabin, which was built of logs,
- unhewed, and with the bark on. In the loft of this house, thus finished by
- his own hands, he slept for many weeks at a time. He spent his evenings as
- he did at home,&mdash;writing on wooden shovels or boards with "a coal, or
- keel, from the branch." This family was rich in the possession of several
- books, which Abe read through time and again, according to his usual
- custom. One of them was the "Kentucky Preceptor," from which Mrs. Crawford
- insists that he "learned his school orations, speeches, and pieces to
- write." She tells us also that "Abe was a sensitive lad, never coming
- where he was not wanted;" that he always lifted his hat, and bowed, when
- he made his appearance; and that "he was tender and kind," like his
- sister, who was at the same time her maid-of-all-work. His pay was
- twenty-five cents a day; "and, when he missed time, he would not charge
- for it." This latter remark of good Mrs. Crawford reveals the fact that
- her husband was in the habit of docking Abe on his miserable wages
- whenever he happened to lose a few minutes from steady work.
- </p>
- <p>
- The time came, however, when Abe got his "revenge" for all this petty
- brutality. Crawford was as ugly as he was surly. His nose was a
- monstrosity,&mdash;long and crooked, with a huge, misshapen "stub" at the
- end, surmounted by a host of pimples, and the whole as "blue" as the usual
- state of Mr. Crawford's spirits. Upon this member Abe levelled his attack
- in rhyme, song, and "chronicle;" and, though he could not reduce the nose,
- he gave it a fame as wide as to the Wabash and the Ohio. It is not
- improbable that he learned the art of making the doggerel rhymes in which
- he celebrated Crawford's nose from the study of Crawford's own "Kentucky
- Preceptor." At all events, his sallies upon this single topic achieved him
- great reputation as a "poet" and a wit, and caused Crawford intolerable
- anguish.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is likely that Abe was reconciled to his situation in this family by
- the presence of his sister, and the opportunity it gave him of being in
- the company of Mrs. Crawford, for whom he had a genuine attachment; for
- she was nothing that her husband was, and every thing that he was not.
- According to her account, he split rails, ploughed, threshed, and did
- whatever else he was ordered to do; but she distinctly affirms that "Abe
- was no hand to pitch into his work like killing snakes." He went about it
- "calmly," and generally took the opportunity to throw "Crawford" down two
- or three times "before they went to the field." It is fair to presume,
- that, when Abe managed to inveigle his disagreeable employer into a
- tussle, he hoisted him high and threw him hard, for he felt that he had no
- reason to be careful of his bones. After meals Abe "hung about," lingered
- long to gossip and joke with the women; and these pleasant, stolen
- conferences were generally broken up with the exclamation, "Well, this
- won't buy the child a coat!" and the long-legged hired boy would stride
- away to join his master.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time Abe had become, not only the longest, but the strongest,
- man in the settlement. Some of his feats almost surpass belief, and those
- who beheld them with their own eyes stood literally amazed. Richardson, a
- neighbor, declares that he could carry a load to which the strength of
- "three ordinary men" would scarcely be equal. He saw him quietly pick up
- and walk away with "a chicken-house, made of poles pinned together, and
- covered, that weighed at least six hundred, if not much more." At another
- time the Richardsons were building a corn-crib: Abe was there; and, seeing
- three or four men preparing "sticks" upon which to carry some huge posts,
- he relieved them of all further trouble by shouldering the posts,
- single-handed, and walking away with them to the place where they were
- wanted. "He could strike with a mall," says old Mr. Wood, "a heavier blow
- than any man.... He could sink an axe deeper into wood than any man I ever
- saw."
- </p>
- <p>
- For hunting purposes, the Pigeon Creek region was one of the most inviting
- on earth. The uplands were all covered with an original growth of majestic
- forest trees,1 whilst on the hillsides, and wherever an opening in the
- woods permitted the access of sunlight, there were beds of fragrant and
- beautiful wild-flowers, presenting, in contrast with the dense green
- around them, the most brilliant and agreeable effects. Here the game had
- vast and secluded ranges, which, until very recently, had heard the report
- of no white man's gun. In Abe's time, the squirrels, rabbits, partridges,
- and other varieties of smaller game, were so abundant as to be a nuisance.
- They devastated grain-fields and gardens; and while they were seldom shot
- for the table, the settlers frequently devised the most cunning means of
- destroying them in great quantities, in order to save the growing crops.
- Wild turkeys and deer were the principal reliance for food; but besides
- these were the bears, the wild-cats, and the panthers.1 The scream of the
- latter, the most ferocious and bloodthirsty of the cat kind, hastened
- Abe's homeward steps on many a dark night, as he came late from Dave
- Turnham's, "Uncle" Wood's, or the Gentryville grocery. That terrific cry
- appeals not only to the natural fear of the monster's teeth and claws,
- but, heard in the solitude of night and the forest, it awakens a feeling
- of superstitious horror, that chills the heart of the bravest.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Now about the timber: it was black walnut and black oak, hickory and
- jack oak, elm and white oak, undergrowth, logwood in abundance,
- grape-vines and shoe-make bushes, and milk-sick plenty. All my relations
- died of that disease on Little Pigeon Creek, Spencer County."&mdash;Dennis
- Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Everybody about Abe made hunting a part of his business.2 Tom Lincoln and
- Dennis Hanks doubtless regaled him continually with wonderful stories of
- their luck and prowess; but he was no hunter himself, and did not care to
- learn. It is true, that, when a mere child, he made a fortunate shot at a
- flock of wild turkeys, through a crack in the wall of the "half-faced
- cabin;"3 and that, when grown up, he went for coons occasionally with
- Richardson, or watched deer-licks with Turnham; but a true and hearty
- sportsman he never was. As practised on this wild border, it was a
- solitary, unsociable way of spending time, which did not suit his nature;
- and, besides, it required more exertion than he was willing to make
- without due compensation. It could not be said that Abe was indolent; for
- he was alert, brisk, active, about every thing that he made up his mind to
- do. His step was very quick; and, when he had a sufficient object in view,
- he strode out on his long, muscular legs, swinging his bony arms as he
- moved along, with an energy that put miles behind him before a lazy fellow
- like Dennis Hanks or John Johnston could make up his mind to start. But,
- when he felt that he had time to spare, he preferred to give it to reading
- or to "talk;" and, of the two, he would take the latter, provided he could
- find a person who had something new or racy to say. He liked excessively
- to hear his own voice, when it was promoting fun and good fellowship; but
- he was also a most rare and attentive listener. Hunting was entirely too
- "still" an occupation for him.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "No Indians there when I first went to Indiana: I say, no, none. I say
- this: bear, deer, turkey, and coon, wild-cats, and other things, and
- frogs."&mdash;Dennis Hanks. 2 "You say, What were some of the customs? I
- suppose you mean take us all together. One thing I can tell you about:
- we had to work very hard cleaning ground for to keep body and soul
- together; and every spare time we had we picked up our rifle, and
- brought in a fine deer or turkey; and in the winter-time we went a
- coon-hunting, for coon-skins were at that time considered legal tender,
- and deer-skins' and hams. I tell you, Billy, I enjoyed myself better
- then than I ever have since."&mdash;Dennis Hanks. 3 "No doubt about the
- A. Lincoln's killing the turkey. He done it with his father's rifle,
- made by William Lutes, of Bullitt County, Kentucky. I have killed a
- hundred deer with her myself; turkeys too numerous to mention."&mdash;Dennis
- Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- All manner of rustic sports were in vogue among the Pigeon Creek boys. Abe
- was especially formidable as a wrestler; and, from about 1828 onward,
- there was no man, far or near, that would give him a match. "Cat,"
- "throwing the mall," "hopping and half-hammon" (whatsoever that may mean),
- and "four-corner bull-pen" were likewise athletic games in high honor.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "You ask, What sort of plays? What we called them at that time were
- 'bull-pen,' 'corner and cat,' 'hopping and half- hammon;' playing at
- night 'old Sister Feby.' This I know, for I took a hand myself; and,
- wrestling, we could throw down anybody."&mdash;Dennis Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- All sorts of frolics and all kinds of popular gatherings, whether for work
- or amusement, possessed irresistible attractions for Abe. He loved to see
- and be seen, to make sport and to enjoy it. It was a most important part
- of his education that he got at the corn-shuckings, the log-rollings, the
- shooting-matches, and the gay and jolly weddings of those early border
- times. He was the only man or boy within a wide compass who had learning
- enough to furnish the literature for such occasions; and those who failed
- to employ his talents to grace or commemorate the festivities they set on
- foot were sure to be stung by some coarse but humorous lampoon from his
- pen. In the social way, he would not suffer himself to be slighted with
- impunity; and, if there were any who did not enjoy his wit, they might
- content themselves with being the subjects of it. Unless he received some
- very pointed intimation that his presence was not wanted, he was among the
- first and earliest at all the neighborhood routs; and when his tall,
- singular figure was seen towering amongst the hunting-shirts, it was
- considered due notice that the fun was about to commence. "Abe Linkhern,"
- as he was generally called, made things lively wherever he went: and, if
- Crawford's blue nose happened to have been carried to the assembly, it
- quickly subsided, on his arrival, into some obscure corner; for the
- implacable "Linkhern" was apt to make it the subject of a jest that would
- set the company in a roar. But when a party was made up, and Abe left out,
- as sometimes happened through the influence of Crawford, he sulked, fumed,
- "got mad," nursed his anger into rage, and then broke out in songs or
- "chronicles," which were frequently very bitter, sometimes passably
- humorous, and invariably vulgar.
- </p>
- <p>
- At an early age he began to attend the "preachings" roundabout, but
- principally at the Pigeon Creek church, with a view to catching whatever
- might be ludicrous in the preacher's air or matter, and making it the
- subject of mimicry as soon as he could collect an audience of idle boys
- and men to hear him. A pious stranger, passing that way on a Sunday
- morning, was invited to preach for the Pigeon Creek congregation; but he
- banged the boards of the old pulpit, and bellowed and groaned so
- wonderfully, that Abe could hardly contain his mirth. This memorable
- sermon was a great favorite with him; and he frequently reproduced it with
- nasal tones, rolling eyes, and all manner of droll aggravations, to the
- great delight of Nat Grigsby and the wild fellows whom Nat was able to
- assemble. None that heard him, not even Nat himself (who was any thing but
- dull), was ever able to show wherein Abe's absurd version really departed
- from the original.
- </p>
- <p>
- The importance of Gentryville, as a "centre of business," soon began to
- possess the imaginations of the dwellers between the two Pigeon Creeks.
- Why might it not be a great place of trade? Mr. Gentry was a most generous
- patron; it was advantageously situated where two roads crossed; it already
- had a blacksmith's shop, a grocery, and a store. Jones, it is true, had
- once moved away in a sulk, but Mr. Gentry's fine diplomacy had quickly
- brought him back, with all his goods and talents unreservedly devoted to
- the "improvement of the town;" and now, since there was literally nothing
- left to cloud the prospects of the "point," brisk times were expected in
- the near future.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dennis Hanks, John Johnston, Abe, and the other boys in the neighborhood,
- loitered much about the store, the grocery, and the blacksmith's shop, at
- Gentryville. Dennis ingenuously remarks, "Sometimes we spent a little time
- at grog, pushing weights, wrestling, telling stories." The time that Abe
- "spent at grog" was, in truth, a "little time." He never liked ardent
- spirits at any period of his life; but "he did take his dram as others
- did."1 He was a natural politician, intensely ambitious, and anxious to be
- popular. For this reason, and this alone, he drank with his friends,
- although very temperately. If he could have avoided it without giving
- offence, he would gladly have done so. But he coveted the applause of his
- pot companions, and, because he could not get it otherwise, made a faint
- pretence of enjoying his liquor as they did. The "people" drank, and Abe
- was always for doing whatever the "people" did. All his life he held that
- whatsoever was popular&mdash;the habit or the sentiment of the masses&mdash;could
- not be essentially wrong. But, although a whiskey-jug was kept in every
- ordinarily respectable household, Abe never tasted it at home. His
- step-mother thought he carried his temperance to extremes.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The fact is proved by his most intimate acquaintances, both at
- Gentryville and New Salem.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Jones, the great Jones, without whom it was generally agreed that
- Gentryville must have gone into eclipse, but with whom, and through whom,
- it was somehow to become a sort of metropolitan cross-roads,&mdash;Jones
- was Abe's friend and mentor from the moment of their acquaintance. Abe is
- even said to have "clerked for him;" that is, he packed and unpacked
- boxes, ranged goods on the shelves, drew the liquids in the cellar, or
- exhibited the stone and earthen ware to purchasers; but in his service he
- was never promoted to keeping accounts, or even to selling the finer goods
- across the counter.1 But Mr. Jones was very fond of his "clerk,"&mdash;enjoyed
- his company, appreciated his humor, and predicted something great for him.
- As he did not doubt that Abe would one day be a man of considerable
- influence, he took pains to give him correct views of the nature of
- American institutions. An ardent Jackson man himself, he imparted to Abe
- the true faith, as delivered by that great democratic apostle; and the
- traces of this teaching were never wholly effaced from Mr. Lincoln's mind.
- Whilst he remained at Gentryville, his politics accorded with Mr. Jones's;
- and, even after he had turned Whig in Illinois, John Hanks tells us that
- he wanted to whip a man for traducing Jackson. He was an eager reader of
- newspapers whenever he could get them, and Mr. Jones carefully put into
- his hands the kind he thought a raw youth should have. But Abe's appetite
- was not to be satisfied by what Mr. Jones supplied; and he frequently
- borrowed others from "Uncle Wood," who lived about a mile from the Lincoln
- cabin, and for whom he sometimes worked.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "Lincoln drove a team, cut up pork, and sold goods for Jones. Jones
- told me that Lincoln read all his books, and I remember History of
- United States as one. Jones often said to me, that Lincoln would make a
- great man one of these days,&mdash;had said so long before, and to other
- people,&mdash;said so as far back as 1828-9.'"&mdash;Dougherty.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- What manner of man kept the Gentryville grocery, we are not informed. Abe
- was often at his place, however, and would stay so long at nights,
- "telling stories" and "cracking jokes," that Dennis Hanks, who was
- ambitious in the same line, and probably jealous of Abe's overshadowing
- success, "got mad at him," and "cussed him." When Dennis found himself
- thrown in the shade, he immediately became virtuous, and wished to retire
- early.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Baldwin, the blacksmith, was one of Abe's special friends from his
- boyhood onward. Baldwin was a story-teller and a joker of rare
- accomplishments; and Abe, when a very little fellow, would slip off to his
- shop and sit and listen to him by the hour. As he grew up, the practice
- continued as of old, except that Abe soon began to exchange anecdotes with
- his clever friend at the anvil. Dennis Hanks says Baldwin was his "<i>particular</i>
- friend," and that "Abe spent a great deal of his leisure time with him."
- Statesmen, plenipotentiaries, famous commanders, have many times made the
- White House at Washington ring with their laughter over the quaint tales
- of John Baldwin, the blacksmith, delivered second-hand by his inimitable
- friend Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe and Dave Turnham had one day been threshing wheat,&mdash;probably for
- Turnham's father,&mdash;and concluded to spend the evening at Gentryville.
- They lingered there until late in the night, when, wending their way along
- the road toward Lincoln's cabin, they espied something resembling a man
- lying dead or insensible by the side of a mud-puddle. They rolled the
- sleeper over, and found in him an old and quite respectable acquaintance,
- hopelessly drunk. All efforts failed to rouse him to any exertion on his
- own behalf. Abe's companions were disposed to let him lie in the bed he
- had made for himself; but, as the night was cold and dreary, he must have
- frozen to death had this inhuman proposition been equally agreeable to
- everybody present. To Abe it seemed utterly monstrous; and, seeing he was
- to have no help, he bent his mighty frame, and, taking the big man in his
- long arms, carried him a great distance to Dennis Hanks's cabin. There he
- built a fire, warmed, rubbed, and nursed him through the entire night,&mdash;his
- companions of the road having left him alone in his merciful task. The man
- often told John Hanks, that it was mighty "clever in Abe to tote him to a
- warm fire that cold night," and was very sure that Abe's strength and
- benevolence had saved his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe was fond of music, but was himself wholly unable to produce three
- harmonious notes together. He made various vain attempts to sing a few
- lines of "Poor old Ned," but they were all equally ludicrous and
- ineffectual. "Religious songs did not appear to suit him at all," says
- Dennis Hanks; but of profane ballads and amorous ditties he knew the words
- of a vast number. When Dennis got happy at the grocery, or passed the
- bounds of propriety at a frolic, he was in the habit of raising a charming
- carol in praise of the joys which enter into the Mussulman's estate on
- earth,&mdash;of which he has vouchsafed us only three lines,&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "The turbaned Turk that scorns the world, And struts about with his
- whiskers curled, For no other man but himself to see."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It was a prime favorite of Abe's; and Dennis sang it with such appropriate
- zest and feeling, that Abe never forgot a single word of it while he
- lived.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another was,&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Hail Columbia, happy land! If you ain't drunk, I'll be damned,"&mdash;
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- a song which Dennis thinks should be warbled only in the "fields;" and
- tells us that they knew and enjoyed "all such [songs] as this." Dave
- Turnham was also a musical genius, and had a "piece" beginning,&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "There was a Romish lady Brought up in popery,"
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- which Abe thought one of the best he ever heard, and insisted upon Dave's
- singing it for the delectation of old Tom Lincoln, who relished it quite
- as much as Abe did.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "I recollect some more:&mdash; 'Come, thou Fount of every blessing,
- Tune my heart to sing thy praise.' 'When I can read my title clear To
- mansions in the skies!' 'How tedious and tasteless the hours.' 'Oh! to
- grace how great a debtor!' Other little songs I won't say any thing
- about: they would not look well in print; but I could give them."&mdash;Dennis
- Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Mrs. Crawford says, that Abe did not attempt to sing much about the house:
- he was probably afraid to indulge in such offensive gayeties in the very
- habitation of the morose Crawford. According to Dennis Hanks, his melody
- was not of the sort that hath power to charm the savage; and he was
- naturally timid about trying it upon Crawford. But, when he was freed from
- those chilling restraints, he put forth his best endeavors to render "one
- [song] that was called 'William Riley,' and one that was called 'John
- Anderson's Lamentations,' and one that was made about Gen. Jackson and
- John Adams, at the time they were nominated for the presidency."
- </p>
- <p>
- The Jackson song indicated clearly enough Abe's steadiness in the
- political views inculcated by Jones. Mrs. Crawford could recollect but a
- single stanza of it:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Let auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind, And Jackson
- be our President, And Adams left behind."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- In the text of "John Anderson's Lamentations,"&mdash;a most distressful
- lyric to begin with,&mdash;Abe was popularly supposed to have interpolated
- some lines of his own, which conclusively attested his genius for poetic
- composition. At all events, he sang it as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "O sinners! poor sinners, take warning by me: The fruits of
- transgression behold now, and see; My soul is tormented, my body
- confined, My friends and dear children left weeping behind. "Much
- intoxication my ruin has been, And my dear companion hath barbarously
- slain: In yonder cold graveyard the body doth lie; Whilst I am
- condemned, and shortly must die. "Remember John Anderson's death, and
- reform Before death overtakes you, and vengeance comes on. My grief's
- overwhelming; in God I must trust: I am justly condemned; my sentence is
- just. "I am waiting the summons in eternity to be hurled; Whilst my poor
- little orphans are cast on the world. I hope my kind neighbors their
- guardeens will be, And Heaven, kind Heaven, protect them and me."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- In 1826 Abe's sister Nancy (or Sarah) was married to Aaron Grigsby; and
- the festivities of the occasion were made memorable by a song entitled,
- "Adam and Eve's Wedding Song," which many believed Abe had himself
- composed. The conceits embodied in the doggerel were old before Abe was
- born; but there is some intrinsic as well as extraneous evidence to show
- that the doggerel itself was his. It was sung by the whole Lincoln family,
- before Nancy's marriage and since, but by nobody else in the neighborhood.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- ADAM AND EVE'S WEDDING SONG. When Adam was created, he dwelt in Eden's
- shade, As Moses has recorded, and soon an Eve was made. Ten thousand
- times ten thousand Of creatures swarmed around Before a bride was
- formed, And yet no mate was found. The Lord then was not willing The man
- should be alone, But caused a sleep upon him, And took from him a bone,
- And closed the flesh in that place of; And then he took the same, And of
- it made a woman, And brought her to the man. Then Adam he rejoiced To
- see his loving bride, A part of his own body, The product of his side.
- This woman was not taken From Adam's feet, we see; So he must not abuse
- her, The meaning seems to be. This woman was not taken From Adam's head,
- we know; To show she must not rule him, 'Tis evidently so. This woman
- she was taken From under Adam's arm; So she must be protected From
- injuries and harm.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- "It was considered at that time," says Mr. Richardson, "that Abe was the
- best penman in the neighborhood. One day, while he was on a visit at my
- mother's, I asked him to write some copies for me. He very willingly
- consented. He wrote several of them, but one of them I have never
- forgotten, although a boy at the time. It was this:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 'Good boys who to their books apply Will all be great men by and by.'"
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Here are two original lines from Abe's own copy-book, probably the first
- he ever had, and which must not be confounded with the famous scrap-book
- in which his step-mother, lost in admiration of its contents, declares he
- "entered all things:"&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Abraham Lincoln, his hand and pen: He will be good, but God knows
- when."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Again,&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Abraham Lincoln is my name, And with my pen I write the same: I will be
- a good boy, but God knows when."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The same book contains the following, written at a later day, and with
- nothing to indicate that any part of it was borrowed:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "Time! what an empty vapor'tis! And days how swift they are! Swift as an
- Indian arrow, Fly on like a shooting-star. The present moment just is
- here, Then slides away in haste, That we can never say they're ours, But
- only say they are past."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abe wrote many "satires" and "chronicles," which are only remembered in
- fragments by a few old persons in the neighborhood. Even if we had them in
- full, they were most of them too indecent for publication. Such, at least,
- was the character of "a piece" which is said to have been "exceedingly
- humorous and witty," touching a church trial, wherein Brother Harper and
- Sister Gordon were the parties seeking judgment. It was very coarse, but
- it served admirably to raise a laugh in the grocery at the expense of the
- church.
- </p>
- <p>
- His chronicles were many, and on a great variety of subjects. They were
- written, as his early admirers love to tell us, "in the scriptural style;"
- but those we have betray a very limited acquaintance with the model. In
- these "chapters" was celebrated every event of importance that took place
- in the neighborhood: weddings, fights, Crawford's nose, Sister Gordon's
- innocence, Brother Harper's wit, were all served up, fresh and gross, for
- the amusement of the groundlings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Charles and Reuben Grigsby were married about the same time, and, being
- brothers, returned to their father's house with their brides upon the same
- day. The infare, the feast, the dance, the ostentatious retirement of the
- brides and grooms, were conducted in the old-fashioned way of all new
- countries in the United States, but a way which was bad enough to shock
- Squire Western himself. On this occasion Abe was not invited, and was very
- "mad" in consequence. This indignation found vent in a highly-spiced piece
- of descriptive writing, entitled "The Chronicles of Reuben," which are
- still in existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- But even "The Chronicles," venomous and highly successful as they were,
- were totally insufficient to sate Abe's desire for vengeance on the
- Grigsbys. They were important people about Gentryville, and the social
- slight they had given him stung him bitterly. He therefore began on
- "Billy" in rhyme, after disposing of Charles and Reuben "in scriptural
- style." Mrs. Crawford attempted to repeat these verses to Mr. Herndon; but
- the good old lady had not proceeded far, when she blushed very red, and,
- saying that they were hardly decent, proposed to tell them to her
- daughter, who would tell them to her husband, who would write them down
- and send them to Mr. Herndon. They are probably much curtailed by Mrs.
- Crawford's modesty, but still it is impossible to transcribe them. We give
- what we can to show how the first steps of Abe's fame as a great writer
- were won. It must be admitted that the literary taste of the community in
- which these rhymes were popular could not have been very high.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "I will tell you about Joel and Mary: it is neither a joke or a story,
- for Reuben and Charles has married two girls, but Billy has married a
- boy." "The girls he had tried on every side, But none could he get to
- agree: All was in vain; he went home again, And, since that, he is
- married to Natty. "So Billy and Natty agreed very well, And mamma's well
- pleased at the match: The egg it is laid, but Natty's afraid The shell
- is so soft it never will hatch; But Betsey she said, 'You cursed bald
- head, My suitor you never can be; Besides'"&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abe dropped "The Chronicles" at a point on the road where he was sure one
- of the Grigsbys would find them. The stratagem succeeded, and that
- delicate "satire" produced the desired effect. The Grigsbys were
- infuriated,&mdash;wild with a rage which would be satisfied only when
- Abe's face should be pounded into a jelly, and a couple of his ribs
- cracked by some member of the injured family. Honor, according to the
- Pigeon Creek code, demanded that somebody should be "licked" in expiation
- of an outrage so grievous,&mdash;if not Abe, then some friend of Abe's,
- whom he would depute to stand the brunt in his stead. "Billy," the eldest
- of the brothers, was selected to challenge him. Abe accepted generally;
- that is, agreed that there should be a fight about the matter in question.
- It was accordingly so ordered: the ground was selected a mile and a half
- from Gentryville, a ring was marked out, and the bullies for twenty miles
- around attended. The friends of both parties were present in force, and
- excitement ran high. When the time arrived for the champions to step into
- the ring, Abe displayed his chivalry in a manner that must have struck the
- bystanders with admiration. He announced, that whereas Billy was
- confessedly his inferior in size, shape, and talents, unable to hit with
- pen or fist with any thing like his power, therefore he would forego the
- advantage which the challenge gave him, and "turn over" his stepbrother,
- John Johnston, to do battle in his behalf. If this near relative should be
- sacrificed, he would abide the issue: he was merely anxious to see a fair
- and honorable fight. This proposition was considered highly meritorious,
- and the battle commenced on those general terms. John started out with
- fine pluck and spirit; but in a little while Billy got in some clever
- hits, and Abe began to exhibit symptoms of great uneasiness. Another pass
- or two, and John flagged quite decidedly, and it became evident that Abe
- was anxiously casting about for some pretext to break the ring. At length,
- when John was fairly down, and Billy on top, and all the spectators
- cheering, swearing, and pressing up to the very edge of the ring, Abe
- cried out that "Bill Boland showed foul play," and, bursting out of the
- crowd, seized Grigsby by the heels, and flung him off. Having righted
- John, and cleared the battle-ground of all opponents, "he swung a
- whiskey-bottle over his head, and swore that he was the big buck of the
- lick." It seems that nobody of the Grigsby faction, not one in that large
- assembly of bullies, cared to encounter the sweep of Abe's tremendously
- long and muscular arms; and so he remained master of the "lick." He was
- not content, however, with a naked triumph, but vaunted himself in the
- most offensive manner. He singled out the victorious but cheated Billy,
- and, making sundry hostile demonstrations, declared that he could whip him
- then and there. Billy meekly said "he did not doubt that," but that, if
- Abe would make things even between them by fighting with pistols, he would
- not be slow to grant him a meeting. But Abe replied that he was not going
- "to fool away his life on a single shot;" and so Billy was fain to put up
- with the poor satisfaction he had already received.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Gentryville "they had exhibitions or speaking meetings." Some of the
- questions they spoke on were, The Bee and the Ant, Water and Fire: another
- was, Which had the most right to complain, the Negro or the Indian?
- Another, "Which was the strongest, Wind or Water?"1 The views which Abe
- then entertained on the Indian and the negro question would be intensely
- interesting now. But just fancy him discoursing on wind and water! What
- treasures of natural science, what sallies of humor, he must have wasted
- upon that audience of bumpkins! A little farther on, we shall see that Abe
- made pretensions to an acquaintance with the laws of nature which was
- considered marvellous in that day and generation.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "Lincoln did write what is called 'The Book of Chronicles,'&mdash;a
- satire on the Grigs-bys and Josiah Crawford,&mdash;not the schoolmaster,
- but the man who loaned Lincoln 'The Life of Washington.' The satire was
- good, sharp, cutting: it hurt us then, but it is all over now. There is
- no family in the land who, after this, loved Lincoln so well, and who
- now look upon him as so great a man. We all voted for him,&mdash;all
- that could,&mdash;children and grandchildren, first, last, and always."&mdash;Nat
- Grigsby.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Dennis Hanks insists that Abe and he became learned men and expert
- disputants, not by a course of judicious reading, but by attending
- "speech-makings, gatherings," &amp;c.
- </p>
- <p>
- "How did Lincoln and yourself learn so much in Indiana under such
- disadvantages?" said Mr. Herndon to Dennis, on one of his two oral
- examinations. The question was artfully put; for it touched the jaunty
- Dennis on the side of his vanity, and elicited a characteristic reply. "We
- learned," said he, "by sight, scent, and hearing. We heard all that was
- said, and talked over and over the questions heard; wore them slick,
- greasy, and threadbare. Went to political and other speeches and
- gatherings, as you do now: we would hear all sides and opinions, talk them
- over, discuss them, agreeing or disagreeing. Abe, as I said before, was
- originally a Democrat after the order of Jackson, so was his father, so we
- all were.... He preached, made speeches, read for us, explained to us,
- &amp;c.... Abe was a cheerful boy, a witty boy, was humorous always;
- sometimes would get sad, not very often.... Lincoln would frequently make
- political and other speeches to the boys: he was calm, logical, and clear
- always. He attended trials, went to court always, read the Revised Statute
- of Indiana, dated 1824, heard law speeches, and listened to law trials,
- &amp;c. Lincoln was lazy, a very lazy man. He was always reading,
- scribbling, writing, ciphering, writing poetry, and the like.... In
- Gentryville, about one mile west of Thomas Lincoln's farm, Lincoln would
- go and tell his jokes and stories, &amp;c., and was so odd, original, and
- humorous and witty, that all the people in town would gather around him.
- He would keep them there till midnight. I would get tired, want to go
- home, cuss Abe most heartily. Abe was a good talker, a good reader, and
- was a kind of newsboy."
- </p>
- <p>
- Boonville was the court-house town of Warrick County, and was situated
- about fifteen miles from Gentryville. Thither Abe walked whenever he had
- time to be present at the sittings of the court, where he could learn
- something of public business, amuse himself profitably, and withal pick up
- items of news and gossip, which made him an interesting personage when he
- returned home. During one of these visits he watched, with profound
- attention, the progress of a murder trial, in which a Mr. John
- Breckenridge was counsel for the defence. At the conclusion of the
- latter's speech, Abe, who had listened, literally entranced, accosted the
- man of eloquence, and ventured to compliment him on the success of his
- effort. "Breckenridge looked at the shabby boy" in amazement, and passed
- on his way. But many years afterwards, in 1862, when Abe was President,
- and Breckenridge a resident of Texas, probably needing executive clemency,
- they met a second time; when Abe said, "It was the best speech that I up
- to that time had ever heard. If I could, as I then thought, make as good a
- speech as that, my soul would be satisfied."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is a curious fact, that through all Abe's childhood and boyhood, when
- he seemed to have as little prospect of the Presidency as any boy that
- ever was born, he was in the habit of saying, and perhaps sincerely
- believing, that that great prize would one day be his. When Mrs. Crawford
- reproved him for "fooling," and bedevilling the girls in her kitchen, and
- asked him "what he supposed would ever become of him," he answered that
- "he was going to be President of the United States."1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 He frequently made use of similar expressions to several others.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Abe usually did the milling for the family, and had the neighbor boy, Dave
- Turnham, for his companion. At first they had to go a long distance, at
- least twelve or thirteen miles, to Hoffman's, on Anderson's Creek; but
- after a while a Mr. Gordon (the husband of Sister Gordon, about whom the
- "witty piece" was written) built a horse-mill within a few miles of the
- Lincolns. Here Abe had come one day with a grist, and Dave probably with
- him. He had duly hitched his "old mare," and started her with great
- impatience; when, just as he was sounding another "cluck," to stir up her
- imperturbable and lazy spirit, she let out with her heels, and laid Abe
- sprawling and insensible on the ground. He was taken up in that condition,
- and did not recover for many minutes; but the first use made of returning
- sense was to finish the interrupted "cluck." He and Mr. Herndon had many
- learned discussions in their quiet little office, at Springfield,
- respecting this remarkable phenomenon, involving so nice a question in
- "psychology."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. William Wood, already referred to as "Uncle Wood," was a genuine
- friend and even a patron of Abe's. He lived only about a mile and a half
- from the Lincolns, and frequently had both old Tom and Abe to work for
- him,&mdash;the one as a rough carpenter, and the other as a common
- laborer. He says that Abe was in the habit of carrying "his pieces" to him
- for criticism and encouragement. Mr. Wood took at least two newspapers,&mdash;one
- of them devoted to politics, and one of them to temperance. Abe borrowed
- them both, and, reading them faithfully over and over again, was inspired
- with an ardent desire to write something on the subjects of which they
- treated. He accordingly composed an article on temperance, which Mr. Wood
- thought "excelled, for sound sense, any thing that the paper contained."
- It was forwarded, through the agency of a Baptist preacher, to an editor
- in Ohio, by whom it was published, to the infinite gratification of Mr.
- Wood and his <i>protégé</i>. Abe then tried his hand on "national
- politics," saying that "the American Government was the best form of
- government for an intelligent people; that it ought to be kept sound, and
- preserved forever; that general education should be fostered and carried
- all over the country; that the Constitution should be saved, the Union
- perpetuated, and the laws revered, respected, and enforced." This article
- was consigned, like the other, to Mr. Wood, to be ushered by him before
- the public. A lawyer named Pritchard chanced to pass that way, and, being
- favored with a perusal of Abe's "piece," pithily and enthusiastically
- declared, "The world can't beat it." "He begged for it," and it was
- published in some obscure paper; this new success causing the author a
- most extraordinary access of pride and happiness.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in 1828 Abe had become very tired of his home. He was now nineteen
- years of age, and becoming daily more restive under the restraints of
- servitude which bound him. He was anxious to try the world for himself,
- and make his way according to his own notions. "Abe came to my house one
- day," says Mr. Wood, "and stood round about, timid and shy. I knew he
- wanted <i>something</i>, and said to him, 'Abe, what's your case?' He
- replied, 'Uncle, I want you to go to the river, and give me some
- recommendation to some boat.' I remarked, 'Abe, your age is against you:
- you are not twenty yet.' 'I know that, but I want a start,' said Abe. I
- concluded not to go for the boy's good." Poor Abe! old Tom still had a
- claim upon him, which even Uncle Wood would not help him to evade. He must
- wait a few weary months more before he would be of age, and could say he
- was his own man, and go his own way. Old Tom was a hard taskmaster to him,
- and, no doubt, consumed the greater part, if not all, of his wages.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the beginning of March, 1828, Abe went to work for old Mr. Gentry, the
- proprietor of Gentryville. Early in the next month, the old gentleman
- furnished his son Allen with a boat, and a cargo of bacon and other
- produce, with which he was to go on a trading expedition to New Orleans,
- unless the stock was sooner exhausted. Abe, having been found faithful and
- efficient, was employed to accompany the young man as a "bow-hand," to
- work the "front oars." He was paid eight dollars per month, and ate and
- slept on board. Returning, Gentry paid his passage on the deck of a
- steamboat.
- </p>
- <p>
- While this boat was loading at Gentry's Landing, near Rockport, on the
- Ohio, Abe saw a great deal of the pretty Miss Roby, whom he had saved from
- the wrath of Crawford the schoolmaster, when she failed to spell "defied."
- She says, "Abe was then a long, thin, leggy, gawky boy, dried up and
- shrivelled." This young lady subsequently became the wife of Allen Gentry,
- Abe's companion in the projected voyage. She probably felt a deep interest
- in the enterprise in hand, for the very boat itself seems to have had
- attractions for her. "One evening," says she, "Abe and I were sitting on
- the banks of the Ohio, or rather on the boat spoken of: I said to Abe that
- the sun was going down. He said to me, 'That's not so: it don't really go
- down; it seems so. The earth turns from west to east, and the revolution
- of the earth carries us under as it were: we do the sinking as you call
- it. The sun, as to us, is comparatively still; the sun's sinking is only
- an appearance.' I replied, 'Abe, what a fool you are!' I know now that I
- was the fool, not Lincoln. I am now thoroughly satisfied that Abe knew the
- general laws of astronomy and the movements of the heavenly bodies. He was
- better read then than the world knows, or is likely to know exactly. No
- man could talk to me that night as he did, unless he had known something
- of geography as well as astronomy. He often and often commented or talked
- to me about what he had read,&mdash;seemed to read it out of the book as
- he went along,&mdash;did so to others. He was the learned boy among us
- unlearned folks. He took great pains to explain; could do it so simply. He
- was diffident then too." 1
- </p>
- <p>
- The trip of Gentry and Lincoln was a very profitable one, and Mr. Gentry,
- senior, was highly gratified by the result. Abe displayed his genius for
- mercantile affairs by handsomely putting off on the innocent folks along
- the river some counterfeit money which a shrewd fellow had imposed upon
- Allen. Allen thought his father would be angry with him for suffering
- himself to be cheated; but Abe consoled him with the reflection that the
- "old man" wouldn't care how much bad money they took in the course of
- business if they only brought the proper amount of good money home.2
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "When he appeared in company, the boys would gather and cluster around
- him to hear him talk.... Mr. Lincoln was figurative in his speeches,
- talks, and conversations. He argued much from analogy, and explained
- things hard for us to understand by stories, maxims, tales, and figures.
- He would almost always point his lesson or idea by some story that was
- plain and near us, that we might instantly see the force and bearing of
- what he said."&mdash;Nat Grigsby. 2 "Gentry (Allen) was a great personal
- friend of Mr. Lincoln. He was a Democrat, but voted for Lincoln,
- sacrificing his party politics to his friendship. He says that on that
- trip they sold some of their produce at a certain landing, and by
- accident or fraud the bill was paid in counterfeit money. Gentry was
- grieving about it; but Lincoln said, 'Never mind, Allen: it will
- accidentally slip out of our fingers before we get to New Orleans, and
- then old Jim can't quarrel at us.' Sure enough, it all went off like hot
- cakes. I was told this in Indiana by many people about Rockport."&mdash;Herndon.
- It must be remembered that counterfeit money was the principal currency
- along the river at this period.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- At Madame Bushane's plantation, six miles below Baton Rouge, they had an
- adventure, which reads strangely enough in the life of the great
- emancipator. The boat was tied up to the shore, in the dead hours of the
- night, and Abe and Allen were fast asleep in the "cabin," in the stern,
- when they were startled by footsteps on board. They knew instantly that it
- was a gang of negroes come to rob, and perhaps to murder them. Allen,
- thinking to frighten the intruders, cried out, "Bring the guns, Lincoln;
- shoot them!" Abe came without a gun, but he fell among the negroes with a
- huge bludgeon, and belabored them most cruelly. Not content with beating
- them off the boat, he and Gentry followed them far back into the country,
- and then, running back to their craft, hastily cut loose and made rapid
- time down the river, fearing lest they should return in greater numbers to
- take revenge. The victory was complete; but, in winning it, Abe received a
- scar which he carried with him to his grave.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When he was eighteen years old, he conceived the project of building a
- little boat, and taking the produce of the Lincoln farm down the river to
- market. He had learned the use of tools, and possessed considerable
- mechanical talent, as will appear in some other acts of his life. Of the
- voyage and its results, we have no knowledge; but an incident occurred
- before starting which he related in later life to his Secretary of State,
- Mr. Seward, that made a very marked and pleasant impression upon his
- memory. As he stood at the landing, a steamer approached, coming down the
- river. At the same time two passengers came to the river's bank who wished
- to be taken out to the packet with their luggage. Looking among the boats
- at the landing, they singled out Abraham's, and asked him to scull them to
- the steamer. This he did; and, after seeing them and their trunks on
- board, he had the pleasure of receiving upon the bottom of his boat,
- before he shoved off, a silver half-dollar from each of his passengers. 'I
- could scarcely believe my eyes,' said Mr. Lincoln, in telling the story.
- 'You may think it was a very little thing,' continued he, 'but it was a
- most important incident in my life. I could scarcely believe that I, a
- poor boy, had earned a dollar in less than a day. The world seemed wider
- and fairer to me. I was a more hopeful and confident being from that
- time.'"1 If Mr. Lincoln ever made the statement for which Mr. Seward is
- given as authority, he drew upon his imagination for the facts. He may
- have sculled passengers to a steamer when he was ferryman for Taylor, but
- he never made a trip like the one described; never built a boat until he
- went to Illinois; nor did he ever sell produce on his father's account,
- for the good reason that his father had none to sell.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 33.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III.
- </h2>
- <p>
- ABE and Gentry returned from New Orleans some time in June, 1828, having
- been gone not quite three months. How much longer he remained in the
- service of Gentry, or whether he remained at all, we are unable to say;
- but he soon took up his old habits, and began to work around among his
- neighbors, or for his father, precisely as he had done before he got his
- partial glimpse of the great world down the river.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the fall of 1829, Mr. Wood saw him cutting down a large tree in the
- woods, and whip-sawing it into planks. Abe said the lumber was for a new
- house his father was about to build; but Tom Lincoln changed his mind
- before the house was half done, and Abe sold his plank to Josiah Crawford,
- "the book man," who worked them into the south-east room of his house,
- where relic-seekers have since cut pieces from them to make canes.
- </p>
- <p>
- In truth, the continued prevalence of that dreadful disease, the
- milk-sickness, with which Nancy Hanks and the Sparrows and the Halls had
- all died, was more than a sufficient reason for a new removal, now in
- contemplation by Thomas Lincoln. Every member of his family, from the
- first settlement in Indiana, except perhaps Abe and himself, had suffered
- with it. The cattle, which, it is true, were of little pecuniary value,
- and raised with great ease and little cost, were swept away by it in great
- numbers throughout the whole neighborhood. It was an awful scourge, and
- common prudence suggested flight. It is wonderful that it took a
- constitutional mover thirteen years to make up his mind to escape from
- it.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "What made Thomas Lincoln leave? The reason is this: we were perplexed
- by a disease called milk-sick. I myself being the oldest, I was
- determined to leave, and hunt a country where the milk-sick was not. I
- married his eldest daughter. I sold out, and they concluded to go with
- me. Billy, I was tolerably popular at that time, for I had some money.
- My wife's mother could not think of parting with her, and we ripped up
- stakes, and started to Illinois, and landed at Decatur. This is the
- reason for leaving Indiana. I am to blame for it, if any. As for getting
- more land, this was not the case, for we could have entered ten thousand
- acres of the best land. When we left, it was on account of the milk.
- Billy, I had four good milch cows, too, with it in one week, and eleven
- young calves. This was enough to run me. Besides, liked to have lossed
- my own life with it. This reason was enough (ain't it?) for leaving."&mdash;Dennis
- Hanks.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- In the spring of 1830, before the winter had fairly broken up, he and Abe,
- and Dennis Hanks and Levi Hall, with their respective families, thirteen
- in all, took the road for Illinois. Dennis and Levi, as already stated,
- were married to the daughters of Mrs. Lincoln. Hall had one son, and
- Dennis a considerable family of sons and daughters. Sarah (or Nancy)
- Lincoln, who had married Aaron Grigsby, was now dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Hanks had gone to the new country from Kentucky in the fall of 1828,
- and settled near Decatur, whence he wrote Thomas Lincoln all about it, and
- advised him to come there. Dennis, whether because of the persuasions of
- John, or some observations made in a flying trip on his own account, was
- very full of the move, and would hear to no delay. Lincoln sold his farm
- to Gentry, senior, if, indeed, he had not done so before, and his corn and
- hogs to Dave Turnham. The corn brought only ten cents a bushel, and,
- according to the pricelist furnished by Dennis Hanks, the stock must have
- gone at figures equally mean.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln took with him to Illinois "some stock-cattle, one horse, one
- bureau, one table, one clothes-chest, one set of chairs, cooking utensils,
- clothing," &amp;c. The goods of the three families&mdash;Hanks, Hall, and
- Lincoln&mdash;were loaded on a wagon belonging to Lincoln. This wagon was
- "ironed," a noticeable fact in those primitive days, and "was positively
- the first one that he (Lincoln) ever owned." It was drawn by four yoke of
- oxen,&mdash;two of them Lincoln's, and two of them Hanks's.
- </p>
- <p>
- We have no particulars of the journey, except that Abe held the "gad," and
- drove the team; that the mud was very deep, that the spring freshets were
- abroad, and that in crossing the swollen and tumultuous Kaskaskia, the
- wagon and oxen were nearly swept away. On the first day of March, 1830,
- after fifteen days' tedious and heavy travel, they arrived at John Hanks's
- house, four miles north-west of Decatur. Lincoln settled (if any thing he
- did may be called settling) at a point ten miles west of Decatur. Here
- John Hanks had cut some logs in 1829, which he now gave to Lincoln to
- build a house with. With the aid of John, Dennis, Abe, and Hall, a house
- was erected on a small bluff, on the north bank of the north fork of the
- Sangamon. Abe and John took the four yoke of oxen and "broke up" fifteen
- acres of land, and then split rails enough to fence it in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe was now over twenty-one. There was no "Uncle Wood to tell him that his
- age was against him:" he had done something more than his duty by his
- father; and, as that worthy was now again placed in a situation where he
- might do well if he chose, Abe came to the conclusion that it was time for
- him to begin life on his own account. It must have cost him some pain to
- leave his good step-mother; but, beyond that, all the old ties were
- probably broken without a single regret. From the moment he was a free
- man, foot-loose, able to go where, and to do what, he pleased, his success
- in those things which lay nearest his heart&mdash;that is, public and
- social preferment&mdash;was astonishing to himself, as well as to others.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is with great pleasure that we dismiss Tom Lincoln, with his family and
- fortunes, from further consideration in these pages. After Abraham left
- him, he moved at least three times in search of a "healthy" location, and
- finally got himself fixed near Goose Nest Prairie, in Coles County, where
- he died of a disease of the kidneys, in 1851, at the ripe old age of
- seventy-three. The little farm (forty acres) upon which his days were
- ended, he had, with his usual improvidence, mortgaged to the School
- Commissioners for two hundred dollars,&mdash;its full value. Induced by
- love for his step-mother, Abraham had paid the debt, and taken a deed for
- the land, "with a reservation of a life-estate therein, to them, or the
- survivor of them." At the same time (1841), he gave a helping hand to John
- Johnston, binding himself to convey the land to him, or his heirs, after
- the death of "Thomas Lincoln and his wife," upon payment of the two
- hundred dollars, which was really advanced to save John's mother from
- utter penury. No matter how much the land might appreciate in value, John
- was to have it upon these terms, and no interest was to be paid by him,
- "except after the death of the survivor, as aforesaid." This, to be sure,
- was a great bargain for John, but he made haste to assign his bond to
- another person for "fifty dollars paid in hand."
- </p>
- <p>
- As soon as Abraham got a little up in the world, he began to send his
- step-mother money, and continued to do so until his own death; but it is
- said to have "done her no good," for it only served to tempt certain
- persons about her, and with whom she shared it, to continue in a life of
- idleness. At the close of the Black Hawk War, Mr. Lincoln went to see them
- for a few days, and afterwards, when a lawyer, making the circuits with
- the courts, he visited them whenever the necessities of his practice
- brought him to their neighborhood. He did his best to serve Mrs. Lincoln
- and her son John, but took little notice of his father, although he wrote
- him an exhortation to believe in God when he thought he was on his
- death-bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in regard to the relations between the family and Abe, after the
- latter began to achieve fame and power, nobody can tell the truth more
- clearly, or tell it in a more interesting and suggestive style, than our
- friend Dennis, with whom we are now about to part forever. It will be
- seen, that, when information reached the "Goose Nest Prairie" that Abe was
- actually chosen President of the United States, a general itching for
- public employment broke out among the Hankses, and that an equally general
- disappointment was the result. Doubtless all of them had expectations
- somewhat like Sancho Panza's, when he went to take the government of his
- island, and John Hanks, at least, would not have been disappointed but for
- the little disability which Dennis mentions in the following extract:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did Abraham Lincoln treat John D. Johnston well?" "I will say this much
- about it. I think Abe done more for John than he deserved. John thought
- that Abe did not do enough for the old people. They became enemies a while
- on this ground. I don't want to tell all the things that I know: it would
- not look well in history. I say this: Abe treated John well."
- </p>
- <p>
- "What kind of a man was Johnston?"&mdash;"I say this much: A
- kinder-hearted man never was in Coles County, Illinois, nor an honester
- man. I don't say this because he was my brother-in-law: I say it, knowing
- it. John did not love to work any the best. I flogged him for not
- working."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did Thomas Lincoln treat Abe cruelly?"&mdash;"He loved him. I never could
- tell whether Abe loved his father very well or not. I don't think he did,
- for Abe was one of those forward boys. I have seen his father knock him
- down off the fence when a stranger would, ask the way to a neighbor's
- house. Abe always would have the first word. The old man loved his
- children."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did any of the Johnston family ask for office?"&mdash;"No! Thomas
- Johnston went to Abe: he got this permit to take daguerrotypes in the
- army; this is all, for they are all dead except John's boys. They did not
- ask for any."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Did you or John Hanks ask Lincoln for any office?"&mdash;"I say this:
- that John Hanks, of Decatur, did solicit him for an Indian Agency; and
- John told me that Abe as good as told him he should have one. But John
- could not read or write. I think this was the reason that Abe did not give
- John the place.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As for myself, I did not ask Abe right out for an office, only this: I
- would like to have the post-office in Charleston; this was my wife that
- asked him. He told her that much was understood,&mdash;as much as to say
- that I would get it. I did not care much about it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do you think Lincoln cared much for his relations?"&mdash;"I will say
- this much: when he was with us, he seemed to think a great deal of us; but
- I thought sometimes it was hypocritical, but I am not sure."
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe left the Lincoln family late in March, or early in April. He did not
- go far away, but took jobs wherever he could get them, showing that he had
- separated himself from the family, not merely to rove, but to labor, and
- be an independent man. He made no engagement of a permanent character
- during this summer: his work was all done "by the job." If he ever split
- rails for Kirkpatrick, over whom he was subsequently elected captain of a
- volunteer company about to enter the Black Hawk War, it must have been at
- this time; but the story of his work for Kirkpatrick, like that of his
- making "a crap of corn" for Mr. Brown, is probably apocryphal.1 All this
- while he clung close to John Hanks, and either worked where he did, or not
- far away. In the winter following, he was employed by a Major Warrick to
- make rails, and walked daily three miles to his work, and three miles back
- again.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 See Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 40.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- "After Abe got to Decatur," says John Hanks, "or rather to Macon (my
- country), a man by the name of Posey came into our neighborhood, and made
- a speech: it was a bad one, and I said Abe could beat it. I turned down a
- box, or keg, and Abe made his speech. The other man was a candidate. Abe
- wasn't. Abe beat him to death, his subject being the navigation of the
- Sangamon River. The man, after the speech was through, took Abe aside, and
- asked him where he had learned so much, and how he did so well. Abe
- replied, stating his manner and method of reading, and what he had read.
- The man encouraged Lincoln to persevere."
- </p>
- <p>
- In February, 1831, a Mr. Denton Offutt wanted to engage John Hanks to take
- a flatboat to New Orleans. John was not well disposed to the business; but
- Offutt came to the house, and would take no denial; made much of John's
- fame as a river-man, and at length persuaded him to present the matter to
- Abe and John Johnston. He did so. The three friends discussed the question
- with great earnestness: it was no slight affair to them, for they were all
- young and poor. At length they agreed to Offutt's proposition, and that
- agreement was the turning-point in Abe's career. They were each to receive
- fifty cents a day, and the round sum of sixty dollars divided amongst them
- for making the trip. These were wages such as Abe had never received
- before, and might have tempted him to a much more difficult enterprise.
- When he went with Gentry, the pay was only eight dollars a month, and no
- such company and assistance as he was to have now. But Offutt was lavish
- with his money, and generous bargains like this ruined him a little while
- after.
- </p>
- <p>
- In March, Hanks, Johnston, and Lincoln went down the Sangamon in a canoe
- to Jamestown (then Judy's Ferry), five miles east of Springfield. Thence
- they walked to Springfield, and found Mr. Offutt comforting himself at
- "Elliott's tavern in Old Town." He had contracted to have a boat ready at
- the mouth of Spring Creek, but, not looking after it himself, was, of
- course, "disappointed." There was only one way out of the trouble: the
- three hands must build a boat. They went to the mouth of Spring Creek,
- five miles north of Springfield, and there consumed two weeks cutting the
- timber from "Congress land." In the mean time, Abe walked back to Judy's
- Ferry, by way of Springfield, and brought down the canoe which they had
- left at the former place. The timber was hewed and scored, and then
- "rafted down to Saugamon-town." At the mouth of Spring Creek they had been
- compelled to walk a full mile for their meals; but at Sangamon-town they
- built a shanty, and boarded themselves. "Abe was elected cook," and
- performed the duties of the office much to the satisfaction of the party.
- The lumber was sawed at Kirkpatrick's mill, a mile and a half from the
- shanty. Laboring under many disadvantages like this, they managed to
- complete and launch the boat in about four weeks from the time of
- beginning.
- </p>
- <p>
- Offutt was with the party at this point. He "was a Whig, and so was Abe;
- but he (Abe) could not hear Jackson wrongfully abused, especially where a
- lie and malice did the abuse." Out of this difference arose some disputes,
- which served to enliven the camp, as well as to arouse Abe's ire, and keep
- him in practice in the way of debate.
- </p>
- <p>
- In those days Abe, as usual, is described as being "funny, jokey, full of
- yarns, stories, and rigs;" as being "long, tall, and green," "frequently
- quoting poetry," and "reciting proselike orations." They had their own
- amusements. Abe extracted a good deal of fun out of the cooking; took his
- "dram" when asked to, and played "seven up" at night, at which he made "a
- good game."
- </p>
- <p>
- A juggler gave an exhibition at Sangamontown, in the upper room of Jacob
- Carman's house. Abe went to it, dressed in a suit of rough blue jeans. He
- had on shoes, but the trousers did not reach them by about twelve inches;
- and the naked shin, which had excited John Romine's laughter years ago in
- Indiana, was still exposed. Between the roundabout and the waist of the
- trousers, there was another wide space uncovered; and, considering these
- defects, Mr. Lincoln's attire was thought to be somewhat inelegant, even
- in those times. His hat, however, was a great improvement on coon-skins
- and opossum. It was woollen, broad-brimmed, and low-crowned. In this hat
- the "showman cooked eggs." Whilst Abe was handing it up to him, after the
- man had long solicited a similar favor from the rest of the audience, he
- remarked, "Mister, the reason I didn't give you my hat before was out of
- respect to your eggs, not care for my hat."
- </p>
- <p>
- Loaded with barrel-pork, hogs, and corn, the boat set out from
- Sangamontown as soon as finished. Mr. Offutt was on board to act as his
- own merchant, intending to pick up additions to his cargo along the banks
- of the two Illinois rivers down which he was about to pass. On the 19th of
- April they arrived at New Salem, a little village destined to be the scene
- of the seven eventful years of Mr. Lincoln's life, which immediately
- followed the conclusion of the present trip. Just below New Salem the boat
- "stuck," for one night and the better part of a day on Rutledge's
- mill-dam,&mdash;one end of it hanging over the dam, and the other sunk
- deep in the water behind. Here was a case for Abe's ingenuity, and he
- exercised it with effect. Quantities of water were being taken in at the
- stern, the lading was sliding backwards, and every thing indicated that
- the rude craft was in momentary danger of breaking in two, or sinking
- outright. But Abe suggested some unheard-of expedient for keeping it in
- place while the cargo was shifted to a borrowed boat, and then, boring a
- hole in that part of the bottom extending over the dam, he "rigged up" an
- equally strange piece of machinery for tilting and holding it while the
- water ran out. All New Salem was assembled on shore, watching the progress
- of this singular experiment,&mdash;and with one voice affirm that Abe
- saved the boat; although nobody is able to tell us precisely how.1 The
- adventure turned Abe's thoughts to the class of difficulties, one of which
- he had just surmounted; and the result of his reflections was "an improved
- method for lifting vessels over shoals."2 Offutt declared that when he got
- back from New Orleans, he would build a steamboat for the navigation of
- the Sangamon, and make Abe the captain; he would build it with runners for
- ice, and rollers for shoals and dams, for with "Abe in command, by
- thunder, she'd have to go."
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Many persons at New Salem describe in full Abe's conduct on this
- occasion. 2 "Occupying an ordinary and commonplace position in one of
- the show-cases in the targe hall of the Patent Office, is one little
- model which, in ages to come, will be prized as at once one of the most
- curious and one of the most sacred relics in that vast museum of unique
- and priceless things. This is a plain and simple model of a steamboat,
- roughly fashioned in wood, by the hand of Abraham Lincoln. It bears date
- in 1849, when the inventor was known simply as a successful lawyer and
- rising politician of Central Illinois. Neither his practice nor his
- politics took up so much of his time as to prevent him from giving much
- attention to contrivances which he hoped might be of benefit to the
- world, and of profit to himself. "The design of this invention is
- suggestive of one phase of Abraham Lincoln's early life, when he went up
- and down the Mississippi as a flat-boatman, and became familiar with
- some of the dangers and inconveniences attending the navigation of the
- Western rivers. It is an attempt to make it an easy matter to transport
- vessels over shoals and snags, and sawyers. The main idea is that of an
- apparatus resembling a noiseless bellows, placed on each side of the
- hull of the craft, just below the water-line, and worked by an odd but
- not complicated system of ropes, valves, and pulleys. When the keel of
- the vessel grates against the sand or obstruction, these bellows are to
- be filled with air; and, thus buoyed up, the ship is expected to float
- lightly and gayly over the shoal, which would otherwise have proved a
- serious interruption to her voyage. "The model, which is about eighteen
- or twenty inches long, and has the air of having been whittled with a
- knife out of a shingle and a cigar-box, is built without any elaboration
- or ornament, or any extra apparatus beyond that necessary to show the
- operation of buoying the steamer over the obstructions. Herein it
- differs from very many of the models which share with it the shelter of
- the immense halls of the Patent Office, and which are fashioned with
- wonderful nicety and exquisite finish, as if much of the labor and
- thought and affection of a lifetime had been devoted to their
- construction. This is a model of a different kind; carved as one might
- imagine a retired rail-splitter would whittle, strongly, but not
- smoothly, and evidently made with a view solely to convey, by the
- simplest possible means, to the minds of the patent authorities, an idea
- of the purpose and plan of the simple invention. The label on the
- steamer's deck informs us that the patent was obtained; but we do not
- learn that the navigation of the Western rivers was revolutionized by
- this quaint conception. The modest little model has reposed here sixteen
- years; and, since it found its resting-place here on the shelf, the
- shrewd inventor has found it his task to guide the Ship of State over
- shoals more perilous, and obstructions more obstinate, than any prophet
- dreamed of when Abraham Lincoln wrote his bold autograph on the prow of
- this miniature steamer."&mdash; Correspondent Boston Advertiser.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Over the dam, and in the deep pool beyond, they reloaded, and floated down
- to Blue Bank, a mile above the mouth of Salt Creek, where Offutt bought
- some more hogs. But the hogs were wild, and refused to be driven. Abe
- again came to the rescue; and, by his advice, their eyes were sewed up
- with a needle and thread, so that, if the animals fought any more, they
- should do it in the dark. Abe held their heads, and John Hanks their
- tails, while Offutt did the surgery. They were then thrown into a cart,
- whence Abe took them, one by one, in his great arms, and deposited them on
- board.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0005" id="image-0005">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/108.jpg" alt="Mr. Lincoln As a Flatboatman 108 "
- width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- From this point they sped very rapidly down the Sangamon and the Illinois.
- Having constructed curious-looking sails of plank, "and sometimes cloth,"
- they were a "sight to see," as they "rushed through Beardstown," where
- "the people came out and laughed at them." They swept by Alton and Cairo,
- and other considerable places, without tying up, but stopped at Memphis,
- Vicksburg, and Natchez.
- </p>
- <p>
- In due time they arrived at New Orleans. "There it was," says John Hanks,
- "we saw negroes chained, maltreated, whipped, and scourged. Lincoln saw
- it; his heart bled, said nothing much, was silent from feeling, was sad,
- looked bad, felt bad, was thoughtful and abstracted. I can say, knowing
- it, that it was on this trip that he formed his opinions of slavery. It
- run its iron in him then and there,&mdash;May, 1831. I have heard him say
- so often and often."
- </p>
- <p>
- Some time in June the party took passage on a steamboat going up the
- river, and remained together until they reached St. Louis, where Offutt
- left them, and Abe, Hanks, and Johnston started on foot for the interior
- of Illinois. At Edwardsville, twenty-five miles out, Hanks took the road
- to Springfield, and Abe and Johnston took that to Coles County, where Tom
- Lincoln had moved since Abraham's departure from home.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe never worked again in company with his friend and relative, good old
- John Hanks. Here their paths separated: Abe's began to ascend the heights,
- while John's continued along the common level. They were in the Black Hawk
- War during the same campaign, but not in the same division. But they
- corresponded, and, from 1833, met at least once a year, until Abe was
- elected President. Then Abe, delighting to honor those of his relatives
- who were worthy of it, invited John to go with him to see his step-mother.
- John also went to the inauguration at Washington, and tells, with
- pardonable pride, how he "was in his [Abe's] rooms several times." He then
- retired to his old home in Macon County, until the assassination and the
- great funeral, when he came to Springfield to look in the blackened face
- of his old friend, and witness the last ceremonies of his splendid burial.
- </p>
- <p>
- Scarcely had Abe reached Coles County, and begun to think what next to
- turn his hand to, when he received a visit from a famous wrestler, one
- Daniel Needham, who regarded him as a growing rival, and had a fancy to
- try him a fall or two. He considered himself "the best man" in the
- country, and the report of Abe's achievements filled his big breast with
- envious pains. His greeting was friendly and hearty, but his challenge was
- rough and peremptory. Abe valued his popularity among "the boys" too
- highly to decline it, and met him by public appointment in the
- "greenwood," at Wabash Point, where he threw him twice with so much ease
- that Needham's pride was more hurt than his body. "Lincoln," said he, "you
- have thrown me twice, but you can't whip me."&mdash;"Needham," replied
- Abe, "are you satisfied that I can throw you? If you are not, and must be
- convinced through a threshing, I will do that, too, for your sake."
- Needham had hoped that the youngster would shrink from the extremity of a
- fight with the acknowledged "bully of the patch;" but finding him willing,
- and at the same time magnanimously inclined to whip him solely for his <i>own
- good</i>, he concluded that a bloody nose and a black eye would be the
- reverse of soothing to his feelings, and therefore surrendered the field
- with such grace as he could command.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV.
- </h2>
- <p>
- ON the west bank of the Sangamon River, twenty miles north-west of
- Springfield, a traveller on his way to Havana will ascend a bluff one
- hundred feet higher than the low-water mark of the stream. On the summit
- he Will find a solitary log-hut. The back-bone of the ridge is about two
- hundred and fifty feet broad where it overlooks the river; but it widens
- gradually as it extends westerly toward the remains of an old forest,
- until it terminates in a broad expanse of meadow. On either side of this
- hill, and skirting its feet north and south, run streams of water in very
- deep channels, and tumble into the Sangamon almost within hearing. The
- hill, or more properly the bluff, rises from the river in an almost
- perpendicular ascent. "There is an old mill at the foot of the bluff,
- driven by water-power. The river washes the base of the bluff for about
- four hundred yards, the hill breaking off almost abruptly at the north.
- The river along this line runs about due north: it strikes the bluff
- coming around a sudden bend from the south-east, the river being checked
- and turned by the rocky hill. The mill-dam running across the Sangamon
- River just at the mill checks the rapidity of the water. It was here, and
- on this dam, that Mr. Lincoln's flatboat 'stuck on the 19th of April,
- 1831.' The dam is about eight feet high, and two hundred and twenty feet
- long, and, as the old Sangamon rolls her turbid waters over the dam,
- plunging them into the whirl and eddy beneath, the roar and hiss of
- waters, like the low, continuous, distant thunder, can be distinctly heard
- through the whole village, day and night, week-day and Sunday, spring and
- fall, or other high-water time. The river, at the base of the bluff, is
- about two hundred and fifty feet wide, the mill using up thirty feet,
- leaving the dam only about two hundred and twenty feet long."
- </p>
- <p>
- In every direction but the West, the country is broken into hills or
- bluffs, like the one we are attempting to describe, which are washed by
- the river, and the several streams that empty into it in the immediate
- vicinity. Looking across the river from bluff to bluff, the distance is
- about a thousand yards; while here and there, on both banks, are patches
- of rich alluvial bottom-lands, eight or nine hundred yards in width,
- enclosed on one side by the hills, and on the other by the river. The
- uplands of the eastern bank are covered with original forests of
- immemorial age; and, viewed from "Salem Hill," the eye ranges over a vast
- expanse of green foliage, the monotony of which is relieved by the
- alternating swells and depressions of the landscape.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the ridge of that hill, where the solitary cabin now stands, there was
- a few years ago a pleasant village. How it vanished like a mist of the
- morning, to what distant places its inhabitants dispersed, and what became
- of the dwellings they left behind, shall be questions for the local
- antiquarian. We have no concern with any part of the history, except that
- part which began in the summer of 1831 and ended in 1837,&mdash;the period
- during which it had the honor of sheltering a man whose enduring fame
- contrasts strangely with the evanescence of the village itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0006" id="image-0006">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/115.jpg" alt="Map of New Salem 115 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- In 1829 James Rutledge and John Cameron built the mill on the Sangamon,
- and laid off the town on the hill. The place was then called Cameron's
- Mill; but in process of time, as cabins, stores, and groceries were added,
- it was dignified by the name of New Salem. "I claim," says one of the
- gentlemen who established the first store, "to be the explorer and
- discoverer of New Salem as a business point. Mr. Hill (now dead) and
- myself purchased some goods at Cincinnati, and shipped them to St. Louis,
- whence I set out on a voyage of discovery on the prairies of Illinois....
- I, however, soon came across a noted character who lives in this vicinity,
- by the name of Thomas Wadkins, who set forth the beauties and other
- advantages of Cameron's Mill, as it was then called. I accordingly came
- home with him, visited the locality, contracted for the erection of a
- magnificent storehouse for the sum of fifteen dollars; and, after passing
- a night in the prairie, reached St. Louis in safety. Others soon
- followed."
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1836 New Salem contained about twenty houses, inhabited by nearly a
- hundred people; but in 1831 there could not have been more than two-thirds
- or three-fourths that number. Many of the houses cost not more than ten
- dollars, and none of them more than one hundred dollars.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the news flew through the country that the mill-dam was broken, the
- people assembled from far and near, and made a grand frolic of mending it.
- In like manner, when a new settler arrived, and the word passed around
- that he wanted to put up a house, everybody came in to the "raising;" and,
- after behaving like the best of good Samaritans to the new neighbor, they
- drank whiskey, ran foot-races, wrestled, fought, and went home.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I first knew this hill, or bluff," says Mr. Herndon, in his remarkable
- lecture on Ann Rutledge, "as early as 1829. I have seen it in spring-time
- and winter, in summer-time and fall. I have seen it in daylight and
- night-time; have seen it when the sward was green, living, and vital; and
- I have seen it wrapped in snow, frost, and sleet. I have closely studied
- it for more than five long years....
- </p>
- <p>
- "As I sat on the verge of the town, in presence of its ruins, I called to
- mind the street running east and west through the village, the river
- eastward; Green's Rocky Branch, with its hills, southward; Clary's Grove,
- westerly about three miles; Petersburg northward, and Springfield
- south-east; and now I cannot exclude from my memory or imagination the
- forms, faces, voices, and features of those I once knew so well. In my
- imagination the village perched on the hill is astir with the hum of busy
- men, and the sharp, quick buzz of women; and from the country come men and
- women on foot or on horseback, to see and be seen, to hear and to be
- heard, to barter and exchange what they have with the merchant and the
- laborer. There are Jack Armstrong and William Green, Kelso and Jason
- Duncan, Alley and Carman, Hill and McNamar, Herndon and Rutledge,
- Warburton and Sincho, Bale and Ellis, Abraham and Ann. Oh, what a
- history!"
- </p>
- <p>
- In those days, which in the progressive West would be called ancient days,
- New Salem was in Sangamon County, with Springfield as the county-seat.
- Springfield itself was still a mere village, having a population of one
- thousand, or perhaps eleven hundred. The capital of the State was yet at
- Vandalia, and waited for the parliamentary tact of Abraham Lincoln and the
- "long nine" to bring it to Springfield. The same influence, which, after
- long struggles, succeeded in removing the capital, caused the new County
- of Menard to be erected out of Sangamon in 1839, of which Petersburg was
- made the county-seat, and within which is included the barren site of New
- Salem.
- </p>
- <p>
- In July or August, 1831, Mr. Lincoln made his second appearance at New
- Salem. He was again in company with Denton Offutt, who had collected some
- goods at Beardstown, and now proposed to bring them to this place. Mr.
- Lincoln undoubtedly came there in the service of Offutt, but whilst the
- goods were being transported from Beardstown he seemed to be idling about
- without any special object in view. Many persons who saw him then for the
- first time speak of him as "doing nothing." He has given some
- encouragement to this idea himself by the manner in which he habitually
- spoke of his advent there,&mdash;describing himself as coming down the
- river after the winter of the deep snow, like a piece of "floating
- driftwood" borne along by the freshet, and accidentally lodged at New
- Salem.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the day of the election, in the month of August, as Minter Graham, the
- school-teacher, tells us, Abe was seen loitering about the polling-place.
- It must have been but a few days after his arrival in the town, for nobody
- knew that he could write. They were "short of a clerk" at the polls; and,
- after casting about in vain for some one competent to fill the office, it
- occurred to one of the judges that perhaps the tall stranger possessed the
- needful qualifications. He thereupon accosted him, and asked if he could
- write. He replied, "Yes, a little."&mdash;"Will you act as clerk of the
- election today?" said the judge. "I will try," returned Abe, "and do the
- best I can, if you so request." He did try accordingly, and, in the
- language of the schoolmaster, "performed the duties with great facility,
- much fairness and honesty and impartiality. This was the first public
- official act of his life. I clerked with him," says Mr. Graham, swelling
- with his theme, "on the same day and at the same polls. The election-books
- are now in the city of Springfield, Ill., where they can be seen and
- inspected any day."
- </p>
- <p>
- Whilst Abe was "doing nothing," or, in other words, waiting for Offutt's
- goods, one Dr. Nelson, a resident of New Salem, built a flatboat, and,
- placing his family and effects upon it, started for Texas. But as the
- Sangamon was a turbulent and treacherous stream at best, and its banks
- were now full to overflowing, Nelson needed a pilot, at least as far as
- Beardstown.
- </p>
- <p>
- His choice fell upon Abe, who took him to the mouth of the doubtful river
- in safety, although Abe often declared that he occasionally ran out into
- the prairie at least three miles from the channel. Arriving at Beardstown,
- Nelson pushed on down the Illinois, and Abe walked back to New Salem.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second storekeeper at New Salem was a Mr. George Warburton; but, "the
- country not having improved his morals in the estimation of his friends,"
- George thought it advisable to transfer his storeroom and the remnant of
- his stock to Offutt. In the mean time, Offutt's long-expected goods were
- received from Beardstown. Abe unpacked them, ranged them on the shelves,
- rolled the barrels and kegs into their places, and, being provided with a
- brand-new book, pen, and ink, found himself duly installed as "first
- clerk" of the principal mercantile house in New Salem. A country store is
- an indescribable collection of miscellanies,&mdash;groceries, drygoods,
- hardware, earthenware, and stoneware, cups and saucers, plates and dishes,
- coffee and tea, sugar and molasses, boots and shoes, whiskey and lead,
- butter and eggs, tobacco and gunpowder, with an endless list of things
- unimaginable except by a housewife or a "merchant." Such was the store to
- the charge of which Abe was now promoted,&mdash;promoted from the rank of
- a common laborer to be a sort of brevet clerk.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Offutt's ideas of commerce were very comprehensive; and, as "his
- business was already considerably scattered about the country," he thought
- he would scatter a little more. He therefore rented the mill at the foot
- of the hill, from Cameron and Rutledge, and set Abe to overlooking that as
- well as the store. This increase of business, however, required another
- clerk, and in a few days Abe was given a companion in the person of W. G.
- Green. They slept together on the same cot in the store; and as Mr. Green
- observes, by way of indicating the great intimacy that subsisted between
- them, "when one turned over, the other had to do so likewise." To complete
- his domestic arrangements, Abe followed the example of Mr. Offutt, and
- took boarding at John Cameron's, one of the owners of the mill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Offutt is variously, though not differently, described as a "wild,
- harum-scarum, reckless fellow;" a "gusty, windy, brain-rattling man;" a
- "noisy, unsteady, fussy, rattlebrained man, wild and improvident." If
- anybody can imagine the character indicated by these terms, he can imagine
- Mr. Offutt,&mdash;Abe's employer, friend, and patron. Since the trip on
- the flatboat, his admiration for Abe had grown to be boundless. He now
- declared that "Abe knew more than any man in the United States;" that "he
- would some day be President of the United States," and that he could, at
- that present moment, outrun, whip, or throw down any man in Sangamon
- County. These loud boasts were not wasted on the desert air: they were bad
- seed sown in a rank soil, and speedily raised up a crop of sharp thorns
- for both Abe and Offutt. At New Salem, honors such as Offutt accorded to
- Abe were to be won before they were worn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bill Clary made light of Offutt's opinion respecting Abe's prowess; and
- one day, when the dispute between them had been running high in the store,
- it ended by a bet of ten dollars on the part of Clary that Jack Armstrong
- was "a better man." Now, "Jack was a powerful twister," "square built, and
- strong as an ox." He had, besides, a great backing; for he was the chief
- of the "Clary's Grove boys," and the Clary's Grove boys were the terror of
- the countryside. Although there never was under the sun a more generous
- parcel of ruffians than those over whom Jack held sway, a stranger's
- introduction was likely to be the most unpleasant part of his acquaintance
- with them. In fact, one of the objects of their association was to
- "initiate or naturalize new-comers," as they termed the amiable
- proceedings which they took by way of welcoming any one ambitious of
- admittance to the society of New Salem. They first bantered the gentleman
- to run a foot-race, jump, pitch the mall, or wrestle; and, if none of
- these propositions seemed agreeable to him, they would request to know
- what he would do in case another gentleman should pull his nose, or squirt
- tobacco-juice in his face. If he did not seem entirely decided in his
- views as to what should properly be done in such a contingency, perhaps he
- would be nailed in a hogshead, and rolled down New-Salem hill; perhaps his
- ideas would be brightened by a brief ducking in the Sangamon; or perhaps
- he would be scoffed, kicked, and cuffed by a great number of persons in
- concert, until he reached the confines of the village, and then turned
- adrift as being unfit company for the people of that settlement. If,
- however, the stranger consented to engage in a tussle with one of his
- persecutors, it was usually arranged that there should be "foul play,"
- with nameless impositions and insults, which would inevitably change the
- affair into a fight; and then, if the subject of all these practices
- proved indeed to be a man of mettle, he would be promptly received into
- "good society," and in all probability would never have better friends on
- earth than the roystering fellows who had contrived his torments.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus far Abe had managed to escape "initiation" at the hands of Jack and
- his associates. They were disposed to like him, and to take him on faith,
- or at least to require no further evidence of his manhood than that which
- rumor had already brought them. Offutt, with his busy tongue, had spread
- wide the report of his wondrous doings on the river; and, better still,
- all New Salem, including many of the "Clary's Grove boys," had witnessed
- his extraordinary feats of strength and ingenuity at Rutledge's mill-dam.
- It was clear that no particular person was "spoiling" for a collision with
- him; and an exception to the rule might have been made in his favor, but
- for the offensive zeal and confidence of his employer.
- </p>
- <p>
- The example of Offutt and Clary was followed by all the "boys;" and money,
- knives, whiskey, and all manner of things, were staked on the result of
- the wrestle. The little community was excited throughout, and Jack's
- partisans were present in great numbers; while Offutt and Bill Green were
- about the only persons upon whom Abe could rely if the contest should take
- the usual turn, and end in a fight. For these, and many other reasons, he
- longed to be safely and honorably out of the scrape; but Offutt's folly
- had made it impossible for him to evade the conflict without incurring the
- imputation, and suffering the penalties, of cowardice. He said, "I never
- tussle and scuffle, and I will not: I don't like this wooling and
- pulling." But these scruples only served to aggravate his case; and he was
- at last forced to take hold of Jack, which he did with a will and power
- that amazed the fellows who had at last baited him to the point of
- indignation. They took "side holds," and stood struggling, each with
- tremendous but equal strength, for several minutes, without any
- perceptible advantage to either. New trips or unexpected twists were of no
- avail between two such experienced wrestlers as these. Presently Abe
- profited by his height and the length of his arms to lift Jack clear off
- the ground, and, swinging him about, thought to land him on his back; but
- this feat was as futile as the rest, and left Jack standing as square and
- as firm as ever. "Now, Jack," said Abe, "let's quit: you can't throw me,
- and I can't throw you." But Jack's partisans, regarding this overture as a
- signal of the enemy's distress, and being covetous of jack-knives,
- whiskey, and "smooth quarters," cheered him on to greater exertions.
- Rendered desperate by these expectations of his friends, and now enraged
- at meeting more than his match, Jack resolved on "a foul," and, breaking
- holds, he essayed the unfair and disreputable expedient of "legging." But
- at this Abe's prudence deserted him, and righteous wrath rose to the
- ascendent. The astonished spectators saw him take their great bully by the
- throat, and, holding him out at arm's-length, shake him like a child. Then
- a score or two of the boys cried "Fight!" Bill Clary claimed the stakes,
- and Offutt, in the fright and confusion, was about to yield them; but
- "Lincoln said they had not won the money, and they should not have it;
- and, although he was opposed to fighting, if nothing else would do them,
- he would fight Armstrong, Clary, or any of the set." Just at this juncture
- James Rutledge, the original proprietor of New Salem, and a man of some
- authority, "rushed into the crowd," and exerted himself to maintain the
- peace. He succeeded; but for a few moments a general fight was impending,
- and Abe was seen with his back against Offutt's store "undismayed" and
- "resolute," although surrounded by enemies.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Of the fight and what followed, we have the particulars from many
- persons who were witnesses.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Jack Armstrong was no bad fellow, after all. A sort of Western John
- Browdie, stout and rough, but great-hearted, honest, and true: his big
- hand, his cabin, his table, and his purse were all at the disposal of a
- friend in need. He possessed a rude sense of justice, and felt an
- incredible respect for a man who would stand single-handed, stanch, and
- defiant, in the midst of persecutors and foes. He had never disliked Abe,
- and had, in fact, looked for very clever things from him, even before his
- title to respectability had been made so incontestably clear; but his
- exhibition of pluck and muscle on this occasion excited Jack to a degree
- of admiration far beyond his power to conceal it. Abe's hand was hardly
- removed from his throat, when he was ready to grasp it in friendship, and
- swear brotherhood and peace between them. He declared him, on the spot,
- "the best fellow that ever broke into their settlement;" and henceforth
- the empire was divided, and Jack and Abe reigned like two friendly Cæsars
- over the roughs and bullies of New Salem. If there were ever any
- dissensions between them, it was because Jack, in the abundance of his
- animal spirits, was sometimes inclined to be an oppressor, whilst Abe was
- ever merciful and kind; because Jack would occasionally incite the "boys"
- to handle a stranger, a witless braggart, or a poor drunkard with a
- harshness that shocked the just and humane temper of his friend, who was
- always found on the side of the weak and the unfortunate. On the whole,
- however, the harmony that subsisted between them was wonderful. Wherever
- Lincoln worked, Jack "did his loafing;" and, when Lincoln was out of work,
- he spent days and weeks together at Jack's cabin, where Jack's jolly wife,
- "old Hannah," stuffed him with bread and honey, laughed at his ugliness,
- and loved him for his goodness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe rapidly grew in favor with the people in and around New Salem, until
- nearly everybody thought quite as much of him as Mr. Offutt did. He was
- decidedly the most popular man that ever lived there. He could do more to
- quell a riot, compromise a feud; and keep peace among the neighbors
- generally, than any one else; and these were of the class of duties which
- it appears to have been the most agreeable for him to perform. One day a
- strange man came into the settlement, and was straightway beset by the
- same fellows who had meditated a drubbing for Abe himself. Jack Armstrong,
- of course, "had a difficulty with him;" "called him a liar, coward," and
- various other names not proper for print; but the man, finding himself
- taken at a disadvantage, "backed up to a woodpile," got a stick, and
- "struck Jack a blow that brought him to the ground." Being "as strong as
- two men, Jack wanted to whip the man badly," but Abe interfered, and,
- managing to have himself made "arbitrator," compromised the difficulty by
- a practical application of the golden rule. "Well, Jack," said he, "what
- did you say to the man?" Whereupon Jack repeated his words. "Well, Jack,"
- replied Abe, "if you were a stranger in a strange place, as this man is,
- and you were called a d&mdash;d liar, &amp;c., what would you do?"&mdash;"Whip
- him, by God!"&mdash;"Then this man has done no more to you than you would
- have done to him."&mdash;"Well, Abe," said the honest bruiser, "it's all
- right," and, taking his opponent by the hand, forgave him heartily, and
- "treated." Jack always treated his victim when he thought he had been too
- hard upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe's duties in Offutt's store were not of a character to monopolize the
- whole of his time,1 and he soon began to think that here was a fine
- opportunity to remedy some of the defects in his education.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "During the time he was working for Offutt, and hands being scarce,
- Lincoln turned In and cut down trees, and split enough rails for Offutt
- to make a pen sufficiently large to contain a thousand hogs. The pen was
- built under New Salem hill, close to the mill.... I know where those
- rails are now; are sound to-day."&mdash;Minter Graham
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- He could read, write, and cipher as well as most men; but as his
- popularity was growing daily, and his ambition keeping pace, he feared
- that he might shortly be called to act in some public capacity which would
- require him to speak his own language with some regard to the rules of the
- grammar,&mdash;of which, according to his own confession, he knew nothing
- at all. He carried his troubles to the schoolmaster, saying, "I have a
- notion to study English grammar."&mdash;"If you expect to go before the
- public in any capacity," replied Mr. Graham, "I think it the best thing
- you can do."&mdash;"If I had a grammar," replied Abe, "I would commence
- now." There was no grammar to be had about New Salem; but the
- schoolmaster, having kept the run of that species of property, gladdened
- Abe's heart by telling him that he knew where there was one. Abe rose from
- the breakfast at which he was sitting, and learning that the book was at
- Vaner's, only six miles distant, set off after it as hard as he could
- tramp. It seemed to Mr. Graham a very little while until he returned and
- announced, with great pleasure, that he had it. "He then turned his
- immediate and most undivided attention" to the study of it. Sometimes,
- when business was not particularly brisk, he would lie under a shade-tree
- in front of the store, and pore over the book; at other times a customer
- would find him stretched on the counter intently engaged in the same way.
- But the store was a bad place for study; and he was often seen quietly
- slipping out of the village, as if he wished to avoid observation, when,
- if successful in getting off alone, he would spend hours in the woods,
- "mastering a book," or in a state of profound abstraction. He kept up his
- old habit of sitting up late at night; but, as lights were as necessary to
- his purpose as they were expensive, the village cooper permitted him to
- sit in his shop, where he burnt the shavings, and kept a blazing fire to
- read by, when every one else was in bed. The Greens lent him books; the
- schoolmaster gave him instructions in the store, on the road, or in the
- meadows: every visitor to New Salem who made the least pretension to
- scholarship was waylaid by Abe, and required to explain something which he
- could not understand. The result of it all was, that the village and the
- surrounding country wondered at his growth in knowledge, and he soon
- became as famous for the goodness of his understanding as for the muscular
- power of his body, and the unfailing humor of his talk.
- </p>
- <p>
- Early in the spring of 1832, some enterprising gentlemen at Springfield
- determined to try whether the Sangamon was a navigable stream or not. It
- was a momentous question to the dwellers along the banks; and, when the
- steamboat "Talisman" was chartered to make the experiment, the popular
- excitement was intense, and her passage up and down was witnessed by great
- concourses of people on either bank. It was thought that Abe's experience
- on this particular river would render his assistance very valuable; and,
- in company with some others, he was sent down to Beardstown, to meet the
- "Talisman," and pilot her up. With Abe at the helm, she ran with
- comparative ease and safety as far as the New-Salem dam, a part of which
- they were compelled to tear away in order to let the steamer through.
- Thence she went on as high as Bogue's mill; but, having reached that
- point, the rapidly-falling water admonished her captain and pilots, that,
- unless they wished her to be left there for the season, they must promptly
- turn her prow down stream. For some time, on the return trip, she made not
- more than three or four miles a day, "on account of the high wind from the
- prairie." "I was sent for, being an old boatman," says J. R. Herndon, "and
- I met her some twelve or thirteen miles above New Salem.... We got to
- Salem the second day after I went on board. When we struck the dam, she
- hung. We then backed off, and threw the anchor over the dam, and tore away
- a part of the dam, and, raising steam, ran her over the first trial. As
- soon as she was over, the company that chartered her was done with her. I
- think the captain gave Mr. Lincoln forty dollars to run her down to
- Beardstown. I am sure I got forty dollars to continue on her until we
- landed at Beardstown. We that went down with her walked back to New
- Salem."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V.
- </h2>
- <p>
- IN the spring of 1832, Mr. Offutt's business had gone to ruin: the store
- was sold out, the mill was handed over to its owners, Mr. Offutt himself
- departed for parts unknown, and his "head clerk" was again out of work.
- Just about that time a governor's proclamation arrived, calling for
- volunteers to meet the famous chief Black Hawk and his warriors, who were
- preparing for a grand, and, in all likelihood, a bloody foray, into their
- old hunting-grounds in the Rock-river country.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0007" id="image-0007">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/128.jpg" alt="Black Hawk, Indian Chief 128 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- Black Hawk was a large Indian, of powerful frame and commanding presence.
- He was a soldier and a statesman. The history of his diplomacy with the
- tribes he sought to confederate shows that he expected to realize on a
- smaller scale the splendid plans of Pontiac and Tecumseh. In his own
- tongue he was eloquent, and dreamed dreams which, amongst the Indians,
- passed for prophecy. The prophet is an indispensable personage in any
- comprehensive scheme of Indian politics, and no chief has ever effected a
- combination of formidable strength without his aid. In the person of Black
- Hawk, the chief and the prophet were one. His power in both capacities was
- bent toward a single end,&mdash;the great purpose of his life,&mdash;the
- recovery of his birthplace and the ancient home of his people from the
- possession of the stranger.
- </p>
- <p>
- Black Hawk was born on the Rock River in Wisconsin, in the year 1767. His
- grandfather lived near Montreal, whence his father Pyesa had emigrated,
- but not until he had become thoroughly British in his views and feelings.
- All his life long he made annual journeys to the councils of the tribes at
- Malden, where the gifts and persuasions of British agents confirmed him in
- his inclination to the British interests. When Pyesa was gathered to his
- fathers, his son took his place as the chief of the Sacs, hated the
- Americans, loved the friendly English, and went yearly to Malden,
- precisely as he thought Pyesa would have had him do. But Black Hawk's mind
- was infinitely superior to Pyesa's: his sentiments were loftier, his heart
- more susceptible; he had the gift of the seer, the power of the orator,
- with the high courage and the profound policy of a born warrior and a
- natural ruler. He "had brooded over the early history of his tribe; and to
- his views, as he looked down the vista of years, the former times seemed
- so much better than the present, that the vision wrought upon his
- susceptible imagination, which pictured it to be the Indian golden age. He
- had some remembrance of a treaty made by Gen. Harrison in 1804, to which
- his people had given their assent; and his feelings were with difficulty
- controlled, when he was required to leave the Rock-river Valley, in
- compliance with a treaty made with Gen. Scott. That valley, however, he
- peacefully abandoned with his tribe, on being notified, and went to the
- west of the Mississippi; but he had spent his youth in that locality, and
- the more he thought of it, the more determined he was to return thither.
- He readily enlisted the sympathies of the Indians, who are ever prone to
- ponder on their real or imaginary wrongs; and it may be readily
- conjectured that what Indian counsel could not accomplish, Indian prophecy
- would."1 He had moved when summoned to move, because he was then
- unprepared to fight; but he utterly denied that the chiefs who seemed to
- have ceded the lands long years before had any right to cede them, or that
- the tribe had ever willingly given up the country to the stranger and the
- aggressor. It was a fraud upon the simple Indians: the old treaty was a
- great lie, and the signatures it purported to have, made with marks and
- primitive devices, were not attached in good faith, and were not the names
- of honest Sacs. No: he would go over the river, he would have his own; the
- voice of the Great Spirit was in the air wherever he went; it was in his
- lodge through all the night-time, and it said "Go;" and Black Hawk must
- needs rise up and tell the people what the voice said.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Schoolcraft's History of the Indian Tribes.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It was by such arguments as these that Black Hawk easily persuaded the
- Sacs. But hostilities by the Sacs alone would be a hopeless adventure. He
- must find allies. He looked first to their kindred, the Foxes, who had
- precisely the same cause of war with the Sacs, and after them to the
- Winnebagoes, Sioux, Kickapoos, and many others. That Black Hawk was a wise
- and valiant leader, all the Indians conceded; and his proposals were heard
- by some of the tribes with eagerness, and by all of them with respect. At
- one time his confederacy embraced nine tribes,&mdash;the most formidable
- in the North-west, if we exclude the Sioux and the Chippewas, who were
- themselves inclined to accede. Early in 1831, the first chief of the
- Chippewas exhibited a miniature tomahawk, red with vermilion, which,
- having been accepted from Black Hawk, signified an alliance between them;
- and away up at Leech. Lake, an obscure but numerous band showed some
- whites a few British medals painted in imitation of blood, which meant
- that they were to follow the war-paths of Black Hawk.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1831 Black Hawk had crossed the river in small force, but had retired
- before the advance of Gen. Gaines, commanding the United States post at
- Rock Island. He then promised to remain on the other side, and to keep
- quiet for the future. But early in the spring of 1832 he re-appeared with
- greater numbers, pushed straight into the Rock-river Valley, and said he
- had "come to plant corn." He was now sixty-seven years of age: he thought
- his great plots were all ripe, and his allies fast and true. They would
- fight a few bloody battles, and then he would sit down in his old age and
- see the corn grow where he had seen it in his youth. But the old chief
- reckoned too much upon Indian fidelity: he committed the fatal error of
- trusting to their patriotism instead of their interests. Gen. Atkinson,
- now in command at Rock Island, set the troops in motion: the governor
- issued his call for volunteers; and, as the Indians by this time had
- committed some frightful barbarities, the blood of the settlers was
- boiling, and the regiments were almost instantly filled with the best
- possible material. So soon as these facts became known, the allies of
- Black Hawk, both the secret and the open, fell away from him, and left
- him, with the Sacs and the Foxes, to meet his fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time Lincoln had enlisted in a company from Sangamon. He had
- not been out in the campaign of the previous year, but told his friend Row
- Herndon, that, if he had not been down the river with Offutt, he would
- certainly have been with the boys in the field. But, notwithstanding his
- want of military experience, his popularity was so great, that he had been
- elected captain of a militia company on the occasion of a muster at
- Clary's Grove the fall before. He was absent at the time, but thankfully
- accepted and served. Very much to his surprise, his friends put him up for
- the captaincy of this company about to enter active service. They did not
- organize at home, however, but marched first to Beardstown, and then to
- Rushville in Schuyler County, where the election took place. Bill
- Kirkpatrick was a candidate against Lincoln, but made a very sorry
- showing. It has been said that Lincoln once worked for Kirkpatrick as a
- common laborer, and suffered some indignities at his hands; but the story
- as a whole is supported by no credible testimony. It is certain, however,
- that the planks for the boat built by Abe and his friends at the mouth of
- Spring Creek were sawed at the mill of a Mr. Kirkpatrick. It was then,
- likely enough, that Abe fell in the way of this man, and learned to
- dislike him. At all events, when he had distanced Kirkpatrick, and was
- chosen his captain by the suffrages of men who had been intimate with
- Kirkpatrick long before they had ever heard of Abe, he spoke of him
- spitefully, and referred in no gentle terms to some old dispute. "Damn
- him," said he to Green, "I've beat him: he used me badly in our settlement
- for my toil."
- </p>
- <p>
- Capt. Lincoln now made a very modest speech to his comrades, reciting the
- exceeding gratification their partiality afforded him, how undeserved he
- thought it, and how wholly unexpected it was. In conclusion, "he promised
- very plainly that he would do the best he could to prove himself worthy of
- that confidence."
- </p>
- <p>
- The troops rendezvoused at Beardstown and Rushville were formed into four
- regiments and a spy battalion. Capt. Lincoln's company was attached to the
- regiment of Col. Samuel Thompson. The whole force was placed under the
- command of Gen. Whiteside, who was accompanied throughout the campaign by
- the governor in person.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 27th of April, the army marched toward the mouth of Rock River, by
- way of Oquaka on the Mississippi. The route was one of difficulty and
- danger, a great part of it lying through a country largely occupied by the
- enemy. The men were raw, and restive under discipline. In the beginning
- they had no more respect for the "rules and regulations" than for
- Solomon's Proverbs, or the Westminster Confession. Capt. Lincoln's company
- is said to have been a particularly "hard set of men," who recognized no
- power but his. They were fighting men, and but for his personal authority
- would have kept the camp in a perpetual uproar.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the crossing of Henderson River,&mdash;a stream about fifty yards wide,
- and eight or ten feet deep, with very precipitous banks,&mdash;they were
- compelled to make a bridge or causeway with timbers cut by the troops, and
- a filling-in of bushes, earth, or any other available material. This was
- the work of a day and night. Upon its completion, the horses and oxen were
- taken from the wagons, and the latter taken over by hand. But, when the
- horses came to cross, many of them were killed in sliding down the steep
- banks. "While in camp here," says a private in Capt. Lincoln's company, "a
- general order was issued prohibiting the discharge of fire-arms within
- fifty steps of the camp. Capt. Lincoln disobeyed the order by firing his
- pistol within ten steps of the camp, and for this violation of orders was
- put under arrest for that day, and his sword taken from him; but the next
- day his sword was restored, and nothing more was done in the matter."
- </p>
- <p>
- From Henderson River the troops marched to Yellow Banks, on the
- Mississippi. "While at this place," Mr. Ben F. Irwin says, "a considerable
- body of Indians of the Cherokee tribe came across the river from the Iowa
- side, with the white flag hoisted. These were the first Indians we saw.
- They were very friendly, and gave us a general war-dance. We, in return,
- gave them a Sucker ho-down. All enjoyed the sport, and it is safe to say
- no man enjoyed it more than Capt. Lincoln."
- </p>
- <p>
- From Yellow Banks, a rapid and exhaustive march of a few days brought the
- volunteers to the mouth of Rock River, where "it was agreed between Gen.
- Whiteside and Gen. Atkinson of the regulars, that the volunteers should
- march up Rock River, about fifty miles, to the Prophet's Town, and there
- encamp, to feed and rest their horses, and await the arrival of the
- regular troops, in keel-boats, with provisions. Judge William Thomas, who
- again acted as quartermaster to the volunteers, made an estimate of the
- amount of provisions required until the boats could arrive, which was
- supplied; and then Gen. Whiteside took up his line of march." 1 But Capt.
- Lincoln's company did not march on the present occasion with the alacrity
- which distinguished their comrades of other corps. The orderly sergeant
- attempted to "form company," but the company declined to be formed; the
- men, oblivious of wars and rumors of wars, mocked at the word of command,
- and remained between their blankets in a state of serene repose. For an
- explanation of these signs of passive mutiny, we must resort again to the
- manuscript of the private who gave the story of Capt. Lincoln's first
- arrest. "About the&mdash;of April, we reached the mouth of Rock River.
- About three or four nights afterwards, a man named Rial P. Green, commonly
- called 'Pot Green,' belonging to a Green-county company, came to oar
- company, and waked up the men, and proposed to them, that, if they would
- furnish him with a tomahawk and four buckets, he would get into the
- officers' liquors, and supply the men with wines and brandies. The desired
- articles were furnished him; and, with the assistance of one of our
- company, he procured the liquors. All this was entirely unknown to Capt.
- Lincoln. In the morning. Capt. Lincoln ordered his orderly to form company
- for parade; but when the orderly called the men to 'parade,' they called
- 'parade,' too, but couldn't fall into line. The most of the men were
- unmistakably drunk. The rest of the forces marched off, and left Capt.
- Lincoln's company behind. The company didn't make a start until about ten
- o'clock, and then, after marching about two miles, the drunken ones lay
- down and slept their drunk off. They overtook the forces that night. Capt.
- Lincoln was again put under arrest, and was obliged to carry a wooden
- sword for two days, and this although Capt. Lincoln was entirely blameless
- in the matter."
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois, chap. iv.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- When Gen. Whiteside reached Prophetstown, where he was to rest until the
- arrival of the regulars and the supplies, he disregarded the plan of
- operations concerted between him and Atkinson, and, burning the village to
- the ground, pushed on towards Dixon's Ferry, forty miles farther up the
- river. Nearing that place, he left his baggage-wagons behind: the men
- threw away their allotments of provisions, or left them with the wagons;
- and in that condition a forced march was made to Dixon. There Whiteside
- found two battalions of mounted men under Majors Stillman and Bailey, who
- clamored to be thrown forward, where they might get up an independent but
- glorious "brush" with the enemy on comparatively private account. The
- general had it not in his heart to deny these adventurous spirits, and
- they were promptly advanced to feel and disclose the Indian force supposed
- to be near at hand. Stillman accordingly moved up the bank of "Old Man's
- Creek" (since called "Stillman's Run"), to a point about twenty miles from
- Dixon, where, just before nightfall, he went into camp, or was about to do
- so, when several Indians were seen hovering along some raised ground
- nearly a mile distant. Straightway Stillman's gallant fellows remounted,
- one by one, or two and two, and, without officers or orders, galloped away
- in pursuit. The Indians first shook a red flag, and then dashed off at the
- top of their speed. Three of them were overtaken and killed: but the rest
- performed with perfect skill the errand upon which they were sent; they
- led Stillman's command into an ambuscade, where lay Black Hawk himself
- with seven hundred of his warriors. The pursuers recoiled, and rode for
- their lives: Black Hawk bore down upon Stillman's camp; the fugitives,
- streaming back with fearful cries respecting the numbers and ferocity of
- the enemy, spread consternation through the entire force. Stillman gave a
- hasty order to fall back; and the men fell back much faster and farther
- than he intended, for they never faced about, or so much as stopped, until
- they reached Whiteside's camp at Dixon. The first of them reached Dixon
- about twelve o'clock; and others came straggling in all night long and
- part of the next day, each party announcing themselves as the sole
- survivors of that stricken field, escaped solely by the exercise of
- miraculous valor.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "It is said that a big, tall Kentuckian, with a very loud voice, who
- was a colonel of the militia, but a private with Stillman, upon his
- arrival in camp, gave to Gen. Whiteside and the wondering multitude the
- following glowing and bombastic account of the battle. 'Sirs,' said he,
- 'our detachment was encamped amongst some scattering timber on the north
- side of Old Man's Creek, with the prairie from the north gently sloping
- down to our encampment. It was just after twilight, in the gloaming of
- the evening, when we discovered Black Hawk's army coming down upon us in
- solid column: they displayed in the form of a crescent upon the brow of
- the prairie, and such accuracy and precision of military movements were
- never witnessed by man; they were equal to the best troops of Wellington
- in Spain. I have said that the Indians came down in solid column, and
- displayed in the form of a crescent; and, what was most wonderful, there
- were large squares of cavalry resting upon the points of the curve,
- which squares were supported again by other columns fifteen deep,
- extending back through the woods, and over a swamp three-quarters of a
- mile, which again rested upon the main body of Black Hawk's army
- bivouacked upon the banks of the Kishwakee. It was a terrible and a
- glorious sight to see the tawny warriors as they rode along our flanks
- attempting to outflank us with the glittering moonbeams glistening from
- their polished blades and burnished spears. It was a sight well
- calculated to strike consternation into the stoutest and boldest heart;
- and accordingly our men soon began to break in small squads for tall
- timber. In a very little time the rout became general. The Indians were
- on our flanks, and threatened the destruction of the entire detachment.
- About this time Major Stillman, Col. Stephenson, Major Perkins, Capt.
- Adams, Mr. Hackelton, and myself, with some others, threw ourselves into
- the rear to rally the fugitives and protect the retreat. But in A short
- time all my companions fell, bravely fighting hand to hand with the
- savage enemy, and I alone was left upon the field of battle. About this
- time I discovered not far to the left, a corps of horsemen which seemed
- to be in tolerable order. I immediately deployed to the left, when,
- leaning down and placing my body in a recumbent posture upon the mane of
- my horse, so as to bring the heads of the horsemen between my eye and
- the horizon, I discovered by the light of the moon that they were
- gentlemen who did not wear hats, by which token I knew they were no
- friends of mine. I therefore made a retrograde movement, and recovered
- my former position, where I remained some time, meditating what further
- I could do in the service of my country, when a random ball came
- whistling by my ear, and plainly whispered to me, "Stranger, you have no
- further business here." Upon hearing this, I followed the example of my
- companions in arms, and broke for tall timber, and the way I run was not
- a little, and quit.' "This colonel was a lawyer just returning from the
- circuit, with a slight wardrobe and 'Chitty's Pleadings' packed in his
- saddle-bags, all of which were captured by the Indians. He afterwards
- related, with much vexation, that Black Hawk had decked himself out in
- his finery, appearing in the woods amongst his savage companions dressed
- in one of the colonel's ruffled shirts drawn over his deer-skin
- leggings, with a volume of 'Chitty's Pleadings' under each arm."&mdash;
- Ford's History of Illinois.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The affair is known to history as "Stillman's Defeat." "Old John Hanks"
- was in it, and speaks of it with shame and indignation, attributing the
- disaster to "drunken men, cowardice, and folly," though in this case we
- should be slow to adopt his opinion. Of folly, there was, no doubt,
- enough, both on the part of Whiteside and Stillman; but of drunkenness no
- public account makes any mention, and individual cowardice is never to be
- imputed to American troops. These men were as brave as any that ever wore
- a uniform, and some of them performed good service afterwards; but when
- they went into this action, they were "raw militia,"&mdash;a mere mob; and
- no mob can stand against discipline, even though it be but the discipline
- of the savage.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day Whiteside moved with all possible celerity to the field of
- Stillman's disaster, and, finding no enemy, was forced to content himself
- with the melancholy duty of burying the mutilated and unsightly remains of
- the dead. All of them were scalped; some had their heads cut off, others
- had their throats cut, and others still were mangled and dishonored in
- ways too shocking to be told.
- </p>
- <p>
- The army was now suffering for want of provisions. The folly of the
- commander in casting off his baggage-train for the forced march on Dixon,
- the extravagance and improvidence of the men with their scanty rations,
- had exhausted the resources of the quartermasters, and, "except in the
- messes of the most careful and experienced," the camp was nearly destitute
- of food. "The majority had been living on parched corn and coffee for two
- or three days;" but, on the morning of the last march from Dixon,
- Quartermaster Thomas had succeeded in getting a little fresh beef from the
- only white inhabitant of that country, and this the men were glad to eat
- without bread. "I can truly say I was often hungry," said Capt. Lincoln,
- reviewing the events of this campaign. He was, doubtless, as destitute and
- wretched as the rest, but he was patient, quiet, and resolute. Hunger
- brought with it a discontented and mutinous spirit. The men complained
- bitterly of all they had been made to endure, and clamored loudly for a
- general discharge. But Capt. Lincoln kept the "even tenor of his way;"
- and, when his regiment was disbanded, immediately enlisted as a private
- soldier in another company.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the battle-field Whiteside returned to his old camp at Dixon, but
- determined, before doing so, to make one more attempt to retrieve his
- ill-fortune. Black Hawk's pirogues were supposed to be lying a few miles
- distant, in a bend of the Rock River; and the capture of these would serve
- as some relief to the dreary series of errors and miscarriages which had
- hitherto marked the campaign. But Black Hawk had just been teaching him
- strategy in the most effective mode, and the present movement was
- undertaken with an excess of caution almost as ludicrous as Stillman's
- bravado. "To provide as well as might be against danger, one man was
- started at a time in the direction of the point. When he would get a
- certain distance, keeping in sight, a second would start, and so on, until
- a string of men extending five miles from the main army was made, each to
- look out for Indians, and give the sign to right, left, or front, by
- hanging a hat on a bayonet,&mdash;erect for the front, and right or left,
- as the case might be. To raise men to go ahead was with difficulty done,
- and some tried hard to drop back; but we got through safe, and found the
- place deserted, leaving plenty of Indian signs,&mdash;a dead dog and
- several scalps taken in Stillman's defeat, as we supposed them to have
- been taken." After this, the last of Gen. Whiteside's futile attempts, he
- returned to the battle-field, and thence to Dixon, where he was joined by
- Atkinson with the regulars and the long-coveted and much-needed supplies.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, during these many marches and countermarches, an old Indian found
- his way into the camp, weary, hungry, and helpless. He professed to be a
- friend of the whites; and, although it was an exceedingly perilous
- experiment for one of his color, he ventured to throw himself upon the
- mercy of the soldiers. But the men first murmured, and then broke out into
- fierce cries for his blood. "We have come out to fight the Indians," said
- they, "and by God we intend to do it!" The poor Indian, now, in the
- extremity of his distress and peril, did what he ought to have done
- before: he threw down before his assailants a soiled and crumpled paper,
- which he implored them to read before his life was taken. It was a letter
- of character and safe-conduct from Gen. Cass, pronouncing him a faithful
- man, who had done good service in the cause for which this army was
- enlisted. But it was too late: the men refused to read it, or thought it a
- forgery, and were rushing with fury upon the defenceless old savage, when
- Capt. Lincoln bounded between them and their appointed victim. "Men," said
- he, and his voice for a moment stilled the agitation around him, "<i>this
- must not be done: he must not be shot and killed by us.</i>"&mdash;"But,"
- said some of them, "the Indian is a damned spy." Lincoln knew that his own
- life was now in only less danger than that of the poor creature that
- crouched behind him. During the whole of this scene Capt. Lincoln seemed
- to "rise to an unusual height" of stature. The towering form, the passion
- and resolution in his face, the physical power and terrible will exhibited
- in every motion of his body, every gesture of his arm, produced an effect
- upon the furious mob as unexpected perhaps to him as to any one else. They
- paused, listened, fell back, and then sullenly obeyed what seemed to be
- the voice of reason, as well as authority. But there were still some
- murmurs of disappointed rage, and half-suppressed exclamations, which
- looked towards vengeance of some kind. At length one of the men, a little
- bolder than the rest, but evidently feeling that he spoke for the whole,
- cried out, "This is cowardly on your part, Lincoln!" Whereupon the tall
- captain's figure stretched a few inches higher again. He looked down upon
- these varlets who would have murdered a defenceless old Indian, and now
- quailed before his single hand, with lofty contempt. The oldest of his
- acquaintances, even Bill Green, who saw him grapple Jack Armstrong and
- defy the bullies at his back, never saw him so much "aroused" before. "If
- any man thinks I am a coward, let him test it," said he. "Lincoln,"
- responded a new voice, "you are larger and heavier than we are."&mdash;"This
- you can guard against: choose your weapons," returned the rigid captain.
- Whatever may be said of Mr. Lincoln's choice of means for the preservation
- of military discipline, it was certainly very effectual in this case.
- There was no more disaffection in his camp, and the word "coward" was
- never coupled with his name again. Mr. Lincoln understood his men better
- than those who would be disposed to criticise his conduct. He has often
- declared himself, that his life and character were both at stake, and
- would probably have been lost, had he not at that supremely critical
- moment forgotten the officer and asserted the man. To have ordered the
- offenders under arrest would have created a formidable mutiny; to have
- tried and punished them would have been impossible. They could scarcely be
- called soldiers: they were merely armed citizens, with a nominal military
- organization. They were but recently enlisted, and their term of service
- was just about to expire. Had he preferred charges against them, and
- offered to submit their differences to a court of any sort, it would have
- been regarded as an act of personal pusillanimity, and his efficiency
- would have been gone forever.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln was believed to be the strongest man in his regiment, and no doubt
- was. He was certainly the best wrestler in it, and after they left
- Beardstown nobody ever disputed the fact. He is said to have "done the
- wrestling for the company;" and one man insists that he <i>always</i> had
- a handkerchief tied around his person, in readiness for the sport. For a
- while it was firmly believed that no man in the <i>army</i> could throw
- him down. His company confidently pitted him "against the field," and were
- willing to bet all they had on the result. At length, one Mr. Thompson
- came forward and accepted the challenge. He was, in fact, the most famous
- wrestler in the Western country. It is not certain that the report of his
- achievements had ever reached the ears of Mr. Lincoln or his friends; but
- at any rate they eagerly made a match with him as a champion not unworthy
- of their own. Thompson's power and skill, however, were as well known to
- certain persons in the army as Mr. Lincoln's were to others. Each side was
- absolutely certain of the victory, and bet according to their faith.
- Lincoln's company and their sympathizers put up all their portable
- property, and some perhaps not their own, including "knives, blankets,
- tomahawks," and all the most necessary articles of a soldier's outfit.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the men first met, Lincoln was convinced that he could throw
- Thompson; but, after tussling with him a brief space in presence of the
- anxious assemblage, he turned to his friends and said, "This is the most
- powerful man I ever had hold of. He will throw me, and you will lose your
- all, unless I act on the defensive." He managed, nevertheless, "to hold
- him off for some time;" but at last Thompson got the "crotch hoist" on
- him, and, although Lincoln attempted with all his wonderful strength to
- break the hold by "sliding" away, a few moments decided his fate: he was
- fairly thrown. As it required two out of three falls to decide the bets,
- Thompson and he immediately came together again, and with very nearly the
- same result. Lincoln fell under, but the other man fell too. There was
- just enough of uncertainty about it to furnish a pretext for a hot dispute
- and a general fight. Accordingly, Lincoln's men instantly began the proper
- preliminaries to a fracas. "We were taken by surprise," says Mr. Green,
- "and, being unwilling to give up our property and lose our bets, got up an
- excuse as to the result. We declared the fall a kind of dog-fall; did so
- apparently angrily." The fight was coming on apace, and bade fair to be a
- big and bloody one, when Lincoln rose up and said, "Boys, the man actually
- threw me once fair, broadly so; and the second time, this very fall, he
- threw me fairly, though not so apparently so." He would countenance no
- disturbance, and his unexpected and somewhat astonishing magnanimity ended
- all attempts to raise one.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln's good friend, Mr. Green, the principal, though not the sole
- authority for the present account of his adventure in behalf of the Indian
- and his wrestle with Thompson, mentions one important incident which is
- found in no other manuscript, and which gives us a glimpse of Mr. Lincoln
- in a scene of another sort. "One other word in reference to Mr. Lincoln's
- care for the health, welfare, and justice to his men. Some officers of the
- United States had claimed that the regular army had a preference in the
- rations and pay. Mr. Lincoln was ordered to do some act which he deemed
- unauthorized. He, however, obeyed, but went to the officer and said to
- him, 'Sir, you forget that we are not under the rules and regulations of
- the War Department at Washington; are only volunteers under the orders and
- regulations of Illinois. Keep in your own sphere, and there will be no
- difficulty; but resistance will hereafter be made to your unjust orders:
- and, further, my men must be equal in all particulars, in rations, arms,
- camps, &amp;c., to the regular army. The man saw that Mr. Lincoln was
- right, and determined to have justice done. Always after this we were
- treated equally well, and just as the regular army was, in every
- particular. This brave, just, and humane act in behalf of the volunteers
- at once attached officers and rank to him, as with hooks of steel."
- </p>
- <p>
- When the army reached Dixon, the almost universal discontent of the men
- had grown so manifest and so ominous, that it could no longer be safely
- disregarded. They longed "for the flesh-pots of Egypt," and fiercely
- demanded their discharge. Although their time had not expired, it was
- determined to march them by way of Paw-Paw Grove to Ottawa, and there
- concede what the governor feared he had no power to withhold.
- </p>
- <p>
- "While on our march from Dixon to Fox River," says Mr. Irwin, "one night
- while in camp, which was formed in a square enclosing about forty acres,
- our horses, outside grazing, got scared about nine o'clock; and a grand
- stampede took place. They ran right through our lines in spite of us, and
- ran over many of us. No man knows what noise a thousand horses make
- running, unless he had been there: it beats a young earthquake, especially
- among scared men, and certain they were scared then. We expected the
- Indians to be on us that night. Fire was thrown, drums beat, fifes played,
- which added additional fright to the horses. We saw no real enemy that
- night, but a line of battle was formed. There were no eyes for sleep that
- night: we stood to our posts in line; and what frightened the horses is
- yet unknown."
- </p>
- <p>
- "During this short Indian campaign," continues the same gentleman, "we had
- some hard times,&mdash;often hungry; but we had a great deal of sport,
- especially of nights,&mdash;-foot-racing, some horse-racing, jumping,
- telling anecdotes, in which Lincoln beat all, keeping up a constant
- laughter and good-humor all the time; among the soldiers some
- card-playing, and wrestling, in which Lincoln took a prominent part. I
- think it safe to say he was never thrown in a wrestle. [Mr. Irwin, it
- seems, still regards the Thompson affair as "a dog-fall."] While in the
- army, he kept a handkerchief tied around him near all the time for
- wrestling purposes, and loved the sport as well as any one could. He was
- seldom ever beat jumping. During the campaign, Lincoln himself was always
- ready for an emergency. He endured hardships like a good soldier: he never
- complained, nor did he fear danger. When fighting was expected, or danger
- apprehended, Lincoln was the first to say, 'Let's go.' He had the
- confidence of every man of his company, and they strictly obeyed his
- orders at a word. His company was all young men, and full of sport.
- </p>
- <p>
- "One night in Warren County, a white hog&mdash;a young sow&mdash;came into
- our lines, which showed more good sense, to my mind, than any hog I ever
- saw. This hog swam creeks and rivers, and went with us clear through to, I
- think, the mouth of Fox River; and there the boys killed it, or it would
- doubtless have come home with us. If it got behind in daylight as we were
- marching, which it did sometimes, it would follow on the track, and come
- to us at night. It was naturally the cleverest, friendly-disposed hog any
- man ever saw, and its untimely death was by many of us greatly deplored,
- for we all liked the hog for its friendly disposition and good manners;
- for it never molested any thing, and kept in its proper place."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 28th of May the volunteers were discharged. The governor had
- already called for two thousand more men to take their places; but, in the
- mean time, he made the most strenuous efforts to organize a small force
- out of the recently discharged, to protect the frontiers until the new
- levies were ready for service. He succeeded in raising one regiment and a
- spy company. Many officers of distinction, among them Gen. Whiteside
- himself, enlisted as private soldiers, and served in that capacity to the
- end of the war. Capt. Lincoln became Private Lincoln of the "Independent
- Spy Company," Capt. Early commanding; and, although he was never in an
- engagement, he saw some hard service in scouting and trailing, as well as
- in carrying messages and reports.
- </p>
- <p>
- About the middle of June the new troops were ready for the field, and soon
- after moved up to Rock River. Meanwhile the Indians had overrun the
- country. "They had scattered their war-parties all over the North from
- Chicago to Galena, and from the Illinois River into the Territory of
- Wisconsin; they occupied every grove, waylaid every road, hung around
- every settlement, and attacked every party of white men that attempted to
- penetrate the country." There had been some desultory fighting at various
- points. Capt. Snyder, in whose company Gen. Whiteside was a private, had
- met the Indians at Burr Oak. Grove, and had a sharp engagement; Mr. St.
- Vrain, an Indian agent, with a small party of assistants, had been
- treacherously murdered near Fort Armstrong; several men had been killed at
- the lead mines, and the Wisconsin volunteers under Dodge had signally
- punished the Indians that killed them; Galena had been threatened and Fort
- Apple, twelve miles from Galena, had sustained a bloody siege of fifteen
- hours; Capt. Stephenson of Galena had performed an act which "equalled any
- thing in modern warfare in daring and desperate courage," by driving a
- party of Indians larger than his own detachment into a dense thicket, and
- there charging them repeatedly until he was compelled to retire, wounded
- himself, and leaving three of his men dead on the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thenceforward the tide was fairly turned against Black Hawk. Twenty-four
- hundred men, under experienced officers, were now in the field against
- him; and, although he succeeded in eluding his pursuers for a brief time,
- every retreat was equivalent to a reverse in battle, and all his
- manoeuvres were retreats. In the latter part of July he was finally
- overtaken by the volunteers under Henry, along the bluffs of the Wisconsin
- River, and defeated in a decisive battle. His ruin was complete: he
- abandoned all hope of conquest, and pressed in disorderly and disastrous
- retreat toward the Mississippi, in vain expectation of placing that
- barrier between him and his enemy.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the fourth day, after crossing the Wisconsin, Gen. Atkinson's advance
- reached the high grounds near the Mississippi. Henry and his brigade,
- having won the previous victory, were placed at the rear in the order of
- march, with the ungenerous purpose of preventing them from winning
- another. But Black Hawk here resorted to a stratagem which very nearly
- saved the remnant of his people, and in the end completely foiled the
- intentions of Atkinson regarding Henry and his men. The old chief, with
- the high heart which even such a succession of reverses could not subdue,
- took twenty warriors and deliberately posted himself, determined to hold
- the army in check or lead it away on a false trail, while his main body
- was being transferred to the other bank of the river. He accordingly made
- his attack in a place where he was favored by trees, logs, and tall grass,
- which prevented the discovery of his numbers. Finding his advance engaged,
- Atkinson formed a line of battle, and ordered a charge; but Black Hawk
- conducted his retreat with such consummate skill that Atkinson believed he
- was just at the heels of the whole Indian army, and under this impression
- continued the pursuit far up the river.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Henry came up to the spot where the fight had taken place, he readily
- detected the trick by various evidences about the ground. Finding the main
- trail in the immediate vicinity, he boldly fell upon it without orders,
- and followed it until he came up with the Indians in a swamp on the margin
- of the river, where he easily surprised and scattered them. Atkinson,
- hearing the firing in the swamp, turned back, and arrived just in time to
- assist in the completion of the massacre. A few of the Indians had already
- crossed the river: a few had taken refuge on a little willow island in the
- middle of the stream. The island was charged,&mdash;the men wading to it
- in water up to their arm-pits,&mdash;the Indians were dislodged and killed
- on the spot, or shot in the water while attempting to swim to the western
- shore. Fifty prisoners only were taken, and the greater part of these were
- squaws and children. This was the battle of the Bad Axe,&mdash;a terrific
- slaughter, considering the numbers engaged, and the final ruin of Black
- Hawk's fortunes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Black Hawk and his twenty warriors, among whom was his own son, made the
- best of their way to the Dalles on the Wisconsin, where they seem to have
- awaited passively whatever fate their enemies should contrive for them.
- There were some Sioux and Winnebagoes in Atkinson's camp,&mdash;men who
- secretly pretended to sympathize with Black Hawk, and, while acting as
- guides to the army, had really led it astray on many painful and perilous
- marches. It is certain that Black Hawk had counted on the assistance of
- those tribes; but after the fight on the Wisconsin, even those who had
- consented to act as his emissaries about the person of the hostile
- commander not only deserted him, but volunteered to hunt him down. They
- now offered to find him, take him, and bring him in, provided that base
- and cowardly service should be suitably acknowledged. They were duly
- employed. Black Hawk became their prisoner, and was presented by them to
- the Indian agent with two or three shameless and disgusting speeches from
- his captors. He and his son were carried to Washington City, and then
- through the principal cities of the country, after which President Jackson
- released him from captivity, and sent him back to his own people. He lived
- to be eighty years old, honored and beloved by his tribe, and after his
- death was buried on an eminence overlooking the Mississippi, with such
- rites as are accorded only to the most distinguished of native captains,&mdash;sitting
- upright in war dress and paint, covered by a conspicuous mound of earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- We have given a rapid and perhaps an unsatisfactory sketch of the
- comparatively great events which brought the Black Hawk War to a close. So
- much at least was necessary, that the reader might understand the several
- situations in which Mr. Lincoln found himself during the short term of his
- second enlistment. We fortunately possess a narrative of his individual
- experience, covering the whole of that period, from the pen of George W.
- Harrison, his friend, companion, and messmate. It is given in full; for
- there is no part of it that would not be injured by the touch of another
- hand. It is an extremely interesting story, founded upon accurate personal
- knowledge, and told in a perspicuous and graphic style, admirably suited
- to the subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The new company thus formed was called the 'Independent Spy Company;' not
- being under the control of any regiment or brigade, but receiving orders
- directly from the commander-in-chief, and always, when with the army,
- camping within the lines, and having many other privileges, such as never
- having camp-duties to perform, drawing rations as much and as often as we
- pleased, &amp;c, Dr. Early (deceased) of Springfield was elected captain.
- Five members constituted a tent, or 'messed' together. Qur mess consisted
- of Mr. Lincoln, Johnston (a half-brother of his), Fanchier, Wyatt, and
- myself. The 'Independent Spy Company' was used chiefly to carry messages,
- to send an express, to spy the enemy, and to ascertain facts. I suppose
- the nearest we were to doing battle was at Gratiot's Grove, near Galena.
- The spy company of Posey's brigade was many miles in advance of the
- brigade, when it stopped in the grove at noon for refreshments. Some of
- the men had turned loose their horses, and others still had theirs in
- hand, when five or six Sac and Fox Indians came near them. Many of the
- white men broke after them, some on horseback, some on foot, in great
- disorder and confusion, thinking to have much sport with their prisoners
- immediately. The Indians thus decoyed them about two miles from the little
- cabins in the grove, keeping just out of danger, when suddenly up sprang
- from the tall prairie grass two hundred and fifty painted warriors, with
- long spears in hand, and tomahawks and butcher-knives in their belts of
- deer-skin and buffalo, and raised such a yell that our friends supposed
- them to be more numerous than Black Hawk's whole clan, and, instantly
- filled with consternation, commenced to retreat. But the savages soon
- began to spear them, making it necessary to halt in the flight, and give
- them a fire, at which time they killed two Indians, one of them being a
- young chief gayly apparelled. Again, in the utmost horror, such as savage
- yells alone can produce, they fled for the little fort in the grove.
- Having arrived, they found the balance of their company, terrified by the
- screams of the whites and the yells of the savages, closely shut up in the
- double cabin, into which <i>they</i> quickly plunged, and found the
- much-needed respite. The Indians then prowled around the grove, shooting
- nearly all the company's horses, and stealing the balance of them. There,
- from cracks between the logs of the cabin, three Indians were shot and
- killed in the act of reaching for the reins of bridles on horses. They
- endeavored to conceal their bodies by trees in an old field which
- surrounded the fort; but, reaching with sticks for bridles, they exposed
- their heads and necks, and all of them were shot with two balls each
- through the neck. These three, and the two killed where our men wheeled
- and fired, make five Indians known to be killed; and on their retreat from
- the prairie to the grove, five white men were cut into small pieces. The
- field of this action is the greatest battle-ground we saw. The dead still
- lay unburied until after we arrived at sunrise the next day. The forted
- men, fifty strong, had not ventured to go out until they saw us, when they
- rejoiced greatly that friends and not dreaded enemies had come. They
- looked like men just out of cholera,&mdash;having passed through the
- cramping stage. The only part we could then act was to seek the lost men,
- and with hatchets and hands to bury them. We buried the white men, and
- trailed the dead young chief where he had been drawn on the grass a
- half-mile, and concealed in the thicket. Those who trailed this once noble
- warrior, and found him, were Lincoln, I think, Wyatt, and myself. By order
- of Gen. Atkinson, our company started on this expedition one evening,
- travelled all night, and reached Gratiot's at sunrise. A few hours after,
- Gen. Posey came up to the fort with his brigade of nearly a thousand men,
- when he positively refused to pursue the Indians,&mdash;being strongly
- solicited by Capt. Early, Lincoln, and others,&mdash;squads of Indians
- still showing themselves in a menacing manner one and a half miles
- distant.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Our company was disbanded at Whitewater, Wis., a short time before the
- massacre at Bad Axe by Gen. Henry; and most of our men started for home on
- the following morning; but it so happened that the night previous to
- starting on this long trip, Lincoln's horse and mine were stolen, probably
- by soldiers of our own army, and we were thus compelled to start outside
- the cavalcade; but I laughed at our fate, and he joked at it, and we all
- started off merrily. But the generous men of our company walked and rode
- by turns with us; and we fared about equal with the rest. But for this
- generosity, our legs would have had to do the better work; for in that
- day, this then dreary route furnished no horses to buy or to steal; and,
- whether on horse or afoot, we always had company, for many of the horses'
- backs were too sore for riding.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Thus we came to Peoria: here we bought a canoe, in which we two paddled
- our way to Pekin. The other members of our company, separating in various
- directions, stimulated by the proximity of home, could never have
- consented to travel at our usual tardy mode. At Pekin, Lincoln made an oar
- with which to row our little boat, while I went through the town in order
- to buy provisions for the trip. One of us pulled away at the one oar,
- while the other sat astern to steer, or prevent circling. The river being
- very low was without current, so that we had to pull hard to make half the
- speed of legs on land,&mdash;in fact, we let her float all night, and on
- the next morning always found the objects still visible that were beside
- us the previous evening. The water was remarkably clear, for this river of
- plants, and the fish appeared to be sporting with us as we moved over or
- near them.
- </p>
- <p>
- "On the next day after we left Pekin, we overhauled a raft of saw-logs,
- with two men afloat on it to urge it on with poles and to guide it in the
- channel. We immediately pulled up to them and went on the raft, where we
- were made welcome by various demonstrations, especially by that of an
- invitation to a feast on fish, corn-bread, eggs, butter, and coffee, just
- prepared for our benefit. Of these good things we ate almost immoderately,
- for it was the only warm meal we had made for several days. While
- preparing it, and after dinner, Lincoln entertained them, and they
- entertained us for a couple of hours very amusingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This slow mode of travel was, at the time, a new mode, and the novelty
- made it for a short time agreeable. We descended the Illinois to Havana,
- where we sold our boat, and again set out the old way, over the
- sand-ridges for Petersburg. As we drew near home, the impulse became
- stronger, and urged us on amazingly. The long strides of Lincoln, often
- slipping back in the loose sand six inches every step, were just right for
- me; and he was greatly diverted when he noticed me behind him stepping
- along in his tracks to keep from slipping.
- </p>
- <p>
- "About three days after leaving the army at Whitewater, we saw a battle in
- full operation about two miles in advance of us. Lincoln was riding a
- young horse, the property of L. D. Matheny. I was riding a sprightly
- animal belonging to John T. Stuart. At the time we came in sight of the
- scene, our two voluntary footmen were about three-fourths of a mile in
- advance of us, and we about half a mile behind most of our company, and
- three or four on foot still behind us, leading some sore-backed horses.
- But the owners of our horses came running back, and, meeting us all in
- full speed, rightfully ordered us to dismount. We obeyed: they mounted,
- and all pressed on toward the conflict,&mdash;they on horseback, we on
- foot. In a few moments of hard walking and terribly close observation,
- Lincoln said to me, 'George, this can't be a very dangerous battle.'
- Reply: 'Much shooting, nothing falls.' It was at once decided to be a sham
- for the purpose of training cavalry, instead of Indians having attacked a
- few white soldiers, and a few of our own men, on their way home, for the
- purpose of killing them."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p>
- THE volunteers from Sangamon returned to their homes shortly before the
- State election, at which, among other officers, assembly-men were to be
- chosen. Lincoln's popularity had been greatly enhanced by his service in
- the war, and some of his friends urged him with warm solicitations to
- become a candidate at the coming election. He prudently resisted, and
- declined to consent, alleging in excuse his limited acquaintance in the
- county at large, until Mr. James Rutledge, the founder of New Salem, added
- the weight of his advice to the nearly unanimous desire of the
- neighborhood. It is quite likely that his recent military career was
- thought to furnish high promise of usefulness in civil affairs; but Mr.
- Rutledge was sure that he saw another proof of his great abilities in a
- speech which Abe was induced to make, just about this time, before the
- New-Salem Literary Society. The following is an account of this speech by
- R. B. Rutledge, the son of James:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "About the year 1832 or 1833, Mr. Lincoln made his first effort at public
- speaking. A debating club, of which James Rutledge was president, was
- organized, and held regular meetings. As he arose to speak, his tall form
- towered above the little assembly. Both hands were thrust down deep in the
- pockets of his pantaloons. A perceptible smile at once lit up the faces of
- the audience, for all anticipated the relation of some humorous story. But
- he opened up the discussion in splendid style, to the infinite
- astonishment of his friends. As he warmed with his subject, his hands
- would forsake his pockets and would enforce his ideas by awkward gestures,
- but would very soon seek their easy resting-places. He pursued the
- question with reason and argument so pithy and forcible that all were
- amazed. The president at his fireside, after the meeting, remarked to his
- wife, that there was more in Abe's head than wit and fun; that he was
- already a fine speaker; that all he lacked was culture to enable him to
- reach the high destiny which he knew was in store for him. From that time
- Mr. Rutledge took a deeper interest in him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Soon after Mr. Rutledge urged him to announce himself as a candidate for
- the Legislature. This he at first declined to do, averring that it was
- impossible to be elected. It was suggested that a canvass of the county
- would bring him prominently before the people, and in time would do him
- good. He reluctantly yielded to the solicitations of his friends, and made
- a partial canvass."
- </p>
- <p>
- In those days political animosities were fierce enough; but, owing to the
- absence of nominating conventions, party lines were not, as yet, very
- distinctly drawn in Illinois. Candidates announced themselves; but,
- usually, it was done after full consultation with influential friends, or
- persons of considerable power in the neighborhood of the candidate's
- residence. We have already seen the process by which Mr. Lincoln was
- induced to come forward. There were often secret combinations among a
- number of candidates, securing a mutual support; but in the present case
- there is no trace of such an understanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- This (1832) was the year of Gen. Jackson's election. The Democrats
- stigmatized their opponents as "Federalists," while the latter were
- steadily struggling to shuffle off the odious name. For the present they
- called themselves Democratic Republicans; and it was not until 1833 or
- 1834, that they formally took to themselves the designation of Whig. The
- Democrats were known better as Jackson men than as Democrats, and were
- inexpressibly proud of either name. Four or five years afterward their
- enemies invented for their benefit the meaningless and hideous word
- "Locofoco."
- </p>
- <p>
- Since 1826 every general election in the State had resulted in a
- Democratic victory. The young men were mostly Democrats; and the most
- promising talents in the State were devoted to the cause, which seemed
- destined to achieve success wherever there was a contest. In a new country
- largely peopled by adventurers from older States, there were necessarily
- found great numbers who would attach themselves to the winning side merely
- because it was the winning side.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is unnecessary to restate here the prevailing questions in national
- politics,&mdash;Jackson's stupendous struggle with the bank, "hard money,"
- "no monopoly," internal improvements, the tariff, and nullification, or
- the personal and political relations of the chieftains,&mdash;Jackson,
- Clay, and Calhoun. Mr. Lincoln will shortly disclose in one of his
- speeches from the stump which of those questions were of special interest
- to the people of Illinois, and consequently which of them principally
- occupied his own attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Democrats were divided into "whole-hog men" and "nominal Jackson men;"
- the former being thoroughly devoted to the fortunes and principles of
- their leader, while the latter were willing to trim a little for the sake
- of popular support. It is probable that Mr. Lincoln might be fairly
- classed as a "nominal Jackson man," although the precise character of some
- of the views he then held, or is supposed to have held, on national
- questions, is involved in considerable doubt. He had not wholly forgotten
- Jones, or Jones's teachings. He still remembered his high disputes with
- Offutt in the shanty at Spring Creek, when he effectually defended Jackson
- against the "abuse" of his employer. He was not Whig, but "Whiggish," as
- Dennis Hanks expresses it. It is not likely that a man who deferred so
- habitually to the popular sentiment around him would have selected the
- occasion of his settlement in a new place to go over bodily to a hopeless
- political minority. At all events, we have at least three undisputed
- facts, which make it plain that he then occupied an intermediate position
- between the extremes of all parties. First, he received the votes of all
- parties at New Salem; second, he was the next year appointed postmaster by
- Gen. Jackson; and, third, the Democrats ran him for the legislature two
- years afterwards; and he was elected by a larger majority than any other
- candidate.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Our old way of conducting elections," says Gov. Ford, "required each
- aspirant to announce himself as a candidate. The most prudent, however,
- always consulted a little caucus of select, influential friends. The
- candidates then travelled around the county, or State, in proper person,
- making speeches, conversing with the people, soliciting votes, whispering
- slanders against their opponents, and defending themselves against the
- attacks of their adversaries; but it was not always best to defend against
- such attacks. A candidate in a fair way to be elected should never deny
- any charge made against him; for, if he does, his adversaries will prove
- all that they have said, and much more. As a candidate did not offer
- himself as the champion of any party, he usually agreed with all opinions,
- and promised every thing demanded by the people, and most usually
- promised, either directly or indirectly, his support to all the other
- candidates at the same election. One of the arts was to raise a quarrel
- with unpopular men who were odious to the people, and then try to be
- elected upon the unpopularity of others, as well as upon his own
- popularity. These modes of electioneering were not true of all the
- candidates, nor perhaps of half of them, very many of them being gentlemen
- of first-class integrity."
- </p>
- <p>
- That portion of the people whose influence lay in their fighting
- qualities, and who were prone to carry a huge knife in the belt of the
- hunting-shirt, were sometimes called the "butcher-knife boys," and
- sometimes "the half-horse and half-alligator men." This class, according
- to Gov. Ford, "made a kind of balance-of-power party." Their favorite was
- sure of success; and nearly all political contests were decided by
- "butcher-knife influence." "In all elections and in all enactments of the
- Legislature, great pains were taken by all candidates, and all men in
- office, to make their course and measures acceptable" to these knights of
- steel and muscle.
- </p>
- <p>
- At a later date they enjoyed a succession of titles, such as "barefoot
- boys," "the flat-footed boys," and "the big-pawed boys."
- </p>
- <p>
- In those times, Gov. Ford avers that he has seen all the rum-shops and
- groceries of the principal places of a county chartered by candidates, and
- kept open for the gratuitous accommodation of the free and independent
- electors for several weeks before the vote. Every Saturday afternoon the
- people flocked to the county-seat, to see the candidates, to hear
- speeches, to discuss prospects, to get drunk and fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Toward evening they would mount their ponies, go reeling from side to
- side, galloping through town, and throwing up their caps and hats,
- screeching like so many infernal spirits broke loose from their nether
- prison; and thus they separated for their homes." These observations occur
- in Ford's account of the campaign of 1830, which resulted in the choice of
- Gov. Reynolds,&mdash;two years before Mr. Lincoln first became a
- candidate,&mdash;and lead us to suppose that the body of electors before
- whom that gentleman presented himself were none too cultivated or refined.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln's first appearance on the stump, in the course of the canvass,
- was at Pappsville, about eleven miles west of Springfield, upon the
- occasion of a public sale by the firm of Poog &amp; Knap. The sale over,
- speech-making was about to begin, when Mr. Lincoln observed strong
- symptoms of inattention in his audience, who had taken that particular
- moment to engage in what Mr. James A. Herndon pronounces "a general
- fight." Lincoln saw that one of his friends was suffering more than he
- liked in the <i>mêlée</i>; and, stepping into the crowd, he shouldered
- them sternly away from his man, until he met a fellow who refused to fall
- back: him he seized by the nape of the neck and the seat of his breeches,
- and tossed him "ten or twelve feet easily." After this episode,&mdash;as
- characteristic of him as of the times,&mdash;he mounted the platform, and
- delivered, with awkward modesty, the following speech:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Gentlemen and Fellow-Citizens, I presume you all know who I am. I am
- humble Abraham Lincoln. I have been solicited by many friends to become a
- candidate for the Legislature. My politics are short and sweet, like the
- old woman's dance. I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor of the
- internal-improvement system and a high protective tariff. These are my
- sentiments and political principles. If elected, I shall be thankful; if
- not, it will be all the same."
- </p>
- <p>
- In these few sentences Mr. Lincoln adopted the leading principles of the
- Whig party,&mdash;Clay's "American System" in full. In his view, as we
- shall see by another paper from him when again a candidate in 1834, the
- internal-improvement system required the distribution of the proceeds of
- the sales of the public lands amongst the States. He says nothing of South
- Carolina, of nullification, of disunion; and on these subjects it is quite
- probable his views were like Mr. Webster's, and his sympathies with
- Jackson. The opinions announced in this speech, on all the subjects
- touched by the speaker, were as emphatically Whig as they could be made in
- words; yet as far as they related to internal improvements, and indirectly
- favored the increase of bank issues, they were such as most of the
- "nominal Jackson men" in Illinois professed to hold, and such as they
- united with the Whigs to enforce, then and afterwards, in the State
- Legislature. The "whole-hog men" would have none of them, and therein lay
- the distinction. Although the Democratic party continued to have a
- numerical majority for many years in the Legislature, the nominal men and
- the Whigs coalesced to control legislation in accordance with Whig
- doctrines. Even with such a record made and making by them, the "nominal
- men" persisted in calling themselves Democrats, while Jackson was vetoing
- the Maysville Road Bill, grappling with the National Bank, and exposing
- the oppressive character of the Tariff Act then in force, which imposed
- the highest scale of duties since the first enactment for "protection" in
- 1816. It was their practice to run men like themselves for the State
- offices where the chances of a plain-spoken Whig were hopeless; and, by
- means of the "nominal" character of the candidate, secure enough
- Democratic votes, united with the Whigs, to elect him. In the very next
- canvass Mr. Lincoln himself was taken up by such a combination and
- triumphantly elected. Such things were made feasible by the prevalent mode
- of making nominations without the salutary intervention of regular party
- conventions and committees. We repeat that Mr. Lincoln's position was
- midway between the extremes in local politics.
- </p>
- <p>
- His friend, Mr. A. Y. Ellis, who was with him during a part of this
- campaign, says, "He wore a mixed jeans coat, claw-hammer style, short in
- the sleeves, and bobtail,&mdash;in fact, it was so short in the tail he
- could not sit on it,&mdash;flax and tow linen pantaloons, and a straw hat.
- I think he wore a vest, but do not remember how it looked. He then wore
- pot-metal boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I accompanied him on one of his electioneering trips to Island Grove; and
- he made a speech which pleased his party friends very well indeed, though
- some of the Jackson men tried to make sport of it. He told several
- anecdotes in his speech, and applied them, as I thought, very well. He
- also told the boys several stories which drew them after him. I remember
- them; but modesty and my veneration for his memory forbid me to relate
- them."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. J. R. Herndon, his friend and landlord, heard him make several
- speeches about this time, and gives us the following extract from one,
- which seems to have made a special impression upon the minds of his
- auditors: "Fellow-citizens, I have been told that some of my opponents
- have said that it was a disgrace to the county of Sangamon to have such a
- looking man as I am stuck up for the Legislature. Now, I thought this was
- a free country: that is the reason I address you today. Had I have known
- to the contrary, I should not have consented to run; but I will say one
- thing, let the shoe pinch where it may: when I have been a candidate
- before you some five or six times, and have been beaten every time, I will
- consider it a disgrace, and will be sure never to try it again; but I am
- bound to beat that man if I am beat myself."
- </p>
- <p>
- These were not the only speeches he made in furtherance of his present
- claims, but they are all of which we have any intelligible account. There
- was one subject upon which he felt himself peculiarly competent to speak,&mdash;the
- practical application of the "internal-improvement system" to the river
- which flowed by the doors of the constituency he addressed. He firmly
- believed in the right of the Legislature of the State or the Congress of
- the United States to appropriate the public money to local improvements
- for the sole advantage of limited districts; and that he believed it good
- policy to exercise the right, his subsequent conduct in the Legislature,
- and an elaborate speech in Congress, are sufficient proof. In this
- doctrine he had the almost unanimous support of the people of Illinois.
- Almost every man in the State was a speculator in town lots or lands. Even
- the farmers had taken up or held the very lands they tilled with a view to
- a speculation in the near future. Long after the Democratic party in the
- South and East, leaving Mr. Calhoun in a state of isolation, had begun to
- inculcate different views of constitutional power and duty, it was a
- dangerous thing for a politician in Illinois to intimate his agreement
- with them. Mr. Lincoln knew well that the policy of local improvement at
- the general expense was at that moment decidedly the most popular platform
- he could mount; but he felt that this was not enough for his individual
- purposes, since it was no invention of his, and belonged to nearly
- everybody else as much as to him. He therefore prudently ingrafted upon it
- a hobby of his own: "The Improvement of the Sangamon River,"&mdash;a plan
- to straighten it by means of cuts, to clear out its obstructions, and make
- it a commercial highway at the cost of the State. That the idea was
- nearly, if not quite impracticable, the trip of "The Talisman" under Mr.
- Lincoln's piloting, and the fact that the river remained unimproved during
- all the years of the "internal-improvement" mania, would seem to be pretty
- clear evidence. But the theme was agreeable to the popular ear, and had
- been dear to Lincoln from the moment he laid his eyes on the Sangamon. It
- was the great topic of his speech against Posey and Ewing in Macon County,
- when, under the auspices of John Hanks, he "beat" those professional
- politicians so completely that they applauded him themselves. His
- experience in navigating the river was not calculated to make him forget
- it, and it had occupied his thoughts more or less from that day forward.
- Now that it might be turned to good use, where he was personally
- interested, he set about preparing a written address on it, and on some
- other questions of local interest, upon which he bestowed infinite pains.
- The "grammatical errors" in the first draft were corrected by Mr. McNamar,
- the pioneer of New Salem as a business point, and the gentleman who was
- destined to be Mr. Lincoln's rival in the most important love-affair of
- his life. He may have consulted the schoolmaster also; but, if he had done
- so, it is hardly to be surmised that the schoolmaster would have left so
- important a fact out of his written reminiscences. It is more probable
- that Mr. Lincoln confined his applications for assistance on this most
- important matter to the quarter where he could get light on politics as
- well as grammar. However that may have been, the following is the finished
- paper:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- To the People of Sangamon County.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fellow-Citizens,&mdash;Having become a candidate for the honorable office
- of one of your Representatives in the next General Assembly of this State,
- in accordance with an established custom and the principles of true
- republicanism, it becomes my duty to make known to you, the people, whom I
- propose to represent, my sentiments with regard to local affairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- Time and experience have verified to a demonstration the public utility of
- internal improvements. That the poorest and most thinly-populated
- countries would be greatly benefited by the opening of good roads, and in
- the clearing of navigable streams within their limits, is what no person
- will deny. Yet it is folly to undertake works of this or any other kind,
- without first knowing that we are able to finish them,&mdash;as
- half-finished work generally proves to be labor lost. There cannot justly
- be any objection to having railroads and canals, any more than to other
- good things, provided they cost nothing. The only objection is to paying
- for them; and the objection arises from the want of ability to pay.
- </p>
- <p>
- With respect to the County of Sangamon, some more easy means of
- communication than it now possesses, for the purpose of facilitating the
- task of exporting the surplus products of its fertile soil, and importing
- necessary articles from abroad, are indispensably necessary. A meeting has
- been held of the citizens of Jacksonville and the adjacent country, for
- the purpose of deliberating and inquiring into the expediency of
- constructing a railroad from some eligible point on the Illinois River,
- through the town of Jacksonville, in Morgan County, to the town of
- Springfield, in Sangamon County. This is, indeed, a very desirable object.
- No other improvement that reason will justify us in hoping for can equal
- in utility the railroad. It is a never-failing source of communication
- between places of business remotely situated from each other. Upon the
- railroad the regular progress of commercial intercourse is not interrupted
- by either high or low water, or freezing weather, which are the principal
- difficulties that render our future hopes of water communication
- precarious and uncertain.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yet however desirable an object the construction of a railroad through our
- country may be; however high our imaginations may be heated at thoughts of
- it,&mdash;there is always a heart-appalling shock accompanying the account
- of its cost, which forces us to shrink from our pleasing anticipations.
- The probable cost of this contemplated railroad is estimated at $290,000;
- the bare statement of which, in my opinion, is sufficient to justify the
- belief that the improvement of the Sangamon River is an object much better
- suited to our infant resources.
- </p>
- <p>
- Respecting this view, I think I may say, without the fear of being
- contradicted, that its navigation may be rendered completely practicable
- as high as the mouth of the South Fork, or probably higher, to vessels of
- from twenty-five to thirty tons' burden, for at least one-half of all
- common years, and to vessels of much greater burden a part of the time.
- From my peculiar circumstances, it is probable, that for the last twelve
- months I have given as particular attention to the stage of the water in
- this river as any other person in the country. In the month of March,
- 1831, in company with others, I commenced the building of a flatboat on
- the Sangamon, and finished and took her out in the course of the spring.
- Since that time I have been concerned in the mill at New Salem. These
- circumstances are sufficient evidence that I have not been very
- inattentive to the stages of the water. The time at which we crossed the
- mill-dam being in the last days of April, the water was lower than it had
- been since the breaking of winter in February, or than it was for several
- weeks after. The principal difficulties we encountered in descending the
- river were from the drifted timber, which obstructions all know are not
- difficult to be removed. Knowing almost precisely the height of water at
- that time, I believe I am safe in saying that it has as often been higher
- as lower since.
- </p>
- <p>
- From this view of the subject, it appears that my calculations with regard
- to the navigation of the Sangamon cannot but be founded in reason; but,
- whatever may be its natural advantages, certain it is, that it never can
- be practically useful to any great extent, without being greatly improved
- by art. The drifted timber, as I have before mentioned, is the most
- formidable barrier to this object. Of all parts of this river, none will
- require so much labor in proportion to make it navigable, as the last
- thirty or thirty-five miles; and going with the meanderings of the
- channel, when we are this distance above its mouth we are only between
- twelve and eighteen miles above Beardstown, in something near a straight
- direction; and this route is upon such low ground as to retain water in
- many places during the season, and in all parts such as to draw two-thirds
- or three-fourths of the river-water at all high stages.
- </p>
- <p>
- This route is on prairie land the whole distance; so that it appears to
- me, by removing the turf a sufficient width, and damming up the old
- channel, the whole river in a short time would wash its way through,
- thereby curtailing the distance, and increasing the velocity of the
- current, very considerably: while there would be no timber on the banks to
- obstruct its navigation in future; and, being nearly straight, the timber
- which might float in at the head would be apt to go clear through. There
- are also many places above this where the river, in its zigzag course,
- forms such complete peninsulas, as to be easier to cut at the necks than
- to remove the obstructions from the bends, which, if done, would also
- lessen the distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- What the cost of this work would be, I am unable to say. It is probable,
- however, that it would not be greater than is common to streams of the
- same length. Finally, I believe the improvement of the Sangamon River to
- be vastly important and highly desirable to the people of the county; and,
- if elected, any measure in the Legislature having this for its object,
- which may appear judicious, will meet my approbation and shall receive my
- support.
- </p>
- <p>
- It appears that the practice of drawing money at exorbitant rates of
- interest has already been opened as a field for discussion; so I suppose I
- may enter upon it without claiming the honor, or risking the danger, which
- may await its first explorer. It seems as though we are never to have an
- end to this baneful and corroding system, acting almost as prejudicial to
- the general interests of the community as a direct tax of several thousand
- dollars annually laid on each county, for the benefit of a few individuals
- only, unless there be a law made fixing the limits of usury. A law for
- this purpose, I am of opinion, may be made, without materially injuring
- any class of people. In cases of extreme necessity, there could always be
- means found to cheat the law; while in all other cases it would have its
- intended effect. I would favor the passage of a law on this subject which
- might not be very easily evaded. Let it be such that the labor and
- difficulty of evading it could only be justified in cases of greatest
- necessity.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Until the year 1833 there had been no legal limit to the rate of
- interest to be fixed by contract. But usury had been carried to such an
- unprecedented degree of extortion and oppression as to cause the
- Legislature to enact severe usury laws, by which all interest above
- twelve per cent was condemned. It had been no uncommon thing before this
- to charge one hundred and one hundred and fifty per cent, and sometimes
- two and three hundred per cent. But the common rate of interest, by
- contract, had been about fifty per cent.&mdash;Ford's History, page 233.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Upon the subject of education, not presuming to dictate any plan or system
- respecting it, I can only say that I view it as the most important subject
- which we as a people can be engaged in. That every man may receive at
- least a moderate education, and thereby be enabled to read the histories
- of his own and other countries, by which he may duly appreciate the value
- of our free institutions, appears to be an object of vital importance,
- even on this account alone, to say nothing of the advantages and
- satisfaction to be derived from all being able to read the Scriptures and
- other works, both of a religious and moral nature, for themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- For my part, I desire to see the time when education&mdash;and, by its
- means, morality, sobriety, enterprise, and industry&mdash;shall become
- much more general than at present, and should be gratified to have it in
- my power to contribute something to the advancement of any measure which
- might have a tendency to accelerate the happy period.
- </p>
- <p>
- With regard to existing laws, some alterations are thought to be
- necessary. Many respectable men have suggested that our estray laws&mdash;the
- law respecting the issuing of executions, the road-law, and some others&mdash;are
- deficient in their present form, and require alterations. But, considering
- the great probability that the framers of those laws were wiser than
- myself, I should prefer not meddling with them, unless they were first
- attacked by others; in which case I should feel it both a privilege and a
- duty to take that stand, which, in my view, might tend most to the
- advancement of justice.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, fellow-citizens, I shall conclude. Considering the great degree of
- modesty which should always attend youth, it is probable I have already
- been more presuming than becomes me. However, upon the subjects of which I
- have treated, I have spoken as I have thought. I may be wrong in regard to
- any or all of them; but, holding it a sound maxim, that it is better only
- sometimes to be right than at all times wrong, so soon as I discover my
- opinions to be erroneous, I shall be ready to renounce them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be true or
- not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as that of being
- truly esteemed of my fellow-men, by rendering myself worthy of their
- esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this ambition is yet to be
- developed. I am young, and unknown to many of you. I was born, and have
- ever remained, in the most humble walks of life. I have no wealthy or
- popular relations or friends to recommend. My case is thrown exclusively
- upon the independent voters of the county; and, if elected, they will have
- conferred a favor upon me, for which I shall be unremitting in my labors
- to compensate. But, if the good people in their wisdom shall see fit to
- keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with disappointments
- to be very much chagrined.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your Friend and Fellow-Citizen,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. LINCOLN.
- </p>
- <p>
- New Salem, March 9, 1832.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was defeated at the election, having four hundred and seventy
- votes less than the candidate who had the highest number. But his
- disappointment was softened by the action of his immediate neighbors, who
- gave him an almost unanimous support. With three solitary exceptions, he
- received the whole vote of his precinct,&mdash;two hundred and
- seventy-seven,&mdash;being one more than the whole number cast for both
- the candidates for Congress.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII
- </h2>
- <p>
- THE results of the canvass for the Legislature were precisely such as had
- been predicted, both by Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Rutledge: he had been
- defeated, as he expected himself; and it had done "him much good," in the
- politician's sense, as promised by Mr. Rutledge. He was now somewhat
- acquainted with the people outside of the New Salem district, and
- generally marked as a young man of good parts and popular manners. The
- vote given him at home demonstrated his local strength, and made his favor
- a thing of value to the politicians of all parties.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon after his return from the army, he had taken quarters at the house of
- J. R. Herndon, who loved him then, and always, with as much sincerity as
- one man can love another. Mr. Herndon's family likewise "became much
- attached to him." He "nearly always had one" of Herndon's children "around
- with him." Mr. Herndon says of him further, that he was "at home wherever
- he went;" making himself wonderfully agreeable to the people he lived
- with, or whom he happened to be visiting. Among other things, "he was very
- kind to the widow and orphan, and chopped their wood."
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln, as we have seen already, was not enamored of the life of a common
- laborer,&mdash;mere hewing and drawing. He preferred to clerk, to go to
- war, to enter politics,&mdash;any thing but that dreary round of daily
- toil and poor pay. But he was now, as he would say, "in a fix:" clerks
- were not wanted every day in New Salem and he began to cast about for some
- independent business of his own, by which he could earn enough to pay
- board and buy books. In every community where he had lived, "the merchant"
- had been the principal man. He felt that, in view of his apprenticeship
- under those great masters, Jones and Offutt, he was fully competent to
- "run a store," and was impatient to find an opening in that line.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unfortunately for him, the circumstances of the business men of New Salem
- were just then peculiarly favorable to his views. At least three of them
- were as anxious to sell out as Lincoln was to buy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln, as already stated, was at this time living with "Row" Herndon.
- Row and his brother "Jim" had taken "a store down to New Salem early in
- that year." But Jim "didn't like the place," and sold out his interests to
- an idle, convivial fellow, named Berry. Six weeks later Row Herndon grew
- tired of his new partner, and sold his interest to Lincoln. The store was
- a mixed one,&mdash;dry goods and groceries.
- </p>
- <p>
- About the same time Mr. Radford, who kept one of the New Salem groceries,
- fell into disfavor with the "Clary's Grove Boys," who generously
- determined that he should keep a grocery no longer. They accordingly
- selected a convenient night for breaking in his windows, and, in their own
- elegant phrase, "gutting his establishment." Convinced that these
- neighborly fellows were inclined to honor him with further attentions, and
- that his bones might share the fate of his windows, Radford determined to
- sell out with the earliest dawn of the coming day. The next day he was
- standing disconsolate in the midst of his wreck, when Bill Green rode up.
- Green thought he saw a speculation in Radford's distress, and offered him
- four hundred dollars for the whole concern. Radford eagerly closed with
- him; and in a few minutes Green owned the grocery, and Radford was ready
- for the road to a more congenial settlement. It is said that Green
- employed Lincoln to make an inventory of the stock. At all events, Lincoln
- was satisfied that Green's bargain was a very good one, and proposed that
- he and Berry should take it off his hands at a premium of two hundred and
- fifty dollars. Radford had Green's note for four hundred dollars; but he
- now surrendered, it and took Lincoln &amp; Berry's for the same amount,
- indorsed by Green; while Lincoln &amp; Berry gave Green a note for two
- hundred and fifty dollars, the latter's profit in the trade.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Rutledge "also owned a small grocery in the village;" and this was
- speedily absorbed by the enterprising firm of Lincoln &amp; Berry, who now
- had the field to themselves, being sole proprietors "of the only store of
- the kind in New Salem."
- </p>
- <p>
- Whether Mr. Lincoln sold liquor by the dram over the counter of this shop
- remains, and will forever remain, an undetermined question. Many of his
- friends aver that he did, and as many more aver that he did not. When
- Douglas, with that courtesy for which he distinguished himself in the
- debates with Lincoln, revived the story, Lincoln replied, that, even if it
- were true, there was but little difference between them; for, while he
- figured on one side of the counter, Douglas figured on the other. It is
- certain liquors were a part of the stock of all the purchases of Lincoln
- &amp; Berry. Of course they sold them by the quantity, and probably by the
- drink. Some of it they <i>gave</i> away, for no man could keep store
- without setting out the customary dram to the patrons of the place.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Here is the evidence of James Davis, a Democrat, "aged sixty," who is
- willing to "give the Devil his due:"&mdash; "Came to Clary's Grove in
- 1829; knew Lincoln well; knew Jim and Row Herndon: they sold out to
- Berry,&mdash;one of them did; afterwards the other sold out to Lincoln.
- The store was a mixed one,&mdash;dry goods, a few groceries, such as
- sugar, salt, &amp;c., and whiskey solely kept for their customers, or to
- sell by the gallon, quart, or pint,&mdash;not otherwise. The Herndons
- probably had the Blankenship goods. Radford had a grocery-store,&mdash;salt,
- pepper, and suchlike things, with whiskey. It is said Green bought this
- out, and instantly sold to Berry &amp; Lincoln. Lincoln &amp; Berry
- broke. Berry subsequently kept a doggery, a whiskey saloon, as I do now,
- or did. Am a Democrat; never agreed in politics with Abe. He was an
- honest man. Give the Devil his due; he never sold whiskey by the dram in
- New Salem! I was in town every week for years; knew, I think, all about
- it. I always drank my dram, and drank at Berry's often; ought to know.
- Lincoln got involved, I think, in the first operation. Salem Hill was a
- barren."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- The difficulty of gathering authentic evidence on this subject is well
- illustrated in the following extract from Mr. George Spears of Petersburg:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I took my horse this morning, and went over to New Salem, among the P&mdash;&mdash;s
- and A&mdash;&mdash;s, and made all the inquiries I could, but could learn
- nothing. The old ladies would begin to count up what had happened in New
- Salem when such a one of their children was born, and such a one had a
- bastard; but it all amounted to nothing. I could arrive at no dates, only
- when those children were born. Old Mrs. Potter affirms that Lincoln did
- sell liquors in a grocery. I can't tell whether he did or not."
- </p>
- <p>
- All that winter (1832-3) Lincoln struggled along with a bad partner, and a
- business which began wrong, and grew worse every day. Berry had no
- qualities which atoned for his evil habits.. He preferred to consume the
- liquors on hand rather than to sell them, and exerted himself so
- successfully, that in a few months he had ruined the credit of the firm,
- squandered its assets, and destroyed his own health. The "store" was a
- dead failure; and the partners were weighed down with a parcel of debts,
- against which Lincoln could scarcely have borne up, even with a better man
- to help him. At last they sold out to two brothers named Trent. The Trents
- continued the business for a few months, when they broke up and ran away.
- Then Berry, encouraged by the example of the Trents, "cleared out" also,
- and, dying soon after, left poor Lincoln the melancholy task of settling
- up the affairs of their ill-starred partnership.
- </p>
- <p>
- In all the preceding transactions, the absence of any cash consideration
- is the one thing very striking. It is a fair illustration of the
- speculative spirit pervading the whole people. Green bought from Radford
- on credit; Lincoln &amp; Berry bought from Green on credit; they bought
- from the Herndons on credit; they bought from Rutledge on credit; and they
- sold to the Trents on credit. Those that did not die or run away had a sad
- time enough in managing the debts resulting from their connection with
- this unlucky grocery. Radford assigned Lincoln &amp; Berry's note to a Mr.
- Van Bergen, who got judgment on it, and swept away all Lincoln's little
- personal property, including his surveying instruments,&mdash;his very
- means of livelihood, as we shall see at another place. The Herndons owed
- E. C. Blankenship for the goods they sold, and assigned Lincoln &amp;
- Berry's note in payment. Mr. Lincoln struggled to pay, by slow degrees,
- this harassing debt to Blankenship, through many long and weary years. It
- was not until his return from Congress, in 1849, that he got the last
- dollar of it discharged. He paid Green <i>his</i> note of two hundred and
- fifty dollars, in small instalments, beginning in 1839, and ending in
- 1840. The history of his debt to Rutledge is not so well known. It was
- probably insignificant as compared with the others; and Mr. Rutledge
- proved a generous creditor, as he had always been a kind and considerate
- friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- Certain that he had no abilities for trade, Mr. Lincoln took the best
- resolution he could have formed under the circumstances. He sat down to
- his books just where he was, believing that knowledge would be power, and
- power profit. He had no reason to shun his creditors, for these were the
- men of all others who most applauded the honesty of his conduct at the
- period of his greatest pecuniary misfortune. He talked to them constantly
- of the "old debt," "the national debt," as he sometimes called it,&mdash;promised
- to pay when he could, and they devoutly relied upon every word he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- Row Herndon moved to the country, and Lincoln was compelled to change his
- boarding-place. He now began to live at a tavern for the first time in his
- life. It was kept by various persons during his stay,&mdash;first, it
- seems, by Mr. Rutledge, then by Henry Onstatt, and last by Nelson Alley.
- It was a small log-house, covered with clapboards, and contained four
- rooms.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln began to read law while he lived with Herndon. Some of his
- acquaintances insist that he began even earlier than this, and assert, by
- way of proof, that he was known to borrow a well-worn copy of Blackstone
- from A. T. Bogue, a pork-dealer at Beardstown. At all events, he now went
- to work in earnest, and studied law as faithfully as if he had never
- dreamed of any other business in life. As a matter of course, his slender
- purse was unequal to the purchase of the needful books: but this
- circumstance gave him little trouble; for, although he was short of funds,
- he was long in the legs, and had nothing to do but to walk off to
- Springfield, where his friend, John T. Stuart, cheerfully supplied his
- wants. Mr. Stuart's partner, H. C. Dummer, says, "He was an
- uncouth-looking lad, did not say much, but what he did say he said
- straight and sharp."
- </p>
- <p>
- "He used to read law," says Henry McHenry, "in 1832 or 1833, barefooted,
- seated in the shade of a tree, and would grind around with the shade, just
- opposite Berry's grocery-store, a few feet south of the door." He
- occasionally varied the attitude by lying flat on his back, and "<i>putting
- his feet up the tree</i>"&mdash;a situation which might have been
- unfavorable to mental application in the case of a man with shorter
- extremities.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The first time I ever saw Abe with a law-book in his hand," says Squire
- Godbey, "he was sitting astride of Jake Bales's woodpile in New Salem.
- Says I, 'Abe, what are you studying?'&mdash;'Law,' says Abe. 'Great God
- Almighty!' responded I." It was too much for Godbey: he could not suppress
- the blasphemy at seeing such a figure acquiring science in such an odd
- situation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Minter Graham asserts that Abe did a little "of what we call sitting up to
- the fine gals of Illinois;" but, according to other authorities, he always
- had his book with him "when in company," and would read and talk
- alternately. He carried it along in his walks to the woods and the river;
- read it in daylight under the shade-tree by the grocery, and at night by
- any friendly light he could find,&mdash;most frequently the one he kindled
- himself in the shop of his old benefactor, the cooper.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abe's progress in the law was as surprising as the intensity of his
- application to study. He never lost a moment that might be improved. It is
- even said that he read and recited to himself on the road and by the
- wayside as he came down from Springfield with the books he had borrowed
- from Stuart. The first time he went up he had "mastered" forty pages of
- Blackstone before he got back. It was not long until, with his restless
- desire to be doing something practical, he began to turn his acquisitions
- to account in forwarding the business of his neighbors. He wrote deeds,
- contracts, notes, and other legal papers, for them, "using a small
- dictionary and an old form-book;" "petifogged" incessantly before the
- justice of the peace, and probably assisted that functionary in the
- administration of justice as much as he benefited his own clients. This
- species of country "student's" practice was entered upon very early, and
- kept up until long after he was quite a distinguished man in the
- Legislature. But in all this he was only trying himself: as he was not
- admitted to the bar until 1837, he did not regard it as legitimate
- practice, and never charged a penny for his services. Although this fact
- is mentioned by a great number of persons, and the generosity of his
- conduct much enlarged upon, it is seriously to be regretted that no one
- has furnished us with a circumstantial account of any of his numerous
- cases before the magistrate.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Mr. Lincoln did not confine himself entirely to the law. He was not
- yet quite through with Kirkham nor the schoolmaster. The "valuable copy"
- of the grammar "he delighted to peruse" is still in the possession of R.
- B. Rutledge, with the thumb-marks of the President all over it. "He also
- studied natural philosophy, chemistry, astronomy, &amp;c. He had no
- regular teacher, but perhaps received more assistance from Minter Graham
- than from any other person."
- </p>
- <p>
- He read with avidity all the newspapers that came to New Salem,&mdash;chiefly
- "The Sangamon Journal," "The Missouri Republican," and "The Louisville
- Journal." 1 The latter was his favorite: its wit and anecdotes were after
- his own heart; and he was a regular subscriber for it through several
- years when he could ill afford a luxury so costly.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 According to Mr. McNamar, Lincoln took "The Sangamon Journal" and "The
- Louisville Journal" from 1832 to 1837; and Hill and Bale took "The
- Missouri Republican" and "The Cincinnati Gazette." "The Missouri
- Republican" was first issued as a daily in September, 1836. Its size was
- then twenty-five by thirty-six inches.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was never a profound historical student: if he happened to
- need historical facts for the purposes of a political or legal discussion,
- he read them on the spur of the occasion. For this reason his opinions of
- current affairs all through his life were based more upon individual
- observation and reflection than upon scientific deductions from the
- experience of the world. Yet at this time, when he probably felt more
- keenly than ever after the want of a little learning to embellish the
- letters and speeches he was ambitious to compose, he is said to have read
- Rollin's "Ancient History," Gibbon's "Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire,"
- and similar works, with great diligence and care. The books were borrowed
- from William Green, Bowlin Greene, and other parties in and about New
- Salem.
- </p>
- <p>
- But he greatly preferred literature of another sort, such as Mrs. Lee
- Hentz's novels; some of which he found among the effects of Mr. Ellis, at
- the time his companion and occasional bedfellow. "He was very fond," Mr.
- Ellis declares, "of short stories, one and two columns long,&mdash;like
- 'Cousin Sally Dillard,' 'Becky Wilson's Courtship,' The Down-easter and
- the Bull,' 'How a bashful man became a married man, with five little
- bashful boys, and how he and his red-headed wife became Millerites, and
- before they were to ascend agreed to make a clean breast of it to each
- other;' and how, when the old lady was through, the Down-easter earnestly
- wished that Gabriel might blow his horn without delay." One New Salemite
- insists that Mr. Lincoln told this latter story "with embezzlements"
- (embellishments), and therefore he is firmly convinced that Mr. Lincoln
- "had a hand" in originating it. The catalogue of literature in which he
- particularly delighted at New Salem is completed by the statement of Mr.
- Rutledge, that he took great pleasure in "Jack Downing's Letters."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln still relished a popular song with a broad "point" or a
- palpable moral in it as much as he had ever enjoyed the vocal efforts of
- Dennis Hanks and his rollicking compeers of the Gentryville grocery. He
- even continued his own unhappy attempts, although with as little success
- as before, and quite as much to the amusement of his friends. To the
- choice collection of miscellaneous ballads acquired in Indiana, he now
- added several new favorites, like "Old Sukey Blue Skin," and some
- selections from the "Missouri Harmony," with variations by himself. He was
- also singularly fond of an Irish song, "which tells how St. Patrick came
- to be born on the 17th day of March."
- </p>
- <p>
- "You ask me," says Mr. Ellis, "if I remember the first time I saw Mr.
- Lincoln. Yes, I do.... I was out collecting back tax for Gen. James D.
- Henry. I went from the tavern down to Jacob Bales's old mill, and then I
- first saw Mr. Lincoln. He was sitting on a saw-log talking to Jack and
- Rial Armstrong and a man by the name of Hohammer. I shook hands with the
- Armstrongs and Hohammer, and was conversing with them a few minutes, when
- we were joined by my old friend and former townsman, George Warburton,
- pretty tight as usual; and he soon asked me to tell him the old story
- about Ben Johnson and Mrs. Dale's blue dye, &amp;c., which I did. And then
- Jack Armstrong said, 'Lincoln, tell Ellis the story about Gov. J. Sichner,
- his city-bred son, and his nigger Bob;' which he did, with several others,
- by Jack's calling for them. I found out then that Lincoln was a cousin to
- Charley Hanks of Island Grove. I told him I knew three of the boys,&mdash;Joe,
- Charley, and John,&mdash;and his uncle, old Billy Hanks, who lived up on
- the North Fork of the Sangamon River, afterwards near Decatur."1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "I myself knew old Billy Hanks, his mother's brother, and he was a
- very sensible old man. He was father to Mrs. Dillon, on Spring Creek;
- and Charley, Billy, jr., and John were his sons: they were all
- low-flung,&mdash;could neither read nor write. Some of them used to live
- in Island Grove, Sangamon County.... I remember the time that Lincoln
- and E. D. Baker ran in convention, to decide who should run for Congress
- in old Sangamon; that some of Baker's friends accused Mr. Lincoln of
- belonging to a proud and an aristocratic family,&mdash;meaning the
- Edwardses and Todds, I suppose; and, when it came to Mr. Lincoln's ears,
- he laughed heartily, and remarked, 'Well, that sounds strange to me: I
- do not remember of but one that ever came to see me, and while he was in
- town he was accused of stealing a jew's- harp.' Josh Speed remembers his
- saying this. I think you ought to remember it. Beverly Powell and myself
- lived with Bell and Speed, and I think he said so in their store. After
- that a Miss Hanks came to spend the winter with Mrs. Lincoln."&mdash;A.
- Y. Ellis.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- This interview took place shortly after the Black Hawk War; but it was not
- until the next year (1833), the period at which we have now arrived, that
- Lincoln and Ellis became "intimate." At that time Ellis went there to keep
- a store, and boarded "at the same log-tavern" where Lincoln was. Lincoln,
- being "engaged in no particular business," merely endeavoring to make a
- lawyer, a surveyor, and a politician of himself, gave a great deal of his
- time to Ellis and Ellis's business. "He also used to assist me in the
- store," says this new friend, "on busy days, but he always disliked to
- wait on the ladies: he preferred trading with the men and boys, as he used
- to say. I also remember that he used to sleep in the store, on the
- counter, when they had too much company at the tavern.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I well remember how he was dressed: he wore flax and tow linen
- pantaloons,&mdash;I thought about five inches too short in the legs,&mdash;and
- frequently he had but one suspender, no vest or coat. He wore a calico
- shirt, such as he had in the Black Hawk War; coarse brogans, tan color;
- blue yarn socks, and straw hat, old style, and without a band.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln was in those days a very shy man of ladies. On one occasion,
- while we boarded at this tavern, there came a family, containing an old
- lady and her son and three stylish daughters, from the State of Virginia,
- and stopped there for two or three weeks; and, during their stay, I do not
- remember of Mr. Lincoln ever eating at the same table when they did. I
- then thought it was on account of his awkward appearance and his wearing
- apparel."
- </p>
- <p>
- There lived at New Salem at this time, and for some years afterward, a
- festive gentleman named Kelso, a school-teacher, a merchant, or a
- vagabond, according to the run of his somewhat variable "luck." When other
- people got drunk at New Salem, it was the usual custom to tussle and
- fight, and tramp each other's toes, and pull each other's noses; but, when
- Kelso got drunk, he astonished the rustic community with copious
- quotations from Robert Burns and William Shakspeare,&mdash;authors little
- known to fame among the literary men of New Salem. Besides Shakspeare and
- Burns, Mr. Kelso was likewise very fond of fishing, and could catch his
- game "when no other man could get a bite." Mr. Lincoln hated fishing with
- all his heart. But it is the testimony of the country-side, from
- Petersburg to Island Grove, that Kelso "drew Lincoln after him by his
- talk;" that they became exceedingly intimate; that they loitered away
- whole days together, along the banks of the quiet streams; that Lincoln
- learned to love inordinately our "divine William" and "Scotia's Bard,"
- whom his friend mouthed in his cups, or expounded more soberly in the
- intervals of fixing bait and dropping line. Finally he and Kelso boarded
- at the same place; and with another "merchant," named Sincho, of tastes
- congenial and wits as keen as Kelso's, they were "always found together,
- battling and arguing." Bill Green ventures the opinion, that Lincoln's
- incessant reading of Shakspeare and Burns had much to do in giving to his
- mind the "sceptical" tendency so fully developed by the labors of his pen
- in 1834-5, and in social conversations during many years of his residence
- at Springfield.
- </p>
- <p>
- Like Offutt, Kelso disappeared suddenly from New Salem, and apparently
- from the recollection of men. Each with a peculiar talent of his own,
- kind-hearted, eccentric creatures, no man's enemy and everybody's prey,
- they strolled out into the great world, and left this little village to
- perish behind them. Of Kelso a few faint traces have been found in
- Missouri; but if he ever had a lodging more permanent than the wayside
- tavern, a haystack, or a hedge, no man was able to tell where it was. Of
- Offutt not a word was ever heard: the most searching and cunning inquiries
- have failed to discover any spot where he lingered for a single hour; and
- but for the humble boy, to whom he was once a gentle master, no human
- being that knew him then would bestow a thought upon his name. In short,
- to use the expressive language of Mr. Lincoln himself, he literally
- "petered out."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was often annoyed by "company." His quarters at the tavern
- afforded him little privacy, and the shade of the tree in front of the
- grocery was scarcely a sufficiently secluded situation for the purposes of
- an ardent student. There were too many people to wonder and laugh at a man
- studying law with "his feet up a tree;" too many to worry him for the
- stories and jokes which it was supposed he could furnish on demand. For
- these reasons it became necessary that he should "retire to the country
- occasionally to rest and study." Sometimes he went to James Short's on the
- Sand Ridge; sometimes to Minter Graham's; sometimes to Bowlin Greenes;
- sometimes to Jack Armstrong's, and as often, perhaps, to Able's or Row
- Herndon's. All of these men served him faithfully and signally at one time
- and another, and to all of them he was sincerely attached. When Bowlin
- Greene died, in 1842, Mr. Lincoln, then in the enjoyment of great local
- reputation, undertook to deliver a funeral oration over the remains of his
- beloved friend; but, when he rose to speak, his voice was choked with deep
- emotion: he stood a few moments, while his lips quivered in the effort to
- form the words of fervent praise he sought to utter, and the tears ran
- down his yellow and shrivelled cheeks. Some of those who came to hear him,
- and saw his tall form thus sway in silence over the body of Bowlin Greene,
- say he looked so helpless, so utterly bereft and pitiable, that every
- heart in the audience was hushed at the spectacle. After repeated efforts,
- he found it impossible to speak, and strode away, openly and bitterly
- sobbing, to the widow's carriage, in which he was driven from the scene.
- Mr. Herndon's papers disclose less than we should like to know concerning
- this excellent man: they give us only this burial scene, with the fact
- that Bowlin Greene had loaned Mr. Lincoln books from their earliest
- acquaintance, and on one occasion had taken him to his home, and cared for
- him with the solicitude of a devoted friend through several weeks of great
- suffering and peril. The circumstances of the attempted eulogy are
- mentioned here to show the relations which subsisted between Mr. Lincoln
- and some of the benefactors we have enumerated.
- </p>
- <p>
- But all this time Mr. Lincoln had a living to make, a running board-bill
- to pay, and nothing to pay it with. He was, it is true, in the hands of
- excellent friends, so far as the greater part of his indebtedness was
- concerned; but he was industrious by nature, and wanted to be working, and
- paying as he went. He would not have forfeited the good opinion of those
- confiding neighbors for a lifetime of ease and luxury. It was therefore a
- most happy thing for him, and he felt it to be so, when he attracted the
- attention of John Calhoun, the surveyor of Sangamon County.
- </p>
- <p>
- Calhoun was the type of a perfect gentleman,&mdash;brave, courteous, able,
- and cultivated. He was a Democrat then, and a Democrat when he died. All
- the world knows how he was president of the Lecompton Convention; how he
- administered the trust in accordance with his well-known convictions; and
- how, after a life of devotion to Douglas, he was adroitly betrayed by that
- facile politician, and left to die in the midst of obloquy and disaster.
- At the time we speak of, he was one of the most popular men in the State
- of Illinois, and was one of the foremost chieftains of the political party
- which invariably carried the county and the district in which Mr. Lincoln
- lived. He knew Lincoln, and admired him. He was well assured that Lincoln
- knew nothing of surveying; but he was equally certain that he could soon
- acquire it. The speculative fever was at its height; he was overrun with
- business: the country was alive with strangers seeking land; and every
- citizen was buying and selling with a view to a great fortune in the
- "flush times" coming. He wanted a deputy with common sense and common
- honesty: he chose Lincoln, because nobody else possessed these qualities
- in a more eminent degree. He hunted him up; gave him a book; told him to
- study it, and said, that, as soon as he was ready, he should have as much
- work as he could do.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln took the book, and "retired to the country;" that is, he went out
- to Minter Graham's for about six weeks, in which time, by the aid of that
- good master, he became an expert surveyor, and was duly appointed
- Calhoun's deputy. Of course he made some money, merely his pay for work;
- but it is a remarkable fact, that, with his vast knowledge of the lands in
- Sangamon and adjacent counties, he never made a single speculation on his
- own account. It was not long until he acquired a considerable private
- business. The accuracy of his surveys were seldom, if ever, questioned.
- Disputes regarding "corners" and "lines" were frequently submitted to his
- arbitration; and the decision was invariably accepted as final. It often
- happened that his business kept him away from New Salem, and his other
- studies, for weeks at a time; but all this while he was gathering friends
- against the day of election.
- </p>
- <p>
- In after years&mdash;from 1844 onward&mdash;it was his good or bad fortune
- frequently to meet Calhoun on the stump; but he never forgot his
- benefaction to him, and always regarded him as the ablest and best man
- with whom he ever had crossed steel. To the day of Calhoun's death they
- were warmly attached to each other. In the times when it was most
- fashionable and profitable to denounce Calhoun and the Le-compton
- Constitution, when even Douglas turned to revile his old friend and
- coadjutor, Mr. Lincoln was never known to breathe a word of censure on his
- personal character.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 7th of May, 1833, Mr. Lincoln was appointed postmaster at New
- Salem. His political opinions were not extreme; and the Jackson
- administration could find no man who was at the same time more orthodox
- and equally competent to perform the duties of the office. He was not able
- to rent a room, for the business is said to have been carried on in his
- hat; but, from the evidence before us, we imagine that he kept the office
- in Mr. Hill's store, Mr. Hill's partner, McNamar, having been absent since
- 1832. He held the place until late in 1836, when New Salem partially
- disappeared, and the office was removed to Petersburg. For a little while
- before his own appointment, he is said to have acted as
- "deputy-postmaster" under Mr. Hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mail arrived duly once a week; and the labors of distributing and
- delivering it were by no means great. But Mr. Lincoln was determined that
- the dignity of the place should not suffer while he was the incumbent. He
- therefore made up for the lack of real business by deciphering the letters
- of the uneducated portion of the community, and by reading the newspapers
- aloud to the assembled inhabitants in front of Hill's store.
- </p>
- <p>
- But his easy good-nature was sometimes imposed upon by inconsiderate
- acquaintances; and Mr. Hill relates one of the devices by which he sought
- to stop the abuse. "One Elmore Johnson, an ignorant but ostentatious,
- proud man, used to go to Lincoln's post-office every day,&mdash;sometimes
- three or four times a day, if in town,&mdash;and inquire, 'Any thing for
- me?' This bored Lincoln, yet it amused him. Lincoln fixed a plan,&mdash;wrote
- a letter to Johnson as coming from a negress in Kentucky, saying many good
- things about opossum, dances, corn-shuckings, &amp;c.; 'John's! come and
- see me; and old master won't kick you out of the kitchen any more!' Elmore
- took it out; opened it; couldn't read a word; pretended to read it; went
- away; got some friends to read it: they read it correctly; he thought the
- reader was fooling him, and went to others with the same result. At last
- he said he would get <i>Lincoln</i> to read it, and presented it to
- Lincoln. It was almost too much for Lincoln, but he read it. The man never
- asked afterwards, 'Any thing here for me?"
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in the latter part of 1834 that Mr. Lincoln's personal property was
- sold under the hammer, and by due process of law, to meet the judgment
- obtained by Van Bergen on the note assigned to him by Radford. Every thing
- he had was taken; but it was the surveyor's instruments which it hurt him
- most to part with, for by their use he was making a tolerable living, and
- building up a respectable business. This time, however, rescue came from
- an unexpected quarter.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mr. Lincoln first came to New Salem, he employed a woman to make him
- a pair of pantaloons, which, probably from the scarcity of material, were
- cut entirely too short, as his garments usually were. Soon afterwards the
- woman's brother came to town, and she pointed Abe out to him as he walked
- along the street. The brother's name was James Short. "Without the
- necessity of a formal introduction," says Short, "we fell in together, and
- struck up a conversation, the purport of which I have now forgotten. He
- made a favorable impression upon me by his conversation on first
- acquaintance through his intelligence and sprightliness, which impression
- was deepened from time to time, as I became better acquainted with him."
- This was a lucky "impression" for Abe. Short was a fast friend, and in the
- day of trouble a sure and able one. At the time the judgment was obtained,
- Short lived on the Sand Ridge, four miles from New Salem; and Lincoln was
- in the habit of walking out there almost daily. Short was then unconscious
- of the main reason of Mr. Lincoln's remarkable devotion to him: there was
- a lady in the house whom Lincoln secretly but earnestly loved, and of whom
- there is much to be said at another place. If the host had known every
- thing, however, poor Abe would have been equally welcome; for he made
- himself a strangely agreeable guest here, as he did everywhere else. In
- busy times he pulled off his roundabout, and helped Short in the field
- with more energy than any hired man would have displayed. "He was," said
- Short, "the best hand at husking corn on the stalk I ever saw. I used to
- consider myself very good; but he would gather two loads to my one."
- </p>
- <p>
- These visits increased Short's disposition to serve him; and it touched
- him sorely when he heard Lincoln moaning about the catastrophe that hung
- over him in the form of Van Bergen's judgment. "An execution was issued,"
- says he, "and levied on Lincoln's horse, saddle, bridle, compass, chain,
- and other surveyor's instruments. He was then very much discouraged, and
- said he would let the whole thing go by the board. He was at my house very
- much,&mdash;half the time. I did all I could to put him in better spirits.
- I went on the delivery-bond with him; and when the sale came off, which
- Mr. Lincoln did not attend, I bid in the above property at a hundred and
- twenty dollars, and immediately gave it up again to him. Mr. Lincoln
- afterwards repaid me when he had moved to Springfield. Greene also turned
- in on this judgment his horse, saddle, and bridle at a hundred and
- twenty-five dollars; and Lincoln afterwards repaid him."
- </p>
- <p>
- But, after all, Mr. Lincoln had no friend more intimate than Jack
- Armstrong, and none that valued him more highly. Until he finally left New
- Salem for Springfield, he "rusticated" occasionally at Jack's hospitable
- cabin, situated "four miles in the country," as the polished metropolitans
- of New Salem would say. Jack's wife, Hannah, before alluded to, liked Abe,
- and enjoyed his visits not less than Jack did. "Abe would come out to our
- house," she says, "drink milk, eat mush, corn-bread, and butter, bring the
- children candy, and rock the cradle while I got him something to eat.... I
- foxed his pants; made his shirts... He has gone with us to father's; he
- would tell stories, joke people, girls and boys, at parties. He would
- nurse babies,&mdash;do any thing to accommodate anybody.... I had no books
- about my house; loaned him none. We didn't think about books and papers.
- We worked; had to live. Lincoln has staid at our house two or three weeks
- at a time."
- </p>
- <p>
- If Jack had "to work to live," as his wife has it, he was likewise
- constrained to fight and wrestle and tumble about with his unhappy
- fellow-citizens, in order to enjoy the life he earned by labor. He
- frequently came "to town," where his sportive inclinations ran riot,
- except as they were checked and regulated by the amicable interposition of
- Abe,&mdash;the prince of his affections, and the only man who was
- competent to restrain him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The children at school had made a wide sliding walk," from the top of
- Salem Hill to the river-bank, down which they rode on sleds and boards,&mdash;a
- distance of two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards. Now, it was one
- of the suggestions of Jack's passion for innocent diversion to nail up in
- hogsheads such of the population as incurred his displeasure, and send
- them adrift along this frightful descent. Sol. Spears and one Scanlon were
- treated to an adventure of this kind; but the hogshead in which the two
- were caged "leaped over an embankment, and came near killing Scanlon."
- After that the sport was considered less amusing, and was very much
- discouraged by that portion of the community who feared, that, in the
- absence of more convenient victims, "the boys" might light on them. Under
- these circumstances, Jack, for once in his life, thought it best to
- abandon coercion, and negotiate for subjects. He selected an elderly
- person of bibulous proclivities, and tempted him with a great temptation.
- "Old man Jordan <i>agreed</i> to be rolled down the hill for a gallon of
- whiskey;" but Lincoln, fully impressed with the brutality of the pastime,
- and the danger to the old sot, "stopped it." Whether he did it by
- persuasion or force, we know not, but probably by a judicious employment
- of both.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I remember once," says Mr. Ellis, "of seeing Mr. Lincoln out of temper,
- and laughing at the same time. It was at New Salem. The boys were having a
- jollification after an election. They had a large fire made of shavings
- and hemp-stalks; and some of the boys made a bet with a fellow that I
- shall call 'Ike,' that he couldn't run his little bob-tail pony through
- the fire. Ike took them up, and trotted his pony back about one hundred
- yards, to give him a good start, as he said. The boys all formed a line on
- either side, to make way for Ike and his pony. Presently here he come,
- full tilt, with his hat off; and, just as he reached the blazing fire, Ike
- raised in his saddle for the jump straight ahead; but pony was not of the
- same opinion, so he flew the track, and pitched poor Ike into the
- devouring element. Mr. Lincoln saw it, and ran to his assistance, saying,
- 'You have carried this thing far enough.' I could see he was mad, though
- he could not help laughing himself. The poor fellow was considerably
- scorched about the head and face. Jack Armstrong took him to the doctor,
- who shaved his head to fix him up, and put salve on the burn. I think Mr.
- Lincoln was a little mad at Armstrong, and Jack himself was very sorry for
- it. Jack gave Ike next morning a dram, his breakfast, and a seal-skin cap,
- and sent him home."
- </p>
- <p>
- "One cold winter day, Lincoln saw a poor fellow named "Ab Trent" hard at
- work chopping up "a house," which Mr. Hill had employed him to convert
- into firewood. Ab was barefooted, and shivered pitifully while he worked.
- Lincoln watched him a few moments, and asked him what he was to get for
- the job. Ab answered, 'One dollar;' and, pointing to his naked and
- suffering feet, said that he wished to buy a pair of shoes. Lincoln seized
- the axe, and, ordering the boy to comfort himself at the nearest fire,
- chopped up 'the house' so fast that Ab and the owner were both amazed when
- they saw it done." According to Mr. Rutledge, "Ab remembered this act with
- the liveliest gratitude. Once he, being a cast-iron Democrat, determined
- to vote against his party and for Mr. Lincoln; but the friends, as he
- afterwards said with tears in his eyes, made him drunk, and he had voted
- against Abe. Thus he did not even have an opportunity to return the noble
- conduct of Mr. Lincoln by this small measure of thanks."
- </p>
- <p>
- We have given some instances of Mr. Lincoln's unfailing disposition to
- succor the weak and the unfortunate. He never seems to have hesitated on
- account of actual or fancied danger to himself, but boldly espoused the
- side of the oppressed against the oppressor, whoever and whatever the
- latter might be. In a fisticuff or a rough-and-tumble fight, he was one of
- the most formidable men of the region in which he lived. It took a big
- bully, and a persevering one, to force him into a collision; but, being
- in, his enemy found good reason to beware of him. He was cool,
- calculating, but swift in action, and terribly strong. Nevertheless, he
- never promoted a quarrel, and would be at infinite trouble any time to
- compose one. An unnecessary broil gave him pain; and whenever there was
- the slightest hope of successful mediation, whether by soft speech or by
- the strong hand, he was instant and fearless for peace. His good-nature,
- his humor, his fertility in expedients, and his alliance, offensive and
- defensive, with Jack Armstrong, made him almost irresistible in his
- benevolent efforts to keep the ordinary ruffian of New Salem within decent
- bounds. If he was talking to Squire Godbey or Row Herndon (each of them
- give incidents of the kind), and he heard the sounds or saw the signs
- which betoken a row in the street, he would jump up, saying, "Let's go and
- stop it." He would push through the "ring" which was generally formed
- around the combatants, and, after separating the latter, would demand a
- truce and "a talk;" and so soon as he got them to talking, the victory was
- his. If it happened to be rough Jack himself who was at the bottom of the
- disturbance, he usually became very much ashamed of his conduct, and
- offered to "treat," or do any thing else that would atone for his
- brutality.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln has often been seen in the old mill on the river-bank to lift a
- box of stones weighing from a thousand to twelve hundred pounds. Of course
- it was not done by a straight lift of the hands: he "was harnessed to the
- box with ropes and straps." It was even said he could easily raise a
- barrel of whiskey to his mouth when standing upright, and take a drink out
- of the bung-hole; but of course one cannot believe it. Frequent
- exhibitions of such strength doubtless had much to do with his unbounded
- influence over the rougher class of men.
- </p>
- <p>
- He possessed the judicial quality of mind in a degree so eminent, and it
- was so universally recognized, that he never could attend a horse-race
- without being importuned to act as a judge, or witness a bet without
- assuming the responsibility of a stakeholder. "In the spring or summer of
- 1832," says Henry McHenry, "I had a horse-race with George Warbur-ton. I
- got Lincoln, who was at the race, to be a judge of the race, much against
- his will and after hard persuasion. Lincoln decided correctly; and the
- other judge said, 'Lincoln is the fairest man I ever bad to deal with: if
- Lincoln is in this county when I die, I want him to be my administrator,
- for he is the only man I ever met with that was wholly and unselfishly
- honest.'" His ineffable purity in determining the result of a scrub-race
- had actually set his colleague to thinking of his latter end.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Lincoln endured another annoyance much worse than this. He was so
- generally esteemed, and so highly admired, that, when any of his neighbors
- had a fight in prospect, one of the parties was sure to insist upon his
- acting as his second. Lincoln was opposed to fights, but there were some
- fights that had to be fought; and these were "set," a day fixed, and the
- neighborhood notified. In these cases there was no room for the offices of
- a mediator; and when the affair was pre-ordained, "and must come off," Mr.
- Lincoln had no excuse for denying the request of a friend.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Two neighbors, Harry Clark and Ben Wilcox," says Mr. Rutledge, "had had a
- lawsuit. The defeated declared, that, although he was beaten in the suit,
- he could whip his opponent. This was a formal challenge, and was at once
- carried to the ears of the victor (Wilcox), and as promptly accepted. The
- time, place, and seconds were chosen with due regularity; Mr. Lincoln
- being Clark's, and John Brewer, Wilcox's second. The parties met, stripped
- themselves all but their breeches, went in, and Mr. Lincoln's principal
- was beautifully whipped. These combats were conducted with as much
- ceremony and punctiliousness as ever graced the duelling-ground. After the
- conflict, the seconds conducted their respective principals to the river,
- washed off the blood, and assisted them to dress. During this performance,
- the second of the party opposed to Mr. Lincoln remarked, 'Well, Abe, my
- man has whipped yours, and I can whip you.' Now, this challenge came from
- a man who was very small in size. Mr. Lincoln agreed to fight, provided he
- would chalk out his size on Mr. Lincoln's person, and every blow struck
- outside of that mark should be counted foul. After this sally, there was
- the best possible humor, and all parties were as orderly as if they had
- been engaged in the most harmless amusement."
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1834 Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature, and this time
- was elected by a larger majority than any other man on the ticket. By this
- time the party with which he acted in the future was "discriminated as
- Whig;" and he did not hesitate to call himself a Whig, although he sought
- and received the votes of a great many Democrats. Just before the time had
- arrived for candidates to announce themselves, he went to John T. Stuart,
- and told him "the Democrats wanted to run him." He made the same statement
- to Ninian W. Edwards. Edwards and Stuart were both his personal and
- political friends, and they both advised him to let the Democrats have
- their way. Major Stuart's advice was certainly disinterested; for, in
- pursuance of it, two of the Whig candidates, Lincoln and Dawson, made a
- bargain with the Democrats which very nearly proved fatal to Stuart
- himself. He was at that time the favorite candidate of the Whigs for the
- Legislature; but the conduct of Lincoln and Dawson so demoralized the
- party, that his vote was seriously diminished. Up to this time Sangamon
- had been stanchly Democratic; but even in this election of 1834 we
- perceive slight evidences of that party's decay, and so early as 1836 the
- county became thoroughly Whig.
- </p>
- <p>
- We shall give no details of this campaign, since we should only be
- repeating what is written of the campaign of 1832. But we cannot withhold
- one extract from the reminiscences of Mr. Row Herndon:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "He (Lincoln) came to my house, near Island Grove, during harvest. There
- were some thirty men in the field. He got his dinner, and went out in the
- field where the men were at work. I gave him an introduction, and the boys
- said that they could not vote for a man unless he could make a hand.
- 'Well, boys,' said he, 'if that is all, I am sure of your votes.' He took
- hold of the cradle, and led the way all the round with perfect ease. The
- boys were satisfied, and I don't think he lost a vote in the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The next day was speaking at Berlin. He went from my house with Dr.
- Barnett, the man that had asked me who this man Lincoln was. I told him
- that he was a candidate for the Legislature. He laughed and said, 'Can't
- the party raise no better material than that?' I said, 'Go to-morrow, and
- hear all before you pronounce judgment.' When he came back, I said,
- 'Doctor, what say you now?' 'Why, sir,' said he, 'he is a perfect take-in:
- he knows more than all of them put together.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln got 1,376 votes, Dawson 1,370, Carpenter 1,170, Stuart 1,164.
- Lincoln was at last duly elected a Representative by a very flattering
- majority, and began to look about for the pecuniary means necessary to
- maintain his new dignity. In this extremity he had recourse to an old
- friend named Coleman Smoot.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day in 1832, while he was clerking for Offutt, a stranger came into
- the store, and soon disclosed the fact that his name was Smoot. Abe was
- behind the counter at the moment; but, hearing the name, he sprang over
- and introduced himself. Abe had often heard of Smoot, and Smoot had often
- heard of Abe. They had been as anxious to meet as ever two celebrities
- were; but hitherto they had never been able to manage it. "Smoot," said
- Lincoln, after a steady survey of his person, "I am very much disappointed
- in you: I expected to see an old Probst of a fellow." (Probst, it appears,
- was the most hideous specimen of humanity in all that country.) "Yes,"
- replied Smoot; "and I am equally disappointed, for I expected to see a
- good-looking man when I saw you." A few neat compliments like the
- foregoing laid the foundation of a lasting intimacy between the two men,
- and in his present distress Lincoln knew no one who would be more likely
- than Smoot to respond favorably to an application for money.
- </p>
- <p>
- "After he was elected to the Legislature," says Mr. Smoot, "he came to my
- house one day in company with Hugh Armstrong. Says he, 'Smoot, did you
- vote for me?' I told him I did. 'Well,' says he, 'you must loan me money
- to buy suitable clothing, for I want to make a decent appearance in the
- Legislature.' I then loaned him two hundred dollars, which he returned to
- me according to promise."
- </p>
- <p>
- The interval between the election and his departure for the seat of
- government was employed by Mr. Lincoln partly in reading, partly in
- writing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The community in which he lived was pre-eminently a community of
- free-thinkers in matters of religion; and it was then no secret, nor has
- it been a secret since, that Mr. Lincoln agreed with the majority of his
- associates in denying to the Bible the authority of divine revelation. It
- was his honest belief,&mdash;a belief which it was no reproach to hold at
- New Salem, Anno Domini 1834, and one which he never thought of concealing.
- It was no distinction, either good or bad, no honor, and no shame. But he
- had made himself thoroughly familiar with the writings of Paine and
- Volney,&mdash;"The Ruins" by one and "The Age of Reason" by the other. His
- mind was full of the subject, and he felt an itching to write. He did
- write, and the result was a "little book." It was probably merely an
- extended essay; but it is ambitiously spoken of as "a book" by himself and
- by the persons who were made acquainted with its contents. In this work he
- intended to demonstrate,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>"First, that the Bible was not God's revelation; and,</b>
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>"Secondly, that Jesus was not the Son of God."</b>
- </p>
- <p>
- These were his leading propositions, and surely they were comprehensive
- enough; but the reader will be better able to guess at the arguments by
- which they were sustained, when he has examined some of the evidence
- recorded in Chapter XIX.
- </p>
- <p>
- No leaf of this little volume has survived. Mr. Lincoln carried it in
- manuscript to the store of Mr. Samuel Hill, where it was read and
- discussed. Hill was himself an unbeliever, but his son considered this
- book "infamous." It is more than probable that Hill, being a warm personal
- friend of Lincoln, feared that the publication of the essay would some day
- interfere with the political advancement of his favorite. At all events,
- he snatched it out of his hand, and thrust it into the fire, from which
- not a shred escaped. The sequel will show that even Mr. Hill's provident
- forethought was not altogether equal to the prevention of the injury he
- dreaded.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII.
- </h2>
- <p>
- THE reader is already familiar with the name of James Rutledge, the
- founder of New Salem, and the owner in part of the famous mill on the
- Sangamon. He was born in South Carolina, and was of the illustrious
- Rutledge family of that State. From South Carolina he emigrated to
- Kentucky, and thence to Illinois. In 1828 he settled at New Salem, built
- the mill and laid out the village in conjunction with Mr. Cameron, a
- retired minister of the Cumberland Presbyterians. Mr. Rutledge's character
- seems to have been pure and high; for wherever his name occurs in the
- voluminous records before us,&mdash;in the long talks and the numerous
- epistles of his neighbors,&mdash;it is almost invariably coupled with some
- expression of genuine esteem and respect.
- </p>
- <p>
- At one time, and along with his other business,&mdash;which appears to
- have been quite extensive and various,&mdash;Mr. Rutledge kept the tavern,
- the small house with four rooms on the main street of New Salem, just
- opposite Lincoln's grocery. There Mr. Lincoln came to board late in 1832,
- or early in 1833. The family consisted of the father, mother, and nine
- children,&mdash;three of them born in Kentucky and six in Illinois; three
- grown up, and the rest quite young. Ann, the principal subject of this
- chapter, was the third child. She was born on the 7th of January, 1813,
- and was about nineteen years of age when Mr. Lincoln came to live in the
- house.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Ann was a little maiden just turned of seventeen, and still attending
- the school of that redoubtable pedagogue Min-ter Graham, there came to New
- Salem a young gentleman of singular enterprise, tact, and capacity for
- business. He is identical with the man whom we have already quoted as "the
- pioneer of New Salem as a business point," and who built the first
- storehouse there at the extravagant cost of fifteen dollars. He took
- boarding with Mr. Rutledge's friend and partner, James Cameron, and gave
- out his name as John McNeil. He came to New Salem with no other capital
- than good sense and an active and plucky spirit; but somehow fortune
- smiled indiscriminately on all his endeavors, and very soon&mdash;as early
- as the latter part of 1832&mdash;he found himself a well-to-do and
- prosperous man, owning a snug farm seven miles north of New Salem, and a
- half-interest in the largest store of the place. This latter property his
- partner, Samuel Hill, bought from him at a good round sum; for McNeil now
- announced his intention of being absent for a brief period, and his
- purpose was such that he might need all his available capital.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time the partners, Hill and McNeil, had both fallen in love
- with Ann Rutledge, and both courted her with devoted assiduity. But the
- contest had long since been decided in favor of McNeil, and Ann loved him
- with all her susceptible and sensitive heart. When the time drew near for
- McNeil to depart, he confided to Ann a strange story,&mdash;and, in the
- eyes of a person less fond, a very startling story. His name was not John
- McNeil at all, but John McNamar. His family was a highly respectable one
- in the State of New York; but a few years before his father had failed in
- business, and there was great distress at home. He (John) then conceived
- the romantic plan of running away, and, at some undefined place in the far
- West, making a sudden fortune with which to retrieve the family disaster.
- He fled accordingly, changed his name to avoid the pursuit of his father,
- found his way to New Salem, and&mdash;she knew the rest. He was now able
- to perform that great act of filial piety which he set out to accomplish,
- would return at once to the relief of his parents, and, in all human
- probability, bring them back with him to his new home in Illinois. At all
- events, she might look for his return as speedily as the journey could be
- made with ordinary diligence; and thenceforward there should be no more
- partings between him and his fair Ann. She believed this tale, because she
- loved the man that told it; and she would have believed it all the same if
- it had been ten times as incredible. A wise man would have rejected it
- with scorn, but the girl's instinct was a better guide; and McNamar proved
- to be all that he said he was, although poor Ann never saw the proof which
- others got of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- McNamar rode away "on old Charley," an antiquated steed that had seen hard
- usage in the Black Hawk War. Charley was slow, stumbled dreadfully, and
- caused his rider much annoyance and some hard swearing. On this provoking
- animal McNamar jogged through the long journey from New Salem to New York,
- and arrived there after many delays, only to find that his broken and
- dispirited father was fast sinking into the grave. After all his efforts,
- he was too late: the father could never enjoy the prosperity which the
- long-absent and long-silent son had brought him. McNamar wrote to Ann that
- there was sickness in the family, and he could not return at the time
- appointed. Then there were other and still other postponements;
- "circumstances over which he had no control" prevented his departure from
- time to time, until years had rolled away, and Ann's heart had grown sick
- with hope deferred. She never quite gave him up, but continued to expect
- him until death terminated her melancholy watch. His inexplicable delay,
- however, the infrequency of his letters, and their unsatisfactory
- character,&mdash;these and something else had broken her attachment, and
- toward the last she waited for him only to ask a release from her
- engagement, and to say that she preferred another and a more urgent
- suitor. But without his knowledge and formal renunciation of his claim
- upon her, she did not like to marry; and, in obedience to this refinement
- of honor, she postponed her union with the more pressing lover until Aug.
- 25, 1835, when, as many persons believe, she died of a broken heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln's friend Short was in some way related to the Rutledges, and for a
- while Lincoln visited Ann two or three times a week at his house.
- According to him, "Miss Rutledge was a good-looking, smart, lively girl, a
- good housekeeper, with a moderate education, and without any of the
- so-called accomplishments." L. M. Greene, who knew her well, talks about
- her as "a beautiful and very amiable young woman;" and "Nult" Greene is
- even more enthusiastic. "This young lady," in the language of the latter
- gentleman, "was a woman of exquisite beauty; but her intellect was quick,
- sharp, deep, and philosophic, as well as brilliant. She had as gentle and
- kind a heart as an angel, full of love, kindliness, and sympathy. She was
- beloved by everybody, and everybody respected and loved her, so sweet and
- angelic was she. Her character was more than good: it was positively noted
- throughout the county. She was a woman worthy of Lincoln's love." McNamar,
- her unfortunate lover, says, "Miss Ann was a gentle, amiable maiden,
- without any of the airs of your city belles, but winsome and comely
- withal; a blonde in complexion, with golden hair, cherry-red lips, and a
- bonny blue eye." Even the women of the neighborhood united with the men to
- praise the name of this beautiful but unhappy girl. Mrs. Hardin Bale "knew
- her well. She had auburn hair, blue eyes, fair complexion; was a slim,
- pretty, kind, tender, good-hearted woman; in height about five feet three
- inches, and weighed about a hundred and twenty pounds. She was beloved by
- all who knew her. McNamar, Hill, and Lincoln all courted her near the same
- time. She died as it were of grief. Miss Rutledge was beautiful." Such was
- Ann Rutledge, the girl in whose grave Mr. Lincoln said, "My heart lies
- buried." When Mr. Lincoln first saw Ann, she was probably the most refined
- woman with whom he had then ever spoken,&mdash;a modest, delicate
- creature, fascinating by reason of the mere contrast with the rude people
- by whom they were both surrounded. She had a secret, too, and a sorrow,&mdash;the
- unexplained and painful absence of McNamar,&mdash;which no doubt made her
- all the more interesting to him whose spirit was often even more
- melancholy than her own. It would be hard to trace the growth of such an
- attachment at a time and place so distant; but that it actually grew, and
- became an intense and mutual passion, the evidence before us is painfully
- abundant.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was always welcome at the little tavern, at Short's on the
- Sand Ridge, or at the farm, half a mile from Short's, where the Rutledges
- finally abode. Ann's father was his devoted friend, and the mother he
- called affectionately "Aunt Polly." It is probable that the family looked
- upon McNamar's delay with more suspicion than Ann did herself. At all
- events, all her adult relatives encouraged the suit which Lincoln early
- began to press; and as time, absence, and apparent neglect, gradually told
- against McNamar, she listened to him with augmenting interest, until, in
- 1835, we find them formally and solemnly betrothed. Ann now waited only
- for the return of McNamar to marry Lincoln. David Rutledge urged her to
- marry immediately, without regard to any thing but her own happiness; but
- she said she could not consent to it until McNamar came back and released
- her from her pledge. At length, however, as McNamar's re-appearance became
- more and more hopeless, she took a different view of it, and then thought
- she would become Abe's wife as soon as he found the means of a decent
- livelihood. "Ann told me once," says James M. in a letter to R. B.
- Rutledge, in coming from camp-meeting on Rock Creek, "that engagements
- made too far ahead sometimes failed; that one <i>had</i> failed (meaning
- her engagement with McNamar), and gave me to understand, that, as soon as
- certain studies were completed, she and Lincoln would be married."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1835 Ann showed unmistakable symptoms of failing health,
- attributable, as most of the neighborhood believed, to the distressing
- attitude she felt bound to maintain between her two lovers. On the 25th of
- August, in that year, she died of what the doctors chose to call
- "brain-fever." In a letter to Mr. Herndon, her brother says, "You suggest
- that the probable cause of Ann's sickness was her conflicts, emotions,
- &amp;c. As to this I cannot say. I, however, have my own private
- convictions. The character of her sickness was brain-fever." A few days
- before her death Lincoln was summoned to her bedside. What happened in
- that solemn conference was known only to him and the dying girl. But when
- he left her, and stopped at the house of John Jones, on his way home,
- Jones saw signs of the most terrible distress in his face and his conduct.
- When Ann actually died, and was buried, his grief became frantic: he lost
- all self-control, even the consciousness of identity, and every friend he
- had in New Salem pronounced him insane, mad, crazy. "He was watched with
- especial vigilance," as William Green tells us, "during storms, fogs,
- damp, gloomy weather, for fear of an accident." "At such times he raved
- piteously, declaring, among other wild expressions of his woe, 'I can
- never be reconciled to have the snow, rains, and storms to beat upon her
- grave!'"
- </p>
- <p>
- About three-quarters of a mile below New Salem, at the foot of the main
- bluff, and in a hollow between two lateral bluffs, stood the house of
- Bowlin Greene, built of logs and weather-boarded. Thither the friends of
- Lincoln, who apprehended a total abdication of reason, determined to
- transport him, partly for the benefit of a mere change of scene, and
- partly to keep him within constant reach of his near and noble friend,
- Bowlin Greene. During this period of his darkened and wavering intellect,
- when "accidents" were momentarily expected, it was discovered that Bowlin
- Greene possessed a power to persuade and guide him proportioned to the
- affection that had subsisted between them in former and better times.
- Bowlin Greene came for him, but Lincoln was cunning and obstinate: it
- required the most artful practices of a general conspiracy of all his
- friends to "disarm his suspicions," and induce him to go and stay with his
- most anxious and devoted friend. But at last they succeeded; and Lincoln
- remained down under the bluff for two or three weeks, the object of
- undisguised solicitude and of the strictest surveillance. At the end of
- that time his mind seemed to be restored, and it was thought safe to let
- him go back to his old haunts,&mdash;to the study of law, to the writing
- of legal papers for his neighbors, to pettifogging before the justice of
- the peace, and perhaps to a little surveying. But Mr. Lincoln was never
- precisely the same man again. At the time of his release he was thin,
- haggard, and careworn,&mdash;like one risen from the verge of the grave.
- He had always been subject to fits of great mental depression, but after
- this they were more frequent and alarming. It was then that he began to
- repeat, with a feeling which seemed to inspire every listener with awe,
- and to carry him to the fresh grave of Ann at every one of his solemn
- periods, the lines entitled, "Immortality; or, Oh! why should the spirit
- of mortal be proud?" None heard him but knew that he selected these
- curiously empty, yet wonderfully sad, impressive lines, to celebrate a
- grief which lay with continual heaviness on his heart, but to which he
- could not with becoming delicacy directly allude. He muttered them as he
- rambled through the woods, or walked by the roaring Sangamon. He was heard
- to murmur them to himself as he slipped into the village at nightfall,
- after a long walk of six miles, and an evening visit to the Concord
- graveyard; and he would suddenly break out with them in little social
- assemblies after noticeable periods of silent gloom. They came unbidden to
- his lips, while the air of affliction in face and gesture, the moving
- tones and touching modulations of his voice, made it evident that every
- syllable of the recitation was meant to commemorate the mournful fate of
- Ann. The poem is now his: the name of the obscure author is forgotten, and
- his work is imperishably associated with the memory of a great man, and
- interwoven with the history of his greatest Sorrow. Mr. Lincoln's adoption
- of it has saved it from merited oblivion, and translated it from the
- "poet's corner" of the country newspaper to a place in the story of his
- own life,&mdash;a story that will continue to be written, or written
- about, as long as our language exists.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many years afterwards, when Mr. Lincoln, the best lawyer of his section,
- with one exception, travelled the circuit with the court and a crowd of
- his jolly brethren, he always rose early, be fore any one else was
- stirring, and, raking together a few glowing coals on the hearth, he would
- sit looking into them, musing and talking with himself, for hours
- together. One morning, in the year of his nomination, his companions found
- him in this attitude, when "Mr. Lincoln repeated aloud, and at length, the
- poem 'Immortality,'" indicating his preference for the two last stanzas,
- but insisting that the entire composition "sounded to him as much like
- true poetry as any thing that he had ever heard."
- </p>
- <p>
- In Carpenter's "Anecdotes and Reminiscences of President Lincoln," occurs
- the following passage:&mdash;?
- </p>
- <p>
- "The evening of March 22, 1864, was a most interesting one to me. I was
- with the President alone in his office for several hours. Busy with pen
- and papers when I went in, he presently threw them aside, and commenced
- talking to me of Shakspeare, of whom he was very fond. Little 'Tad,' his
- son, coming in, he sent him to the library for a copy of the plays, and
- then read to me several of his favorite passages. Relapsing into a sadder
- strain, he laid the book aside, and, leaning back in his chair, said,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'There is a poem which has been a great favorite with me for years, which
- was first shown to me when a young man by a friend, and which I afterwards
- saw and cut from a newspaper, and learned by heart. I would,' he
- continued, 'give a great deal to know who wrote it; but I have never been
- able to ascertain.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "Then, half closing his eyes, he repeated the verses to me:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "'Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud? Like a swift-fleeting
- meteor, a fast-flying cloud, A flash of the lightning, a break of the
- wave, He passeth from life to his rest in the grave. The leaves of the
- oak and the willow shall fade, Be scattered around, and together be
- laid; And the young and the old, and the low and the high, Shall moulder
- to dust, and together shall lie. The infant a mother attended and loved;
- The mother that infant's affection who proved; The husband that mother
- and infant who blest,&mdash; Each, all, are away to their dwellings of
- rest. [The maid on whose cheek, on whose brow, in whose eye, Shone
- beauty and pleasure, her triumphs are by; And the memory of those who
- loved her and praised, Are alike from the minds of the living erased.]
- The hand of the king that the sceptre hath borne, The brow of the priest
- that the mitre hath worn, The eye of the sage, and the heart of the
- brave, Are hidden and lost in the depths of the grave. The peasant whose
- lot was to sow and to reap, The herdsman who climbed with his goats up
- the steep, The beggar who wandered in search of his bread, Have faded
- away like the grass that we tread. [The saint who enjoyed the communion
- of Heaven, The sinner who dared to remain unforgiven, The wise and the
- foolish, the guilty and just, Have quietly mingled their bones in the
- dust.] So the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed, That withers
- away to let others succeed; So the multitude comes, even those we
- behold, To repeat every tale that has often been told. For we are the
- same our fathers have been; We see the same sights our fathers have
- seen; We drink the same stream, we view the same sun, And run the same
- course our fathers have run. The thoughts we are thinking our fathers
- would think; From the death we are shrinking our fathers would shrink;
- To the life we are clinging they also would cling; But it speeds from us
- all like a bird on the wing. They loved, but the story we cannot unfold;
- They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold; They grieved, but no
- wail from their slumber will come; They joyed, but the tongue of their
- gladness is dumb. They died, ay, they died: we things that are now, That
- walk on the turf that lies over their brow, And make in their dwellings
- a transient abode, Meet the things that they met on their pilgrimage
- road. Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain, Are mingled together
- in sunshine and rain; And the smile and the tear, the song and the
- dirge, Still follow each other like surge upon surge. 'Tis the wink of
- an eye,'tis the draught of a breath, From the blossom of health to the
- paleness of death, From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,&mdash;
- Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?'"
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It was only a year or two after the death of Ann Rutledge that Mr. Lincoln
- told Robert L. Wilson, a distinguished colleague in the Legislature, parts
- of whose letter will be printed in another place, that, although "he
- appeared to enjoy life rapturously," it was a mistake; that, "when alone,
- he was so overcome by mental depression, that he never dared to carry a
- pocket-knife." And during all Mr. Wilson's extended acquaintance with him
- he never did own a knife, notwithstanding he was inordinately fond of
- whittling.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Herndon says, "He never addressed another woman, in my opinion, 'Yours
- affectionately,' and generally and characteristically abstained from the
- use of the word '<i>love.</i>' That word cannot be found more than a
- half-dozen times, if that often, in all his letters and speeches since
- that time. I have seen some of his letters to other ladies, but he never
- says 'love.' He never ended his letters with 'Yours affectionately,' but
- signed his name, 'Your friend, A. Lincoln.'" After Mr. Lincoln's election
- to the Presidency, he one day met an old friend, Isaac Cogdale, who had
- known him intimately in the better days of the Rutledges at New Salem.
- "Ike," said he, "call at my office at the State House about an hour by
- sundown. The company will then all be gone." Cogdale went according to
- request; "and sure enough," as he expressed it, "the company dropped off
- one by one, including Lincoln's clerk."
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I want to inquire about old times and old acquaintances,' began Mr.
- Lincoln. 'When we lived in Salem, there were the Greenes, Potters,
- Armstrongs, and Rutledges. These folks have got scattered all over the
- world,&mdash;some are dead. Where are the Rutledges, Greenes, &amp;c.?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "After we had spoken over old times," continues Cogdale,&mdash;"persons,
- circumstances,&mdash;in which he showed a wonderful memory, I then dared
- to ask him this question:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'May I now, in turn, ask you one question, Lincoln?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Assuredly. I will answer your question, if a fair one, with all my
- heart.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Well, Abe, is it true that you fell in love and courted Ann Rutledge?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'It is true,&mdash;true: indeed I did. I have loved the name of Rutledge
- to this day. I have kept my mind on their movements ever since, and love
- them dearly.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Abe, is it true,'" still urged Cogdale, "that you ran a little wild
- about the matter?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'I did really. I ran off the track. It was my first. I loved the woman
- dearly. She was a handsome girl; would have made a good, loving wife; was
- natural and quite intellectual, though not highly educated. I did honestly
- and truly love the girl, and think often, often, of her now.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- A few weeks after the burial of Ann, McNamar returned to New Salem. He saw
- Lincoln at the post-office, and was struck with the deplorable change in
- his appearance. A short time afterwards Lincoln wrote him a deed, which he
- still has, and prizes highly, in memory of his great friend and rival. His
- father was at last dead; but he brought back with him his mother and her
- family. In December of the same year his mother died, and was buried in
- the same graveyard with Ann. During his absence, Col. Rutledge had
- occupied his farm, and there Ann died; but "the Rutledge farm" proper
- adjoined this one to the south. "Some of Mr. Lincoln's corners, as a
- surveyor, are still visible on lines traced by him on both farms."
- </p>
- <p>
- On Sunday, the fourteenth day of October, 1866, William H. Herndon knocked
- at the door of John McNamar, at his residence, but a few feet distant from
- the spot where Ann Rutledge breathed her last. After some preliminaries
- not necessary to be related, Mr. Herndon says, "I asked him the question:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Did you know Miss Rutledge? If so, where did she die?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "He sat by his open window, looking westerly; and, pulling me closer to
- himself, looked through the window and said, 'There, by that,'&mdash;choking
- up with emotion, pointing his long forefinger, nervous and trembling, to
- the spot,&mdash;'there, by that currant-bush, she died. The old house in
- which she and her father died is gone.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "After further conversation, leaving the sadness to momentarily pass away,
- I asked this additional question:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Where was she buried?'
- </p>
- <p>
- "'In Concord burying-ground, one mile south-east of this place.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Herndon sought the grave. "S. C. Berry," says he, "James Short (the
- gentleman who purchased in Mr. Lincoln's compass and chain in 1834, under
- an execution against Lincoln, or Lincoln &amp; Berry, and gratuitously
- gave them back to Mr. Lincoln), James Miles, and myself were together.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I asked Mr. Berry if he knew where Miss Rutledge was buried,&mdash;the
- place and exact surroundings. He replied, 'I do. The grave of Miss
- Rutledge lies just north of her brother's, David Rutledge, a young lawyer
- of great promise, who died in 1842, in his twenty-seventh year.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "The cemetery contains but an acre of ground, in a beautiful and secluded
- situation. A thin skirt of timber lies on the east, commencing at the
- fence of the cemetery. The ribbon of timber, some fifty yards wide, hides
- the sun's early rise. At nine o'clock the sun pours all his rays into the
- cemetery. An extensive prairie lies west, the forest north, a field on the
- east, and timber and prairie on the south. In this lonely ground lie the
- Berrys, the Rutledges, the Clarys, the Armstrongs, and the Joneses, old
- and respected citizens,&mdash;pioneers of an early day. I write, or rather
- did write, the original draught of this description in the immediate
- presence of the ashes of Miss Ann Rutledge, the beautiful and tender dead.
- The village of the dead is a sad, solemn place. Its very presence imposes
- truth on the mind of the living writer. Ann Rutledge lies buried north of
- lier brother, and rests sweetly on his left arm, angels to guard her. The
- cemetery is fast filling with the hazel and the dead."
- </p>
- <p>
- A lecture delivered by William H. Herndon at Springfield, in 1866,
- contained the main outline, without the minuter details, of the story here
- related. It was spoken, printed, and circulated without contradiction from
- any quarter. It was sent to the Rutledges, McNeeleys, Greenes, Short, and
- many other of the old residents of New Salem and Petersburg, with
- particular requests that they should correct any error they might find in
- it. It was pronounced by them all truthful and accurate; but their
- replies, together with a mass of additional evidence, have been carefully
- collated with the lecture, and the result is the present chapter. The
- story of Ann Rutledge, Lincoln, and McNamar, as told here, is as well
- proved as the fact of Mr. Lincoln's election to the Presidency.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX
- </h2>
- <p>
- FOLLOWING strictly the chronological order hitherto observed in the course
- of this narrative, we should be compelled to break off the story of Mr.
- Lincoln's love-affairs at New Salem, and enter upon his public career in
- the Legislature and before the people. But, while by that means we should
- preserve continuity in one respect, we should lose it in another; and the
- reader would perhaps prefer to take in at one view all of Mr. Lincoln's
- courtships, save only that one which resulted in marriage.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three-quarters of a mile, or nearly so, north of Bowlin Greene's, and on
- the summit of a hill, stood the house of Bennett Able, a small frame
- building eighteen by twenty feet. Able and his wife were warm friends of
- Mr. Lincoln; and many of his rambles through the surrounding country,
- reading and talking to himself, terminated at their door, where he always
- found the latch-string on the outside, and a hearty welcome within. In
- October, 1833, Mr. Lincoln met there Miss Mary Owens, a sister of Mrs.
- Able, and, as we shall presently learn from his own words, admired her,
- although not extravagantly. She remained but four weeks, and then went
- back to her home in Kentucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Owens's mother being dead, her father married again; and Miss Owens,
- for good reasons of her own, thought she would rather live with her sister
- than with her stepmother. Accordingly, in the fall of 1836, she
- re-appeared at Able's, passing through New Salem on the day of the
- presidential election, where the men standing about the polls stared and
- wondered at her "beauty." Twenty eight or nine years of age, "she was," in
- the language of Mr. L. M. Greene, "tall and portly; weighed about one
- hundred and twenty pounds, and had large blue eyes, with the finest
- trimmings I ever saw. She was jovial, social, loved wit and humor, had a
- liberal English education, and was considered wealthy. Bill," continues
- our excellent friend, "I am getting old; have seen too much trouble to
- give a lifelike picture of this woman. I won't try it. None of the poets
- or romance-writers has ever given to us a picture of a heroine so
- beautiful as a good description of Miss Owens in 1836 would be."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Hardin Bale, a cousin to Miss Owens, says "she was blue-eyed,
- dark-haired, handsome,&mdash;not pretty,&mdash;was rather large and tall,
- handsome, truly handsome, matronly looking, over ordinary size in height
- and weight.... Miss Owens was handsome, that is to say, noble-looking,
- matronly seeming."
- </p>
- <p>
- Respecting her age and looks, Miss. Owens herself makes the following
- note, Aug. 6, 1866:&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- "Born in the year eight; fair skin, deep-blue eyes, with dark curling
- hair; height five feet five inches, weighing about one hundred and fifty
- pounds."
- </p>
- <p>
- Johnson G. Greene is Miss Owens's cousin; and, whilst on a visit to her in
- 1866, he contrived to get her version of the Lincoln courtship at great
- length. It does not vary in any material part from the account currently
- received in the neighborhood, and given by various persons, whose oral or
- written testimony is preserved in Mr. Herndon's collection of manuscripts.
- Greene (J. G.) described her in terms about the same as those used by Mrs.
- Bale, adding that "she was a nervous and muscular woman," very
- "intellectual,"&mdash;"the most intellectual woman he ever saw,"&mdash;"with
- a forehead massive and angular, square, prominent, and broad."
- </p>
- <p>
- After Miss Owens's return to New Salem, in the fall of 1813, Mr. Lincoln
- was unremitting in his attentions; and wherever she went he was at her
- side. She had many relatives in the neighborhood,&mdash;the Bales, the
- Greenes, the Grahams: and, if she went to spend an afternoon or an evening
- with any of these, Abe was very likely to be on hand to conduct her home.
- He asked her to marry him; but she prudently evaded a positive answer
- until she could make up her mind about questionable points of his
- character. She did not think him coarse or cruel; but she did think him
- thoughtless, careless, not altogether as polite as he might be,&mdash;in
- short, "deficient," as she expresses it, "in those little links which make
- up the great chain of woman's happiness." His heart was good, his
- principles were high, his honor sensitive; but still, in the eyes of this
- refined, young lady, he did not seem to be quite the gentleman. "He was
- lacking in the smaller attentions;" and, in fact, the whole affair is
- explained when she tells us that "<i>his education was different from"
- hers</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day Miss Owens and Mrs. Bowlin Greene were making their way slowly and
- tediously up the hill to Able's house, when they were joined by Lincoln.
- Mrs. Bowlin Greene was carrying "a great big fat child, heavy, and crossly
- disposed." Although the woman bent pitiably under her burden, Lincoln
- offered her no assistance, but, dropping behind with Miss Owens, beguiled
- the way according to his wishes. When they reached the summit, "Miss Owens
- said to Lincoln laughingly, 'You would not make a good husband. Abe.' They
- sat on the fence; and one word brought on another, till a split or breach
- ensued."
- </p>
- <p>
- Immediately after this misunderstanding, Lincoln went off toward Havana on
- a surveying expedition, and was absent about three weeks. On the first day
- of his return, one of Able's boys was sent up "to town" for the mail.
- Lincoln saw him at the post-office, and "asked if Miss Owens was at Mr.
- Able's." The boy said "Yes."&mdash;"Tell her," said Lin-join, "that I'll
- be down to see her in a few minutes." Now, Miss Owens had determined to
- spend that evening at Minter Graham's; and when the boy gave in the
- report, "she thought a moment, and said to herself, 'If I can draw Lincoln
- up there to Graham's, it will be all right.'" This scheme was to operate
- as a test of Abe's love; but it shared the fate of some of "the best-laid
- schemes of mice and men," and went "all agley."
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln, according to promise, went down to Able's, and asked if Miss
- Owens was in. Mrs. Able replied that she had gone to Graham's, about one
- and a half miles from Able's due south-west. Lincoln said, "Didn't she
- know I was coming?" Mrs. Able answered, "No;" but one of the children
- said, "Yes, ma, she did, for I heard Sam tell her so." Lincoln sat a
- while, and then went about his business. "The fat was now in the fire.
- Lincoln thought, as he was extremely poor, and Miss Owens very rich, it
- was a fling on him on that account. Abe was mistaken in his guesses, for
- wealth cut no figure in Miss Owens's eyes. Miss Owens regretted her
- course. Abe would not bend; and Miss Owens wouldn't. She said, if she had
- it to do over again she would play the cards differently.... She had two
- sons in the Southern army. She said that if either of them had got into
- difficulty, she would willingly have gone to old Abe for relief."
- </p>
- <p>
- In Miss Owens's letter of July 22, 1866, it will be observed! that she
- tacitly admitted to Mr. Gaines Greene "the circumstances in connection
- with Mrs. Greene and child." Although she here denies the precise words
- alleged to have been used by her in the little quarrel at the top of the
- hill, she does not deny the impression his conduct left upon her mind, but
- presents additional evidence of it by the relation of another incident of
- similar character, from which her inferences were the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fortunately we are not compelled, to rely upon tradition, however
- authentic, for the facts concerning this interesting episode in Mr.
- Lincoln's life. Miss Owens is still alive to tell her own tale, and we
- have besides his letters to the lady herself. Mr. Lincoln wrote his
- account of it as early as 1838. As in duty bound, we shall permit the lady
- to speak first. At her particular request, her present name and residence
- are suppressed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, May 1, 1866.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. W. H. Herndon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;After quite a struggle with my feelings, I have at last
- decided to send you the letters in my possession written by Mr. Lincoln,
- believing, as I do, that you are a gentleman of honor, and will faithfully
- abide by all you have said.
- </p>
- <p>
- My associations with your lamented friend were in Menard County, whilst
- visiting a sister, who then resided near Petersburg. I have learned that
- my maiden name is now in your possession; and you have ere this, no doubt,
- been informed that I am a native Kentuckian.
- </p>
- <p>
- As regards Miss Rutledge, I cannot tell you any thing, she having died
- previous to my acquaintance with Mr. Lincoln; and I do not now recollect
- of ever hearing him mention her name. Please return the letters at your
- earliest convenience.
- </p>
- <p>
- Very respectfully yours,
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary S.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, May 22,1866.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. W. H. Herndon.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear Sir,&mdash;Really you catechise me in true lawyer style; but I
- feel you will have the goodness to excuse me if I decline answering all
- your questions in detail, being well assured that few women would have
- ceded as much as I have under all the circumstances.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say you have heard why our acquaintance terminated as it did. I, too,
- have heard the same bit of gossip; but I never used the remark which Madam
- Rumor says I did to Mr. Lincoln. I think I did on one occasion say to my
- sister, who was very anxious for us to be married, that I thought Mr.
- Lincoln was deficient in those little links which make up the chain of
- woman's happiness,&mdash;at least, it was so in my case. Not that I
- believed it proceeded from a lack of goodness of heart: but his training
- had been different from mine; hence there was not that congeniality which
- would otherwise have existed.
- </p>
- <p>
- From his own showing, you perceive that his heart and hand were at my
- disposal; and I suppose that my feelings were not sufficiently enlisted to
- have the matter consummated. About the beginning of the year 1833 I left
- Illinois, at which time our acquaintance and correspondence ceased without
- ever again being renewed.
- </p>
- <p>
- My father, who resided in Green County, Kentucky, was a gentleman of
- considerable means; and I am persuaded that few persons placed a higher
- estimate on education than he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- Respectfully yours,
- </p>
- <p>
- Mart S.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, July 22, 1866.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. W. H. Herndon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;I do not think that you are pertinacious in asking the
- question relative to old Mrs. Bowlin Greene, because I wish to set you
- right on that question. Your information, no doubt, came through my
- cousin, Mr. Gaines Greene, who visited us last winter. Whilst here, he was
- laughing at me about Mr. Lincoln, and among other things spoke about the
- circumstance in connection with Mrs. Greene and child. My impression is
- now that I tacitly admitted it, for it was a season of trouble with me,
- and I gave but little heed to the matter. We never had any hard feelings
- toward each other that I know of. On no occasion did I say to Mr. Lincoln
- that I did not believe he would make a kind husband, because he did not
- tender his services to Mrs. Greene in helping of her carry her babe. As I
- said to you in a former letter, I thought him lacking in smaller
- attentions. One circumstance presents itself just now to my mind's eye.
- There was a company of us going to Uncle Billy Greene's. Mr. Lincoln was
- riding with me; and we had a very bad branch to cross. The other gentlemen
- were very officious in seeing that their partners got over safely. We were
- behind, he riding in, never looking back to see how I got along. When I
- rode up beside him, I remarked, "You are a nice fellow! I suppose you did
- not care whether my neck was broken or not." He laughingly replied (I
- suppose by way of compliment) that he knew I was plenty smart to take care
- of myself.
- </p>
- <p>
- In many things he was sensitive, almost to a fault. He told me of an
- incident: that he was crossing a prairie one day, and saw before him "a
- hog mired down," to use his own language. He was rather "fixed up;" and he
- resolved that he would pass on without looking towards the shoat. After he
- had gone by, he said the feeling was irresistible; and he had to look
- back, and the poor thing seemed to say wistfully, "There, now, my last
- hope is gone;" that he deliberately got down, and relieved it from its
- difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- In many things we were congenial spirits. In politics we saw eye to eye,
- though since then we differed as widely as the South is from the North.
- But methinks I hear you say, "Save me from a political woman!" So say I.
- </p>
- <p>
- The last message I ever received from him was about a year after we parted
- in Illinois. Mrs. Able visited Kentucky; and he said to her in
- Springfield, "Tell your sister that I think she was a great fool, because
- she did not stay here, and marry me." Characteristic of the man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Respectfully yours,
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary S.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- Vandalia, Dec. 13, 1836.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary,&mdash;I have been sick ever since my arrival, or I should have
- written sooner. It is but little difference, however, as I have very
- little even yet to write. And more, the longer I can avoid the
- mortification of looking in the post-office for your letter, and not
- finding it, the better. You see I am mad about that <i>old letter</i> yet.
- I don't like very well to risk you again. I'll try you once more, anyhow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The new State House is not yet finished, and consequently the Legislature
- is doing little or nothing. The Governor delivered an inflammatory
- political message, and it is expected there will be some sparring between
- the parties about it as soon as the two Houses get to business. Taylor
- delivered up his petitions for the new county to one of our members this
- morning. I am told he despairs of its success, on account of all the
- members from Morgan County opposing it. There are names enough on the
- petition, I think, to justify the members from our county in going for it;
- but if the members from Morgan oppose it, which they say they will, the
- chance will be bad.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our chance to take the seat of government to Springfield is better than I
- expected. An internal-improvement convention was held here since we met,
- which recommended a loan of several million of dollars, on the faith of
- the State, to construct railroads. Some of the Legislature are for it, and
- some against it: which has the majority I cannot tell. There is great
- strife and struggling for the office of the United States Senator here at
- this time. It is probable we shall ease their pains in a few days. The
- opposition men have no candidate of their own; and consequently they will
- smile as complacently at the angry snarl of the contending Van-Buren
- candidates and their respective friends, as the Christian does at Satan's
- rage. You recollect that I mentioned at the outset of this letter that I
- had been unwell. That is the fact, though I believe I am about well now;
- but that, with other things I cannot account for, have conspired, and have
- gotten my spirits so low that I feel that I would rather be any place in
- the world than here. I really cannot endure the thought of staying here
- ten weeks. Write back as soon as you get this, and, if possible, say
- something that will please me; for really I have not been pleased since I
- left you. This letter is so dry and stupid that I am ashamed to send it,
- but with my present feelings I cannot do any better.
- </p>
- <p>
- Give my best respects to Mr. and Mrs. Able and family.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, May 7, 1837.
- </p>
- <p>
- Miss Mary S. Owens.
- </p>
- <p>
- Friend Mary,&mdash;I have commenced two letters to send you before this,
- both of which displeased me before I got half done, and so I tore them up.
- The first I thought was not serious enough, and the second was on the
- other extreme. I shall send this, turn out as it may.
- </p>
- <p>
- This thing of living in Springfield is rather a dull business, after all;
- at least, it is so to me. I am quite as lonesome here as I ever was
- anywhere in my life. I have been spoken to by but one woman since I've
- been here, and should not have been by her, if she could have avoided it.
- I've never been to church yet, nor probably shall not be soon. I stay away
- because I am conscious I should not know how to behave myself.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am often thinking about what we said of your coming to live at
- Springfield. I am afraid you would not be satisfied. There is a great deal
- of flourishing about in carriages here, which it would be your doom to see
- without sharing it. You would have to be poor, without the means of hiding
- your poverty. Do you believe you could bear that patiently? Whatever woman
- may cast her lot with mine, should any ever do so, it is my intention to
- do all in my power to make her happy and contented; and there is nothing I
- can imagine that would make me more unhappy than to fail in the effort. I
- know I should be much happier with you than the way I am, provided I saw
- no signs of discontent in you. What you have said to me may have been in
- the way of jest, or I may have misunderstood it. If so, then let it be
- forgotten; if otherwise, I much wish you would think seriously before you
- decide. For my part, I have already decided. What I have said I will most
- positively abide by, provided you wish it. My opinion is, that you had
- better not do it. You have not been accustomed to hardship, and it may be
- more severe than you now imagine. I know you are capable of thinking
- correctly on any subject; and, if you deliberate maturely upon this before
- you decide, then I am willing to abide your decision.
- </p>
- <p>
- You must write me a good long letter after you get this. You have nothing
- else to do; and, though it might not seem interesting to you after you
- have written it, it would be a good deal of company to me in this "busy
- wilderness." Tell your sister, I don't want to hear any more about selling
- out and moving, That gives me the hypo whenever I think of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours, &amp;c.,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Aug. 16, 1837.
- </p>
- <p>
- Friend Mary,&mdash;You will no doubt think it rather strange that I should
- write you a letter on the same day on which we parted; and I can only
- account for it by supposing that seeing you lately makes me think of you
- more than usual; while at our late meeting we had but few expressions of
- thoughts. You must know that I cannot see you, or think of you, with
- entire indifference; and yet it may be that you are mistaken in regard to
- what my real feelings toward you are. If I knew you were not, I should not
- trouble you with this letter. Perhaps any other man would know enough
- without further information; but I consider it my peculiar right to plead
- ignorance, and your bounden duty to allow the plea. I want in all cases to
- do right; and most particularly so in all cases with women. I want, at
- this particular time, more than any thing else, to do right with you: and
- if I knew it would be doing right, as I rather suspect it would, to let
- you alone, I would do it. And, for the purpose of making the matter as
- plain as possible, I now say that you can now drop the subject, dismiss
- your thoughts (if you ever had any) from me forever, and leave this letter
- unanswered, without calling forth one accusing murmur from me. And I will
- even go further, and say, that, if it will add any thing to your comfort
- or peace of mind to do so, it is my sincere wish that you should. Do not
- understand by this that I wish to cut your acquaintance. I mean no such
- thing. What I do wish is, that our further acquaintance shall depend upon
- yourself. If such further acquaintance would constitute nothing to your
- happiness, I am sure it would not to mine. If you feel yourself in any
- degree bound to me, I am now willing to release you, provided you wish it;
- while, on the other hand, I am willing, and even anxious, to bind you
- faster, if I can be convinced that it will, in any considerable degree,
- add to your happiness. This, indeed, is the whole question with me.
- Nothing would make me more miserable than to believe you miserable,&mdash;nothing
- more happy than to know you were so.
- </p>
- <p>
- In what I have now said, I think I cannot be misunderstood; and to make
- myself understood is the only object of this letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- If it suits you best to not answer this, farewell. A long life and a merry
- one attend you. But, if you conclude to write back, speak as plainly as I
- do. There can be neither harm nor danger in saying to me any thing you
- think, just in the manner you think it.
- </p>
- <p>
- My respects to your sister. Your friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- After his second meeting with Mary, Mr. Lincoln had little time to
- prosecute his addresses in person; for early in December he was called
- away to his seat in the Legislature; but, if his tongue was silent in the
- cause, his pen was busy.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the session of the Legislature of 1886-7, Mr. Lincoln made the
- acquaintance of Mrs. O. H. Browning, whose husband was also a member. The
- acquaintance ripened into friendship, and that winter and the next Mr.
- Lincoln spent a great deal of time in social intercourse with the
- Brownings. Mrs. Browning knew nothing as yet of the affair with Miss
- Owens; but as the latter progressed, and Lincoln became more and more
- involved, she noticed the ebb of his spirits, and often rallied him as the
- victim of some secret but consuming passion. With this for his excuse,
- Lincoln wrote her, after the adjournment of the Legislature, a full and
- connected account of the manner in which he had latterly been making "a
- fool of" himself. For many reasons the publication of this letter is an
- extremely painful duty. If it could be withheld, and the act decently
- reconciled to the conscience of a biographer professing to be honest and
- candid, it should never see the light in these pages. Its grotesque humor,
- its coarse exaggerations in describing the person of a lady whom the
- writer was willing to marry, its imputation of toothless and weatherbeaten
- old age to a woman really young and handsome, its utter lack of that
- delicacy of tone and sentiment which one naturally expects a gentleman to
- adopt when he thinks proper to discuss the merits of his late mistress,&mdash;all
- these, and its defective orthography, it would certainly be more agreeable
- to suppress than to publish. But, if we begin by omitting or mutilating a
- document which sheds so broad a light upon one part of his life and one
- phase of his character, why may we not do the like as fast and as often as
- the temptations arise? and where shall the process cease? A biography
- worth writing at all is worth writing fully and honestly; and the writer
- who suppresses or mangles the truth is no better than he who bears false
- witness in any other capacity. In April, 1838, Miss Owens finally departed
- from Illinois; and in that same month Mr. Lincoln wrote Mrs. Browning:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, April 1, 1838.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Madam,&mdash;Without appologising for being egotistical, I shall make
- the history of so much of my life as has elapsed since I saw you the
- subject of this letter. And, by the way, I now discover, that, in order to
- give a full and inteligible account of the things I have done and suffered
- since I saw you, I shall necessarily have to relate some that happened
- before.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was, then, in the autumn of 1836, that a married lady of my
- acquaintance, and who was a great friend of mine, being about to pay a
- visit to her father &amp; other relatives residing in Kentucky, proposed
- to me that on her return she would bring a sister of hers with her on
- condition that I would engage to become her brother-in-law with all
- convenient despatch. I, of course, accepted the proposal, for you know I
- could not have done otherwise, had I really been averse to it; but
- privately, between you and me, I was most confoundedly well pleased with
- the project. I had seen the said sister some three years before, thought
- her inteligent and agreeable, and saw no good objection to plodding life
- through hand in hand with her. Time passed on, the lady took her journey,
- and in due time returned, sister in company, sure enough. This astonished
- me a little; for it appeared to me that her coming so readily showed that
- she was a trifle too willing; but, on reflection, it occurred to me that
- she might have been prevailed on by her married sister to come, without
- any thing concerning me ever having been mentioned to her; and so I
- concluded, that, if no other objection presented itself, I would consent
- to wave this. All this occurred to me on <i>hearing</i> of her arrival in
- the neighborhood; for, be it remembered, I had not yet <i>seen</i> her,
- except about three years previous, as above mentioned. In a few days we
- had an interview; and, although I had seen her before, she did not look as
- my imagination had pictured her. I knew she was oversize, but she now
- appeared a fair match for Falstaff. I knew she was called an "old maid,"
- and I felt no doubt of the truth of at least half of the appelation; but
- now, when I beheld her, I could not for my life avoid thinking of my
- mother; and this, not from withered features, for her skin was too full of
- fat 'to permit of its contracting into wrinkles, but from her want of
- teeth, weather-beaten appearance in general, and from a kind of notion
- that ran in my head that nothing could have commenced at the size of
- infancy and reached her present bulk in less than thirty-five or forty
- years; and, in short, I was not at all pleased with her. But what could I
- do? I had told her sister that I would take her for better or for worse;
- and I made a point of honor and conscience in all things to stick to my
- word, especially if others had been induced to act on it, which in this
- case I had no doubt they had; for I was now fairly convinced that no other
- man on earth would have her, and hence the conclusion that they were bent
- on holding me to my bargain. "Well," thought I, "I have said it, and, be
- the consequences what they may, it shall not be my fault if I fail to do
- it." At once I determined to consider her my wife; and, this done, all my
- powers of discovery were put to work in search of perfections in her which
- might be fairly sett off against her defects. I tried to imagine her
- handsome, which, but for her unfortunate corpulency, was actually true.
- Exclusive of this, no woman that I have ever seen has a finer face. I also
- tried to convince myself that the mind was much more to be valued than the
- person; and in this she was not inferior, as I could discover, to any with
- whom I had been acquainted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after this, without attempting to come to any positive
- understanding with her, I sat out for Vandalia, when and where you first
- saw me. During my stay there I had letters from her which did not change
- my opinion of either her intelect or intention, but, on the contrary,
- confirmed it in both.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this while, although I was fixed, "firm as the surge-repelling rock,"
- in my resolution, I found I was continually repenting the rashness which
- had led me to make it. Through life, I have been in no bondage, either
- real or imaginary, from the thraldom of which I so much desired to be
- free. After my return home, I saw nothing to change my opinions of her in
- any particular. She was the same, and so was I. I now spent my time in
- planing how I might get along through life after my contemplated change of
- circumstances should have taken place, and how I might procrastinate the
- evil day for a time, which I really dreaded as much, perhaps more, than an
- Irishman does the halter.
- </p>
- <p>
- After all my suffering upon this deeply-interesting subject, here I am,
- wholly, unexpectedly, completely, out of the "scrape;" and I now want to
- know if you can guess how I got out of it,&mdash;out, clear, in every
- sense of the term; no violation of word, honor, or conscience. I don't
- believe you can guess, and so I might as well tell you at once. As the
- lawyer says, it was done in the manner following, to wit: After I had
- delayed the matter as long as I thought I could in honor do (which, by the
- way, had brought me round into the last fall), I concluded I might as well
- bring it to a consumation without further delay; and so I mustered my
- resolution, and made the proposal to her direct: but, shocking to relate,
- she answered, No, At first I supposed she did it through an affectation of
- modesty, which I thought but ill became her under the peculiar
- circumstances of her case; but, on my renewal of the charge, I found she
- repeled it with greater firmness than before. I tried it again and again,
- but with the same success, or rather with the same want of success.
- </p>
- <p>
- I finally was forced to give it up; at which I verry unexpectedly found
- myself mortified almost beyond endurance. I was mortified, it seemed to
- me, in a hundred different ways. My vanity was deeply wounded by the
- reflection that I had so long been too stupid to discover her intentions,
- and at the same time never doubting that I understood them perfectly; and
- also that she, whom I had taught myself to believe nobody else would have,
- had actually rejected me with all my fancied greatness. And, to cap the
- whole, I then, for the first time, began to suspect that I was really a
- little in love with her. But let it all go. I'll try and outlive it.
- Others have been made fools of by the girls; but this can never with truth
- be said of me. I most emphatically, in this instance, made a fool of
- myself. I have now come to the conclusion never again to think of
- marrying, and for this reason: I can never be satisfied with any one who
- would be blockhead enough to have me.
- </p>
- <p>
- When you receive this, write me a long yarn about something to amuse me.
- Give my respects to Mr. Browning.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your sincere friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln,
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. O. H. Browning.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X
- </h2>
- <p>
- THE majority of Mr. Lincoln's biographers&mdash;and they are many and
- credulous&mdash;tell us that he <i>walked</i> from New Salem to Vandalia,
- a distance of one hundred miles, to take his seat, for the first time, in
- the Legislature of the State. But that is an innocent mistake; for he was
- resolved to appear with as much of the dignity of the senator as his
- circumstances would permit. It was for this very purpose that he had
- borrowed the two hundred dollars from Coleman Smoot; and, when the choice
- between riding and walking presented itself, he sensibly enough got into
- the stage, with his new clothes on, and rode to the scene of his labors.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he arrived there, he found a singular state of affairs. Duncan had
- been chosen Governor at the recent August election by "the whole-hog
- Jackson men;" but he was absent in Congress during the whole of the
- campaign; and, now that he came to the duties of his office, it was
- discovered that he had been all the while an anti-Jackson man, and was
- quite willing to aid the Whigs in furtherance of some of their worst
- schemes. These schemes were then just beginning to be hatched in great
- numbers; but in due time they were enacted into laws, and prepared
- Illinois with the proper weights of public debt and "rag" currency, to
- sink her deeper than her neighbors into the miseries of financial ruin in
- 1837. The speculating fever was just reaching Illinois; the land and
- town-lot business had barely taken shape at Chicago; and State banks and
- multitudinous internal improvements were yet to be invented. But this
- Legislature was a very wise one in its own conceit, and was not slow to
- launch out with the first of a series of magnificent experiments. It
- contented itself, however, with chartering a State bank, with a capital of
- one million five hundred thousand dollars; rechartering, with a capital of
- three hundred thousand dollars, the Shawneetown Bank, which had broken
- twelve years before; and providing for a loan of five hundred thousand
- dollars, on the credit of the State, wherewith to make a beginning on the
- Illinois and Michigan Canal. The bill for the latter project was drawn and
- introduced by Senator James M. Strode, the gentleman who described with
- such moving eloquence the horrors of Stillman's defeat. These measures
- Gov. Ford considers "the beginning of all the bad legislation which
- followed in a few years, and which, as is well known, resulted in general
- ruin." Mr. Lincoln favored them all, and faithfully followed out the
- policy of which they were the inauguration at subsequent sessions of the
- same body. For the present, nevertheless, he was a silent member, although
- he was assigned a prominent place on the Committee on Public Accounts and
- Expenditures. The bank-charters were drawn by a Democrat who hoped to find
- his account in the issue; all the bills were passed by a Legislature
- "nominally" Democratic; but the Board of Canal Commissioners was composed
- exclusively of Whigs, and the Whigs straightway assumed control of the
- banks.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at a special session of this Legislature that Lincoln first saw
- Stephen A. Douglas, and, viewing his active little person with immense
- amusement, pronounced him "the <i>least</i> man he ever saw." Douglas had
- come into the State (from Vermont) only the previous year, but, having
- studied law for several months, considered himself eminently qualified to
- be State's attorney for the district in which he lived, and was now come
- to Vandalia for that purpose. The place was already filled by a man of
- considerable distinction; but the incumbent remaining at home, possibly in
- blissful ignorance of his neighbor's design, was easily supplanted by the
- supple Vermonter.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is the misfortune of legislatures in general, as it was in those days
- the peculiar misfortune of the Legislature of Illinois, to be beset by a
- multitude of gentlemen engaged in the exclusive business of "log-rolling."
- Chief among the "rollers" were some of the most "distinguished" members,
- each assisted by an influential delegation from the district, bank, or
- "institution" to be benefited by the legislation proposed. An expert
- "log-roller," an especially wily and persuasive person, who could depict
- the merits of his scheme with roseate but delusive eloquence, was said to
- carry "a gourd of possum fat," and the unhappy victim of his art was said
- to be "<i>greased and swallowed</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is not to be supposed that anybody ever succeeded in anointing a single
- square inch of Mr. Lincoln's person with the "fat" that deluded; but
- historians aver that "the Long Nine," of whom he was the longest and
- cleverest, possessed "gourds" of extraordinary dimensions, and distributed
- "grease" of marvellous virtues. But of that at another place.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1836 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature; his
- colleagues on the Whig ticket in Sangamon being, for Representatives, John
- Dawson, William F. Elkin, N. W. Edwards, Andrew McCormick, Dan Stone, and
- R. L. Wilson; and for Senators, A. G. Herndon and Job Fletcher. They were
- all elected but one, and he was beaten by John Calhoun.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln opened the campaign by the following manifesto:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- New Salem, June 13, 1836.
- </p>
- <p>
- To the Editor of "The Journal."
- </p>
- <p>
- In your paper of last Saturday, I see a communication over the signature
- of "Many Voters," in which the candidates who are announced in the
- "Journal" are called upon to "show their hands." Agreed. Here's mine.
- </p>
- <p>
- I go for all sharing the privileges of the government who assist in
- bearing its burdens. Consequently, I go for admitting all <i>whites</i> to
- the right of suffrage who pay taxes or bear arms (<i>by no means excluding
- females</i>).
- </p>
- <p>
- If elected, I shall consider the whole people of Sangamon my constituents,
- as well those that oppose as those that support me.
- </p>
- <p>
- While acting as their Representative, I shall be governed by their will on
- all subjects upon which I have the means of knowing what their will is;
- and upon all others I shall do what my own judgment teaches me will best
- advance their interests. Whether elected or not, I go for distributing the
- proceeds of the sales of the public lands to the several States, to enable
- our State, in common with others, to dig canals and construct railroads
- without borrowing money and paying the interest on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>If alive on the first Monday in November, I shall vote for Hugh L.
- White for President.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Very respectfully,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- The elections were held on the first Monday in August, and the campaign
- began about six weeks or two months before. Popular meetings were
- advertised in "The Sangamon Journal" and "The State Register,"&mdash;organs
- of the respective parties. Not unfrequently the meetings were joint,
- &mdash;composed of both parties,&mdash;when, as Lincoln would say, the
- candidates "put in their best licks," while the audience "rose to the
- height of the great argument" with cheers, taunts, cat-calls, fights, and
- other exercises appropriate to the free and untrammelled enjoyment of the
- freeman's boon.
- </p>
- <p>
- The candidates travelled from one grove to another on horseback; and, when
- the "Long Nine" (all over six feet in height) took the road, it must have
- been a goodly sight to see.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I heard Lincoln make a speech," says James Gourly, "in Mechanicsburg,
- Sangamon County, in 1836. John Neal had a fight at the time: the roughs
- got on him, and Lincoln jumped in and saw fair play. We staid for dinner
- at Green's, close to Mechanicsburg,&mdash;drank whiskey sweetened with
- honey. There the questions discussed were internal improvements, Whig
- principles." (Gourly was a great friend of Lincoln's, for Gourly had had a
- foot-race "with H. B. Truett, now of California," and Lincoln had been his
- "judge;" and it was a remarkable circumstance, that nearly everybody for
- whom Lincoln "judged" came out ahead.)
- </p>
- <p>
- "I heard Mr. Lincoln during the same canvass," continues Gourly. "It was
- at the Court House, where the State House now stands. The Whigs and
- Democrats had a general quarrel then and there. N. W. Edwards drew a
- pistol on Achilles Morris." But Gourly's account of this last scene is
- unsatisfactory, although the witness is willing; and we turn to Lincoln's
- colleague, Mr. Wilson, for a better one. "The Saturday evening preceding
- the election the candidates were addressing the people in the Court House
- at Springfield. Dr. Early, one of the candidates on the Democratic side,
- made some charge that N. W. Edwards, one of the candidates on the Whig
- side, deemed untrue. Edwards climbed on a table, so as to be seen by
- Early, and by every one in the house, and at the top of his voice told
- Early that the charge was false. The excitement that followed was intense,&mdash;so
- much so, that fighting men thought that a duel must settle the difficulty.
- Mr. Lincoln, by the programme, followed Early. He took up the subject in
- dispute, and handled it fairly, and with such ability that every one was
- astonished and pleased. So that difficulty ended there. Then, for the
- first time, developed by the excitement of the occasion, he spoke in that
- tenor intonation of voice that ultimately settled down into that clear,
- shrill monotone style of speaking that enabled his audience, however
- large, to hear distinctly the lowest sound of his voice."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was during this campaign, possibly at the same meeting, that Mr. Speed
- heard him reply to George Forquer. Forquer had been a leading Whig, one of
- their foremost men in the Legislature of 1834, but had then recently
- changed sides, and thereupon was appointed Register of the Land Office at
- Springfield. Mr. Forquer was an astonishing man: he not only astonished
- the people by "changing his coat in politics," but by building the best
- frame-house in Springfield, and erecting over it the only lightning-rod
- the entire region could boast of. At this meeting he listened attentively
- to Mr. Lincoln's first speech, and was much annoyed by the transcendent
- power with which the awkward young man defended the principles he had
- himself so lately abandoned. "The speech" produced a profound impression,
- "especially upon a large number of Lincoln's friends and admirers, who had
- come in from the country" expressly to hear and applaud him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "At the conclusion of Lincoln's speech" (we quote from Mr. Speed), "the
- crowd was dispersing, when Forquer rose and asked to be heard. He
- commenced by saying that the young man would have to be taken down, and
- was sorry that the task devolved upon him. He then proceeded to answer
- Lincoln's speech in a style, which, while it was able and fair, yet, in
- his whole manner, asserted and claimed superiority. Lincoln stood near
- him, and watched him during the whole of his speech. When Forquer
- concluded, he took the stand again. I have often heard him since, in court
- and before the people, but never saw him appear so well as upon that
- occasion. He replied to Mr. Forquer with great dignity and force; but I
- shall never forget the conclusion of that speech. Turning to Mr. Forquer,
- he said, that he had commenced his speech by announcing that 'this young
- man would have to be taken down.' Turning then to the crowd, he said, 'It
- is for you, not for me, to say whether I am up or down. The gentleman has
- alluded to my being a young man: I am older in years than I am in the
- tricks and trades of politicians. I desire to live, and I desire place and
- distinction as a politician; but I would rather die now, than, like the
- gentleman, live to see the day that I would have to erect a lightning-rod
- to protect a guilty conscience from an offended God.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- He afterwards told Speed that the sight of that same rod "had led him to
- the study of the properties of electricity and the utility of the rod as a
- conductor."
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the Democratic orators stumping the county at this time was Dick
- Taylor, a pompous gentleman, who went abroad in superb attire, ruffled
- shirts, rich vest, and immense watch-chains, with shining and splendid
- pendants. But Dick was a severe Democrat in theory, made much of "the
- hard-handed yeomanry," and flung many biting sarcasms upon the
- aristocratic pretensions of the Whigs,&mdash;the "rag barons" and the
- manufacturing "lords." He was one day in the midst of a particularly
- aggravating declamation of this sort, "when Abe began to feel devilish,
- and thought he would take the wind out of Dick's sails by a little sport."
- He therefore "edged" slyly up to the speaker, and suddenly catching his
- vest by the lower corner, and giving it a sharp pull upward, it opened
- wide, and out fell upon the platform, in full view of the astonished
- audience, a mass of ruffled shirt, gold watch, chains, seals, and
- glittering jewels. Jim Matheny was there, and nearly broke his heart with
- mirth. "The crowd couldn't stand it, but shouted uproariously." It must
- have been then that Abe delivered the following speech, although Ninian W.
- Edwards places it in 1840:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "While he [Col. Taylor] was making these charges against the Whigs over
- the country, riding in fine carriages, wearing ruffled shirts, kid gloves,
- massive gold watch-chains, with large gold seals, and flourishing a heavy
- gold-headed cane, he [Lincoln] was a poor boy, hired on a flatboat at
- eight dollars a month, and had only one pair of breeches to his back, and
- they were buckskin,&mdash;'and,' said Lincoln, 'if you know the nature of
- buckskin, when wet and dried by the sun, they will shrink,&mdash;and mine
- kept shrinking, until they left several inches of my legs bare between the
- tops of my socks and the lower part of my breeches; and, whilst I was
- growing taller, they were becoming shorter, and so much tighter, that they
- left a blue streak around my legs that can be seen to this day. If you
- call this aristocracy, I plead guilty to the charge.'" Hitherto Sangamon
- County had been uniformly Democratic; but at this election the Whigs
- carried it by an average majority of about four hundred, Mr. Lincoln
- receiving a larger vote than any other candidate. The result was in part
- due to a transitory and abortive attempt of the anti-Jackson and
- anti-Van-Buren men to build up a third party, with Judge White of
- Tennessee as its leader. This party was not supposed to be wedded to the
- "specie circular," was thought to be open to conviction on the bank
- question, clamored loudly about the business interests and general
- distress of the country, and was actually in favor of the distribution of
- the proceeds of the sales of the public lands. In the nomenclature of
- Illinois, its members might have been called "nominal Jackson men;" that
- is to say, men who continued to act with the Democratic party, while
- disavowing its cardinal principles,&mdash;traders, trimmers, cautious
- schismatics who argued the cause of Democracy from a brief furnished by
- the enemy. The diversion in favor of White was just to the hand of the
- Whigs, and they aided it in every practicable way. Always for an expedient
- when an expedient would answer, a compromise when a compromise would do,
- the "hand" Mr. Lincoln "showed" at the opening of the campaign contained
- the "White" card among the highest of its trumps. "If alive on the first
- Monday in November, I shall vote for Hugh L. White for President." A
- number of local Democratic politicians assisting him to play it, it won
- the game in 1836, and Sangamon County went over to the Whigs.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this election Mr. Douglas was made a Representative from Morgan County,
- along with Col. Hardin, from whom he had the year before taken the State's
- attorneyship. The event is notable principally because Mr. Douglas was
- nominated by a convention, and not by the old system of self-announcement,
- which, under the influence of Eastern immigrants, like himself, full of
- party zeal, and attached to the customs of the places whence they came,
- was gradually but surely falling into disfavor. Mr. Douglas served only
- one session, and then became Register of the Land Office at Springfield.
- The next year he was nominated for Congress in the Peoria District, under
- the convention system, and in the same year Col. Stephenson was nominated
- for Governor in the same way. The Whigs were soon compelled to adopt the
- device which they saw marshalling the Democrats in a state of complete
- discipline; whilst they themselves were disorganized by a host of
- volunteer candidates and the operations of innumerable cliques and
- factions. At first "it was considered a Yankee contrivance," intended to
- abridge the liberties of the people; but the Whig "people" were as fond of
- victory, offices, and power as their enemies were, and in due time they
- took very kindly to this effectual means of gaining them. A speech of
- Ebenezer Peck of Chicago, "before a great meeting of the lobby, during the
- special session of 1835-6 at Vandalia," being a production of special
- ingenuity and power, is supposed to have contributed largely to the
- introduction of the convention system into the middle and southern parts
- of the State. Mr. Peck was then a fervent Democrat, whom the Whigs
- delighted to malign as a Canadian monarchist; but in after times he was
- the fast and able friend of their great leader, Abraham Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of the first and worst effects of the stricter organization of parties
- in Illinois, as well as in other States, was the strong diversion of
- public attention from State to Federal affairs. Individual candidates were
- no longer required to "show their hands:" they accepted "platforms" when
- they accepted nominations; and without a nomination it was mere quixotism
- to stand at all. District, State, and national conventions, acting and
- re-acting upon one another, produced a concert of sentiment and conduct
- which overlaid local issues, and repressed independent proceedings. This
- improved party machinery supplied the readiest and most effective means of
- distributing the rapidly-increasing patronage of the Federal Executive;
- and those who did not wish to be cut off from its enjoyment could do no
- less than re-affirm with becoming fervor, in their local assemblages, the
- latest deliverance of the faith by the central authority. The promoters of
- heresies and schisms, the blind leaders who misled a county or a State
- convention, and seduced it into the declaration of principles of its own,
- had their seats contested in the next general council of the party, were
- solemnly sat upon, condemned, "delivered over to Satan to be buffeted,"
- and cast out of the household of faith, to wander in the wilderness and to
- live upon husks. It was like a feeble African bishop imputing heresy to
- the Christian world, with Rome at its head. A man like Mr. Lincoln, who
- earnestly "desired place and distinction as a politician," labored without
- hope while his party affinities remained the subject of a reasonable
- doubt. He must be "a whole-hog man" or nothing, a Whig or a Democrat. Mr.
- Lincoln chose his company with commendable decision, and wasted no tender
- regrets upon his "nominal" Democratic friends. For White against Harrison,
- in November, 1836, he led the Whigs into action when the Legislature met
- in December; and when the hard-cider campaign of 1840 commenced, with its
- endless meetings and processions, its coon-skins and log-cabins, its
- intrigue, trickery, and fun, his musical voice rose loudest above the din
- for "Old Tippecanoe;" and no man did better service, or enjoyed those
- memorable scenes more, than he who was to be the beneficiary of a similar
- revival in 1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- When this legislature met in the winter of 1836-7, the bank and
- internal-improvement infatuation had taken full possession of a majority
- of the people, as well as of the politicians. To be sure, "Old Hickory"
- had given a temporary check to the wild speculations in Western land by
- the specie circular, about the close of his administration, whereby gold
- and silver were made "land-office money;" and the Government declined to
- exchange any more of the public domain for the depreciated paper of rotten
- and explosive banks. Millions of notes loaned by the banks on insufficient
- security or no security at all were by this timely measure turned back
- into the banks, or converted to the uses of a more legitimate and less
- dangerous business. But, even if the specie circular had not been
- repealed, it would probably have proved impotent against the evils it was
- designed to prevent, after the passage of the Act distributing among the
- States the surplus (or supposed surplus) revenues of the Federal
- Government.
- </p>
- <p>
- The last dollar of the old debt was paid in 1833. There were from time to
- time large unexpended and unappropriated balances in the treasury. What
- should be done with them? There was no sub-treasury as yet, and questions
- concerning the mere safe-keeping of these moneys excited the most
- tremendous political contests. The United States Bank had always had the
- use of the cash in the treasury in the form of deposits; but the bank
- abused its trust,&mdash;used its enormous power over the currency and
- exchanges of the country to achieve political results in its own interest,
- and, by its manifold sins and iniquities, compelled Gen. Jackson to remove
- the deposits. Ultimately the bank took shelter in Pennsylvania, where it
- began a new fraudulent life under a surreptitious clause tacked to the end
- of a road law on its passage through the General Assembly. In due time the
- "beast," as Col. Benton loved to call it, died in its chosen lair a
- shameful and ignominious death, cheating the public with a show of
- solvency to the end, and leaving a fine array of bill-holders and
- depositors to mourn one of the most remarkable delusions of modern times.
- </p>
- <p>
- Withdrawn, or rather withheld (for they were never withdrawn), from the
- Bank of the United States, the revenues of the Federal Government were
- deposited as fast as they accrued in specie-paying State banks. They were
- paid in the notes of the thousand banks, good, bad, and indifferent, whose
- promises to pay constituted the paper currency of the day. It was this
- money which the Whigs, aided by Democratic recusants, proposed to give
- away to the States. They passed an Act requiring it to be <i>deposited</i>
- with the States,&mdash;ostensibly as a safe and convenient method of
- keeping it; but nobody believed that it would ever be called for, or paid
- if it was. It was simply an extraordinary largess; and pending the very
- embarrassment caused by itself, when the government had not a dollar
- wherewith to pay even a pension, and the temporary expedient was an issue
- of treasury notes against the better judgment of the party in power, the
- possibility of withdrawing these deposits was never taken into the
- account. The Act went into effect on the 1st of January, 1837, and was one
- of the immediate causes of the suspension and disasters of that year. "The
- condition of our deposit banks was desperate,&mdash;wholly inadequate to
- the slightest pressure on their vaults in the ordinary course of business,
- much less that of meeting the daily government drafts and the approaching
- deposit of near forty millions with the States." Nevertheless, the
- deposits began at the rate of ten millions to the quarter. The deposit
- banks "blew up;" and all the others, including that of the United States,
- closed their doors to customers and bill-holders, which gave them more
- time to hold public meetings, imputing the distress of the country to the
- hard-money policy of Jackson and Van Buren, and agitating for the
- re-charter of Mr. Biddle's profligate concern as the only remedy human
- ingenuity could devise.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in the month previous to the first deposit with the States,&mdash;about
- the time when Gov. Ford says, "lands and town-lots were the only articles
- of export" from Illinois; when the counters of Western land-offices were
- piled high with illusory bank-notes in exchange for public lands, and when
- it was believed that the West was now at last about to bound forward in a
- career of unexampled prosperity, under the forcing process of public
- improvements by the States, with the aid and countenance of the Federal
- Government,&mdash;that Mr. Lincoln went up to attend the first session of
- the new Legislature at Vandalia. He was big with projects: his real public
- service was just now about to begin. In the previous Legislature he had
- been silent, observant, studious. He had improved the opportunity so well,
- that of all men in this new body, of equal age in the service, he was the
- smartest parliamentarian and the cunningest "log-roller." He was fully
- determined to identify himself conspicuously with the "liberal"
- legislation in contemplation, and dreamed of a fame very different from
- that which he actually obtained as an antislavery leader. It was about
- this time that he told his friend, Mr. Speed, that he aimed at the great
- distinction of being called "the De Witt Clinton of Illinois."
- </p>
- <p>
- Meetings with a view to this sort of legislation had been held in all, or
- nearly all, the counties in the State during the preceding summer and
- fall. Hard-money, strict-construction, no-monopoly, anti-progressive
- Democrats were in a sad minority. In truth, there was little division of
- parties about these matters which were deemed so essential to the
- prosperity of a new State. There was Mr. Lincoln, and there was Mr.
- Douglas, in perfect unison as to the grand object to be accomplished, but
- mortally jealous as to which should take the lead in accomplishing it. A
- few days before the Legislature assembled, "a mass convention" of the
- people of Sangamon County "instructed" their members "to vote for a <i>general
- system of internal improvements</i>." The House of Representatives
- organized in the morning; and in the evening its hall was surrendered to a
- convention of delegates from all parts of the State, which "devised and
- recommended to the Legislature a system of internal improvements, the
- chief feature of which was, that it should be commensurate with the wants
- of the people." This result was arrived at after two days of debate, with
- "Col. Thomas Mather, of the State Bank, as president."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln served on the Committee on Finance, and was a most laborious
- member, instant in season and out of season, for the great measures of the
- Whig party. It was to his individual exertion that the Whigs were indebted
- in no small degree for the complete success of their favorite schemes at
- this session. A railroad from Galena to the mouth of the Ohio was provided
- for; another from Alton to Shawneetown; another from Alton to Mount
- Carmel; another from Alton to the eastern boundary of the State towards
- Terre Haute; another from Quincy by way of Springfield to the Wabash;
- another from Bloomington to Pekin; another from Peoria to Warsaw,&mdash;in
- all about thirteen hundred miles. But in this comprehensive "system,"
- "commensurate with the wants of the people," the rivers were not to be
- overlooked; and accordingly the Kaskaskia, the Illinois, the Great Wabash,
- the Little Wabash, and the Rock rivers were to be duly improved. To set
- these little matters in motion, a loan of eight millions of dollars was
- authorized; and, to complete the canal from Chicago to Peru, another loan
- of four millions of dollars was voted at the same session,&mdash;two
- hundred thousand dollars being given as a gratuity to those counties which
- seemed to have no special interest in any of the foregoing projects. Work
- on all these roads was to commence, not only at the same time, but at both
- ends of each road, and at all the river-crossings. There were as yet no
- surveys of any route, no estimates, no reports of engineers, or even
- unprofessional viewers. "Progress" was not to wait on trifles; capitalists
- were supposed to be lying in wait to catch these precious bonds; the money
- would be raised in a twinkling, and being applied with all the skill of "a
- hundred De Witt Clintons,"&mdash;a class of gentlemen at that time
- extremely numerous and obtrusive,&mdash;the loan would build the
- railroads, the railroads would build cities, cities would create farms,
- foreign capital would rush to so inviting a field, the lands would be
- taken up with marvellous celerity, and the "land-tax" going into a sinking
- fund, <i>that</i>, with some tolls and certain sly speculations to be made
- by the State, would pay principal and interest of the debt without ever a
- cent of taxation upon the people. In short, everybody was to be enriched,
- while the munificence of the State in selling its credit and spending the
- proceeds would make its empty coffers overflow with ready money. It was a
- dark stroke of statesmanship, a mysterious device in finance, which,
- whether from being misunderstood, or from being mismanaged, bore from the
- beginning fruits the very reverse of those it had promised.
- </p>
- <p>
- A Board of Canal Commissioners was already in existence; but now were
- established, as necessary parts of the new "system," a Board of Fund
- Commissioners and a Board of Commissioners of Public Works.
- </p>
- <p>
- The capital stock of the Shawneetown Bank was increased to one million
- seven hundred thousand dollars, and that of the State Bank to three
- million one hundred thousand dollars. The State took the new stock, and
- proposed to pay for it "with the surplus revenues of the United States,
- and the residue by a sale of State bonds." The banks were likewise made
- fiscal agencies, to place the loans, and generally to manage the railroad
- and canal funds. The career of these banks is an extremely interesting
- chapter in the history of Illinois,&mdash;little less so than the rise and
- collapse of the great internal-improvement system. But, as it has already
- a place in a chronicle of wider scope and greater merit than this, it is
- enough to say that in due time they went the way of their kind,&mdash;the
- State lost by them, and they lost by the State, in morals as well as in
- money.
- </p>
- <p>
- The means used in the Legislature to pass the "system" deserve some notice
- for the instruction of posterity. "First, a large portion of the people
- were interested in the success of the canal, which was threatened, if
- other sections of the State were denied the improvements demanded by them;
- and thus the friends of the canal were forced to log-roll for that work by
- supporting others which were to be ruinous to the country. Roads and
- improvements were proposed everywhere, to enlist every section of the
- State. Three or four efforts were made to pass a smaller system; and, when
- defeated, the bill would be amended by the addition of other roads, until
- a majority was obtained for it. Those counties which could not be thus
- accommodated were to share in the fund of two hundred thousand dollars.
- Three roads were appointed to terminate at Alton, before the Alton
- interest would agree to the system. The seat of government was to be
- removed to Springfield. Sangamon County, in which Springfield is situated,
- was then represented by two Senators and seven Representatives, called the
- 'Long Nine,' all Whigs but one. Amongst them were some dexterous jugglers
- and managers in politics, whose whole object was to obtain the seat of
- government for Springfield. This delegation, from the beginning of the
- session, threw itself as a unit in support of, or in opposition to, every
- local measure of interest, but never without a bargain for votes in return
- on the seat-of-government question. Most of the other counties were small,
- having but one Representative and many of them with but one for a whole
- representative district; and this gave Sangamon County a decided
- preponderance in the log-rolling system of those days. It is worthy of
- examination whether any just and equal legislation can ever be sustained
- where some of the counties are great and powerful, and others feeble. But
- by such means 'The Long-Nine' rolled along like a snowball, gathering
- accessions of strength at every turn, until they swelled up a considerable
- party for Springfield, which party they managed to take almost as a unit
- in favor of the internal-improvement system, in return for which the
- active supporters of that system were to vote for Springfield to be the
- seat of government. Thus it was made to cost the State about six millions
- of dollars to remove the seat of government from Vandalia to Springfield,
- half of which sum would have purchased all the real estate in that town at
- three prices; and thus by log-rolling on the canal measure; by multiplying
- railroads; by terminating three railroads at Alton, that Alton might
- become a great city in opposition to St. Louis; by distributing money to
- some of the counties to be wasted by the county commissioners; and by
- giving the seat of government to Springfield,&mdash;was the whole State
- bought up, and bribed to approve the most senseless and disastrous policy
- which ever crippled the energies of a growing country." 1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Enumerating the gentlemen who voted for this combination of evils,&mdash;among
- them Stephen A. Douglas, John A. McClernand, James Shields, and Abraham
- Lincoln,&mdash;and reciting the high places of honor and trust to which
- most of them have since attained, Gov. Ford pronounces "all of them spared
- monuments of popular wrath, evincing how safe it is to a politician, but
- how disastrous it may be to the country, to keep along with the present
- fervor of the people."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It was a maxim with many politicians just to keep along even with the
- humor of the people, right or wrong;" and this maxim Mr. Lincoln held
- then, as ever since, in very high estimation. But the "humor" of his
- constituents was not only intensely favorable to the new scheme of
- internal improvements: it was most decidedly their "humor" to have the
- capital at Springfield, and to make a great man of the legislator who
- should take it there. Mr. Lincoln was doubtless thoroughly convinced that
- the popular view of all these matters was the right one; but, even if he
- had been unhappily afflicted with individual scruples of his own, he would
- have deemed it but simple duty to obey the almost unanimous voice of his
- constituency. He thought he never could serve them better than by giving
- them just what they wanted; and that to collect the will of his people,
- and register it by his own vote, was the first and leading obligation of a
- representative. It happened that on this occasion the popular feeling fell
- in very pleasantly with his young dream of rivalling the fame of Clinton;
- and here, also, was a fine opportunity of repeating, in a higher strain
- and on a loftier stage, the ingenious arguments, which, in the very outset
- of his career, had proved so hard for "Posey and Ewing," when he overthrew
- those worthies in the great debate respecting the improvement of the
- Sangamon River.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The Internal-Improvement Bill," says Mr. Wilson (one of the "Long Nine"),
- "and a bill to permanently locate the seat of government of the State,
- were the great measures of the session of 1836-7. Vandalia was then the
- seat of government, and had been for a number of years. A new state house
- had just been built. Alton, Decatur, Peoria, Jacksonville, Illiapolis, and
- Springfield were the points seeking the location, if removed from
- Vandalia. The delegation from Sangamon were a unit, acting in concert in
- favor of the permanent location at Springfield. The bill was introduced at
- an early day in the session, to locate, by a joint vote of both Houses of
- the Legislature. The friends of the other points united to defeat the
- bill, as each point thought the postponement of the location to some
- future period would give strength to their location. The contest on this
- bill was long and severe. Its enemies laid it on the table twice,&mdash;once
- on the table to the fourth day of July, and once indefinitely postponed
- it. To take a bill from the table is always attended with difficulty; but
- when laid on the table to a day beyond the session, or when indefinitely
- postponed, it requires a vote of reconsideration, which always is an
- intense struggle. In these dark hours, when our bill to all appearances
- was beyond resuscitation, and all our opponents were jubilant over our
- defeat, and when friends could see no hope, Mr. Lincoln never for one
- moment despaired; but, collecting his colleagues to his room for
- consultation, his practical common sense, his thorough knowledge of human
- nature, then made him an overmatch for his compeers, and for any man that
- I have ever known."
- </p>
- <p>
- "We surmounted all obstacles, passed the bill, and, by a joint vote of
- both Houses, located the seat of government of the State of Illinois at
- Springfield, just before the adjournment of the Legislature, which took
- place on the fourth day of March, 1837. The delegation acting during the
- whole session upon all questions as a unit, gave them strength and
- influence, that enabled them to carry through their measures and give
- efficient aid to their friends. The delegation was not only remarkable for
- their numbers, but for their length, most of them measuring six feet and
- over. It was said at the time that that delegation measured fifty-four
- feet high. Hence they were known as 'The Long Nine.' So that during that
- session, and for a number of years afterwards, all the bad laws passed at
- that session of the Legislature were chargeable to the management and
- influence of 'The Long Nine.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "He (Mr. Lincoln) was on the stump and in the halls of the Legislature a
- ready debater, manifesting extraordinary ability in his peculiar manner of
- presenting his subject. He did not follow the beaten track of other
- speakers and thinkers, but appeared to comprehend the whole situation of
- the subject, and take hold of its principles. He had a remarkable faculty
- for concentration, enabling him to present his subject in such a manner,
- as nothing but conclusions were presented."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this session of the Legislature, March 3, 1837, that Mr. Lincoln
- began that antislavery record upon which his fame through all time must
- chiefly rest. It was a very mild beginning; but even that required
- uncommon courage and candor in the day and generation in which it was
- done.
- </p>
- <p>
- The whole country was excited concerning the doctrines and the practices
- of the Abolitionists. These agitators were as yet but few in numbers: but
- in New England they comprised some of the best citizens, and the leaders
- were persons of high character, of culture and social influence; while, in
- the Middle States, they were, for the most part, confined to the Society
- of Friends, or Quakers. All were earnest, active, and uncompromising in
- the propagation of their opinions; and, believing slavery to be the "sum
- of all villanies," with the utmost pertinacity they claimed the
- unrestricted right to disseminate their convictions in any manner they saw
- fit, regardless of all consequences. They paid not the slightest heed to
- the wishes or the opinions of their opponents. They denounced all
- compromises with an unsparing tongue, and would allow no law of man to
- stand, in their eyes, above the law of God.
- </p>
- <p>
- George Thompson, identified with emancipation in the British West Indies,
- had come and gone. For more than a year he addressed public meetings in
- New England, the Central States, and Ohio, and contributed not a little to
- the growing excitement by his fierce denunciations of the slave-holding
- class, in language with which his long agitation in England had made him
- familiar. He was denounced, insulted, and mobbed; and even in Boston he
- was once posted as an "infamous foreign scoundrel," and an offer was made
- of a hundred dollars to "snake him out" of a public meeting. In fact,
- Boston was not at all behind other cities and towns in its condemnation of
- the Abolitionists. A great meeting in Faneuil Hall, called by eighteen
- hundred leading citizens,&mdash;Whigs and Democrats,&mdash;condemned their
- proceedings in language as strong and significant as Richard Fletcher,
- Peleg Sprague, and Harrison Gray Otis could write it. But Garrison still
- continued to publish "The Liberator," filling it with all the
- uncompromising aggressiveness of his sect, and distributing it throughout
- the Southern States. It excited great alarm in the slaveholding
- communities where its secret circulation, in the minds of the
- slaveholders, tended to incite the slaves to insurrections,
- assassinations, and running away; but in the place where it was published
- it was looked upon with general contempt and disgust. When the Mayor of
- Baltimore wrote to the Mayor of Boston to have it suppressed, the latter
- (the eloquent Otis) replied, "that his officers had ferreted out the paper
- and its editor, whose office was an obscure hole; his only visible
- auxiliary a negro boy; his supporters a few insignificant persons of all
- colors."
- </p>
- <p>
- At the close of the year 1835, President Jackson had called the attention
- of Congress to the doings of these people in language corresponding to the
- natural wrath with which he viewed the character of their proceedings. "I
- must also," said he, "invite your attention to the painful excitements in
- the South by attempts to circulate through the mails inflammatory appeals
- addressed to the passions of slaves, in prints and various sorts of
- publications calculated to stimulate them to insurrection, and to produce
- all the horrors of civil war. It is fortunate for the country that the
- good sense, the generous feeling, and deep-rooted attachment of the people
- of the non-slaveholding States to the Union and their fellow-citizens of
- the same blood in the South have given so strong and impressive a tone to
- the sentiments entertained against the proceedings of the misguided
- persons who have engaged in these unconstitutional and wicked attempts,
- and especially against the emissaries from foreign parts, who have dared
- to interfere in this matter, as to authorize the hope that these attempts
- will no longer be persisted in.... I would therefore call the special
- attention of Congress to the subject, and respectfully suggest the
- propriety of passing such a law as will prohibit, under severe penalties,
- the circulation in the Southern States, through the mail, of incendiary
- publications, intended to instigate the slaves to insurrection."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Clay said the sole purpose of the Abolitionists was to array one
- portion of the Union against the other. "With that in view, in all their
- leading prints and publications, the alleged horrors of slavery are
- depicted in the most glowing and exaggerated colors, to excite the
- imaginations and stimulate the rage of the people of the Free States
- against the people of the slaveholding States.... Why are the Slave States
- wantonly and cruelly assailed? Why does the abolition press teem with
- publications tending to excite hatred and animosity on the part of the
- Free States against the Slave States?... Why is Congress petitioned? Is
- their purpose to appeal to our understanding, and actuate our humanity?
- And do they expect to accomplish that purpose by holding us up to the
- scorn and contempt and detestation of the people of the Free States and
- the whole civilized world?... Union on the one side will beget union on
- the other.... One section will stand in menacing, hostile array against
- another; the collision of opinion will be quickly followed by the clash of
- arms."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Everett, then (1836) Governor of Massachusetts, informed the
- Legislature, for the admonition of these unsparing agitators against the
- peace of the South, that "every thing that tends to disturb the relations
- created by this compact [the Constitution] is at war with its spirit; and
- whatever, by direct and necessary operation, is calculated to excite an
- insurrection among the slaves, has been held by highly respectable legal
- authority an offence against the peace of this Commonwealth, which may be
- prosecuted as a misdemeanor at common law." It was proposed in the
- Legislature to pass an act defining the offence with more certainty, and
- attaching to it a severer penalty. The Abolitionists asked to be heard
- before the committee; and Rev. S. J. May, Ellis Gray Loring, Prof. Charles
- Follen, Samuel E. Sewell, and others of equal ability and character, spoke
- in their behalf. They objected to the passage of such an act in the
- strongest terms, and derided the value of a Union which could not protect
- its citizens in one of their most cherished rights. During the hearing,
- several bitter altercations took place between them and the chairman.
- </p>
- <p>
- In New York, Gov. Marcy called upon the Legislature "to do what may be
- done consistently with the great principles of civil liberty, to put an
- end to the evils which the Abolitionists are bringing upon us and the
- whole country." The "character" and the "interests" of the State were
- equally at stake, and both would be sacrificed unless these furious and
- cruel fanatics were effectually suppressed.
- </p>
- <p>
- In May, 1836, the Federal House of Representatives resolved, by
- overwhelming votes, that Congress had no right to interfere with slavery
- in the States, or in the District of Columbia, and that henceforth all
- abolition petitions should be laid on the table without being printed or
- referred. And, one day later than the date of Mr. Lincoln's protest, Mr.
- Van Buren declared in his inaugural, that no bill abolishing slavery in
- the District of Columbia, or meddling with it in the States where it
- existed, should ever receive his signature. "There was no other form,"
- says Benton, "at that time, in which slavery agitation could manifest
- itself, or place it could find a point to operate; the ordinance of 1787
- and the compromise of 1820 having closed up the Territories against it.
- Danger to slave property in the States, either by direct action, or
- indirectly through the District of Columbia, were the only points of
- expressed apprehension."
- </p>
- <p>
- Abolition agitations fared little better in the twenty-fifth Congress than
- in the twenty-fourth. At the extra session in September of 1837, Mr. Slade
- of Vermont introduced two petitions for the abolition of slavery in the
- District of Columbia; but, after a furious debate and a stormy scene, they
- were disposed of by the adoption of the following:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Resolved, That all petitions, memorials, and papers, touching the
- abolition of slavery, or the buying, selling, or transferring of slaves,
- in any State, District, or Territory, of the United States, be laid on the
- table, without being debated, printed, read, or referred; and that no
- further action whatever shall be had thereon."
- </p>
- <p>
- In Illinois, at the time we speak of (March, 1837), an Abolitionist was
- rarely seen, and scarcely ever heard of. In many parts of the State such a
- person would have been treated as a criminal. It is true, there were a few
- Covenanters, with whom hatred of slavery in any form and wherever found
- was an essential part of their religion. Up to 1824 they had steadily
- refused to vote, or in any other way to acknowledge the State government,
- regarding it as "an heathen and unbaptized institution," because the
- Constitution failed to recognize "Jesus Christ as the head of the
- government, and the Holy Scriptures as the only rule of faith and
- practice." It was only when it was proposed to introduce slavery into
- Illinois by an alteration of that "heathen" Constitution, that the
- Covenanters consented to take part in public affairs. The movement which
- drew them out proved to be a long and unusually bitter campaign, lasting
- full eighteen months, and ending in the fall of 1824, with a popular
- majority of several thousand against calling a convention for the purpose
- of making Illinois a Slave State. Many of the antislavery leaders in <i>this</i>
- contest&mdash;conspicuous among whom was Gov. Coles&mdash;were gentlemen
- from Slave States, who had emancipated their slaves before removal, and
- were opposed to slavery, not upon religious or moral grounds, but because
- they believed it would be a material injury to the new country.
- Practically no other view of the question was discussed; and a person who
- should have undertaken to discuss it from the "man and brother"
- stand-point of more modern times would have been set down as a lunatic. A
- clear majority of the people were against the introduction of slavery into
- their own State; but that majority were fully agreed with their brethren
- of the minority, that those who went about to interfere with slavery in
- the most distant manner in the places where it already existed were
- deserving of the severest punishment, as the common enemies of society. It
- was in those days a mortal offence to call a man an Abolitionist, for
- Abolitionist was synonymous with thief. Between a band of men who stole
- horses and a band of men who stole negroes, the popular mind made small
- distinctions in the degrees of guilt. They were regarded as robbers,
- disturbers of the peace, the instigators of arson, murder, poisoning,
- rape; and, in addition to all this, traitors to the government under which
- they lived, and enemies to the Union which gave us as a people liberty and
- strength. In testimony of these sentiments, Illinois enacted a "black
- code" of most preposterous and cruel severity,&mdash;a code that would
- have been a disgrace to a Slave State, and was simply an infamy in a free
- one. It borrowed the provisions of the most revolting laws known among
- men, for exiling, selling, beating, bedevilling, and torturing negroes,
- whether bond or free. Under this law Gov. Coles, the leader of the
- antislavery party, who had emancipated his slaves, and settled them around
- him in his new home, but had neglected to file a bond with the condition
- that his freedmen should behave well and never become a charge upon the
- public, was fined two hundred dollars in each case; and, so late as 1852,
- the writer of these pages very narrowly escaped the same penalty for the
- same offence.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1835-36 Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy had been publishing a moderately
- antislavery paper at St. Louis. But the people of that city did not look
- with favor upon his enterprise; and, after meeting with considerable
- opposition, in the summer of 1836 he moved his types and press across the
- river to Alton, Ill. Here he found an opposition more violent than that
- from which he had fled. His press was thrown into the river the night
- after its arrival; and he was informed that no abolition paper would be
- allowed in the town. The better class of citizens, however, deprecated the
- outrage, and pledged themselves to reimburse Mr. Lovejoy, in case he would
- agree not to make his paper an abolition journal. Mr. Lovejoy assured them
- it was not his purpose to establish such a paper in Alton, but one of a
- religious character: at the same time he would not give up his right as an
- American citizen to publish whatever he pleased on any subject, holding
- himself answerable to the laws of his country in so doing. With this
- general understanding, he was permitted to go forward. He continued about
- a year, discussing in his paper the slavery question occasionally; not,
- however, in a violent manner, but with a tone of moderation. This policy,
- however, was not satisfactory: it was regarded as a violation of his
- pledge; and the contents of his office were again destroyed. Mr. Lovejoy
- issued an appeal for aid to re-establish his paper, which met with a
- prompt and generous response. He proposed to bring up another press, and
- announced that armed men would protect it: meantime, a committee presented
- him with some resolutions adopted at a large meeting of the citizens of
- Alton, reminding him that he had previously given a pledge that in his
- paper he would refrain from advocating abolitionism) and also censuring
- him for not having kept his promise, and desiring to know if he intended
- to continue the publication of such doctrines in the future. His response
- consisted of a denial of the right of any portion of the people of Acton
- to prescribe what questions he should or should not discuss in his paper.
- Great excitement followed: another press was brought up on the 21st of
- September, which shortly after followed the fate of its predecessors.
- Another arrived Nov. 7, 1837, and was conveyed to a stone warehouse by the
- riverside, where Mr. Lovejoy and a few friends (some of them not
- Abolitionists) resolved to defend it to the last. That night they were
- attacked. First there was a brief parley, then a volley of stones, then an
- attempt to carry the building by assault. At this juncture a shot was
- fired out of a second-story window, which killed a young man in the crowd.
- It was said to have been fired by Lovejoy; and, as the corpse was borne
- away, the wrath of the populace knew no bounds. It was proposed to get
- powder from the magazine, and blow the warehouse up. Others thought the
- torch would be a better agent; and, finally, a man ran up a ladder to fire
- the roof. Lovejoy came out of the door, and, firing one shot, retreated
- within, where he rallied the garrison for a sortie. In the mean time many
- shots were fired both by the assailants and the assailed. The house was
- once actually set on fire by one person from the mob, and saved by
- another. But the courage of Mr. Lovejoy's friends was gradually sinking,
- and they responded but faintly to his strong appeals for action. As a last
- resource, he rushed to the door with a single companion, gun in hand, and
- was shot dead on the threshold. The other man was wounded in the leg, the
- warehouse was in flames, the mob grew more ferocious over the blood that
- had been shed, and riddled the doors and windows with volleys from all
- sorts of fire-arms. The Abolitionists had fought a good fight; but seeing
- now nothing but death before them, in that dismal, bloody, and burning
- house, they escaped down the river-bank, by twos and threes, as best they
- could, and their press was tumbled after them, into the river. And thus
- ended the first attempt to establish an abolition paper in Illinois. The
- result was certainly any thing but encouraging, and indicated pretty
- clearly what must have been the general state of public feeling throughout
- the State in regard to slavery agitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- In fact, no State was more alive to the necessity of repressing the
- Abolitionists than Illinois; and accordingly it was proposed in the
- Legislature to take some action similar to that which had been already
- taken, or was actually pending, in the legislatures of sister
- Commonwealths, from Massachusetts through the list. A number of
- resolutions were reported, and passed with no serious opposition. The
- record does not disclose the precise form in which they passed; but that
- is of little consequence now. That they were extreme enough may be
- gathered from the considerate language of the protest, and from the fact
- that <i>such a protest</i> was considered necessary at all. The protest
- was undoubtedly the product of Mr. Lincoln's pen, for his adroit
- directness is seen in every word of it. He could get but one man&mdash;his
- colleague, Dan Stone&mdash;to sign with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 3,1837.
- </p>
- <p>
- The following protest was presented to the House, which was read, and
- ordered to be spread on the journals, to wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Resolutions upon the subject of domestic slavery having passed both
- branches of the General Assembly at its present session, the undersigned
- hereby protest against the passage of the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- They believe that the institution of slavery is founded on both injustice
- and bad policy; but that the promulgation of abolition doctrines tends
- rather to increase than abate its evils.
- </p>
- <p>
- They believe that the Congress of the United States has no power, under
- the Constitution, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the
- different States.
- </p>
- <p>
- They believe that the Congress of the United States has the power, under
- the Constitution, to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, but that
- the power ought not to be exercised, unless at the request of the people
- of the District.
- </p>
- <p>
- The difference between these opinions and those contained in the said
- resolutions is their reason for entering this protest.
- </p>
- <p>
- (Signed) Dan Stone,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln, Representatives from the County of Sanqamon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln says nothing here about slavery in the Territories. The
- Missouri Compromise being in full force, and regarded as sacred by all
- parties, it was one of its chief effects that both sections were deprived
- of any pretext for the agitation of that question, from which every
- statesman, Federalist or Republican, Whig or Democratic, apprehended
- certain disaster to the Union. Neither would Mr. Lincoln suffer himself to
- be classed with the few despised Quakers, Covenanters, and Puritans, who
- were so frequently disturbing the peace of the country by
- abolition-memorials to Congress and other public bodies. Slavery, says the
- protest, is wrong in principle, besides being bad in economy; but "the
- promulgation of abolition doctrines" is still worse. In the States which
- choose to have it, it enjoys a constitutional immunity beyond the reach of
- any "higher law;" and Congress must not touch it, otherwise than to shield
- and protect it. Even in the District of Columbia, Mr. Lincoln and Dan
- Stone would leave it entirely to the will of the people. In fact, the
- whole paper, plain and simple as it is, seems to have been drawn with no
- object but to avoid the imputation of extreme views on either side. And
- from that day to the day of his inauguration, Mr. Lincoln never saw the
- time when he would have altered a word of it. He never sided with the
- Lovejoys. In his eyes their work tended "rather to increase than to abate"
- the evils of slavery, and was therefore unjust, as well as futile. Years
- afterwards he was the steady though quiet opponent of Owen Lovejoy, and
- declared that Lovejoy's nomination for Congress over Leonard Swett "almost
- turned him blind." When, in 1860, the Democrats called Mr. Lincoln an
- Abolitionist, and cited the protest of 1837 to support the charge, friends
- pointed to the exact language of the document as his complete and
- overwhelming refutation.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 10th of May, the New York banks suspended specie payments, and two
- days afterwards the Bank of the United States and the Philadelphia banks
- did likewise. From these the stoppage and the general ruin, among business
- men and speculators alike, spread throughout the country. Nevertheless,
- the Fund Commissioners of Illinois succeeded in placing a loan during the
- summer, and before the end of the year work had begun on many railroads.
- "Money was as plenty as dirt. Industry, in place of being stimulated,
- actually languished. We exported nothing, and every thing was paid for by
- the borrowed money expended among us." And this money was bank-paper, such
- as a pensioner upon the Government of the United States scorned to take in
- payment of his gratuity, after the deposit banks had suspended or broken,
- with thirty-two millions of Government money in their possession.
- </p>
- <p>
- The banks which had received such generous legislation from the
- Legislature that devised the internal-improvement system were not disposed
- to see that batch of remarkable enterprises languish for want of their
- support. One of them took at par and sold nine hundred thousand dollars of
- bonds; while the other took one million seven hundred and sixty-five
- thousand dollars, which it used as capital, and expanded its business
- accordingly. But the banks were themselves in greater danger than the
- internal-improvement system. If the State Bank refused specie payments for
- sixty days, its charter was forfeited under the Act of Assembly. But they
- were the main-stay of all the current speculations, public and private;
- and having besides large sums of public money in their hands, the governor
- was induced to call a special session of the Legislature in July, 1837, to
- save them from impending dissolution. This was done by an act authorizing
- or condoning the suspension of specie payments. The governor had not
- directly recommended this, but he had most earnestly recommended the
- repeal or modification of the internal-improvement system; and <i>that</i>
- the Legislature positively refused. This wise body might be eaten by its
- own dogs, but it was determined not to eat <i>them</i>; and in this
- direction there was no prospect of relief for two years more. According to
- Gov. Ford, the cool, reflecting men of the State anxiously hoped that
- their rulers might be able to borrow no more money, but in this they were
- immediately and bitterly disappointed. The United States Bank took some of
- their bonds. Some were sold at par in this country, and others at nine per
- cent discount in Europe.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1838, a governor (Carlin) was elected who was thought by many to be
- secretly hostile to the "system;" and a new Legislature was chosen, from
- which it was thought something might be hoped. Mr. Lincoln was again
- elected, with a reputation so much enhanced by his activity and address in
- the last Legislature, that this time he was the candidate of his party for
- speaker. The nomination, however, was a barren honor, and known to be such
- when given. Col. Ewing was chosen by a plurality of one,&mdash;two Whigs
- and two Democrats scattering their votes. Mr. Lincoln kept his old place
- on the Finance Committee. At the first session the governor held his peace
- regarding the "system;" and, far from repealing it, the Legislature added
- a new feature to it, and voted another $800,000.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Fund Commissioners were in deep water and muddy water: they had
- reached the end of their string. The credit of the State was gone, and
- already were heard murmurs of repudiation. Bond County had in the
- beginning pronounced the system a swindle upon the people; and Bond County
- began to have admirers. Some of the bonds had been lent to New York State
- banks to start upon; and the banks had presently failed. Some had been
- sold on credit. Some were scattered about in various places on special
- deposit. Others had been sent to London for sale, where the firm that was
- selling them broke with the proceeds of a part of them in their hands. No
- expedients sufficed any longer. There was no more money to be got, and
- nothing left to do, but to "wind up the system," and begin the work of
- common sense by providing for the interest on the sums already expended. A
- special session of the Legislature in 1838-9 did the "winding up," and
- thenceforth, for some years, there was no other question so important in
- Illinois State politics as how to pay the interest on the vast debt
- outstanding for this account. Many gentlemen discovered that De Witt
- Clintons were rare, and in certain contingencies very precious. Among
- these must have been Mr. Lincoln. But being again, elected to the
- Legislature in 1840, again the acknowledged leader and candidate of his
- party for speaker, he ventured in December of that year to offer an
- expedient for paying the interest on the debt; but it was only an
- expedient, and a very poor one, to avoid the obvious but unpopular resort
- of direct taxation.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln moved to strike out the bill and amendment, and insert the
- following:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "An Act providing for the payment of interest on the State debt.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Section 1.&mdash;Be it enacted by the people of the State of Illinois
- represented in the General Assembly, that the governor be authorized and
- required to issue, from time to time, such an amount of State bonds, to be
- called the 'Illinois Interest Bonds,' as may be absolutely necessary for
- the payment of the interest upon the lawful debt of the State, contracted
- before the passage of this Act.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Section 2.&mdash;Said bonds shall bear interest at the rate of&mdash;&mdash;per
- cent per annum, payable half-yearly at&mdash;&mdash;, and be reimbursable
- in years from their respective issuings.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Section 3.&mdash;That the State's portion of the tax hereafter arising
- from all lands which were not taxable in the year one thousand eight
- hundred and forty is hereby set apart as an exclusive fund for the payment
- of interest on the said 'Illinois Interest Bonds;' and the faith of the
- State is hereby pledged that said fund shall be applied to that object,
- and no other, except at any time there should be a surplus; in which case
- such surplus shall became a part of the general funds of the treasury.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Section 4.&mdash;That hereafter the sum of thirty cents for each hundred
- dollars' worth of all taxable property shall be paid into the State
- treasury; and no more than forty cents for each hundred dollars' worth of
- such taxable property shall be levied and collected for county purposes."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a loose document. The governor was to determine the "amount" of
- bonds "necessary," and the sums for which they should be issued. Interest
- was to be paid only upon the "lawful" debt; and the governor was left to
- determine what part of it <i>was</i> lawful, and what unlawful. The last
- section lays a specific tax; but the proceeds are in no way connected with
- the "interest bonds."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln said he submitted this proposition with great diffidence. He
- had felt his share of the responsibility devolving upon us in the present
- crisis; and, after revolving in his mind every scheme which seemed to
- afford the least prospect of relief, he submitted this as the result of
- his own deliberations.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The details of the bill might be imperfect; but he relied upon the
- correctness of its general features.
- </p>
- <p>
- "By the plan proposed in the original bill of hypothecating our bonds, he
- was satisfied we could not get along more than two or three months before
- some other step would be necessary: another session would have to be
- called, and new provisions made.
- </p>
- <p>
- "It might be objected that these bonds would not be salable, and the money
- could not be raised in time. He was no financier; but he believed these
- bonds thus secured would be equal to the best in market. A perfect
- security was provided for the interest; and it was this characteristic
- that inspired confidence, and made bonds salable. If there was any
- distrust, it could not be because our means of fulfilling promises were
- distrusted. He believed it would have the effect to raise our other bonds
- in market.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There was another objection to this plan, which applied to the original
- bill; and that was as to the impropriety of borrowing money to pay
- interest on borrowed money,&mdash;that we are hereby paying compound
- interest. To this he would reply, that, if it were a fact that our
- population and wealth were increasing in a ratio greater than the
- increased interest hereby incurred, then this was not a good objection. If
- our increasing means would justify us in deferring to a future time the
- resort to taxation, then we had better pay compound interest than resort
- to taxation now. He was satisfied, that, by a direct tax now, money enough
- could not be collected to pay the accruing interest. The bill proposed to
- provide in this way for interest not otherwise provided for. It was not
- intended to apply to those bonds for the interest on which a security had
- already been provided.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He hoped the House would seriously consider the proposition. He had no
- pride in its success as a measure of his own, but submitted it to the
- wisdom of the House, with the hope, that, if there was any thing
- objectionable in it, it would be pointed out and amended."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln's measure did not pass. There was a large party in favor, not
- only of passing the interest on the State debt, which fell due in the
- coming January and July, but of repudiating the whole debt outright.
- Others thought the State ought to pay, not the full face of its bonds, but
- only the amount received for them; while others still contended that,
- whereas, many of the bonds had been irregularly, illegally, and even
- fraudulently disposed of, there ought to be a particular discrimination
- made against <i>these</i>, and these only. "At last Mr. Cavarly, a member
- from Green, introduced a bill of two sections, authorizing the Fund
- Commissioners to hypothecate internal-improvement bonds to the amount of
- three hundred thousand dollars, and which contained the remarkable
- provision, that the proceeds were to be applied by that officer to the
- payment of all interest <i>legally</i> due on the public debt; thus
- shifting from the General Assembly, and devolving on the Fund
- Commissioner, the duty of deciding on the legality of the debt. Thus, by
- this happy expedient, conflicting opinions were reconciled without direct
- action on the matter in controversy, and thus the two Houses were enabled
- to agree upon a measure to provide temporarily for the interest on the
- public debt. The Legislature further provided, at this session, for the
- issue of interest bonds, to be sold in the market at what they would
- bring; and an additional tax of ten cents on the hundred dollars' worth of
- property was imposed and pledged, to pay the interest on these bonds. By
- these contrivances, the interest for January and July, 1841, was paid. The
- Fund Commissioner hypothecated internal-improvement bonds for the money
- first due; and his successor in office, finding no sale for Illinois
- stocks, so much had the credit of the State fallen, was compelled to
- hypothecate eight hundred and four thousand dollars of interest bonds for
- the July interest. On this hypothecation he was to have received three
- hundred and twenty-one thousand six hundred dollars, but was never paid
- more than two hundred and sixty-one thousand five hundred dollars. These
- bonds have never been redeemed from the holders, though eighty of them
- were afterwards repurchased, and three hundred and fifteen thousand
- dollars of them were received from the Shawneetown Bank for State stock in
- that institution."1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- This session (the session of 1840-1) had been called two weeks earlier
- than usual, to provide for the January interest on the debt. But the banks
- had important business of their own in view, and proceeded to improve the
- occasion. In 1837, and every year since then, the banks had succeeded in
- getting acts of the Legislature which condoned their suspension of specie
- payments. But, by the terms of the last act, their charters were forfeited
- unless they resumed before the adjournment of the next session. The
- Democrats, however, maintained that the present special session was <i>a
- session</i> in the sense of the law, and that, before its adjournment, the
- banks must hand out "the hard," or die. On the other hand, the Whigs held
- this session, and the regular session which began on the first Monday in
- December, to be one and the same, and proposed to give the banks another
- winter's lease upon life and rags. But the banks were a power in the land,
- and knew how to make themselves felt. They were the depositories of the
- State revenues. The auditor's warrants were drawn upon them, and the
- members of the Legislature paid in their money. The warrants were at a
- discount of fifty per cent; and, if the banks refused to cash them, the
- members would be compelled to go home more impecunious than they came. The
- banks, moreover, knew how to make "opportune loans to Democrats;" and,
- with all these aids, they organized a brilliant and eventually a
- successful campaign. In the eyes of the Whigs they were "the institutions
- of the country," and the Democrats were guilty of incivism in attacking
- them. But the Democrats retorted with a string of overwhelming slang about
- rag barons, rags, printed lies, bank vassals, ragocracy, and the
- "British-bought, bank, blue-light, Federal, Whig party." It was a fierce
- and bitter contest; and, witnessing it, one might have supposed that the
- very existence of the State, with the right to life, liberty, and the
- pursuit of happiness, depended upon the result. The Democrats were bent
- upon carrying an adjournment <i>sine die</i>; which, according to their
- theory, killed the banks. To defeat this, the Whigs resorted to every
- expedient of parliamentary tactics, and at length hit upon one entirely
- unknown to any of the standard manuals: they tried to absent themselves in
- sufficient numbers to leave no quorum behind. "If the Whigs absented
- themselves," says Mr. Gillespie, a Whig member, "there would not be a
- quorum left, even with the two who should be deputed to call the ayes and
- noes. The Whigs immediately held a meeting, and resolved that they would
- all stay out, except Lincoln and me, who were to call the ayes and noes.
- We appeared in the afternoon: motion to adjourn <i>sine die</i> was made,
- and we called the ayes and noes. The Democrats discovered the game, and
- the sergeant-at-arms was sent out to gather up the absentees. There was
- great excitement in the House, which was then held in a church at
- Springfield. We soon discovered that several Whigs had been caught and
- brought in, and that the plan had been spoiled; and we&mdash;Lincoln and I&mdash;determined
- to leave the hall, and, going to the door, found it locked, and then
- raised a window and jumped out, but not until the Democrats had succeeded
- in adjourning. Mr. Grid-ley of McLean accompanied us in our exit.... I
- think Mr. Lincoln always regretted that he entered into that arrangement,
- as he deprecated every thing that savored of the revolutionary."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of the debate on the Apportionment Bill, Mr. Lincoln had
- occasion to address the House in defence of "The Long Nine," who were
- especially obnoxious to the Democrats. The speech concluded with the
- following characteristic passage:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "The gentleman had accused old women of being partial to the number nine;
- but this, he presumed, was without foundation. A few years since, it would
- be recollected by the House, that the delegation from this county were
- dubbed by way of eminence 'The Long Nine,' and, by way of further
- distinction, he had been called 'The Longest of the Nine.' Now," said Mr.
- Lincoln, "I desire to say to my friend from Monroe (Mr. Bissell), that if
- any woman, old or young, ever thought there was any peculiar charm in this
- distinguished specimen of number nine, I have as yet been so unfortunate
- as not to have discovered it." (Loud applause.)
- </p>
- <p>
- But this Legislature was full of excitements. Besides the questions about
- the public debt and the bank-charters, the Democrats proposed to legislate
- the Circuit judges out of office, and reconstruct the Supreme Court to
- suit themselves. They did this because the Supreme judges had already
- decided one question of some political interest against them, and were now
- about to decide another in the same way. The latter was a question of
- great importance; and, in order to avoid the consequences of such a
- decision, the Democrats were eager for the extremest measures.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Constitution provided that all free white male <i>inhabitants</i>
- should vote upon six months' residence. This, the Democrats held, included
- aliens; while the Whigs held the reverse. On this grave judicial question,
- parties were divided precisely upon the line of their respective
- interests. The aliens numbered about ten thousand, and nine-tenths of them
- voted steadily with the Democracy. Whilst a great outcry concerning it was
- being made from both sides, and fierce disputes raged in the newspapers
- and on the stump, two Whigs at Galena got up an amicable case, to try it
- in a quiet way before a Whig judge, who held the Circuit Courts in their
- neighborhood. The judge decided for his friends, like a man that he was.
- The Democrats found it out, and raised a popular tumult about it that
- would have put Demetrius the silversmith to shame. They carried the case
- to the Supreme Court, where it was argued before the Whig majority, in
- December, 1889, by able and distinguished counsellors,&mdash;Judge Douglas
- being one of them; but the only result was a continuance to the next June.
- In the mean time Judge Smith, the only Democrat on the bench, was seeking
- favor with his party friends by betraying to Douglas the secrets of the
- consultation-room.
- </p>
- <p>
- With his aid, the Democrats found a defect in the record, which sent the
- case over to December, 1840, and adroitly secured the alien vote for the
- great elections of that memorable year. The Legislature elected then was
- overwhelmingly Democratic; and, having good reason to believe that the
- aliens had small favor to expect from this court, they determined
- forthwith to make a new one that would be more reasonable. There were now
- nine Circuit judges in the State, and four Supreme judges, under the Act
- of 1835. The offices of the Circuit judges the Democrats concluded to
- abolish, and to create instead nine Supreme judges, who should perform
- circuit duties. This they called "reforming the judiciary;" and "thirsting
- for vengeance," as Gov. Ford says, they went about the work with all the
- zeal, but with very little of the disinterested devotion, which reformers
- are generally supposed to have. Douglas, counsel for one of the litigants,
- made a furious speech "in the lobby," demanding the destruction of the
- court that was to try his cause; and for sundry grave sins which he
- imputed to the judges he gave Smith&mdash;his friend Smith&mdash;as
- authority. It was useless to oppose it: this "reform" was a foregone
- conclusion. It was called the "Douglas Bill;" and Mr. Douglas was
- appointed to one of the new offices created by it. But Mr. Lincoln, E. D.
- Baker, and other Whig members, entered upon the journal the following
- protest:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "For the reasons thus presented, and for others no less apparent, the
- undersigned cannot assent to the passage of the bill, or permit it to
- become a law without this evidence of their disapprobation; and they now
- protest against the re-organization of the judiciary: Because,
- </p>
- <p>
- "1st. It violates the great principles of free government by subjecting
- the judiciary to the Legislature.
- </p>
- <p>
- "2d. It is a fatal blow at the independence of the judges and the
- constitutional term of their offices.
- </p>
- <p>
- "3d. It is a measure not asked for, or wished for, by the people.
- </p>
- <p>
- "4th. It will greatly increase the expense of our courts, or else greatly
- diminish their utility.
- </p>
- <p>
- "5th. It will give our courts a political and partisan character, thereby
- impairing public confidence in their decisions.
- </p>
- <p>
- "6th. It will impair our standing with other States and the world.
- </p>
- <p>
- "7th. It is a party measure for party purposes, from which no practical
- good to the people can possibly arise, but which may be the source of
- immeasurable evils.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The undersigned are well aware that this protest will be altogether
- unavailing with the majority of this body. The blow has already fallen;
- and we are compelled to stand by, the mournful spectators of the ruin it
- will cause."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was elected in 1840, to serve, of course, until the next
- election in August, 1842; but for reasons of a private nature, to be
- explained hereafter, he did not appear during the session of 1841-2.
- </p>
- <p>
- In concluding this chapter, taking leave of New Salem, Vandalia, and the
- Legislature, we cannot forbear another quotation from Mr. Wilson,
- Lincoln's colleague from Sangamon, to whom we are already so largely in
- debt:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In 1838 many of the Long Nines were candidates for re-election to the
- Legislature. A question of the division of the county was one of the local
- issues. Mr. Lincoln and myself, among others, residing in the portion of
- the county sought to be organized into a new county, and opposing the
- division, it became necessary that I should make a special canvass through
- the north-west part of the county, then known as Sand Ridge. I made the
- canvass; Mr. Lincoln accompanied me; and, being personally well acquainted
- with every one, we called at nearly every house. At that time it was the
- universal custom to keep some whiskey in the house, for private use and to
- treat friends. The subject was always mentioned as a matter of etiquette,
- but with the remark to Mr. Lincoln, 'You never drink, but maybe your
- friend would like to take a little.' I never saw Mr. Lincoln drink. He
- often told me he never drank; had no desire for drink, nor the
- companionship of drinking men. Candidates never treated anybody in those
- times unless they wanted to do so.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln remained in New Salem until the spring of 1837, when he went
- to Springfield, and went into the law-office of John T. Stuart as a
- partner in the practice of law, and boarded with William Butler.
- </p>
- <p>
- "During his stay in New Salem he had no property other than what was
- necessary to do his business, until after he stopped in Springfield. He
- was not avaricious to accumulate property, neither was he a spendthrift.
- He was almost always during those times hard up. He never owned land.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The first trip he made around the circuit after he commenced the practice
- of law, I had a horse, saddle, and bridle, and he had none. I let him have
- mine. I think he must have been careless, as the saddle skinned the
- horse's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- "While he lived in New Salem he visited me often. He would stay a day or
- two at a time: we generally spent the time at the stores in Athens. He was
- very fond of company: telling or hearing stories told was a source of
- great amusement to him. He was not in the habit of reading much,&mdash;never
- read novels. Whittling pine boards and shingles, talking and laughing,
- constituted the entertainment of the days and evenings.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In a conversation with him about that time, he told me, that, although he
- appeared to enjoy life rapturously, still he was the victim of terrible
- melancholy. He sought company, and indulged in fun and hilarity without
- restraint, or stint as to time; but when by himself, he told me that he
- was so overcome by mental depression that he never dared carry a knife in
- his pocket; and as long as I was intimately acquainted with him, previous
- to his commencement of the practice of the law, he never carried a
- pocket-knife. Still he was not misanthropic: he was kind and
- tender-hearted in his treatment to others.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In the summer of 1837 the citizens of Athens and vicinity gave the
- delegation then called the 'Long Nine' a public dinner, at which Mr.
- Lincoln and all the others were present. He was called out by the toast,
- 'Abraham Lincoln, one of Nature's noblemen.' I have often thought, that,
- if any man was entitled to that compliment, it was he."
- </p>
- <p>
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- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
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- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI
- </h2>
- <p>
- UNDER the Act of Assembly, due in great part to Mr. Lincoln's exertions,
- the removal of the archives and other public property of the State from
- Vandalia to Springfield began on the fourth day of July, 1839, and was
- speedily completed. At the time of the passage of the Act, in the winter
- of 1836-7, Mr. Lincoln determined to follow the capital, and establish his
- own residence at Springfield. The resolution was natural and necessary;
- for he had been studying law in all his intervals of leisure, and wanted a
- wider field than the justice's court at New Salem to begin the practice.
- Henceforth Mr. Lincoln might serve in the Legislature, attend to his
- private business, and live snugly at home. In addition to the State
- courts, the Circuit and District Courts of the United States sat here. The
- eminent John McLean of Ohio was the justice of the Supreme Court who sat
- in this circuit, with Judge Pope of the District Court, from 1839 to 1849,
- and after that with Judge Drummond. The first terms of these courts, and
- the first session of the Legislature at Springfield, were held in
- December, 1839. The Senate sat in one church, and the House in another.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln got his license as an attorney early in 1837, "and commenced
- practice regularly as a lawyer in the town of Springfield in March" of
- that year. His first case was that of Hawthorne vs. Wooldridge, dismissed
- at the cost of the plaintiff, for whom Mr. Lincoln's name was entered.
- There were then on the list of attorneys at the Springfield bar many names
- of subsequent renown. Judge Stephen T. Logan was on the bench of the
- Circuit Court under the Act of 1835. Stephen A. Douglas had made his
- appearance as the public prosecutor at the March term of 1836; and at the
- same term E. D. Baker had been admitted to practice. Among the rest were
- John T. Stuart, Cyrus Walker, S. H. Treat, Jesse B. Thomas, George
- Forquer, Dan Stone, Ninian W. Edwards, John J. Hardin, Schuyler Strong, A.
- T. Bledsoe, and Josiah Lamborn.
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time Mr. Lincoln enjoyed considerable local fame as a politician,
- but none, of course, as a lawyer. He therefore needed a partner, and got
- one in the person of John T. Stuart, an able and distinguished Whig, who
- had relieved his poverty years before by the timely loan of books with
- which to study law, and who had from the first promoted his political
- fortunes with zeal as disinterested as it was effective. The connection
- promised well for Mr. Lincoln, and no doubt did well during the short
- period of its existence. The courtroom was in Hoffman's Row; and the
- office of Stuart &amp; Lincoln was in the second story above the
- court-room. It was a "little room," and generally a "dirty one." It
- contained "a small dirty bed,"&mdash;on which Lincoln lounged and slept,&mdash;a
- buffalo-robe, a chair, and a bench. Here the junior partner, when
- disengaged from the cares of politics and the Legislature, was to be found
- pretty much all the time, "reading, abstracted and gloomy." Springfield
- was a small village, containing between one and two thousand inhabitants.
- There were no pavements: the street-crossings were made of "chunks,"
- stones, and sticks. Lincoln boarded with Hon. William Butler, a gentleman
- who possessed in an eminent degree that mysterious power which guides the
- deliberations of party conventions and legislative bodies to a foregone
- conclusion. Lincoln was very poor, worth nothing, and in debt,&mdash;circumstances
- which are not often alleged in behalf of the modern legislator; but "Bill
- Butler" was his friend, and took him in with little reference to
- board-bills and the settlement of accounts. According to Dr. Jayne, he
- "fed and clothed him for years;" and this signal service, rendered at a
- very critical time, Mr. Lincoln forgot wholly when he was in Congress, and
- Butler wanted to be Register of the Land Office, as well as when he was
- President of the United States, and opportunities of repayment were
- multitudinous. It is doubtless all true; but the inference of personal
- ingratitude on the part of Mr. Lincoln will not bear examination. It will
- be shown at another place that Mr. Lincoln regarded all public offices
- within his gift as a sacred trust, to be administered solely for the
- people, and as in no sense a fund upon which he could draw for the payment
- of private accounts. He <i>never</i> preferred his friends to his enemies,
- but rather the reverse, as if fearful that he might by bare possibility be
- influenced by some unworthy motive. He was singularly cautious to avoid
- the imputation of fidelity to his friends at the expense of his opponents.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Coke's and Blackstone's time the law was supposed to be "a jealous
- mistress;" but in Lincoln's time, and at Springfield, she was any thing
- but exacting. Politicians courted her only to make her favor the
- stepping-stone to success in other employments. Various members of that
- bar have left great reputations to posterity, but none of them were earned
- solely by the legitimate practice of the law. Douglas is remembered as a
- statesman, Baker as a political orator, Hardin as a soldier, and some now
- living, like Logan and Stuart, although eminent in the law, will be no
- less known to the history of the times as politicians than as lawyers.
- Among those who went to the law for a living, and to the people for fame
- and power, was Mr. Lincoln. He was still a member of the Legislature when
- he settled at Springfield, and would probably have continued to run for a
- seat in that body as often as his time expired, but for the unfortunate
- results of the "internal-improvement system," the hopeless condition of
- the State finances, and a certain gloominess of mind, which arose from
- private misfortunes that befell him about the time of his retirement. We
- do not say positively that these were the reasons why Mr. Lincoln made no
- effort to be re-elected to the Legislature of 1840; but a careful study of
- all the circumstances will lead any reasonable man to believe that they
- were. He was intensely ambitious, longed ardently for place and
- distinction, and never gave up a prospect which seemed to him good when he
- was in a condition to pursue it with honor to himself and fairness to
- others. Moreover State politics were then rapidly ceasing to be the
- high-road to fame and fortune. Although the State of Illinois was
- insolvent, unable to pay the interest on her public debt, and many were
- talking about repudiating the principal, the great campaign of 1840 went
- off upon national issues, and little or nothing was said about questions
- of State policy. Mr. Lincoln felt and obeyed this tendency of the public
- mind, and from 1837 onward his speeches&mdash;those that were printed and
- those that were not&mdash;were devoted chiefly, if not exclusively, to
- Federal affairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In January, 1837, he delivered a lecture before the Springfield Lyceum on
- the subject of the "<i>Perpetuation of our Free Institutions</i>." As a
- mere declamation, it is unsurpassed in the annals of the West. Although
- delivered in mid-winter, it is instinct with the peculiar eloquence of the
- most fervid Fourth of July.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In the great journal of things," began the orator, "happening under the
- sun, we, the American People, find our account running under date of the
- nineteenth century of the Christian era. We find ourselves in the peaceful
- possession of the fairest portion of the earth, as regards extent of
- territory, fertility of soil, and salubrity of climate. We find ourselves
- under the government of a system of political institutions conducing more
- essentially to the ends of civil and religious liberty than any of which
- the history of former times tells us. We, when mounting the stage of
- existence, found ourselves the legal inheritors of these fundamental
- blessings. We toiled not in the acquisition or establishment of them: they
- are a legacy bequeathed us by a <i>once</i> hardy, brave, and patriotic,
- but <i>now</i> lamented and departed race of ancestors. Theirs was the
- task (and nobly they performed it) to possess themselves, and, through
- themselves, us, of this goodly land, and to uprear upon its hills and
- valleys a political edifice of liberty and equal rights: 'tis ours only to
- transmit these&mdash;the former unprofaned by the foot of an invader, the
- latter undecayed by the lapse of time and untorn by usurpation&mdash;to
- the latest generation that fate shall permit the world to know. This task,
- gratitude to our fathers, justice to ourselves, duty to posterity,&mdash;all
- imperatively require us faithfully to perform.
- </p>
- <p>
- "How, then, shall we perform it? At what point shall we expect the
- approach of danger? Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to
- step the ocean and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe,
- Asia, and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth (our own
- excepted) in their military chest, with a Bonaparte for a commander, could
- not, by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the Blue
- Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years!
- </p>
- <p>
- "At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected? I answer,
- if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot come from
- abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and
- finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by
- suicide.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I hope I am not over-wary; but, if I am not, there is even now something
- of ill-omen amongst us. I mean the increasing disregard for law which
- pervades the country, the growing disposition to substitute the wild and
- furious passions in lieu of the sober judgment of courts, and the worse
- than savage mobs for the executive ministers of justice. This disposition
- is awfully fearful in any community, and that it now exists in ours,
- though grating to our feelings to admit it, it would be a violation of
- truth and an insult to our intelligence to deny. Accounts of outrages
- committed by mobs form the every-day news of the times. They have pervaded
- the country from New England to Louisiana; they are neither peculiar to
- the eternal snows of the former, nor the burning sun of the latter. They
- are not the creature of climate; neither are they confined to the
- slaveholding or non-slaveholding States. Alike they spring up among the
- pleasure-hunting masters of Southern slaves and the order-loving citizens
- of the land of steady habits. Whatever, then, their cause may be, it is
- common to the whole country."
- </p>
- <p>
- The orator then adverts to the doings of recent mobs in various parts of
- the country, and insists, that, if the spirit that produced them continues
- to increase, the laws and the government itself must fall before it: bad
- citizens will be encouraged, and good ones, having no protection against
- the lawless, will be glad to receive an individual master who will be able
- to give them the peace and order they desire. That will be the time when
- the usurper will put down his heel on the neck of the people, and batter
- down the "fair fabric" of free institutions. "Many great and good men," he
- says, "sufficiently qualified for any task they should undertake, may ever
- be found, whose ambition would aspire to nothing beyond a seat in
- Congress, a gubernatorial or a presidential chair; <i>but such belong not
- to the family of the lion or the tribe of the eagle.</i>1 What! Think you
- these places would satisfy an Alexander, a Cæsar, or a Napoleon? Never!
- Towering genius disdains a beaten path. It seeks regions hitherto
- unexplored. It sees no distinction in adding story to story upon the
- monuments of fame erected to the memory of others. It denies that it is
- glory enough to serve under any chief. It scorns to tread in the footsteps
- of any predecessor, however illustrious. It thirsts and burns for
- distinction; and, if possible, it will have it, whether at the expense of
- emancipating slaves or enslaving freemen.... Another reason which once <i>was</i>,
- but which, to the same extent, <i>is now no more</i>, has done much in
- maintaining our institutions thus far. I mean the powerful influence which
- the interesting scenes of the Revolution had upon the <i>passions</i> of
- the people as distinguished from their judgment." This influence, the
- lecturer maintains, was kept alive by the presence of the surviving
- soldiers of the Revolution, who were in some sort "living histories," and
- concludes with this striking peroration:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "But those histories are gone. They <i>can</i> be read no more forever.
- They <i>were</i> a fortress of strength; but what invading foeman could
- never do, the silent artillery of time <i>has done</i>,&mdash;the
- levelling of its walls. They are gone. They <i>were</i> a forest of giant
- oaks; but the all-resistless hurricane has swept over them, and left only
- here and there a lonely trunk, despoiled of its verdure, shorn of its
- foliage, unshading and unshaded, to murmur in a few more gentle breezes,
- and to combat with its mutilated limbs a few more rude storms, then to
- sink and be no more. They <i>were</i> the pillars of the temple of
- liberty; and now that they have crumbled away, that temple must fall,
- unless we, the descendants, supply their places with other pillars hewn
- from the same solid quarry of sober reason. Passion has helped us, but can
- do so no more. It will in future be our enemy. Reason&mdash;cold,
- calculating, unimpassioned reason&mdash;must furnish all the materials for
- our future support and defence. Let those materials be moulded into <i>general
- intelligence, sound morality</i>, and, in particular, <i>a reverence for
- the Constitution and the laws</i>; and that we improved to the last, that
- we revered his name to the last, that during his long sleep we permitted
- no hostile foot to pass or desecrate his resting-place, shall be that
- which to learn the last trump shall awaken our Washington. Upon these let
- the proud fabric of freedom rest as the rock of its basis, and as truly as
- has been said of the only greater institution, 'The gates of hell shall
- not prevail against it."'
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The italics are the orator's.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- These extracts from a lecture carefully composed by Mr. Lincoln at the
- mature age of twenty-eight, and after considerable experience in the
- public service, are worthy of attentive perusal. To those familiar with
- his sober and pure style at a later age, these sophomoric passages will
- seem incredible. But they were thought "able and eloquent" by the "Young
- Men's Lyceum" of Springfield: he was "solicited to furnish a copy for
- publication," and they were duly printed in "The Sangamon Journal." In the
- mere matter of rhetoric, they compare favorably with some of his other
- productions of nearly the same date. This was what he would have called
- his "growing time;" and it is intensely interesting to witness the
- processes of such mental growth as his. In time, gradually, but still
- rapidly, his style changes completely: the constrained and unnatural
- attempts at striking and lofty metaphor disappear, and the qualities which
- produced the Gettysburg address&mdash;that model of unadorned eloquence&mdash;begin
- to be felt. He finds the people understand him better when he comes down
- from his stilts, and talks to them from their own level.
- </p>
- <p>
- Political discussions at Springfield were apt to run into heated and
- sometimes unseemly personal controversies. When Douglas and Stuart were
- candidates for Congress in 1838, they fought like tigers in Herndon's
- grocery, over a floor that was drenched with slops, and gave up the
- struggle only when both were exhausted. Then, as a further entertainment
- to the populace, Mr. Stuart ordered out a "barrel of whiskey and wine."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the election-day in 1840, it was reported to Mr. Lincoln that one
- Radford, a contractor on the railroad, had brought up his men, and taken
- full possession of one of the polling-places. Lincoln started off to the
- precinct on a slow trot. Radford knew him well, and a little stern advice
- reversed proceedings without any fighting. Among other remarks, Lincoln
- said, "Radford, you'll spoil and blow if you live much longer." He wanted
- to hit Radford, but could get no chance to do so, and contented himself
- with confiding his intentions to Speed. "I intended just to knock him
- down, and leave him kicking."
- </p>
- <p>
- The same year, Col. Baker was making a speech to a promiscuous audience in
- the court-room,&mdash;"a rented room in Hoffman's Row." It will be
- remembered that Lincoln's office was just above, and he was listening to
- Baker through a large hole or trap-door in the ceiling. Baker warmed with
- his theme, and, growing violent and personally offensive, declared at
- length, "that wherever there was a land-office, there was a Democratic
- newspaper to defend its corruptions." "This," says John B. Webber, "was a
- personal attack on my brother, George Webber. I was in the Court House,
- and in my anger cried, 'Pull him down!'" A scene of great confusion
- ensued, threatening to end in a general riot, in which Baker was likely to
- suffer. But just at the critical moment Lincoln's legs were seen coming
- through the hole; and directly his tall figure was standing between Baker
- and the audience, gesticulating for silence. "Gentlemen," said he, "let us
- not disgrace the age and country in which we live. This is a land where
- freedom of speech is guaranteed. Mr Baker has a right to speak, and ought
- to be permitted to do so. I am here to protect him, and no man shall take
- him from this stand if I can prevent it." Webber only recollects that
- "some one made some soothing, kind remarks," and that he was properly
- "held until the excitement ceased," and the affair "soon ended in quiet
- and peace."
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1838, or 1840, Jesse B. Thomas made an intemperate attack upon the
- "Long Nine," and especially upon Mr. Lincoln, as the longest and worst of
- them. Lincoln was not present at the meeting; but being sent for, and
- informed of what had passed, he ascended the platform, and made a reply
- which nobody seems to remember, but which everybody describes as a
- "terrible skinning" of his victim. Ellis says, that, at the close of a
- furious personal denunciation, he wound up by "mimicking" Thomas, until
- Thomas actually cried with vexation and anger. Edwards, Speed, Ellis,
- Davis, and many others, refer to this scene, and, being asked whether Mr.
- Lincoln could not be vindictive upon occasion, generally respond,
- "Remember the Thomas skinning."
- </p>
- <p>
- The most intimate friend Mr. Lincoln ever had, at this or any other time,
- was probably Joshua F. Speed. In 1836 he settled himself in Springfield,
- and did a thriving business as a merchant. Ellis was one of his clerks,
- and so also was William H. Herndon, Mr. Lincoln's future partner. This
- store was for years Lincoln's familiar haunt. There he came to while away
- the tedious evenings with Speed and the congenial company that naturally
- assembled around these choice spirits. He even slept in the store room as
- often as he slept at home, and here made to Speed the most confidential
- communications he ever made to mortal man. If he had on earth "a bosom
- crony," it was Speed, and that deep and abiding attachment subsisted
- unimpaired to the day of Mr. Lincoln's death. In truth, there were good
- reasons why he should think of Speed with affection and gratitude, for
- through life no man rendered him more important services.
- </p>
- <p>
- One night in December, 1839, Lincoln, Douglas, Baker, and some other
- gentlemen of note, were seated at Speed's hospitable fire in the store.
- They got to talking politics, got warm, hot, angry. Douglas sprang up and
- said, "Gentlemen, this is no place to talk politics: we will discuss the
- questions publicly with you," and much more in a high tone of banter and
- defiance. A few days afterwards the Whigs had a meeting, at which Mr.
- Lincoln reported a resolution challenging the Democrats to a joint debate.
- The challenge was accepted; and Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn, and Jesse B.
- Thomas were deputed by the Democrats to meet Logan, Baker, Browning, and
- Lincoln on the part of the Whigs. The intellectual encounter between these
- noted champions is still described by those who witnessed it as "the great
- debate." It took place in the Second Presbyterian Church, in the hearing
- of as many people as could get into the building, and was adjourned from
- night to night. When Mr. Lincoln's turn came, the audience was very thin;
- but, for all that, his speech was by many persons considered the best one
- of the series. To this day, there are some who believe he had assistance
- in the preparation of it. Even Mr. Herndon accused Speed of having "had a
- hand in it," and got a flat denial for his answer. At all events, the
- speech was a popular success, and was written out, and published in "The
- Sangamon Journal," of March 6, 1840. The exordium was a sort of complaint
- that must have had a very depressing effect upon both the speaker and his
- hearers:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Fellow-Citizens,&mdash;It is peculiarly embarrassing to me to attempt a
- continuance of the discussion, on this evening, which has been conducted
- in this hall on several preceding ones. It is so, because on each of these
- evenings there was a much fuller attendance than now, without any reason
- for its being so, except the greater interest the community feel in the
- speakers who addressed them then, than they do in him who is to do so now.
- I am, indeed, apprehensive that the few who have attended have done so
- more to spare me of mortification, than in the hope of being interested in
- any thing I may be able to say. This circumstance casts a damp upon my
- spirits which I am sure I shall be unable to overcome during the evening.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The subject heretofore and now to be discussed is the Sub-Treasury scheme
- of the present administration, as a means of collecting, safe-keeping,
- transferring, and disbursing the revenues of the nation, as contrasted
- with a National Bank for the same purposes. Mr. Douglas has said that we
- (the Whigs) have not dared to meet them (the Locos) in argument on this
- question. I protest against this assertion. I say we have again and again,
- during this discussion, urged facts and arguments against the Sub-Treasury
- which they have neither dared to deny nor attempted to answer. But lest
- some may be led to believe that we really wish to avoid the question, I
- now propose, in my humble way, to urge these arguments again; at the same
- time begging the audience to mark well the positions I shall take, and the
- proofs I shall offer to sustain them, and that they will not again allow
- Mr. Douglas or his friends to escape the force of them by a round and
- groundless assertion that we dare not meet them in argument.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of the Sub-Treasury, then, as contrasted with a National Bank, for the
- before-enumerated purposes, I lay down the following propositions, to wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "1st. It will injuriously affect the community by its operation on the
- circulating medium.
- </p>
- <p>
- "2d. It will be a more expensive fiscal agent.
- </p>
- <p>
- "3d. It will be a less secure depository for the public money."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln's objections to the Sub-Treasury were those commonly urged by
- its enemies, and have been somewhat conclusively refuted by the operation
- of that admirable institution from the hour of its adoption to the
- present. "The extravagant expenditures" of Mr. Van Buren's administration,
- however, was a standard topic of the Whigs in those days, and, sliding
- gracefully off from the Sub-Treasury, Mr. Lincoln dilated extensively upon
- this more attractive subject. This part of his speech was entirely in
- reply to Mr. Douglas. But, when he came to answer Mr. Lamborn's remarks,
- he "got in a hard hit" that must have brought down the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lamborn insists that the difference between the Van Buren party and
- the Whigs is, that, although the former sometimes err in practice, they
- are always correct in principle, whereas the latter are wrong in
- principle; and, the better to impress this proposition, he uses a
- figurative expression in these words: 'The Democrats are vulnerable in the
- heel, but they are sound in the heart and head.' The first branch of the
- figure,&mdash;that is, that the Democrats are vulnerable in the heel,&mdash;I
- admit is not merely figuratively but literally true. Who that looks but
- for a moment at their Swartwouts, their Prices, their Harringtons, and
- their hundreds of others, scampering away with the public money to Texas,
- to Europe, and to every spot of the earth where a villain may hope to find
- refuge from justice, can at all doubt that they are most distressingly
- affected in their heels with a species of 'running itch.' It seems that
- this malady of their heels operates on the sound-headed and honest-hearted
- creatures very much like the cork-leg in the comic song did on its owner,
- which, when he had once got started on it, the more he tried to stop it,
- the more it would run away. At the hazard of wearing this point
- threadbare, I will relate an anecdote which seems to be too strikingly in
- point to be omitted. A witty Irish soldier who was always boasting of his
- bravery when no danger was near, but who invariably retreated without
- orders at the first charge of the engagement, being asked by his captain
- why he did so, replied, 'Captain, I have as brave a heart as Julius Cæsar
- ever had, but somehow or other, whenever danger approaches, my cowardly
- legs will run away with it.' So with Mr. Lamborn's party. They take the
- public money into their hands for the most laudable purpose that wise
- heads and honest hearts can dictate; but, before they can possibly get it
- out again, their rascally vulnerable heels will run away with them."
- </p>
- <p>
- But, as in the lecture before the Lyceum, Mr. Lincoln reserved his most
- impressive passage, his boldest imagery, and his most striking metaphor,
- for a grand and vehement peroration.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lamborn refers to the late elections in the States, and, from their
- results, confidently predicts every State in the Union will vote for Mr.
- Van Buren at the next presidential election. Address that argument to
- cowards and knaves: with the free and the brave it will affect nothing. It
- may be true: if it must, let it. Many free countries have lost their
- liberty, and ours may lose hers; but, if she shall, be it my proudest
- plume, not that I was the last to desert, but that I never deserted her. I
- know that the great volcano at Washington, aroused and directed by the
- evil spirit that reigns there, is belching forth the lava of political
- corruption in a current broad and deep, which is sweeping with frightful
- velocity over the whole length and breadth of the land, bidding fair to
- leave unscathed no green spot or living thing; while on its bosom are
- riding, like demons on the wave of hell, the imps of that evil spirit, and
- fiendishly taunting all those who dare to resist its destroying course
- with the hopelessness of their efforts; and, knowing this, I cannot deny
- that all may be swept away. Broken by it, I, too, may be; bow to it, I
- never will. The probability that we may fall in the struggle ought not to
- deter us from the support of a cause we believe to be just. It shall not
- deter me. If ever I feel the soul within me elevate and expand to those
- dimensions, not wholly unworthy of its almighty Architect, it is when I
- contemplate the cause of my country, deserted by all the world beside, and
- I standing up boldly, alone, hurling defiance at her victorious
- oppressors. Here, without contemplating consequences, before Heaven and in
- face of the world, I swear eternal fealty to the just cause, as I deem it,
- of the land of my life, my liberty, and my love. And who that thinks with
- me will not fearlessly adopt that oath that I take? Let none falter who
- thinks he is right, and we may succeed. But if, after all, we shall fail,
- be it so: we still shall have the proud consolation of saying to our
- consciences, and to the departed shade of our country's freedom, that the
- cause approved of our judgment and adored of our hearts, in disaster, in
- chains, in torture, in death, we never faltered in defending."
- </p>
- <p>
- Considering that the times were extremely peaceful, and that the speaker
- saw no bloodshed except what flowed from the noses of belligerents in the
- groceries about Springfield, the speech seems to have been unnecessarily
- defiant.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1840 Mr. Lincoln was a candidate for presidential elector on the
- Harrison ticket, and stumped a large part of the State. He and Douglas
- followed Judge Treat's court all around the circuit, "and spoke in the
- afternoons." The Harrison club at Springfield became thoroughly familiar
- with his voice. But these one-sided affairs were not altogether suited to
- his temper: through his life he preferred a joint discussion, and the
- abler the man pitted against him, the better he liked it. He knew he shone
- in retort, and sought every opportunity to practise it. From 1838 to 1858,
- he seems to have followed up Douglas as a regular business during times of
- great political excitement, and only on one or two occasions did he find
- the "Little Giant" averse to a conflict. Here, in 1840, they came in
- collision, as they did in 1839, and as they continued to do through twenty
- or more years, until Lincoln became President of the United States, and
- Douglas's disappointments were buried with his body. Once during this
- Harrison campaign they had a fierce discussion before a meeting assembled
- in the market-house. In the course of his speech, Lincoln imputed to Van
- Buren the great sin of having voted in the New York State Convention for
- negro suffrage with a property qualification. Douglas denied the fact; and
- Lincoln attempted to prove his statement by reading a certain passage from
- Holland's "Life of Van Buren," containing a letter from Van Buren to one
- Mr. Fithian. Whereupon "Douglas got mad," snatched up the book, and,
- tossing it into the crowd, remarked sententiously, although not
- conclusively, "Damn such a book!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "He was very sensitive," says Mr. Gillespie, "where he thought he had
- failed to come up to the expectations of his friends. I remember a case.
- He was pitted by the Whigs, in 1840, to debate with Mr. Douglas, the
- Democratic champion. Lincoln did not come up to the requirements of the
- occasion. He was conscious of his failure; and I never saw any man so much
- distressed. He begged to be permitted to try it again, and was reluctantly
- indulged; and in the next effort he transcended our highest expectations.
- I never heard, and never expect to hear, such a triumphant vindication as
- he then gave of Whig measures or policy. He never after, to my knowledge,
- fell below himself."
- </p>
- <p>
- It must by this time be clear to the reader that Mr. Lincoln was never
- agitated by any passion more intense than his wonderful thirst for
- distinction. There is good evidence that it furnished the feverish dreams
- of his boyhood; and no man that knew him well can doubt that it governed
- all his conduct, from the hour when he astonished himself by his
- oratorical success against Posey and Ewing, in the back settlements of
- Macon County, to the day when the assassin marked him as the first hero of
- the restored Union, re-elected to his great office, surrounded by every
- circumstance that could minister to his pride, or exalt his sensibilities,&mdash;a
- ruler whose power was only less wide than his renown. He never rested in
- the race he had determined to run; he was ever ready to be honored; he
- struggled incessantly for place. There is no instance where an important
- office seemed to be within his reach, and he did not try to get it.
- Whatsoever he did in politics, at the bar, in private life, had more or
- less reference to this great object of his life. It is not meant to be
- said that he was capable of any shameful act, any personal dishonor, any
- surrender or concealment of political convictions. In these respects, he
- was far better than most men. It was not in his nature to run away from
- the fight, or to desert to the enemy; but he was quite willing to accept
- his full share of the fruits of victory.
- </p>
- <p>
- Born in the humblest circumstances, uneducated, poor, acquainted with
- flatboats and groceries, but a stranger to the drawing-room, it was
- natural that he should seek in a matrimonial alliance those social
- advantages which he felt were necessary to his political advancement. This
- was, in fact, his own view of the matter; but it was strengthened and
- enforced by the counsels of those whom he regarded as friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- [Miss Mary Lincoln. Wife of the President 270]
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1839 Miss Mary, daughter of Hon. Robert S. Todd of Lexington, Ky., came
- to live with her sister, Mrs. Ninian W. Edwards, at Springfield. Like Miss
- Owens, Miss Todd had a stepmother, with whom she failed to "agree," and
- for that reason the Edwardses offered her a home with them. She was young,&mdash;just
- twenty-one,&mdash;her family was of the best, and her connections in
- Illinois among the most refined and distinguished people. Her mother
- having died when she was a little girl, she had been educated under the
- care of a French lady, "opposite Mr. Clay's." She was gifted with rare
- talents, had a keen sense of the ridiculous, a ready insight into the
- weaknesses of individual character, and a most fiery and ungovernable
- temper. Her tongue and her pen were equally sharp. High-bred, proud,
- brilliant, witty, and with a will that bent every one else to her purpose,
- she took Mr. Lincoln captive the very moment she considered it expedient
- to do so.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was a rising politician, fresh from the people, and possessed
- of great power among them: Miss Todd was of aristocratic and distinguished
- family, able to lead through the awful portals of "good society"
- whomsoever they chose to countenance. It was thought that a union between
- them could not fail of numerous benefits to both parties. Mr. Edwards
- thought so; Mrs. Edwards thought so; and it was not long before Mary Todd
- herself thought so. She was very ambitious, and even before she left
- Kentucky announced her belief that she was "destined to be the wife of
- some future President." For a little while she was courted by Douglas as
- well as by Lincoln; but she is said to have refused the "Little Giant,"
- "on account of his bad morals." Being asked which of them she intended to
- have, she answered, "The one that has the best chance of being President."
- She decided in favor of Lincoln, and, in the opinion of some of her
- husband's friends, aided to no small extent in the fulfilment of the
- prophecy which the bestowal of her hand implied. A friend of Miss Todd was
- the wife of an elderly but wealthy gentleman; and being asked by one of
- the Edwards coterie why she had married "such an old, dried-up husband,
- such a withered-up old buck," she answered that "He had lots of horses and
- gold." But Mary Todd spoke up in great surprise, and said, "Is that true?
- I would rather marry a good man, a man of mind, with hope and bright
- prospects ahead for position, fame, and power, than to marry all the
- horses, gold, and bones in the world."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Edwards, Miss Todd's sister, tells us that Mr. Lincoln "was charmed
- with Mary's wit and fascinated with her quick sagacity, her will, her
- nature and culture." "I have happened in the room," she says, "where they
- were sitting often and often, and Mary led the conversation. Lincoln would
- listen, and gaze on her as if drawn by some superior power,&mdash;irresistibly
- so: he listened, but never scarcely said a word.... Lincoln could not hold
- a lengthy conversation with a lady,&mdash;was not sufficiently educated
- and intelligent in the female line to do so."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln and Mary were engaged, and their marriage was only a question
- of time. But Mr. Lincoln's love-affairs were destined never to run
- smoothly, and now one Miss Matilda Edwards made her "sweet appearance,"
- and brought havoc in her train. She was the sister of Ninian W. Edwards,
- and came to spend a year with her brother. She was very fair, and soon was
- the reigning belle. No sooner did Lincoln know her than he felt his heart
- change. The other affair, according to the Edwardses, according to Stuart,
- according to Herndon, according to Lincoln and everybody else, was a
- "policy match;" but <i>this</i> was love. For a while he evidently tried
- hard to go on as before, but his feelings were too strong to be concealed.
- Mr. Edwards endeavored to reconcile matters by getting his sister to marry
- Speed; but the rebellious beauty refused Speed incontinently (as she did
- Douglas too), and married Mr. Schuyler Strong. Poor Lincoln never
- whispered a word of his passion to her: his high sense of honor prevented
- that, and perhaps she would not have listened to him if it had been
- otherwise.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length, after long reflection, in great agony of spirit, Mr. Lincoln
- concluded that duty required him to make a candid statement of his
- feelings to the lady who was entitled to his hand. He wrote her a letter,
- and told her gently but plainly that he did not love her. He asked Speed
- to deliver it; but Speed advised him to burn it. "Speed," said Mr.
- Lincoln, "I always knew you were an obstinate man. If you won't deliver
- it, I'll get some one else to do it." But Speed now had the letter in his
- hand; and, emboldened by the warm friendship that existed between them,
- replied, "I shall not deliver it, nor give it to you to be delivered.
- Words are forgotten, misunderstood, passed by, not noticed in a private
- conversation; but once put your words in writing, and they stand as a
- living and eternal monument against you. If you think you have <i>will</i>
- and manhood enough to go and see her, and speak to her what you say in
- that letter, you may do that." Lincoln went to see her forthwith, and
- reported to Speed. He said, that, when he made his somewhat startling
- communication, she rose and said, "'The deceiver shall be deceived: woe is
- me!' alluding to a young man she had fooled." Mary told him she knew the
- reason of his change of heart, and released him from his engagement. Some
- parting endearments took place between them, and then, as the natural
- result of those endearments, a reconciliation.
- </p>
- <p>
- We quote again from Mrs. Edwards:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Lincoln and Mary were engaged; every thing was ready and prepared for the
- marriage, even to the supper. Mr. Lincoln failed to meet his engagement.
- Cause, insanity!
- </p>
- <p>
- "In his lunacy he declared he hated Mary and loved Miss Edwards. This is
- true, yet it was not his real feelings. A crazy man hates those he loves
- when at himself. Often, often, is this the case. The world had it that Mr.
- Lincoln backed out, and this placed Mary in a peculiar situation; and to
- set herself right, and free Mr. Lincoln's mind, she wrote a letter to Mr.
- Lincoln, stating that she would release him from his engagement.... The
- whole of the year was a crazy spell. Miss Edwards was at our house, say a
- year. I asked Miss Edwards if Mr. Lincoln ever mentioned the subject of
- his love to her. Miss Edwards said, 'On my word, he never mentioned such a
- subject to me: he never even stooped to pay me a compliment.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- In the language of Mr. Edwards, "Lincoln went as crazy as a loon," and was
- taken to Kentucky by Speed, who kept him "until he recovered." He "did not
- attend the Legislature in 1841-2 for this reason."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Herndon devoutly believes that Mr. Lincoln's insanity grew out of a
- most extraordinary complication of feelings,&mdash;aversion to the
- marriage proposed, a counter-attachment to Miss Edwards, and a new access
- of unspeakable tenderness for the memory of Ann Rutledge,&mdash;the old
- love struggling with a new one, and each sending to his heart a
- sacrificial pang as he thought of his solemn engagement to marry a third
- person. In this opinion Mr. Speed appears to concur, as shown by his
- letter below. At all events, Mr. Lincoln's derangement was nearly, if not
- quite, complete. "We had to remove razors from his room," says Speed,
- "take away all knives, and other dangerous things. It was terrible." And
- now Speed determined to do for him what Bowlin Greene had done on a
- similar occasion at New Salem. Having sold out his store on the 1st of
- January, 1841, he took Mr. Lincoln with him to his home in Kentucky, and
- kept him there during most of the summer and fall, or until he seemed
- sufficiently restored to be given his liberty again at Springfield, when
- he was brought back to his old quarters. During this period, "he was at
- times very melancholy," and, by his own admission, "almost contemplated
- self-destruction." It was about this time that he wrote some gloomy lines
- under the head of "Suicide," which were published in "The Sangamon
- Journal." Mr. Herndon remembered something about them; but, when he went
- to look for them in the office-file of the "Journal," he found them neatly
- cut out,&mdash;"supposed to have been done," says he, "by Lincoln."
- Speed's mother was much pained by the "deep depression" of her guest, and
- gave him a Bible, advising him to read it, to adopt its precepts, and pray
- for its promises. He acknowledged this attempted service, after he became
- President, by sending her a photograph of himself, with this inscription:
- "To my very good friend, Mrs. Lucy G. Speed, from whose pious hands I
- received an Oxford Bible twenty years ago." But Mrs. Speed's medicine, the
- best ever offered for a mind diseased, was of no avail in this case. Among
- other things, he told Speed, referring probably to his inclination to
- commit suicide, "that he had done nothing to make any human being remember
- that he had lived, and that to connect his name with the events
- transpiring in his day and generation, and so impress himself upon them as
- to link his name with something that would redound to the interest of his
- fellow-man, was what he desired to live for." Of this conversation he
- pointedly reminded Speed at the time, or just before the time, he issued
- the Emancipation Proclamation.
- </p>
- <p>
- What took place after his return to Springfield cannot be better told than
- in the words of the friends of both parties. "Mr. Edwards and myself,"
- says Mrs. Edwards, "after the first crash of things, told Mary and Lincoln
- that they had better not ever marry; that their natures, minds, education,
- raising, &amp;c., were so different, that they could not live happy as man
- and wife; had better never think of the subject again. All at once we
- heard that Mr. Lincoln and Mary had secret meetings at Mr. S. Francis's,
- editor of 'The Springfield Journal.' Mary said the reason this was so, the
- cause why it was, was that the world, woman and man, were uncertain and
- slippery, and that it was best to keep the secret courtship from all eyes
- and ears. Mrs. Lincoln told Mr. Lincoln, that, though she had released him
- in the letter spoken of, yet she would hold the question an open one,&mdash;that
- is, that she had not changed her mind, but felt as always.... The marriage
- of Mr. Lincoln and Mary was quick and sudden,&mdash;one or two hours'
- notice." How poor Mr. Lincoln felt about it, may be gathered from the
- reminiscences of his friend, J. H. Matheny, who says, "that Lincoln and
- himself, in 1842, were very friendly; that Lincoln came to him one evening
- and said, 'Jim, I shall have to marry that girl.'" He was married that
- evening, but Matheny says, "he looked as if he was going to the
- slaughter," and that Lincoln "had often told him, directly and
- individually, that he was driven into the marriage; that it was concocted
- and planned by the Edwards family; that Miss Todd&mdash;afterwards Mrs.
- Lincoln&mdash;was crazy for a week or so, not knowing what to do; and that
- he loved Miss Edwards, and went to see her, and not Mrs. Lincoln."
- </p>
- <p>
- The license to marry was issued on the 4th of November, 1842, and on the
- same day the marriage was celebrated by Charles Dresser, "M.G." With this
- date carefully borne in mind, the following letters are of surpassing
- interest. They are relics, not only of a great man, but of a great agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first is from Mr. Speed to Mr. Herndon, and explains the circumstances
- under which the correspondence took place. Although it is in part a
- repetition of what the reader already knows, it is of such peculiar value,
- that we give it in full:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- W. H. Herndon, Esq.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;I enclose you copies of all the letters of any interest
- from Mr. Lincoln to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some explanation may be needed, that you may rightly understand their
- import.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the winter of 1840 and 1841 he was unhappy about his engagement to his
- wife,&mdash;not being entirely satisfied that his <i>heart</i> was going
- with his hand. How much he suffered then on that account, none know so
- well as myself: he disclosed his whole heart to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1841 I became engaged to my wife. He was here on a visit
- when I courted her; and, strange to say, something of the same feeling
- which I regarded as so foolish in him took possession of me, and kept me
- very unhappy from the time of my engagement until I was married.
- </p>
- <p>
- This will explain the deep interest he manifested in his letters on my
- account.
- </p>
- <p>
- Louisville, Nov. 30, 1866.
- </p>
- <p>
- If you use the letters (and some of them are perfect gems) do it care
- fully, so as not to wound the feelings of Mrs. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing is plainly discernible: if I had not been married and happy,&mdash;far
- more happy than I ever expected to be,&mdash;he would not have married.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have erased a name which I do not wish published. If I have failed to do
- it anywhere, strike it out when you come to it. That is the word&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- I thank you for your last lecture. It is all new to me, but so true to my
- appreciation of Lincoln's character, that, independent of my knowledge of
- you, I would almost swear to it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln wrote a letter (a long one, which he read to me) to Dr. Drake, of
- Cincinnati, descriptive of his case. Its date would be in December, 1840,
- or early in January, 1841. I think that he must have informed Dr. D. of
- his early love for Miss Rutledge, as there was a part of the letter which
- he would not read.
- </p>
- <p>
- It would be worth much to you, if you could procure the original.
- </p>
- <p>
- Charles D. Drake, of St. Louis, may have his father's papers. The date
- which I give you will aid in the search.
- </p>
- <p>
- I remember Dr. Drake's reply, which was, that he would not undertake to
- prescribe for him without a personal interview. I would advise you to make
- some effort to get the letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend, &amp;c.,
- </p>
- <p>
- J. F. Speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first of the papers from Mr. Lincoln's pen is a letter of advice and
- consolation to his friend, for whom he apprehends the terrible things
- through which, by the help of that friend, he has himself just passed.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear Speed,&mdash;Feeling, as you know I do, the deepest solicitude for
- the success of the enterprise you are engaged in, I adopt this as the last
- method I can invent to aid you, in case (which God forbid) you shall need
- any aid. I do not place what I am going to say on paper, because I can say
- it better in that way than I could by word of mouth; but, were I to say it
- orally before we part, most likely you would forget it at the very time
- when it might do you some good. As I think it reasonable that you will
- feel very badly sometime between this and the final consummation of your
- purpose, it is intended that you shall read this just at such a time. Why
- I say it is reasonable that you will feel very badly yet, is because of
- three <i>special causes</i> added to <i>the general one</i> which I shall
- mention.
- </p>
- <p>
- The general cause is, that you are naturally of a nervous temperament, and
- this I say from what I have seen of you personally, and what you have told
- me concerning your mother at various times, and concerning your brother
- William at the time his wife died. The first special cause is your <i>exposure
- to bad weather</i> on your journey, which my experience clearly proves to
- be very severe on defective nerves. The second is the <i>absence of all
- business and conversation</i> of friends, which might divert your mind,
- give it occasional rest from the intensity of thought which will sometimes
- wear the sweetest idea threadbare, and turn it to the bitterness of death.
- </p>
- <p>
- The third is <i>the rapid and near approach of that crisis on which all
- your thoughts and feelings concentrate.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- If from all these causes you shall escape, and go through triumphantly,
- without another "twinge of the soul," I shall be most happily but most
- egregiously deceived. If, on the contrary, you shall, as I expect you will
- at some time, be agonized and distressed, let me, who have some reason to
- speak with judgment on such a subject, beseech you to ascribe it to the
- causes I have mentioned, and not to some false and ruinous suggestion of
- the Devil.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But," you will say, "do not your causes apply to every one engaged in a
- like undertaking?" By no means. <i>The particular causes</i>, to a greater
- or less extent, perhaps, do apply in all cases; but the <i>general one</i>,&mdash;nervous
- debility, which is the key and conductor of all the particular ones, and
- without which they would be utterly harmless, though it <i>does</i>
- pertain to you,&mdash;<i>does not</i> pertain to one in a thousand. It is
- out of this that the painful difference between you and the mass of the
- world springs.
- </p>
- <p>
- I know what the painful point with you is at all times when you are
- unhappy: it is an apprehension that you do not love her as you should.
- What nonsense! How came you to court her? Was it because you thought she
- deserved it, and that you had given her reason to expect it? If it was for
- that, why did not the same reason make you court Ann Todd, and at least
- twenty others of whom you can think, and to whom it would apply with
- greater force than to <i>her?</i> Did you court her for her wealth? Why,
- you know she had none. But you say you reasoned yourself into it. What do
- you mean by that? Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason
- yourself out of it? Did you not think, and partly form the purpose, of
- courting her the first time you ever saw her or heard of her? What had
- reason to do with it at that early stage? There was nothing at that time
- for reason to work upon. Whether she was moral, amiable, sensible, or even
- of good character, you did not, nor could then know, except, perhaps, you
- might infer the last from the company you found her in.
- </p>
- <p>
- All you then did or could know of her was her personal <i>appearance and
- deportment</i>; and these, if they impress at all, impress the heart, and
- not the head.
- </p>
- <p>
- Say candidly, were not those heavenly <i>black eyes</i> the whole basis of
- all your early <i>reasoning</i> on the subject? After you and I had once
- been at the residence, did you not go and take me all the way to Lexington
- and back, for no other purpose but to get to see her again, on our return
- on that evening to take a trip for that express object?
- </p>
- <p>
- What earthly consideration would you take to find her scouting and
- despising you, and giving herself up to another? But of this you have no
- apprehension; and therefore you cannot bring it home to your feelings.
- </p>
- <p>
- I shall be so anxious about you, that I shall want you to write by every
- mail. Your friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill., Feb. 3, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Your letter of the 25th January came to hand to-day. You
- well know that I do not feel my own sorrows much more keenly than I do
- yours, when I know of them; and yet I assure you I was not much hurt by
- what you wrote me of your excessively bad feeling at the time you wrote.
- Not that I am less capable of sympathizing with you now than ever, not
- that I am less your friend than ever, but because I hope and believe that
- your present anxiety and distress about her health and her life must and
- will forever banish those horrid doubts which I know you sometimes felt as
- to the truth of your affection for her. If they can once and forever be
- removed (and I almost feel a presentiment that the Almighty has sent your
- present affliction expressly for that object), surely, nothing can come in
- their stead to fill their immeasurable measure of misery. The death-scenes
- of those we love are surely painful enough; but these we are prepared for
- and expect to see: they happen to all, and all know they must happen.
- Painful as they are, they are not an unlooked-for sorrow. Should she, as
- you fear, be destined to an early grave, it is indeed a great consolation
- to know that she is so well prepared to meet it.. Her religion, which you
- once disliked so much, I will venture you now prize most highly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But I hope your melancholy bodings as to her early death are not well
- founded. I even hope that ere this reaches you, she will have returned
- with improved and still-improving health, and that you will have met her,
- and forgotten the sorrows of the past in the enjoyment of the present. I
- would say more if I could, but it seems that I have said enough. It really
- appears to me that you yourself ought to rejoice, and not sorrow, at this
- indubitable evidence of your undying affection for her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why, Speed, if you did not love her, although you might not wish her
- death, you would most certainly be resigned to it. Perhaps this point is
- no longer a question with you, and my pertinacious dwelling upon it is a
- rude intrusion upon your feelings. If so, you must pardon me. You know the
- hell I have suffered on that point, and how tender I am upon it. You know
- I do not mean wrong. I have been quite clear of hypo since you left, even
- better than I was along in the fall. I have seen&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;but
- once. She seemed very cheerful, and so I said nothing to her about what we
- spoke of.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old Uncle Billy Herndon is dead, and it is said this evening that Uncle
- Ben Ferguson will not live. This, I believe, is all the news, and enough
- at that, unless it were better.
- </p>
- <p>
- Write me immediately on the receipt of this.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill., Feb. 13, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Yours of the 1st inst. came to hand three or four days
- ago. When this shall reach you, you will have been Fanny's husband several
- days. You know my desire to befriend you is everlasting; that I will never
- cease while I know how to do any thing.
- </p>
- <p>
- But you will always hereafter be on ground that I have never occupied, and
- consequently, if advice were needed, I might advise wrong. I do fondly
- hope, however, that you will never again need any comfort from abroad.
- But, should I be mistaken in this, should excessive pleasure still be
- accompanied with a painful counterpart at times, still let me urge you, as
- I have ever done, to remember, in the depth and even agony of despondency,
- that very shortly you are to feel well again. I am now fully convinced
- that you love her as ardently as you are capable of loving. Your ever
- being happy in her presence, and your intense anxiety about her health, if
- there were nothing else, would place this beyond all dispute in my mind. I
- incline to think it probable that your nerves will fail you occasionally
- for a while; but once you get them firmly graded now, that trouble is over
- forever.
- </p>
- <p>
- I think if I were you, in case my mind were not exactly right, I would
- avoid being <i>idle</i>. I would immediately engage in some business, or
- go to making preparations for it, which would be the same thing.
- </p>
- <p>
- If you went through the ceremony calmly, or even with sufficient composure
- not to excite alarm in any present, you are safe beyond question, and in
- two or three months, to say the most, will be the happiest of men.
- </p>
- <p>
- I would desire you to give my particular respects to Fanny; but perhaps
- you will not wish her to know you have received this, lest she should
- desire to see it. Make her write me an answer to my last letter to her; at
- any rate, 1 would set great value upon a note or letter from her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Write me whenever you have leisure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. S.&mdash;I have been quite a man since you left.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Yours of the 16th inst., announcing that Miss Fanny and
- you are "no more twain, but one flesh," reached me this morning. I have no
- way of telling how much happiness I wish you both, though I believe you
- both can conceive it. I feel somewhat jealous of both of you now: you will
- be so exclusively concerned for one another, that I shall be forgotten
- entirely. My acquaintance with Miss Fanny (I call her this, lest you
- should think I am speaking of your mother) was too short for me to
- reasonably hope to long be remembered by her; and still I am sure I shall
- not forget her soon. Try if you cannot remind her of that debt she owes
- me,&mdash;and be sure you do not interfere to prevent her paying it.
- </p>
- <p>
- I regret to learn that you have resolved to not return to Illinois. I
- shall be very lonesome without you. How miserable things seem to be
- arranged in this world! If we have no friends, we have no pleasure; and,
- if we have them, we are sure to lose them, and be doubly pained by the
- loss. I did hope she and you would make your home here; but I own I have
- no right to insist. You owe obligations to her ten thousand times more
- sacred than you can owe to others, and in that light let them be respected
- and observed. It is natural that she should desire to remain with her
- relatives and friends. As to friends, however, <i>she</i> could not need
- them anywhere: she would have them in abundance here.
- </p>
- <p>
- Give my kind remembrance to Mr. Williamson and his family, particularly
- Miss Elizabeth; also to your mother, brother, and sisters. Ask little
- Eliza Davis if she will ride to town with me if I come there again.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, finally, give Fanny a double reciprocation of all the love she sent
- me. Write me often, and believe me
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. S.&mdash;Poor Easthouse is gone at last. He died a while before day
- this morning. They say he was very loath to die.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;I received yours of the 12th, written the day you went
- down to William's place, some days since, but delayed answering it till I
- should receive the promised one of the 16th, which came last night. I
- opened the letter with intense anxiety and trepidation; so much, that,
- although it turned out better than I expected, I have hardly yet, at the
- distance of ten hours, become calm.
- </p>
- <p>
- I tell you, Speed, our forebodings (for which you and I are peculiar) are
- all the worst sort of nonsense. I fancied, from the time I received your
- letter of Saturday, that the one of Wednesday was never to come, and yet
- it did come, and, what is more, it is perfectly clear, both from its tone
- and handwriting, that you were much happier, or, if you think the term
- preferable, less miserable, when you wrote it, than when you wrote the
- last one before. You had so obviously improved at the very time I so much
- fancied you would have grown worse. You say that something indescribably
- horrible and alarming still haunts you. You will not say that three months
- from now, I will venture. When your nerves once get steady now, the whole
- trouble will be over forever. Nor should you become impatient at their
- being even very slow in becoming steady. Again you say, you much fear that
- that Elysium of which you have dreamed so much is never to be realized.
- Weil, if it shall not, I dare swear it will not be the fault of her who is
- now your wife. I now have no doubt, that it is the peculiar misfortune of
- both you and me to dream dreams of Elysium far exceeding all that any
- thing earthly can realize. Far short of your dreams as you may be, no
- woman could do more to realize them than that same black-eyed Fanny. If
- you could but contemplate her through my imagination, it would appear
- ridiculous to you that any one should for a moment think of being unhappy
- with her. My old father used to have a saying, that, "If you make a bad
- bargain, hug it all the tighter;" and it occurs to me, that, if the
- bargain you have just closed can possibly be called a bad one, it is
- certainly the most pleasant one for applying that maxim to which my fancy
- can by any effort picture.
- </p>
- <p>
- I write another letter, enclosing this, which you can show her, if she
- desires it. I do this because she would think strangely, perhaps, should
- you tell her that you received no letters from me, or, telling her you do,
- refuse to let her see them. I close this, entertaining the confident hope
- that every successive letter I shall have from you (which I here pray may
- not be few, nor far between) may show you possessing a more steady hand
- and cheerful heart than the last preceding it.
- </p>
- <p>
- As ever, your friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, March 27, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Yours of the 10th inst. was received three or four days
- since. You know I am sincere when I tell you the pleasure its contents
- gave me was and is inexpressible. As to your farm matter, I have no
- sympathy with you. I have no farm, nor ever expect to have, and
- consequently have not studied the subject enough to be much interested
- with it. I can only say that I am glad you are satisfied and pleased with
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- But on that other subject, to me of the most intense interest whether in
- joy or sorrow, I never had the power to withhold my sympathy from you. It
- cannot be told how it now thrills me with joy to hear you say you are "<i>far
- happier than you ever expected to be</i>." That much I know is enough. I
- know you too well to suppose your expectations were not, at least,
- sometimes extravagant, and, if the reality exceeds them all, I say,
- Enough, dear Lord. I am not going beyond the truth when I tell you, that
- the short space it took me to read your last letter gave me more pleasure
- than the total sum of all I have enjoyed since that fatal 1st of January,
- 1841. Since then it seems to me I should have been entirely happy, but for
- the never-absent idea that there is <i>one</i> still unhappy whom I have
- contributed to make so. That still kills my soul. I cannot but reproach
- myself for even wishing to be happy while she is otherwise. She
- accompanied a large party on the railroad cars to Jacksonville last
- Monday, and on her return spoke, so that I heard of it, of having enjoyed
- the trip exceedingly. God be praised for that.
- </p>
- <p>
- You know with what sleepless vigilance I have watched you ever since the
- commencement of your affair; and, although I am almost confident it is
- useless, I cannot forbear once more to say, that I think it is even yet
- possible for your spirits to flag down and leave you miserable. If they
- should, don't fail to remember that they cannot long remain so. One thing
- I can tell you which I know you will be glad to hear, and that is that I
- have seen&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;and scrutinized her feelings as well as I
- could, and am fully convinced she is far happier now than she has been for
- the last fifteen months past.
- </p>
- <p>
- You will see by the last "Sangamon Journal" that I have made a temperance
- speech on the 22d of February, which I claim that Fanny and you shall read
- as an act of charity to me; for I cannot learn that anybody else has read
- it, or is likely to. Fortunately, it is not very long, and I shall deem it
- a sufficient compliance with my request if one of you listens while the
- other reads it.
- </p>
- <p>
- As to your Lockridge matter, it is only necessary to say that there has
- been no court since you left, and that the next commences to-morrow
- morning, during which I suppose we cannot fail to get a judgment.
- </p>
- <p>
- I wish you would learn of Everett what he would take, over and above a
- discharge, for all trouble we have been at, to take his business out of
- our hands and give it to somebody else. It is impossible to collect money
- on that or any other claim here now, and, although you know I am not a
- very petulant man, I declare I am almost out of patience with Mr.
- Everett's endless importunity. It seems like he not only writes all the
- letters he can himself, but gets everybody else in Louisville and vicinity
- to be constantly writing to us about his claim. I have always said that
- Mr. Everett is a very clever fellow, and I am very sorry he cannot be
- obliged; but it does seem to me he ought to know we are interested to
- collect his claim, and therefore would do it if we could.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am neither joking nor in a pet when I say we would thank him to transfer
- his business to some other, without any compensation for what we have
- done, provided he will see the court cost paid, for which we are security.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sweet violet you enclosed came safely to hand, but it was so dry, and
- mashed so flat, that it crumbled to dust at the first attempt to handle
- it. The juice that mashed out of it stained a place in the letter, which I
- mean to preserve and cherish for the sake of her who procured it to be
- sent. My renewed good wishes to her in particular, and generally to all
- such of your relations who know me.
- </p>
- <p>
- As ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill., July 4, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Yours of the 16th June was received only a day or two
- since. It was not mailed at Louisville till the 25th. You speak of the
- great time that has elapsed since I wrote you. Let me explain that. Your
- letter reached here a day or two after I had started on the circuit. I was
- gone five or six weeks, so that I got the letters only a few weeks before
- Butler started to your country. I thought it scarcely worth while to write
- you the news which he could and would tell you more in detail. On his
- return, he told me you would write me soon, and so I waited for your
- letter. As to my having been displeased with your advice, surely you know
- better than that. I know you do, and therefore will not labor to convince
- you. True, that subject is painful to me; but it is not your silence, or
- the silence of all the world, that can make me forget it. I acknowledge
- the correctness of your advice too; but, before I resolve to do the one
- thing or the other, I must gain my confidence in my own ability to keep my
- resolves when they are made. In that ability you know I once prided
- myself, as the only or chief gem of my character: that gem I lost, how and
- where you know too well. I have not yet regained it; and, until I do, I
- cannot trust myself in any matter of much importance. I believe now, that,
- had you understood my case at the time as well as I understood yours
- afterwards, by the aid you would have given me I should have sailed
- through clear; but that does not now afford me sufficient confidence to
- begin that or the like of that again.
- </p>
- <p>
- You make a kind acknowledgment of your obligations to me for your present
- happiness. I am much pleased with that acknowledgment. But a thousand
- times more am I pleased, to know that you enjoy a degree of happiness
- worthy of an acknowledgment. The truth is, I am not sure that there was
- any went with me in the part I took in your difficulty: I was drawn to it
- as by fate. If I would, I could not have done less than I did. I always
- was superstitious: I believe God made me one of the instruments of
- bringing your Fanny and you together, which union I have no doubt he had
- fore-ordained. Whatever he designs, he will do for me yet. "Stand still,
- and see the salvation of the Lord" is my text just now. If, as you say,
- you have told Fanny all, I should have no objection to her seeing this
- letter, but for its reference to our friend here: let her seeing it depend
- upon whether she has ever known any thing of my affairs; and, if she has
- not, do not let her.
- </p>
- <p>
- I do not think I can come to Kentucky this season. I am so poor, and make
- so little headway in the world, that I drop back in a month of idleness as
- much as I gain in a year's sowing. I should like to visit you again. I
- should like to see that "sis" of yours that was absent when I was there,
- though I suppose she would run away again, if she were to hear I was
- coming.
- </p>
- <p>
- My respects and esteem to all your friends there, and, by your permission,
- my love to your Fanny. Ever yours, Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Oct. 5, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;You have heard of my duel with Shields, and I have now
- to inform you that the duelling business still rages in this city. Day
- before yesterday Shields challenged Butler, who accepted, and proposed
- fighting next morning at sunrising in Bob Allen's meadow, one hundred
- yards' distance, with rifles. To this Whitesides, Shields's second, said
- "no," because of the law. Thus ended duel No. 2. Yesterday Whiteside chose
- to consider himself insulted by Dr. Merryman, so sent him a kind of <i>quasi</i>-challenge,
- inviting him to meet him at the Planter's House in St. Louis, on the next
- Friday, to settle their difficulty. Merryman made me his friend, and sent
- W. a note, inquiring to know if he meant his note as a challenge, and, if
- so, that he would, according to the law in such case made and provided,
- prescribe the terms of the meeting. W. returned for answer, that, if M.
- would meet him at the Planter's House as desired, he would challenge him.
- M. replied in a note, that he denied W.'s right to dictate time and place,
- but that he (M.) would waive the question of time, and meet him at
- Louisiana, Mo. Upon my presenting this note to W., and stating verbally
- its contents, he declined receiving it, saying he had business in St.
- Louis, and it was as near as Louisiana. Merryman then directed me to
- notify Whiteside that he should publish the correspondence between them,
- with such comments as he thought fit. This I did. Thus it stood at bedtime
- last night. This morning Whiteside, by his friend Shields, is praying for
- a new trial, on the ground that he was mistaken in Merryman's proposition
- to meet him at Louisiana, Mo., thinking it was the State of Louisiana.
- This Merryman hoots at, and is preparing his publication; while the town
- is in a ferment, and a street-fight somewhat anticipated.
- </p>
- <p>
- But I began this letter, not for what I have been writing, but to say
- something on that subject which you know to be of such infinite solicitude
- to me. The immense sufferings you endured from the first days of September
- till the middle of February you never tried to conceal from me, and I well
- understood. You have now been the husband of a lovely woman nearly eight
- months. That you are happier now than the day you married her, I well
- know; for without you could not be living. But I have your word for it,
- too, and the returning elasticity of spirits which is manifested in your
- letters. But I want to ask a close question, "Are you now in <i>feeling</i>,
- as well as <i>judgment</i>, glad you are married as you are?" From anybody
- but me this would be an impudent question, not to be tolerated; but I know
- you will pardon it in me. Please answer it quickly, as I am impatient to
- know.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have sent my love to your Fanny so often, I fear she is getting tired of
- it. However, I venture to tender it again,
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the last of these letters, Mr. Lincoln refers to his "duel with
- Shields." That was another of the disagreeable consequences which flowed
- from his fatal entanglement with Mary. Not content with managing a timid,
- although half-frantic and refractory, lover, her restless spirit led her
- into new fields of adventure. Her pen was too keen to be idle in the
- political controversies of the time. As a satirical writer, she had no
- rival of either sex at Springfield, and few, we venture to say, anywhere
- else. But that is a dangerous talent: the temptations to use it unfairly
- are numerous and strong; it inflicts so much pain, and almost necessarily
- so much injustice, upon those against whom it is directed, that its
- possessor rarely, if ever, escapes from a controversy without suffering
- from the desperation it provokes. Mary Todd was not disposed to let her
- genius rust for want of use; and, finding no other victim handy, she
- turned her attention to James Shields, "Auditor." She had a friend, one
- Miss Jayne, afterwards Mrs. Trumbull, who helped to keep her literary
- secrets, and assisted as much as she could in worrying the choleric
- Irishman. Mr. Francis, the editor, knew very well that Shields was "a
- fighting-man;" but the "pieces" sent him by the wicked ladies were so
- uncommonly rich in point and humor, that he yielded to a natural
- inclination, and printed them, one and all. Below we give a few specimens:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- LETTER FROM THE LOST TOWNSHIPS.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lost Townships, Aug. 27, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Mr. Printer,&mdash;I see you printed that long letter I sent you a
- spell ago: I'm quite encouraged by it, and can't keep from writing again.
- I think the printing of my letters will be a good thing all round,&mdash;it
- will give me the benefit of being known by the world, and give the world
- the advantage of knowing what's going on in the Lost Townships, and give
- your paper respectability besides. So here comes another. Yesterday
- afternoon I hurried through cleaning up the dinner-dishes, and stepped
- over to Neighbor S&mdash;&mdash;, to see if his wife Peggy was as well as
- mought be expected, and hear what they called the baby. Well, when I got
- there, and just turned round the corner of his log-cabin, there he was
- setting on the doorstep reading a newspaper.
- </p>
- <p>
- "How are you, Jeff?" says I. He sorter started when he heard me, for he
- hadn't seen me before.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why," says he, "I'm mad as the devil, Aunt'Becca!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "What about?" says I: "ain't its hair the right color? None of that
- nonsense, Jeff: there ain't an honester woman in the Lost Townships than"&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Than who?" says he: "what the mischief are you about?"
- </p>
- <p>
- I began to see I was running the wrong trail, and so says I, "Oh! nothing:
- I guess I was mistaken a little, that's all. But what is it you're mad
- about?" "Why," says he, "I've been tugging ever since harvest getting out
- wheat and hauling it to the river, to raise State-Bank paper enough to pay
- my tax this year, and a little school-debt I owe; and now, just as I've
- got it, here I open this infernal 'Extra Register,' expecting to find it
- full of 'Glorious Democratic Victories' and 'High-Comb'd Cocks,' when, lo
- and behold! I find a set of fellows calling themselves officers of State
- have forbidden the tax-collectors and school-commissioners to receive
- State paper at all; and so here it is, dead on my hands. I don't now
- believe all the plunder I've got will fetch ready cash enough to pay my
- taxes and that school-debt."
- </p>
- <p>
- I was a good deal thunderstruck myself; for that was the first I had heard
- of the proclamation, and my old man was pretty much in the same fix with
- Jeff. We both stood a moment staring at one another, without knowing what
- to say. At last says I, "Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, let me look at that
- paper." He handed it to me, when I read the proclamation over.
- </p>
- <p>
- "There, now," says he, "did you ever see such a piece of impudence and
- imposition as that?" I saw Jeff was in a good tune for saying some
- ill-natured things, and so I tho't I would just argue a little on the
- contrary side, and make him rant a spell if I could.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why," says I, looking as dignified and thoughtful as I could, "it seems
- pretty tough, to be sure, to have to raise silver where there's none to be
- raised; but then, you see, 'there will be danger of loss' if it ain't
- done."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Loss, damnation 1" says he. "I defy Daniel Webster, I defy King Solomon,
- I defy the world,&mdash;I defy&mdash;I defy&mdash;yes, I defy even you,
- Aunt'Becca, to show how the people can lose any thing by paying their
- taxes in State paper."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well," says I, "you see what the officers of State say about it, and they
- are a desarnin' set of men. But," says I, "I guess you're mistaken about
- what the proclamation says. It don't say the people will lose any thing by
- the paper money being taken for taxes. It only says 'there will be danger
- of loss;' and though it is tolerable plain that the people can't lose by
- paying their taxes in something they can get easier than silver, instead
- of having to pay silver; and though it is just as plain that the State
- can't lose by taking State-Bank paper, however low it may be, while she
- owes the bank more than the whole revenue, and can pay that paper over on
- her debt, dollar for dollar,&mdash;still there is danger of loss to the
- 'officers of State;' and you know, Jeff, we can't get along without
- officers of State."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Damn officers of State!" says he: "that's what you Whigs are always
- hurrahing for."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, don't swear so, Jeff," says I: "you know I belong to the meetin',
- and swearin' hurts my feelins'."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Beg pardon, Aunt'Becca," says he; "but I do say it's enough to make Dr.
- Goddard swear, to have tax to pay in silver, for nothing only that Ford
- may get his two thousand a year, and Shields his twenty-four hundred a
- year, and Carpenter his sixteen hundred a year, and all without 'danger of
- loss' by taking it in State paper. Yes, yes: it's plain enough now what
- these officers of State mean by 'danger of loss.' Wash, I s'pose, actually
- lost fifteen hundred dollars out of the three thousand that two of these
- 'officers of State' let him steal from the treasury, by being compelled to
- take it in State paper. Wonder if we don't have a proclamation before long
- commanding us to make up this loss to Wash in silver."
- </p>
- <p>
- And so he went on till his breath run out, and he had to stop. I couldn't
- think of any thing to say just then; and so I begun to look over the paper
- again. "Ay! here's another proclamation, or something like it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Another!" says Jeff; "and whose egg is it, pray?"
- </p>
- <p>
- I looked to the bottom of it, and read aloud, "Your obedient servant, Jas.
- Shields, Auditor."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Aha!" says Jeff, "one of them same three fellows again. Well, read it,
- and let's hear what of it."
- </p>
- <p>
- I read on till I came to where it says, "The object of this measure is to
- suspend the collection of the revenue for the current year."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now stop, now stop!" says he: "that's a lie a'ready, and I don't want to
- hear of it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh! maybe not," says I.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I say it&mdash;is&mdash;a&mdash;lie. Suspend the collection, indeed! Will
- the collectors, that have taken their oaths to make the collection, dare
- to suspend it? Is there any thing in the law requiring them to perjure
- themselves at the bidding of James Shields? Will the greedy gullet of the
- penitentiary be satisfied with swallowing him instead of all them, if they
- should venture to obey him? And would he not discover some 'danger of
- loss,' and be off, about the time it came to taking their places?
- </p>
- <p>
- "And suppose the people attempt to suspend, by refusing to pay, what then?
- The collectors would just jerk up their horses and cows, and the like, and
- sell them to the highest bidder for silver in hand, without valuation or
- redemption. Why, Shields didn't believe that story himself: it was never
- meant for the truth. If it was true, why was it not writ till five days
- after the proclamation? Why didn't Carlin and Carpenter sign it as well as
- Shields? Answer me that, Aunt'Becca. I say it's a lie, and not a well-told
- one at that. It grins out like a copper dollar. Shields is a fool as well
- as a liar. With him truth is out of the question; and, as for getting a
- good bright passable lie out of him, you might as well try to strike fire
- from a cake of tallow. I stick to it, it's all an infernal Whig lie!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "A Whig lie! Highty tighty!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes, a Whig lie; and it's just like every thing the cursed British Whigs
- do. First they'll do some divilment, and then they'll tell a lie to hide
- it. And they don't care how plain a lie it is: they think they can cram
- any sort of a one down the throats of the ignorant Locofocos, as they call
- the Democrats."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why, Jeff, you're crazy: you don't mean to say Shields is a Whig!"
- </p>
- <p>
- "<i>Yes, I do."</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why, look here! the proclamation is in your own Democratic paper, as you
- call it."
- </p>
- <p>
- "I know it; and what of that? They only printed it to let us Democrats see
- the deviltry the Whigs are at."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well, but Shields is the auditor of this Loco&mdash;I mean this
- Democratic State."
- </p>
- <p>
- "So he is, and Tyler appointed him to office."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Tyler appointed him?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Yes (if you must chaw it over), Tyler appointed him; or, if it wasn't
- him, it was old Granny Harrison, and that's all one. I tell you,
- Aunt'Becca, there's no mistake about his being a Whig. Why, his very looks
- shows it,&mdash;every thing about him shows it: if I was deaf and blind, I
- could tell him by the smell. I seed him when I was down in Springfield
- last winter. They had a sort of a gatherin' there one night among the
- grandees, they called a fair. All the gals about town was there; and all
- the handsome widows and married women, finickin' about, trying to look
- like gals, tied as tight in the middle, and puffed out at both ends, like
- bundles of fodder that hadn't been stacked yet, but wanted stackin' pretty
- bad. And then they had tables all round the house kivered over with [ ]
- caps, and pincushions, and ten thousand such little knick-knacks, tryin'
- to sell'em to the fellows that were bowin' and scrapin' and kungeerin'
- about'em. They wouldn't let no Democrats in, for fear they'd disgust the
- ladies, or scare the little gals, or dirty the floor. I looked in at the
- window, and there was this same fellow Shields floatin' about on the air,
- without heft or earthly substance, just like a lock of cat-fur where cats
- had been fightin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He was paying his money to this one, and that one, and t'other one, and
- sufferin' great loss because it wasn't silver instead of State paper; and
- the sweet distress he seemed to be in,&mdash;his very features, in the
- ecstatic agony of his soul, spoke audibly and distinctly, 'Dear girls, it
- is distressing, but I cannot marry you all. Too well I know how much you
- suffer; but do, do remember, it is not my fault that I am so handsome and
- so interesting.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "As this last was expressed by a most exquisite contortion of his face, he
- seized hold of one of their hands, and squeezed, and held on to it about a
- quarter of an hour. 'O my good fellow!' says I to myself, 'if that was one
- of our Democratic gals in the Lost Townships, the way you'd get a brass
- pin let into you, would be about up to the head.' He a Democrat!
- Fiddlesticks! I tell you, Aunt'Becca, he's a Whig, and no mistake: nobody
- but a Whig could make such a conceity dunce of himself."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Well," says I, "maybe he is; but, if he is, I'm mistaken the worst sort.
- Maybe so, maybe so; but, if I am, I'll suffer by it; I'll be a Democrat if
- it turns out that Shields is a Whig; considerin' you shall be a Whig if he
- turns out a Democrat."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A bargain, by jingoes!" says he; "but how will we find out?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Why," says I, "we'll just write, and ax the printer."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Agreed again!" says he; "and, by thunder! if it does turn out that
- Shields is a Democrat, I never will"&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Jefferson,&mdash;Jefferson"&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "What do you want, Peggy?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "Do get through your everlasting clatter sometime, and bring me a gourd of
- water: the child's been crying for a drink this live-long hour."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let it die, then: it may as well die for water as to be taxed to death to
- fatten officers of State."
- </p>
- <p>
- Jeff run off to get the water, though, just like he hadn't been sayin' any
- thing spiteful; for he's a raal good-hearted fellow, after all, once you
- get at the foundation of him.
- </p>
- <p>
- I walked into the house, and "Why, Peggy," says I, "I declare, we like to
- forgot you altogether."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Oh, yes!" says she, "when a body can't help themselves, everybody soon
- forgets'em; but, thank God! by day after to-morrow I shall be well enough
- to milk the cows, and pen the calves, and wring the contrary ones' tails
- for'em, and no thanks to nobody."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Good-evening, Peggy," says I; and so I sloped, for I seed she was mad at
- me for making Jeff neglect her so long.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, Mr. Printer, will you be sure to let us know in your next paper
- whether this Shields is a Whig or a Democrat? I don't care about it for
- myself, for I know well enough how it is already; but I want to convince
- Jeff. It may do some good to let him, and others like him, know who and
- what those officers of State are. It may help to send the present
- hypocritical set to where they belong, and to fill the places they now
- disgrace with men who will do more work for less pay, and take a fewer
- airs while they are doing it. It ain't sensible to think that the same men
- who get us into trouble will change their course; and yet it's pretty
- plain, if some change for the better is not made, it's not long that
- either Peggy or I, or any of us, will have a cow left to milk, or a calf's
- tail to wring.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours, truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- Rebecca&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lost Townships, Sept. 8,1842. Dear Mr. Printer,&mdash;I was a-standin' at
- the spring yesterday a-washin' out butter, when I seed Jim Snooks a-ridin'
- up towards the house for very life like, when, jist as I was a wonderin'
- what on airth was the matter with him, he stops suddenly, and ses he,
- "Aunt'Becca, here's somethin' for you;" and with that he hands out your
- letter. Well, you see I steps out towards him, not thinkin' that I had
- both hands full of butter; and seein' I couldn't take the letter, you
- know, without greasin' it, I ses, "Jim, jist you open it, and read it for
- me." Well, Jim opens it, and reads it; and would you believe it, Mr.
- Editor? I was so completely dumfounded, and turned into stone, that there
- I stood in the sun, a-workin' the butter, and it a-runnin' on the ground,
- while he read the letter, that I never thunk what I was about till the
- hull on't run melted on the ground, and was lost. Now, sir, it's not for
- the butter, nor the price of the butter, but, the Lord have massy on us, I
- wouldn't have sich another fright for a whole firkin of it. Why, when I
- found out that it was the man what Jeff seed down to the fair that had
- demanded the author of my letters, threatnin' to take personal
- satisfaction of the writer, I was so skart that I tho't I should
- quill-wheel right where I was.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say that Mr. S. is offended at being compared to cat's fur, and is as
- mad as a March hare (that ain't far), because I told about the squeezin'.
- Now, I want you to tell Mr. S, that, rather than fight, I'll make any
- apology; and, if he wants personal satisfaction, let him only come here,
- and he may squeeze my hand as hard as I squeeze the butter, and, if that
- ain't personal satisfaction, I can only say that he is the fust man that
- was not satisfied with squeezin' my hand. If this should not answer, there
- is one thing more that I would do rather than get a lickin'. I have all
- along expected to die a widow; but, as Mr. S. is rather good-looking than
- otherwise, I must say I don't care if we compromise the matter by&mdash;really,
- Mr. Printer, I can't help blushin'&mdash;but I&mdash;it must come out&mdash;I&mdash;but
- widowed modesty&mdash;well, if I must, I must&mdash;wouldn't he&mdash;maybe
- sorter, let the old grudge drap if I was to consent to be&mdash;be&mdash;h-i-s
- w-i-f-e? I know he's a fightin' man, and would rather fight than eat; but
- isn't marryin' better than fightin', though it does sometimes run into it?
- And I don't think, upon the whole, that I'd be sich a bad match neither:
- I'm not over sixty, and am just four feet three in my bare feet, and not
- much more round the girth; and for color, I wouldn't turn my back to nary
- gal in the Lost Townships. But, after all, maybe I'm countin' my chickins
- before they' re hatched, and dreamin' of matrimonial bliss when the only
- alternative reserved for me may be a lickin'. Jeff tells me the way these
- fire-eaters do is to give the challenged party choice of weapons, &amp;c.,
- which bein' the case, I'll tell you in confidence that I never fights with
- any thing but broomsticks, or hot water, or a shovelful of coals, or some
- such thing; the former of which being somewhat like a shillalah, may not
- be very objectionable to him. I will give him choice, however, in one
- thing, and that is, whether, when we fight, I shall wear breeches or he
- petticoats; for I presume that change is sufficient to place us on an
- equality.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours, &amp;c.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rebecca&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. S.&mdash;Jist say to your friend, if he concludes to marry rather than
- fight, I shall only inforce one condition: that is, if he should ever
- happen to gallant any young gals home of nights from our house, he must
- not squeeze their hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is by no means a subject of wonder that these publications threw Mr.
- James Shields into a state of wrath. A thin-skinned, sensitive,
- high-minded, and high-tempered man, tender of his honor, and an Irishman
- besides, it would have been strange indeed, if he had not felt like
- snuffing blood. But his rage only afforded new delights to his tormentors;
- and when it reached its height, "Aunt'Becca" transformed herself to
- "Cathleen," and broke out in rhymes like the following, which Miss Jayne's
- brother "Bill" kindly consented to "drop" for the amiable ladies.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- [For The Journal.] Ye Jew's-harps awake! The A&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;s
- won: Rebecca the widow has gained Erin's son; The pride of the North
- from Emerald Isle Has been wooed and won by a woman's smile. The
- combat's relinquished, old loves all forgot: To the widow he's bound.
- Oh, bright be his lot! In the smiles of the conquest so lately achieved,
- Joyful be his bride, "widowed modesty" relieved. The footsteps of time
- tread lightly on flowers, May the cares of this world ne'er darken his
- hours! But the pleasures of life are fickle and coy As the smiles of a
- maiden sent off to destroy. Happy groom! in sadness, far distant from
- thee, The Fair girls dream only of past times of glee Enjoyed in thy
- presence; whilst the soft blarnied store Will be fondly remembered as
- relics of yore, And hands that in rapture you oft would have prest In
- prayer will be clasped that your lot may be blest. Cathleen.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It was too bad. Mr. Shields could stand it no longer. He sent Gen.
- Whiteside to Mr. Francis, to demand the name of the person who wrote the
- letters from the "Lost Townships;" and Mr. Francis told him it was <i>A.
- Lincoln</i>. This information led to a challenge, a sudden scampering off
- of parties and friends to Missouri, a meeting, an explanation, and a
- peaceful return.
- </p>
- <p>
- Abraham Lincoln in the field of honor, sword in hand, manoeuvred by a
- second learned in the <i>duello</i>, would be an attractive spectacle
- under any circumstances. But with a celebrated man for an antagonist, and
- a lady's humor the occasion, the scene is one of transcendent interest;
- and the documents which describe it are well entitled to a place in his
- history. The letter of Mr. Shields's second, being first in date, is first
- in order.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Oct. 3, 1842. To the Editor op "The Sangamon Journal."
- </p>
- <p>
- Sir,&mdash;To prevent misrepresentation of the recent affair between
- Messrs. Shields and Lincoln, I think it proper to give a brief narrative
- of the facts of the case, as they came within my knowledge; for the truth
- of which I hold myself responsible, and request you to give the same
- publication. An offensive article in relation to Mr. Shields appeared in
- "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d September last; and, on demanding the
- author, Mr. Lincoln was given up by the editor. Mr. Shields, previous to
- this demand, made arrangements to go to Quincy on public business; and
- before his return Mr. Lincoln had left for Tremont, to attend the court,
- with the intention, as we learned, of remaining on the circuit several
- weeks. Mr. Shields, on his return, requested me to accompany him to
- Tremont; and, on arriving there, we found that Dr. Merryman and Mr. Butler
- had passed us in the night, and got there before us. We arrived in Tremont
- on the 17th ult.; and Mr. Shields addressed a note to Mr. Lincoln
- immediately, informing him that he was given up as the author of some
- articles that appeared in "The Sangamon Journal" (one more over the
- signature having made its appearance at this time), and requesting him to
- <i>retract</i> the offensive allusions contained in said articles in
- relation to his private character. Mr. Shields handed this note to me to
- deliver to Mr. Lincoln, and directed me, at the same time, not to enter
- into any verbal communication, or be the bearer of any verbal explanation,
- as such were always liable to misapprehension. This note was delivered by
- me to Mr. Lincoln, stating, at the same time, that I would call at his
- convenience for an answer. Mr. Lincoln, in the evening of the same day,
- handed me a letter addressed to Mr. Shields. In this he gave or offered no
- explanation, but stated therein that he could not submit to answer
- further, on the ground that Shields's note contained an assumption of
- facts and also a menace. Mr. Shields then addressed him another note, in
- which he disavowed all intention to menace, and requested to know whether
- he (Mr. Lincoln) was the author of either of the articles which appeared
- in "The Journal," headed "Lost Townships," and signed "Rebecca;" and, if
- so, he repeated his request of a retraction of the offensive matter in
- relation to his private character; if not, his denial would be held
- sufficient. This letter was returned to Mr. Shields unanswered, with a
- verbal statement "that there could be no further negotiation between them
- until the first note was withdrawn." Mr. Shields thereupon sent a note
- designating me as his friend, to which Mr. Lincoln replied by designating
- Dr. Merryman. These three last notes passed on Monday morning, the 19th.
- Dr. Merryman handed me Mr. Lincoln's last note when by ourselves. I
- remarked to Dr. Merryman that the matter was now submitted to us, and that
- I would propose that he and myself should pledge our words of honor to
- each other to try to agree upon terms of amicable arrangement, and compel
- our principals to accept of them. To this he readily assented, and we
- shook hands upon the pledge. It was then mutually agreed that we should
- adjourn to Springfield, and there procrastinate the matter, for the
- purpose of effecting the secret arrangement between him and myself. All
- this I kept concealed from Mr. Shields. Our horse had got a little lame in
- going to Tremont, and Dr. Merryman invited me to take a seat in his buggy.
- I accepted the invitation the more readily, as I thought, that leaving Mr.
- Shields in Tremont until his horse would be in better condition to travel
- would facilitate the private agreement between Dr. Merryman and myself. I
- travelled to Springfield part of the way with him, and part with Mr.
- Lincoln; but nothing passed between us on the journey in relation to the
- matter in hand. We arrived in Springfield on Monday night. About noon on
- Tuesday, to my astonishment, a proposition was made to meet in Missouri,
- within three miles of Alton, on the next Thursday! The weapons, cavalry
- broadswords of the largest size; the parties to stand on each side of a
- barrier, and to be confined to a limited space. As I had not been
- consulted at all on the subject, and considering the private understanding
- between Dr. Merryman and myself, and it being known that Mr. Shields was
- left at Tremont, such a proposition took me by surprise. However, being
- determined not to violate the laws of the State, I declined agreeing upon
- the terms until we should meet in Missouri. Immediately after, I called
- upon Dr. Merryman, and withdrew the pledge of honor between him and myself
- in relation to a secret arrangement. I started after this to meet Mr.
- Shields, and met him about twenty miles from Springfield. It was late on
- Tuesday night when we both reached the city, and learned that Dr. Merryman
- had left for Missouri, Mr. Lincoln having left before the proposition was
- made, as Dr. Merryman had himself informed me. The time and place made it
- necessary to start at once. We left Springfield at eleven o'clock on
- Tuesday night, travelled all night, and arrived in Hillsborough on
- Wednesday morning, where we took in Gen. Ewing. From there we went to
- Alton, where we arrived on Thursday; and, as the proposition required
- three friends on each side, I was joined by Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, as
- the friends of Mr. Shields.
- </p>
- <p>
- We then crossed to Missouri, where a proposition was made by Gen. Hardin
- and Dr. English (who had arrived there in the mean time as mutual friends)
- to refer the matter to, I think, four friends for a settlement. This I
- believed Mr. Shields would refuse, and declined seeing him; but Dr. Hope,
- who conferred with him upon the subject, returned, and stated that Mr.
- Shields declined settling the matter through any other than the friends he
- had selected to stand by him on that occasion. The friends of both the
- parties finally agreed to withdraw the papers (temporarily) to give the
- friends of Mr. Lincoln an opportunity to explain. Whereupon the friends of
- Mr. Lincoln, to wit, Messrs. Merryman, Bledsoe, and Butler, made a full
- and satisfactory explanation in relation to the article which appeared in
- "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, the only one written by him. This was
- all done without the knowledge or consent of Mr. Shields; and he refused
- to accede to it until Dr. Hope, Gen. Ewing, and myself declared the
- apology sufficient, and that we could not sustain him in going further. I
- think it necessary to state further, that no explanation or apology had
- been previously offered on the part of Mr. Lincoln to Mr. Shields, and
- that none was ever communicated by me to him, nor was any ever offered to
- me, unless a paper read to me by Dr. Merryman after he had handed me the
- broadsword proposition on Tuesday. I heard so little of the reading of the
- paper, that I do not know fully what it purported to be; and I was the
- less inclined to inquire, as Mr. Lincoln was then gone to Missouri, and
- Mr. Shields not yet arrived from Tremont. In fact, I could not entertain
- any offer of the kind, unless upon my own responsibility; and that I was
- not disposed to do after what had already transpired.
- </p>
- <p>
- I make this statement, as I am about to be absent for some time, and I
- think it due to all concerned to give a true version of the matter before
- I leave.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your obedient servant,
- </p>
- <p>
- John D. Whiteside.
- </p>
- <p>
- To which Mr. Merryman replied:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Oct. 8, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Editors of "The Journal."
- </p>
- <p>
- Gents,&mdash;By your paper of Friday, I discover that Gen. Whiteside has
- published his version of the late affair between Messrs. Shields and
- Lincoln. I now bespeak a hearing of my version of the same affair, which
- shall be true and full as to all material facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- On Friday evening, the 16th of September, I learned that Mr. Shields and
- Gen. Whiteside had started in pursuit of Mr. Lincoln, who was at Tremont,
- attending court. I knew that Mr. Lincoln was wholly unpractised both as to
- the diplomacy and weapons commonly employed in similar affairs; and I felt
- it my duty, as a friend, to be with him, and, so far as in my power, to
- prevent any advantage being taken of him as to either his honor or his
- life. Accordingly, Mr. Butler and myself started, passed Shields and
- Whiteside in the night, and arrived at Tremont ahead of them on Saturday
- morning. I told Mr. Lincoln what was brewing, and asked him what course he
- proposed to himself. He stated that he was wholly opposed to duelling, and
- would do any thing to avoid it that might not degrade him in the
- estimation of himself and friends; but, if such degradation or a fight
- were the only alternative, he would fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the afternoon Shields and Whiteside arrived, and very soon the former
- sent to Mr. Lincoln by the latter the following note or letter:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tremont, Sept. 17,1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln, Esq.&mdash;I regret that my absence on public business
- compelled me to postpone a matter of private consideration a little longer
- than I could have desired. It will only be necessary, however, to account
- for it by informing you that I have been to Quincy on business that would
- not admit of delay. I will now state briefly the reasons of my troubling
- you with this communication, the disagreeable nature of which I regret, as
- I had hoped to avoid any difficulty with any one in Springfield while
- residing there, by endeavoring to conduct myself in such a way amongst
- both my political friends and opponents, as to escape the necessity of
- any. Whilst thus abstaining from giving provocation, I have become the
- object of slander, vituperation, and personal abuse, which, were I capable
- of submitting to, I would prove myself worthy of the whole of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- In two or three of the last number's of "The Sangamon Journal," articles
- of the most personal nature, and calculated to degrade me, have made their
- appearance. On inquiring, I was informed by the editor of that paper,
- through the medium of my friend, Gen. Whiteside, that you are the author
- of those articles. This information satisfies me that I have become, by
- some means or other, the object of your secret hostility. I will not take
- the trouble of inquiring into the reason of all this; but I will take the
- liberty of requiring a full, positive, and absolute retraction of all
- offensive allusions used by you in these communications, in relation to my
- private character and standing as a man, as an apology for the insults
- conveyed in them.
- </p>
- <p>
- This may prevent consequences which no one will regret more than myself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your ob't serv't,
- </p>
- <p>
- [Copy.] Jas. Shields.
- </p>
- <p>
- About sunset Gen. Whiteside called again, and received from Mr. Lincoln
- the following answer to Mr. Shields's note:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tremont, Sept. 17, 1812
- </p>
- <p>
- Jas. Shields, Esq.&mdash;Your note of to-day was handed me by Gen.
- Whiteside. In that note, you say you have been informed, through the
- medium of the editor of "The Journal," that I am the author of certain
- articles in that paper which you deem personally abusive of you; and,
- without stopping to inquire whether I really am the author, or to point
- out what is offensive in them, you demand an unqualified retraction of all
- that is offensive, and then proceed to hint at consequences.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, sir, there is in this so much assumption of facts, and so much of
- menace as to consequences, that I cannot submit to answer that note any
- further than I have, and to add, that the consequence to which I suppose
- you allude would be matter of as great regret to me as it possibly could
- to you. Respectfully,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- In about an hour Gen. Whiteside called again with another note from Mr.
- Shields; but after conferring with Mr. Butler for a long time, say two or
- three hours, returned without presenting the note to Mr. Lincoln. This was
- in consequence of an assurance from Mr. Butler that Mr. Lincoln could not
- receive any communication from Mr. Shields, unless it were a withdrawal of
- his first note, or a challenge. Mr. Butler further stated to Gen.
- Whiteside, that, on the withdrawal of the first note, and a proper and
- gentlemanly request for an explanation, he had no doubt one would be
- given. Gen. Whiteside admitted that that was the course Mr. Shields ought
- to pursue, but deplored that his furious and intractable temper prevented
- his having any influence with him to that end. Gen. W. then requested us
- to wait with him until Monday morning, that he might endeavor to bring Mr.
- Shields to reason.
- </p>
- <p>
- On Monday morning he called and presented Mr. Lincoln the same note as,
- Mr. Butler says, he had brought on Saturday evening. It was as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Tremont, Sept. 17, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln, Esq.&mdash;In your reply to my note of this date, you intimate
- that I assume facts and menace consequences, and that you cannot submit to
- answer it further. As now, sir, you desire it, I will be a little more
- particular. The editor of "The Sangamon Journal" gave me to understand
- that you are the author of an article which appeared, I think, in that
- paper of the 2d September inst., headed "The Lost Townships," and signed
- Rebecca or 'Becca. I would therefore take the liberty of asking whether
- you are the author of said article, or any other over the same signature
- which has appeared in any of the late numbers of that paper. If so, I
- repeat my request of an absolute retraction of all offensive allusion
- contained therein in relation to my private character and standing. If you
- are not the author of any of the articles, your denial will be sufficient.
- I will say further, it is not my intention to menace, but to do myself
- justice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your ob't serv't,
- </p>
- <p>
- [Copy.] Jas. Shields.
- </p>
- <p>
- This Mr. Lincoln perused, and returned to Gen. Whiteside, telling him
- verbally, that he did not think it consistent with his honor to negotiate
- for peace with Mr. Shields, unless Mr. Shields would withdraw his former
- offensive letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a very short time Gen. Whiteside called with a note from Mr. Shields,
- designating Gen. Whiteside as his friend, to which Mr. Lincoln instantly
- replied, designating me as his. On meeting Gen. Whiteside, he proposed
- that we should pledge our honor to each other that we would endeavor to
- settle the matter amicably; to which I agreed, and stated to him the only
- conditions on which it could be so settled; viz., the withdrawal of Mr.
- Shields's first note; which he appeared to think reasonable, and regretted
- that the note had been written,&mdash;saying, however, that he had
- endeavored to prevail on Mr. Shields to write a milder one, but had not
- succeeded. He added, too, that I must promise not to mention it, as he
- would not dare to let Mr. Shields know that he was negotiating peace; for,
- said he, "He would challenge me next, and as soon cut my throat as not."
- Not willing that he should suppose my principal less dangerous than his
- own, I promised not to mention our pacific intentions to Mr. Lincoln or
- any other person; and we started for Springfield forthwith.
- </p>
- <p>
- We all, except Mr. Shields, arrived in Springfield late at night on
- Monday. We discovered that the affair had, somehow, got great publicity in
- Springfield, and that an arrest was probable. To prevent this, it was
- agreed by Mr. Lincoln and myself that he should leave early on Tuesday
- morning. Accordingly, he prepared the following instructions for my guide,
- on a suggestion from Mr. Butler that he had reason to believe that an
- attempt would be made by the opposite party to have the matter
- accommodated:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- In case Whiteside shall signify a wish to adjust this affair without
- further difficulty, let him know, that, if the present papers be
- withdrawn, and a note from Mr. Shields asking to know if I am the author
- of the articles of which he complains, and asking that I shall make him
- gentlemanly satisfaction if I am the author, and this without menace or
- dictation as to what that satisfaction shall be, a pledge is made that the
- following answer shall be given:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I did write the 'Lost Township' letter which appeared in the 'Journal' of
- the 2d inst., but had no participation in any form in any other article
- alluding to you. I wrote that wholly for political effect. I had no
- intention of injuring your personal or private character, or standing as a
- man or a gentleman; and I did not then think, and do not now think, that
- that article could produce, or has produced, that effect against you; and,
- had I anticipated such an effect, would have forborne to write it. And I
- will add, that your conduct towards me, so far as I knew, had always been
- gentlemanly, and that I had no personal pique against you, and no cause
- for any."
- </p>
- <p>
- If this should be done, I leave it with you to manage what shall and what
- shall not be published.
- </p>
- <p>
- If nothing like this is done, the preliminaries of the fight are to be:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- 1st, Weapons.&mdash;Cavalry broadswords of the largest size, precisely
- equal in all respects, and such as now used by the cavalry company at
- Jacksonville.
- </p>
- <p>
- 2d, Position.&mdash;A plank ten feet long, and from nine to twelve inches
- broad, to be firmly fixed on edge on the ground as the line between us,
- which neither is to pass his foot over upon forfeit of his life. Next, a
- line drawn on the ground on either side of said plank and parallel with
- it, each at the distance of the whole length of the sword and three feet
- additional from the plank; and the passing of his own such line by either
- party during the fight shall be deemed a surrender of the contest.
- </p>
- <p>
- 3d, Time.&mdash;On Thursday evening at 5 o'clock, if you can get it so;
- but in no case to be at a greater distance of time than Friday evening at
- 5 o'clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4th, Place.&mdash;Within three miles of Alton, on the opposite side of the
- river, the particular spot to be agreed on by you.
- </p>
- <p>
- Any preliminary details coming within the above rules, you are at liberty
- to make at your discretion; but you are in no case to swerve from these
- rules, or to pass beyond their limits.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of the forenoon I met Gen. Whiteside, and he again intimated
- a wish to adjust the matter amicably. I then read to him Mr. Lincoln's
- instructions to an adjustment, and the terms of the hostile meeting, if
- there must be one, both at the same time.
- </p>
- <p>
- He replied that it was useless to talk of an adjustment, if it could only
- be effected by the <i>withdrawal</i> of Mr. Shields's paper, for such
- withdrawal Mr. Shields would never consent to; adding, that he would as
- soon think of asking Mr. Shields to "butt his brains out against a brick
- wall as to withdraw that paper." He proceeded: "I see but one course,&mdash;that
- is a desperate remedy:'tis to tell them, if they will not make the matter
- up, they must fight us." I replied, that, if he chose to fight Mr. Shields
- to compel him to do right, he might do so; but as for Mr. Lincoln, he was
- on the defensive, and, I believed, in the right, and I should do nothing
- to compel him to do wrong. Such withdrawal having been made indispensable
- by Mr. Lincoln, I cut this matter short as to an adjustment, an I proposed
- to Gan. Whiteside to accept the terms of the fight, which he refused to do
- until Mr. Shields's arrival in town, but agreed, verbally, that Mr.
- Lincoln's friends should procure the broadswords, and take them to the
- ground. In the afternoon he came to me, saying that some persons were
- swearing out affidavits to have us arrested, and that he intended to meet
- Mr. Shields immediately, and proceed to the place designated; lamenting,
- however, that I would not delay the time, that he might procure the
- interference of Gov. Ford and Gen. Ewing to mollify Mr. Shields. I told
- him that an accommodation, except upon the terms I mentioned, was out of
- the question; that to delay the meeting was to facilitate our arrest; and,
- as I was determined not to be arrested, I should leave town in fifteen
- minutes. I then pressed his acceptance of the preliminaries, which he
- disclaimed upon the ground that it would interfere with his oath of office
- as Fund Commissioner. I then, with two other friends, went to
- Jacksonville, where we joined Mr. Lincoln about 11 o'clock on Tuesday
- night. Wednesday morning we procured the broadswords, and proceeded to
- Alton, where we arrived about 11, A.M., on Thursday. The other party were
- in town before us. We crossed the river, and they soon followed. Shortly
- after, Gen. Hardin and Dr. English presented to Gen. Whiteside and myself
- the following note:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Alton, Sept. 22, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Messrs. Whiteside and Merryman.&mdash;As the mutual personal friends of
- Messrs. Shields and Lincoln, but without authority from either, we
- earnestly desire to see a reconciliation of the misunderstanding which
- exists between them. Such difficulties should always be arranged amicably,
- if it is possible to do so with honor to both parties.
- </p>
- <p>
- Believing ourselves, that such an arrangement can possibly be effected, we
- respectfully, but earnestly, submit the following proposition for your
- consideration:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Let the whole difficulty be submitted to four or more gentlemen, to be
- selected by yourselves, who shall consider the affair, and report
- thereupon for your consideration.
- </p>
- <p>
- John J. Hardin.
- </p>
- <p>
- E. W. English.
- </p>
- <p>
- To this proposition Gen. Whiteside agreed: I declined doing so without
- consulting Mr. Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln remarked, that, as they had accepted
- the proposition, he would do so, but directed that his friends should make
- no terms except those first proposed. Whether the adjustment was finally
- made upon these very terms, and no other, let the following documents
- attest:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gentlemen,&mdash;All papers in relation to the matter in controversy
- between Mr. Shields and Mr. Lincoln having been withdrawn by the friends
- of the parties concerned, the friends of Mr. Shields ask the friends of
- Mr. Lincoln to explain all offensive matter in the articles which appeared
- in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, 9th, and 16th of September, under the
- signature of "Rebecca," and headed "Lost Townships."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is due to Gen. Hardin and Mr. English to state that their interference
- was of the most courteous and gentlemanly character.
- </p>
- <p>
- John D. Whiteside.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wm. Lee D. Ewino.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. M. Hope.
- </p>
- <p>
- Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gentlemen,&mdash;All papers in relation to the matter in controversy
- between Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Shields having been withdrawn by the friends
- of the parties concerned, we, the undersigned, friends of Mr. Lincoln, in
- accordance with your request that explanation of Mr. Lincoln's publication
- in relation to Mr. Shields in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, 9th, and
- 16th of September be made, take pleasure in saying, that, although Mr.
- Lincoln was the writer of the article signed "Rebecca" in the "Journal" of
- the 2d, and that only, yet he had no intention of injuring the personal or
- private character or standing of Mr. Shields as a gentleman or a man, and
- that Mr. Lincoln did not think, nor does he now think, that said article
- could produce such an effect; and, had Mr. Lincoln anticipated such an
- effect, he would have forborne to write it. We will further state, that
- said article was written solely for political effect, and not to gratify
- any personal pique against Mr. Shields, for he had none, and knew of no
- cause for any It is due to Gen. Hanlin and Mr. English to say that their
- interference was of the most courteous and gentlemanly character.
- </p>
- <p>
- E. H. Merryman.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. T. Bledsoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wm. Butler.
- </p>
- <p>
- Let it be observed now, that Mr. Shields's friends, after agreeing to the
- arbitrament of four disinterested gentlemen, declined the contract, saying
- that Mr. Shields wished his own friends to act for him. They then proposed
- that we should explain without any withdrawal of papers. This was promptly
- and firmly refused, and Gen. Whiteside himself pronounced the papers
- withdrawn. They then produced a note requesting us to "<i>disavow</i>" all
- offensive intentions in the publications, &amp;c., &amp;c. This we
- declined answering, and only responded to the above request for an
- explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- These are the material facts in relation to the matter, and I think
- present the case in a very different light from the garbled and curtailed
- statement of Gen. Whiteside. Why he made that statement I know not, unless
- he wished to detract from the honor of Mr. Lincoln. This was ungenerous,
- more particularly as he on the ground requested us not to make in our
- explanation any quotations from the "Rebecca papers;" also not to make <i>public
- the terms of reconciliation</i>, and to unite with them in defending the
- honorable character of the adjustment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gen. W., in his publication, says, "The friends of both parties agreed to
- withdraw the papers (temporarily) to give the friends of Mr. Lincoln an
- opportunity to explain." This I deny. I say the papers were withdrawn to
- enable Mr. Shields's friends to <i>ask</i> an explanation; and I appeal to
- the documents for proof of my position.
- </p>
- <p>
- By looking over these documents, it will be seen that Mr. Shields had not
- before asked for an <i>explanation</i>, but had all the time been
- dictatorily insisting on a <i>retraction</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gen. Whiteside, in his communication, brings to light much of Mr.
- Shields's manifestations of bravery behind the scenes. I can do nothing of
- the kind for Mr. Lincoln. He took his stand when I first met him at
- Tremont, and maintained it <i>calmly</i> to the last, without difficulty
- or difference between himself and his friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- I cannot close this article, lengthy as it is, without testifying to the
- honorable and gentlemanly conduct of Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, nor indeed
- can I say that I saw any thing objectionable in the course of Gen.
- Whiteside up to the time of his communication. This is so replete with
- prevarication and misrepresentation, that I cannot accord to the General
- that candor which I once supposed him to possess. He complains that I did
- not procrastinate time according to agreement. He forgets that by his own
- act he cut me off from that chance in inducing me, by promise, not to
- communicate our secret contract to Mr. Lincoln. Moreover, I could see no
- consistency in wishing for an extension of time at that stage of the
- affair, when in the outset they were in so precipitate a hurry, that they
- could not wait three days for Mr. Lincoln to return from Tremont, but must
- hasten there, apparently with the intention of bringing the matter to a
- speedy issue. He complains, too, that, after inviting him to take a seat
- in my buggy, I never broached the subject to him on our route here. But
- was I, the defendant in the case, with a challenge hanging over me, to
- make advances, and beg a reconciliation? Absurd! Moreover, the valorous
- general forgets that he beguiled the tedium of the journey by recounting
- to me his exploits in many a well-fought battle,&mdash;dangers by "flood
- and field" in which I don't believe he ever participated,&mdash;doubtless
- with a view to produce a salutary effect on my nerves, and impress me with
- a proper notion of his fire-eating propensities.
- </p>
- <p>
- One more main point of his argument, and I have done. The General seems to
- be troubled with a convenient shortness of memory on some occasions. He
- does not remember that any explanations were offered at any time, unless
- it were a paper read when the "broadsword proposition" was tendered, when
- his mind was so confused by the anticipated clatter of broadswords, or <i>something
- else</i>, that he did "not know fully what it purported to be." The truth
- is, that by unwisely refraining from mentioning it to his principal, he
- placed himself in a dilemma which he is now endeavoring to shuffle out of.
- By his inefficiency, and want of knowledge of those laws which govern
- gentlemen in matters of this kind, he has done great injustice to his
- principal, a gentleman who I believe is ready at all times to vindicate
- his honor manfully, but who has been unfortunate in the selection of his
- friend; and this fault he is now trying to wipe out by doing an act of
- still greater injustice to Mr. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- E. H. Merryman.
- </p>
- <p>
- And so Mr. Lincoln acknowledged himself to have been the author of one of
- the "Lost Township Letters." Whether he was or not, was known only perhaps
- to Miss Todd and himself. At the time of their date, he was having secret
- meetings with her at Mr. Francis's house, and endeavoring to nerve himself
- to the duty of marrying her, with what success the letters to Speed are
- abundant evidence. It is probable that Mary composed them fresh from these
- stolen conferences; that some of Mr. Lincoln's original conceptions and
- peculiarities of style unwittingly crept into them, and that here and
- there he altered and amended the manuscript before it went to the printer.
- Such a connection with a lady's productions made it obligatory upon him to
- defend them. But why avow one, and disavow the rest? It is more than
- likely that he was determined to take just enough responsibility to fight
- upon, provided Shields should prove incorrigible, and not enough to
- prevent a peaceful issue, if the injured gentleman should be inclined to
- accept an apology.
- </p>
- <p>
- After his marriage, Mr. Lincoln took up his residence at the "Globe
- Tavern," where he had a room and boarding for man and wife for the
- moderate sum of four dollars per week. But, notwithstanding cheap living,
- he was still as poor as ever, and gave "poverty" as one of his reasons for
- not paying a friendly visit which seemed to be expected of him.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the bar and in political affairs he continued to work with as much
- energy as before, although his political prospects seem just now to have
- suffered an unexpected eclipse. In 1843, Lincoln, Hardin, and Baker were
- candidates for the Whig congressional nomination; but between Hardin and
- Baker there was "bitter hostility," and between Baker and Lincoln
- "suspicion and dislike." The contest was long and fierce; but, before it
- was over, Lincoln reluctantly withdrew in favor of Baker. He had had a
- hard time of it, and had been compelled to meet accusations of a very
- strange character. Among other things, he was charged with being an
- aristocrat; with having deserted his old friends, the people, by marrying
- a proud woman on account of her blood and family. This hurt him keenly,
- and he took great pains to disprove it; but this was not all. He was
- called an infidel by some, a Presbyterian here, an Episcopalian there; so
- that by turns he incurred the hostility of all the most powerful religious
- societies in the district.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 24th of March, he wrote to Mr. Speed as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, March 24, 1843.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;... We had a meeting of the Whigs of the county here on
- last Monday to appoint delegates to a district convention; and Baker beat
- me, and got the delegation instructed to go for him. The meeting, in spite
- of my attempt to decline it, appointed me one of the delegates; so that,
- in getting Baker the nomination, I shall be fixed a good deal like a
- fellow who is made a groomsman to a man that has cut him out, and is
- marrying his own dear "gal." About the prospects of your having a namesake
- at our town, can't say exactly yet.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was now a Baker delegate, pledged to get him the nomination if he
- could; and yet he was far from giving up the contest in his own behalf.
- Only two days after the letter to Speed, he wrote to Mr. Morris:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill., March 26, 1843.
- </p>
- <p>
- Friend Morris,&mdash;Your letter of the 23d was received on yesterday
- morning, and for which (instead of an excuse, which you thought proper to
- ask) I tender you my sincere thanks. It is truly gratifying to me to
- learn, that, while the people of Sangamon have cast me off, my old friends
- of Menard, who have known me longest and best, stick to me. It would
- astonish, if not amuse, the older citizens (a stranger, friendless,
- uneducated, penniless boy, working on a flat-boat at ten dollars per
- month) to learn that I have been put down here as the candidate of pride,
- wealth, and aristocratic family distinction. Yet so, chiefly, it was.
- There was, too, the strangest combination of church-influence against me.
- Baker is a Campbellite; and therefore, as I suppose, with few exceptions,
- got all that church.
- </p>
- <p>
- My wife has some relations in the Presbyterian churches, and some with the
- Episcopal churches; and therefore, wherever it would tell, I was set down
- as either the one or the other, while it was everywhere contended that no
- Christian ought to go for me, because I belonged to no church, was
- suspected of being a deist, and had talked about fighting a duel. With all
- these things, Baker, of course, had nothing to do. Nor do I complain of
- them. As to his own church going for him, I think that was right enough:
- and as to the influences I have spoken of in the other, though they were
- very strong, it would be grossly untrue and unjust to charge that they
- acted upon them in a body, or were very near so. I only mean that those
- influences levied a tax of a considerable per cent upon my strength
- throughout the religious controversy. But enough of this.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say, that, in choosing a candidate for Congress, you have an equal
- right with Sangamon; and in this you are undoubtedly earnest. In agreeing
- to withdraw if the Whigs of Sangamon should go against me, I did not mean
- that they alone were worth consulting, but that if she, with her heavy
- delegation, should be against me, it would be impossible for me to
- succeed; and therefore I had as well decline. And in relation to Menard
- having rights, permit me fully to recognize them, and to express the
- opinion, that, if she and Mason act circumspectly, they will in the
- convention be able so far to enforce their rights as to decide absolutely
- which <i>one</i> of the candidates shall be successful. Let me show the
- reason of this. Hardin, or some other Morgan candidate, will get Putnam,
- Marshall, Woodford, Tazewell, and Logan,&mdash;make sixteen. Then you and
- Mason, having three, can give the victory to either side.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say you shall instruct your delegates for me, unless I object. I
- certainly shall not object. That would be too pleasant a compliment for me
- to tread in the dust. And besides, if any thing should happen (which,
- however, is not probable) by which Baker should be thrown out of the
- fight, I would be at liberty to accept the nomination if I could get it. I
- do, however, feel myself bound not to hinder him in any way from getting
- the nomination. I should despise myself were I to attempt it. I think,
- then, it would be proper for your meeting to appoint three delegates, and
- to instruct them to go for some one as a first choice, some one else as a
- second, and perhaps some one as a third; and, if in those instructions I
- were named as the first choice, it would gratify me very much.
- </p>
- <p>
- If you wish to hold the balance of power, it is important for you to
- attend to and secure the vote of Mason also. You should be sure to have
- men appointed delegates that you know you can safely confide in. If
- yourself and James Short were appointed for your county, all would be
- safe; but whether Jim's woman affair a year ago might not be in the way of
- his appointment is a question. I don't know whether you know it, but I
- know him to be as honorable a man as there is in the world. You have my
- permission, and even request, to show this letter to Short; but to no one
- else, unless it be a very particular friend, who you know will not speak
- of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. S.&mdash;Will you write me again?
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0008" id="image-0008">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/306.jpg" alt="Joshua F. Speed 306 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- To Martin M. Morris, Petersburg, 111.
- </p>
- <p>
- And finally to Speed on the same subject:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, May 18, 1843.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;Yours of the 9th inst. is duly received, which I do not
- meet as a "bore," but as a most welcome visitor. I will answer the
- business part of it first.
- </p>
- <p>
- In relation to our Congress matter here, you were right in supposing I
- would support the nominee. Neither Baker nor I, however, is the man, but
- Hardin, so far as I can judge from present appearances. We shall have no
- split or trouble about the matter,&mdash;all will be harmony. In relation
- to the "coming events" about which Butler wrote you, I had not heard one
- word before I got your letter; but I have so much confidence in the
- judgment of a Butler on such a subject, that I incline to think there may
- be some reality in it. What day does Butler appoint? By the way, how do
- "events" of the same sort come on in your family? Are you possessing
- houses and lands, and oxen and asses, and men-servants and maid-servants,
- and begetting sons and daughters? We are not keeping house, but boarding
- at the Globe Tavern, which is very well kept now by a widow lady of the
- name of Beck. Our room (the same Dr. Wallace occupied there) and boarding
- only costs us four dollars a week. Ann Todd was married something more
- than a year since to a fellow by the name of Campbell, and who, Mary says,
- is pretty much of a "dunce," though he has a little money and property.
- They live in Boonville, Mo., and have not been heard from lately enough
- for me to say any thing about her health. I reckon it will scarcely be in
- our power to visit Kentucky this year. Besides poverty and the necessity
- of attending to business, those "coming events," I suspect, would be
- somewhat in the way. I most heartily wish you and your Fanny would not
- fail to come. Just let us know the time, and we will have a room provided
- for you at our house, and all be merry together for a while. Be sure to
- give my respects to your mother and family: assure her, that, if I ever
- come near her, I will not fail to call and see her. Mary joins in sending
- love to your Fanny and you.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the "race," still smarting from the mortification of defeat, and the
- disappointment of a cherished hope, he took his old friend Jim Matheny
- away off to a solitary place in the woods, "and then and there," "with
- great emphasis," protested that he had not grown proud, and was not an
- aristocrat. "Jim," said he, in conclusion, "I am now, and always shall be,
- the same Abe Lincoln that I always was."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII
- </h2>
- <p>
- IN 1844 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for elector on the Whig ticket.
- Mr. Clay, as he has said himself, was his "<i>beau-ideal</i> of a
- statesman," and he labored earnestly and as effectually as any one else
- for his election. For the most part, he still had his old antagonists to
- meet in the Springfield region, chief among whom this year was John
- Calhoun. With him and others he had joint debates, running through several
- nights, which excited much popular feeling. One of his old friends and
- neighbors, who attended all these discussions, speaks in very enthusiastic
- terms of Mr. Calhoun, and, after enumerating his many noble gifts of head
- and heart, concludes that "Calhoun came nearer of whipping Lincoln in
- debate than Douglas did."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln made many speeches in Illinois, and finally, towards the close
- of the campaign, he went over into Indiana, and there continued "on the
- stump" until the end. Among other places he spoke at Rockport on the Ohio,&mdash;where
- he had first embarked for New Orleans with Gentry,&mdash;at Gentryville,
- and at a place in the country about two miles from the cabin where his
- father had lived. While he was in the midst of his speech at Gentryville,
- his old friend, Nat Grigsby, entered the room. Lincoln recognized him on
- the instant, and, stopping short in his remarks, cried out, "There's Nat!"
- Without the slightest regard for the proprieties of the occasion, he
- suspended his address totally, and, striding from the platform, began
- scrambling through the audience and over the benches, toward the modest
- Nat, who stood near the door. When he reached him, Lincoln shook his hand
- "cordially;" and, after felicitating himself sufficiently upon the happy
- meeting, he returned to the platform, and finished his speech. When that
- was over, Lincoln could not make up his mind to part with Nat, but
- insisted that they must sleep together. Accordingly, they wended their way
- to Col. Jones's, where that fine old Jackson Democrat received his
- distinguished "clerk" with all the honors he could show him. Nat says,
- that in the night a cat "began mewing, scratching, and making a fuss
- generally." Lincoln got up, took the cat in his hands, and stroking its
- back "gently and kindly," made it sparkle for Nat's amusement. He then
- "gently" put it out of the door, and, returning to bed, "commenced telling
- stories and talking over old times."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is hardly necessary to say, that the result of the canvass was a severe
- disappointment to Mr. Lincoln. No defeat but his own could have given him
- more pain; and thereafter he seems to have attended quietly to his own
- private business until the Congressional canvass of 1846.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was thought for many years by some persons well informed, that between
- Lincoln, Logan, Baker, and Hardin,&mdash;four very conspicuous Whig
- leaders,&mdash;there was a secret personal understanding that they four
- should "rotate" in Congress until each had had a term. Baker succeeded
- Hardin in 1844; Lincoln was elected in 1846, and Logan was nominated, but
- defeated, in 1848. Lincoln publicly declined to contest the nomination
- with Baker in 1844; Hardin did the same for Lincoln in 1846 (although both
- seem to have acted reluctantly), and Lincoln refused to run against Logan
- in 1848. Col. Matheny and others insist, with great show of reason, that
- the agreement actually existed; and, if such was the case, it was
- practically carried out, although Lincoln was a candidate against Baker,
- and Hardin against Lincoln, as long as either of them thought there was
- the smallest prospect of success. They might have done this, however,
- merely to keep other and less tractable candidates out of the field. That
- Lincoln would cheerfully have made such a bargain to insure himself a seat
- in Congress, there can be no doubt; but the supposition that he did do it
- can scarcely be reconciled with the feeling displayed by him in the
- conflict with Baker, or the persistency of Hardin, to a very late hour, in
- the contest of 1846.
- </p>
- <p>
- At all events, Mr. Lincoln and Gen. Hardin were the two, and the only two,
- candidates for the Whig nomination in 1846. The contest was much like the
- one with Baker, and Lincoln was assailed in much the same fashion. He was
- called a deist and an infidel, both before and after his nomination, and
- encountered in a less degree the same opposition from the members of
- certain religious bodies that had met him before. But with Hardin he
- maintained personal relations the most friendly. The latter proposed to
- alter the mode of making the nomination; and, in the letter conveying this
- desire to Mr. Lincoln, he also offered to stipulate that each candidate
- should remain within the limits of his own county. To this Mr. Lincoln
- replied, "As to your proposed stipulation that all the candidates shall
- remain in their own counties, and restrain their friends to the same, it
- seems to me, that, on reflection, you will see the fact of your having
- been in Congress has, in various ways, so spread your name in the district
- as to give you a decided advantage in such a stipulation. I appreciate
- your desire to keep down excitement, and I promise you to 'keep cool'
- under the circumstances."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 26th of February, 1846, "The Journal" contained Gen. Hardin's card
- declining to be "longer considered a candidate," and in its editorial
- comments occurred the following: "We have had, and now have, no doubt that
- he (Hardin) has been, and now is, a great favorite with the Whigs of the
- district. He states, in substance, that there was never any understanding
- on his part that his name was not to be presented in the canvasses of 1844
- and 1846. This, we believe, is strictly true. Still, the doings of the
- Pekin Convention did seem to point that way; and the general's voluntary
- declination as to the canvass of 1844 was by many construed into an
- acquiescence on his part. These things had led many of his most devoted
- friends to not expect him to be a candidate at this time. Add to this the
- relation that Mr. Lincoln bears, and has borne, to the party, and it is
- not strange that many of those who are as strongly devoted to Gen. Hardin
- as they are to Mr. Lincoln should prefer the latter at this time. We do
- not entertain a doubt, that, if we could reverse the positions of the two
- men, that a very large portion of those who now have supported Mr. Lincoln
- most warmly would have supported Gen. Hardin quite as warmly." This
- article was admirably calculated to soothe Gen. Hardin, and to win over
- his friends. It was wise and timely. The editor was Mr. Lincoln's intimate
- friend. It is marked by Mr. Lincoln's style, and has at least one
- expression which was peculiar to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- In its issue of May 7, "The Journal" announced the nomination as having
- been made at Petersburg, on the Friday previous, and said further, "This
- nomination was, of course, anticipated, there being no other candidate in
- the field. Mr. Lincoln, we all know, is a good Whig, a good man, an able
- speaker, and richly deserves, as he enjoys, the confidence of the Whigs of
- this district and of the State."
- </p>
- <p>
- Peter Cartwright, the celebrated pioneer Methodist preacher, noted for his
- piety and combativeness, was Mr. Lincoln's competitor before the people.
- We know already the nature of the principal charges against Mr. Lincoln's
- personal character; and these, with the usual criticism upon Whig policy,
- formed the staple topics of the campaign on the Democratic side. But Peter
- himself did not escape with that impunity which might have been expected
- in the case of a minister of the gospel. Rough tongues circulated
- exaggerated stories of his wicked pugnacity and his worldly-mindedness,
- whilst the pretended servant of the Prince of peace. Many Democrats looked
- with intense disgust upon his present candidacy, and believed, that, by
- mingling in politics, he was degrading his office and polluting the
- Church. One of these Democrats told Mr. Lincoln what he thought, and said,
- that, although it was a hard thing to vote against his party, he would do
- it if it should be necessary to defeat Cartwright. Mr. Lincoln told him,
- that on the day of the election he would give him a candid opinion as to
- whether the vote was needed or not Accordingly, on that day, he called
- upon the gentleman, and said, "I have got the preacher,... and don't want
- your vote."
- </p>
- <p>
- Clay's majority in this district in 1844 had been but nine hundred and
- fourteen; whereas it now gave Mr. Lincoln a majority of fifteen hundred
- and eleven, in a year which had no Presidential excitements to bring out
- electors. In 1848 Gen. Taylor's majority was smaller by ten, and the same
- year the Whig candidate for Congress was defeated by a hundred and six.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the following letter to Mr. Speed, he intimates that the first
- sensations of pleasure attending his new distinction were not of long
- duration; at least, that there were moments in which, if he did not forget
- his greatness, it afforded him little joy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Oct. 22, 1846.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- You no doubt assign the suspension of our correspondence to the true
- philosophic cause; though it must be confessed by both of us, that this is
- rather a cold reason for allowing a friendship such as ours to die out by
- degrees. I propose now, that, upon receipt of this, you shall be
- considered in my debt, and under obligations to pay soon, and that neither
- shall remain long in arrears hereafter. Are you agreed?
- </p>
- <p>
- Being elected to Congress, though I am very grateful to our friends for
- having done it, has not pleased me as much as I expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- We have another boy, born the 10th of March. He is very much such a child
- as Bob was at his age, rather of a longer order. Bob is "short and low,"
- and expect always will be. He talks very plainly,&mdash;almost as plainly
- as anybody. He is quite smart enough. I sometimes fear he is one of the
- little rare-ripe sort, that are smarter at about five than ever after. He
- has a great deal of that sort of mischief that is the offspring of much
- animal spirits. Since I began this letter, a messenger came to tell me Bob
- was lost; but by the time I reached the house his mother had found him,
- and had him whipped; and by now, very likely, he is run away again. Mary
- has read your letter, and wishes to be remembered to Mrs. S. and you, in
- which I most sincerely join her. As ever yours.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the meeting of the Thirtieth Congress Mr. Lincoln took his seat, and
- went about the business of his office with a strong determination to do
- something memorable. He was the only Whig member from Illinois, and would
- be carefully watched. His colleagues were several of them old
- acquaintances of the Vandalia times. They were John McClernand, O. B.
- Ficklin, William A. Richardson, Thomas J. Turner, Robert Smith, and John
- Wentworth (Long John). And at this session that alert, tireless, ambitious
- little man, Stephen A. Douglas, took his seat in the Senate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The roll of this House shone with an array of great and brilliant names.
- Robert C. Winthrop was the Speaker. On the Whig side were John Quincy
- Adams, Horace Mann, Hunt of New York, Collamer of Vermont, Ingersoll of
- Pennsylvania, Botts and Goggin of Virginia, Morehead of Kentucky, Caleb B.
- Smith of Indiana, Stephens and Toombs of Georgia, Gentry of Tennessee, and
- Vinton and Schenck of Ohio. On the Democratic side were Wilmot of
- Pennsylvania, McLane of Maryland, McDowell of Virginia, Rhett of South
- Carolina, Cobb of Georgia, Boyd of Kentucky, Brown and Thompson of
- Mississippi, and Andrew Johnson and George W. Jones of Tennessee. In the
- Senate were Webster, Calhoun, Benton, Berrien, Clayton, Bell, Hunter, and
- William R. King.
- </p>
- <p>
- The House organized on the 6th; and the day previous to that. Mr. Lincoln
- wrote to his friend and partner, William H. Herndon:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Dec. 5, 1847.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;You may remember that about a year ago a man by the
- name of Wilson (James Wilson, I think) paid us twenty dollars as an
- advance fee to attend to a case in the Supreme Court for him, against a
- Mr. Campbell, the record of which case was in the hands of Mr. Dixon of
- St. Louis, who never furnished it to us. When I was at Bloomington last
- fall, I met a friend of Wilson, who mentioned the subject to me, and
- induced me to write to Wilson, telling him that I would leave the ten
- dollars with you which had been left with me to pay for making abstracts
- in the case, so that the case may go on this winter; but I came away, and
- forgot to do it. What I want now is to send you the money to be used
- accordingly, if any one comes on to start the case, or to be retained by
- you if no one does.
- </p>
- <p>
- There is nothing of consequence new here. Congress is to organize
- to-morrow. Last night we held a Whig caucus for the House, and nominated
- Winthrop of Massachusetts for Speaker, Sargent of Pennsylvania for
- Sergeant-at-arms, Homer of New Jersey Doorkeeper, and McCormick of
- District of Columbia Postmaster. The Whig majority in the House is so
- small, that, together with some little dissatisfaction, leaves it doubtful
- whether we will elect them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- This paper is too thick to fold, which is the reason I send only a
- halfsheet.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again on the 13th, to the same gentleman:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Dec. 13, 1847.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your letter advising me of the receipt of our fee in
- the bank-case is just received, and I don't expect to hear another as good
- a piece of news from Springfield while I am away. I am under no
- obligations to the bank; and I therefore wish you to buy bank
- certificates, and pay my debt there, so as to pay it with the least money
- possible. I would as soon you should buy them of Mr. Ridgely, or any other
- person at the bank, as of any one else, provided you can get them as
- cheaply. I suppose, after the bank-debt shall be paid, there will be some
- money left, out of which I would like to have you pay Lavely and Stout
- twenty dollars, and Priest and somebody (oil-makers) ten dollars, for
- materials got for house-painting. If there shall still be any left, keep
- it till you see or hear from me.
- </p>
- <p>
- I shall begin sending documents so soon as I can get them. I wrote you
- yesterday about a "Congressional Globe." As you are all so anxious for me
- to distinguish myself, I have concluded to do so before long.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was a member of the Committee on Post-offices and Post-roads,
- and in that capacity had occasion to study the claim of a mail-contractor
- who had appealed to Congress against a decision of the Department. Mr.
- Lincoln made a speech on the case, in which, being his first, he evidently
- felt some pride, and reported progress to his friends at home:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Jan. 8, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your letter of Dec. 27 was received a day or two ago.
- I am much obliged to you for the trouble you have taken, and promise to
- take, in my little business there. As to speech-making, by way of getting
- the hang of the House, I made a little speech two or three days ago, on a
- post-office question of no general interest. I find speaking <i>here and
- elsewhere</i> about the same thing. I was about as badly scared, and no
- worse, as I am when I speak in court. I expect to make one within a week
- or two, in which I hope to succeed well enough to wish you to see it.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is very pleasant to me to learn from you that there are some who desire
- that I should be re-elected. I most heartily thank them for the kind
- partiality; and I can say, as Mr. Clay said of the annexation of Texas,
- that "<i>personally</i> I would not object" to a re-election, although I
- thought at the time, and still think, it would be quite as well for me to
- return to the law at the end of a single term. I made the declaration,
- that I would not be a candidate again, more from a wish to deal fairly
- with others, to keep peace among our friends, and to keep the district
- from going to the enemy, than for any cause personal to myself; so that,
- if it should so happen <i>that nobody else wishes to be elected</i>, I
- could not refuse the people the right of sending me again. But to enter
- myself as a competitor of others, or to authorize any one so to enter me,
- is what my word and honor forbid.
- </p>
- <p>
- I get some letters intimating a probability of so much difficulty amongst
- our friends as to lose us the district; but I remember such letters were
- written to Baker when my own case was under consideration, and I trust
- there is no more ground for such apprehension now than there was then.
- </p>
- <p>
- Remember I am always glad to receive a letter from you.
- </p>
- <p>
- Most truly your friend,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thoroughly hostile to Polk, and hotly opposed to the war, Mr. Lincoln took
- an active, although not a leading part in the discussions relating to the
- commencement and conduct of the latter. He was politician enough, however,
- to go with the majority of his party in voting supplies to the troops, and
- thanks to the generals, whilst censuring the President by solemnly
- declaring that the "war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally begun by
- the President of the United States." But his position, and the position of
- the Whigs, will be made sufficiently apparent by the productions of his
- own pen.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 22d of December, 1847, Mr. Lincoln introduced a preamble and
- resolutions, which attained great celebrity in Illinois under the title of
- "Spot Resolutions," and in all probability lost the party a great many
- votes in the Springfield district. They were as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Whereas, The President of the United States, in his Message of May 11,
- 1846, has declared that "the Mexican Government not only refused to
- receive him [the envoy of the United States], or listen to his
- propositions, but, after a long-continued series of menaces, has at last
- invaded <i>our territory</i>, and shed the blood of our fellow-citizens on
- <i>our own soil</i>;"
- </p>
- <p>
- And again, in his Message of Dec. 8, 1846, that "we had ample cause of war
- against Mexico long before the breaking out of hostilities; but even then
- we forbore to take redress into our own hands until Mexico herself became
- the aggressor, by invading <i>our soil</i> in hostile array, and shedding
- the blood of our citizens;"
- </p>
- <p>
- And yet again, in his Message of Dec. 7, 1847, that "the Mexican
- Government refused even to hear the terms of adjustment which he [our
- minister of peace] was authorized to propose, and finally, under wholly
- unjustifiable pretexts, involved the two countries in war, by invading the
- territory of the State of Texas, striking the first blow, and shedding the
- blood of our citizens on <i>our own soil</i>;" and,
- </p>
- <p>
- Whereas, This House is desirous to obtain a full knowledge of all the
- facts which go to establish whether the particular spot on which the blood
- of our citizens was so shed was or was not at that time "<i>our own soil</i>;"
- therefore,
- </p>
- <p>
- Resolved by the House of Representatives, That the President of the United
- States be respectfully requested to inform this House,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- 1st. Whether the spot on which the blood of our citizens was shed, as in
- his Messages declared, was or was not within the territory of Spain, at
- least after the treaty of 1819, until the Mexican revolution.
- </p>
- <p>
- 2d. Whether that spot is or is not within the territory which was wrested
- from Spain by the revolutionary government of Mexico.
- </p>
- <p>
- 3d. Whether that spot is or is not within a settlement of people, which
- settlement has existed ever since long before the Texas revolution, and
- until its inhabitants fled before the approach of the United States army.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4th. Whether that settlement is or is not isolated from any and all other
- settlements by the Gulf and the Rio Grande on the south and west, and by
- wide, uninhabited regions on the north and east.
- </p>
- <p>
- 5th. Whether the people of that settlement, or a majority of them, or any
- of them, have ever submitted themselves to the government or laws of Texas
- or of the United States, by consent or by compulsion, either by accepting
- office, or voting at elections, or paying tax, or serving on juries, or
- having process served upon them, or in any other way.
- </p>
- <p>
- 6th. Whether the people of that settlement did or did not flee from the
- approach of the United States army, leaving unprotected their homes and
- their growing crops, <i>before</i> the blood was shed, as in the Messages
- stated; and whether the first blood, so shed, was or was not shed within
- the enclosure of one of the people who had thus fled from it.
- </p>
- <p>
- 7th. Whether our <i>citizens</i>, whose blood was shed, as in his Messages
- declared, were or were not at that time armed officers and soldiers, sent
- into that settlement by the military order of the President, through the
- Secretary of War.
- </p>
- <p>
- 8th. Whether the military force of the United States was or was not so
- sent into that settlement after Gen. Taylor had more than once intimated
- to the War Department, that, in his opinion, no such movement was
- necessary to the defence or protection of Texas.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln improved the first favorable opportunity (Jan. 12, 1818), to
- address the House in the spirit of the "Spot Resolutions."
- </p>
- <p>
- In Committee of the Whole House, Jan. 12, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln addressed the Committee as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Chairman,&mdash;Some, if not at all, of the gentlemen on the other
- side of the House, who have addressed the Committee within the last two
- days, have spoken rather complainingly, if I have rightly understood them,
- of the vote given a week or ten days ago, declaring that the war with
- Mexico was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
- President. I admit that such a vote should not be given in mere party
- wantonness, and that the one given is justly censurable, if it have no
- other or better foundation. I am one of those who joined in that vote, and
- did so under my best impression of the <i>truth</i> of the case. How I got
- this impression, and how it may possibly be removed, I will now try to
- show. When the war began, it was my opinion that all those who, because of
- knowing too <i>little</i>, or because of knowing too <i>much</i>, could
- not conscientiously approve the conduct of the President (in the beginning
- of it), should, nevertheless, as good citizens and patriots, remain silent
- on that point, at least till the war should be ended. Some leading
- Democrats, including ex-President Van Buren, have taken this same view, as
- I understand them; and I adhered to it, and acted upon it, until since I
- took my seat here; and I think I should still adhere to it, were it not
- that the President and his friends will not allow it to be so. Besides the
- continual effort of the President to argue every silent vote given for
- supplies into an indorsement of the justice and wisdom of his conduct;
- besides that singularly candid paragraph in his late Message, in which he
- tells us that Congress, with great unanimity (only two in the Senate and
- fourteen in the House dissenting), had declared that "by the act of the
- Republic of Mexico a state of war exists between that government and the
- United States;" when the same journals that informed him of this also
- informed him, that, when that declaration stood disconnected from the
- question of supplies, sixty-seven in the House, and not fourteen merely,
- voted against it; besides this open attempt to prove by telling the <i>truth</i>
- what he could not prove by telling the <i>whole truth</i>, demanding of
- all who will not submit to be misrepresented, in justice to themselves, to
- speak out; besides all this, one of my colleagues [Mr. Richardson], at a
- very early day in the session, brought in a set of resolutions expressly
- indorsing the original justice of the war on the part of the President.
- Upon these resolutions, when they shall be put on their passage, I shall
- be <i>compelled</i> to vote; so that I cannot be silent if I would. Seeing
- this, I went about preparing myself to give the vote understandingly when
- it should come. I carefully examined the President's Messages, to
- ascertain what he himself had said and proved upon the point. The result
- of this examination was to make the impression, that, taking for true all
- the President states as facts, he falls far short of proving his
- justification; and that the President would have gone further with his
- proof, if it had not been for the small matter that the <i>truth</i> would
- not permit him. Under the impression thus made, I gave the vote before
- mentioned. I propose now to give concisely the process of the examination
- I made, and how I reached the conclusion I did.
- </p>
- <p>
- The President, in his first Message of May, 1846, declares that the soil
- was <i>ours</i> on which hostilities were commenced by Mexico; and he
- repeats that declaration, almost in the same language, in each successive
- annual Message,&mdash;thus showing that he esteems that point a highly
- essential one. In the importance of that point I entirely agree with the
- President. To my judgment, it is the <i>very point</i> upon which he
- should be justified or condemned. In his Message of December, 1846, it
- seems to have occurred to him, as is certainly true, that title, ownership
- to soil, or any thing else, is not a simple fact, but is a conclusion
- following one or more simple facts; and that it was incumbent upon him to
- present the facts from which he concluded the soil was ours on which the
- first blood of the war was shed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Accordingly, a little below the middle of page twelve, in the Message last
- referred to, he enters upon that task; forming an issue and introducing
- testimony, extending the whole to a little below the middle of page
- fourteen. Now, I propose to try to show that the whole of this, issue and
- evidence, is, from beginning to end, the sheerest deception. The issue, as
- he presents it, is in these words: "But there are those who, conceding all
- this to be true, assume the ground that the true western boundary of Texas
- is the Nueces, instead of the Rio Grande; and that, therefore, in marching
- our army to the east bank of the latter river, we passed the Texan line,
- and invaded the Territory of Mexico." Now, this issue is made up of two
- affirmatives, and no negative. The main deception of it is, that it
- assumes as true, that one river or the other is necessarily the boundary,
- and cheats the superficial thinker entirely out of the idea that possibly
- the boundary is somewhere between the two, and not actually at either. A
- further deception is, that it will let in evidence which a true issue
- would exclude. A true issue made by the President would be about as
- follows: "I say the soil <i>was ours</i> on which the first blood was
- shed; there are those who say it was not."
- </p>
- <p>
- I now proceed to examine the President's evidence, as applicable to such
- an issue. When that evidence is analyzed, it is all included in the
- following propositions:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- 1. That the Rio Grande was the western boundary of Louisiana, as we
- purchased it of France in 1803.
- </p>
- <p>
- 2. That the Republic of Texas always claimed the Rio Grande as her western
- boundary.
- </p>
- <p>
- 3. That, by various acts, she had claimed it on paper.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4. That Santa Anna, in his treaty with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande as
- her boundary.
- </p>
- <p>
- 5. That Texas <i>before</i>, and the United States <i>after</i>
- annexation, had <i>exercised</i> jurisdiction <i>beyond</i> the Nueces, <i>between</i>
- the two rivers.
- </p>
- <p>
- 6. That our Congress <i>understood</i> the boundary of Texas to extend
- beyond the Nueces.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now for each of these in its turn:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- His first item is, that the Rio Grande was the western boundary of
- Louisiana, as we purchased it of France in 1803; and, seeming to expect
- this to be disputed, he argues over the amount of nearly a page to prove
- it true; at the end of which, he lets us know, that, by the treaty of
- 1819, we sold to Spain the whole country, from the Rio Grande eastward to
- the Sabine. Now, admitting for the present, that the Rio Grande was the
- boundary of Louisiana, what, under Heaven, had that to do with the present
- boundary between us and Mexico? How, Mr. Chairman, the line that once
- divided your land from mine can still be the boundary between us after I
- have sold my land to you, is, to me, beyond all comprehension. And how any
- man, with an honest purpose only of proving the truth, could ever have
- thought of introducing such a fact to prove such an issue, is equally
- incomprehensible. The outrage upon common right, of seizing as our own
- what we have once sold, merely because it was ours before we sold it, is
- only equalled by the outrage on common sense of any attempt to justify it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The President's next piece of evidence is, that "The Republic of Texas
- always <i>claimed</i> this river (Rio Grande) as her western boundary."
- That is not true, in fact. Texas <i>has</i> claimed it, but she has not <i>always</i>
- claimed it. There is, at least, one distinguished exception. Her State
- Constitution&mdash;the public's most solemn and well-considered act, that
- which may, without impropriety, be called her last will and testament,
- revoking all others&mdash;makes no such claim. But suppose she had always
- claimed it. Has not Mexico always claimed the contrary? So that there is
- but claim against claim, leaving nothing proved until we get back of the
- claims, and find which has the better <i>foundation.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Though not in the order in which the President presents his evidence, I
- now consider that class of his statements which are, in substance, nothing
- more than that Texas has, by various acts of her Convention and Congress,
- claimed the Rio Grande as her boundary&mdash;<i>on paper</i>. I mean here
- what he says about the fixing of the Rio Grande as her boundary in her old
- constitution (not her State Constitution), about forming congressional
- districts, counties, &amp;c. Now, all this is but naked <i>claim</i>; and
- what I have already said about claims is strictly applicable to this. If I
- should claim your land by word of mouth, that certainly would not make it
- mine; and if I were to claim it by a deed which I had made myself, and
- with which you had nothing to do, the claim would be quite the same in
- substance, or rather in utter nothingness.
- </p>
- <p>
- I next consider the President's statement that Santa Anna, in his <i>treaty</i>
- with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande as the western boundary of Texas.
- Besides the position so often taken that Santa Anna, while a prisoner of
- war, a captive, <i>could not</i> bind Mexico by a treaty, which I deem
- conclusive,&mdash;besides this, I wish to say something in relation to
- this treaty, so called by the President, with Santa Anna. If any man would
- like to be amused by a sight at that <i>little</i> thing, which the
- President calls by that <i>big</i> name, he can have it by turning to
- "Niles's Register," vol. 1. p. 336. And if any one should suppose that
- "Niles's Register" is a curious repository of so mighty a document as a
- solemn treaty between nations, I can only say that I learned, to a
- tolerable degree of certainty, by inquiry at the State Department, that
- the President himself never saw it anywhere else. By the way, I believe I
- should not err if I were to declare, that, during the first ten years of
- the existence of that document, it was never by anybody <i>called</i> a
- treaty; that it was never so called till the President, in his extremity,
- attempted, by so calling it, to wring something from it in justification
- of himself in connection with the Mexican war. It has none of the
- distinguishing features of a treaty. It does not call itself a treaty.
- Santa Anna does not therein assume to bind Mexico: he assumes only to act
- as president, commander-in-chief of the Mexican army and navy; stipulates
- that the then present hostilities should cease, and that he would not
- himself take up arms, nor influence the Mexican people to take up arms,
- against Texas during the existence of the war of independence. He did not
- recognize the independence of Texas; he did not assume to put an end to
- the war, but clearly indicated his expectation of its continuance; he did
- not say one word about boundary, and most probably never thought of it. It
- is stipulated therein that the Mexican forces should evacuate the
- Territory of Texas, <i>passing to the other side of the Rio Grande;</i>
- and in another article it is stipulated, that, to prevent collisions
- between the armies, the Texan army should not approach nearer than within
- five leagues,&mdash;of what is not said; but clearly, from the object
- stated, it is of the Rio Grande. Now, if this is a treaty recognizing the
- Rio Grande as the boundary of Texas, it contains the singular feature of
- stipulating that Texas shall not go within five leagues of <i>her own</i>
- boundary.
- </p>
- <p>
- Next comes the evidence of Texas before annexation, and the United States
- afterwards, exercising jurisdiction beyond the Nueces, and between the two
- rivers. This actual exercise of jurisdiction is the very class or quality
- of evidence we want. It is excellent so far as it goes; but does it go far
- enough? He tells us it went beyond the Nueces; but he does not tell us it
- went to the Rio Grande. He tells us jurisdiction was exercised between the
- two rivers; but he does not tell us it was exercised over all the
- territory between them. Some simple-minded people think it possible to
- cross one river and go beyond it, without going all the way to the next;
- that jurisdiction may be exercised between two rivers without covering all
- the country between them. I know a man, not very unlike myself, who
- exercises jurisdiction over a piece of land between the Wabash and the
- Mississippi; and yet so far is this from being all there is between those
- rivers, that it is just a hundred and fifty-two feet long by fifty wide,
- and no part of it much within a hundred miles of either. He has a neighbor
- between him and the Mississippi,&mdash;that is, just across the street, in
- that direction,&mdash;whom, I am sure, he could neither persuade nor force
- to give up his habitation; but which, nevertheless, he could certainly
- annex, if it were to be done by merely standing on his own side of the
- street and claiming it, or even sitting down and writing a deed for it.
- </p>
- <p>
- But next, the President tells us, the Congress of the United States
- understood the State of Texas they admitted into the Union to extend
- beyond the Nueces. Well, I suppose they did,&mdash;I certainly so
- understand it,&mdash;but how far beyond? That Congress did not understand
- it to extend clear to the Rio Grande, is quite certain by the fact of
- their joint resolutions for admission, expressly leaving all questions of
- boundary to future adjustment. And it may be added, that Texas herself is
- proved to have had the same understanding of it that our Congress had, by
- the fact of the exact conformity of her new Constitution to those
- resolutions.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am now through the whole of the President's evidence; and it is a
- singular fact, that, if any one should declare the President sent the army
- into the midst of a settlement of Mexican people, who had never submitted,
- by consent or by force, to the authority of Texas or of the United States,
- and that there, and thereby, the first blood of the war was shed, there is
- not one word in all the President has said which would either admit or
- deny the declaration. In this strange omission chiefly consists the
- deception of the President's evidence,&mdash;an omission which, it does
- seem to me, could scarcely have occurred but by design. My way of living
- leads me to be about the courts of justice; and there I have sometimes
- seen a good lawyer, struggling for his client's neck in a desperate case,
- employing every artifice to work round, befog, and cover up with many
- words, some position pressed upon him by the prosecution, which he dared
- not admit, and yet could not deny. Party bias may help to make it appear
- so; but, with all the allowance I can make for such bias, it still does
- appear to me that just such, and from just such necessity, are the
- President's struggles in this case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some time after my colleague (Mr. Richardson) introduced the resolutions I
- have mentioned, I introduced a preamble, resolution, and interrogatories,
- intended to draw the President out, if possible, on this hitherto
- untrodden ground. To show their relevancy, I propose to state my
- understanding of the true rule for ascertaining the boundary between Texas
- and Mexico. It is, that, <i>wherever</i> Texas was <i>exercising</i>
- jurisdiction was hers; and wherever Mexico was exercising jurisdiction was
- hers; and that whatever separated the actual exercise of jurisdiction of
- the one from that of the other was the true boundary between them. If, as
- is probably true, Texas was exercising jurisdiction along the western bank
- of the Nueces, and Mexico was exercising it along the eastern bank of the
- Rio Grande, then neither river was the boundary, but the uninhabited
- country between the two was. The extent of our territory in that region
- depended, not on any treaty-fixed boundary (for no treaty had attempted
- it), but on revolution. Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the
- power, have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government,
- and form a new one that suits them better. This is a most valuable, a most
- sacred right,&mdash;a right which, we hope and believe, is to liberate the
- world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an
- existing government may choose to exercise it. Any portion of such people
- that can may revolutionize, and make their own of so much of the territory
- as they inhabit. More than this, a <i>majority</i> of any portion of such
- people may revolutionize, putting down a <i>minority</i>, intermingled
- with or near about them, who may oppose their movements. Such minority was
- precisely the case of the Tories of our own Revolution. It is a quality of
- revolutions not to go by old lines or old laws, but to break up both, and
- make new ones. As to the country now in question, we bought it of France
- in 1803, and sold it to Spain in 1819, according to the President's
- statement. After this, all Mexico, including Texas, revolutionized against
- Spain; and, still later, Texas revolutionized against Mexico. In my view,
- just so far as she carried her revolution, by obtaining the <i>actual,</i>
- willing or unwilling, submission of the people, <i>so far</i> the country
- was hers, and no farther.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, sir, for the purpose of obtaining the very best evidence as to
- whether Texas had actually carried her revolution to the place where the
- hostilities of the present war commenced, let the President answer the
- interrogatories I proposed, as before mentioned, or some other similar
- ones. Let him answer fully, fairly, and candidly. Let him answer with <i>facts</i>,
- and not with arguments. Let him remember he sits where Washington sat;
- and, so remembering, let him answer as Washington would answer. As a
- nation should not, and the Almighty will not, be evaded, so let him
- attempt no evasion, no equivocation. And if, so answering, he can show
- that the soil was ours where the first blood of the war was shed; that it
- was not within an inhabited country, or, if within such, that the
- inhabitants had submitted themselves to the civil authority of Texas, or
- of the United States, and that the same is true of the site of Fort Brown,
- then I am with him for his justification. In that case, I shall be most
- happy to reverse the vote I gave the other day. I have a selfish motive
- for desiring that the President may do this: I expect to give some votes,
- in connection with the war, which, without his so doing, will be of
- doubtful propriety, in my own judgment, but which will be free from the
- doubt if he does so. But if he cannot or will not do this,&mdash;if, on
- any pretence, or no pretence, he shall refuse or omit it,&mdash;then I
- shall be fully convinced of what I more than suspect already,&mdash;that
- he is deeply conscious of being in the wrong; that he feels the blood of
- this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to Heaven against him; that he
- ordered Gen. Taylor into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement,
- purposely to bring on a war; that, originally having some strong motive&mdash;what
- I will not stop now to give my opinion concerning&mdash;to involve the two
- countries in a war, and trusting to escape scrutiny by fixing the public
- gaze upon the exceeding brightness of military glory,&mdash;that
- attractive rainbow that rises in showers of blood, that serpent's eye that
- charms to destroy,&mdash;he plunged into it, and has swept on and on,
- till, disappointed in his calculation of the ease with which Mexico might
- be subdued, he now finds himself he knows not where. How like the
- half-insane mumbling of a fever-dream is the whole war part of the late
- Message! At one time telling us that Mexico has nothing whatever that we
- can get but territory; at another, showing us how we can support the war
- by levying contributions on Mexico. At one time urging the national honor,
- the security of the future, the prevention of foreign interference, and
- even the good of Mexico herself, as among the objects of the war; at
- another, telling us that, "to reject indemnity by refusing to accept a
- cession of territory, would be to abandon all our just demands, and to
- wage the war, bearing all its expenses, without a purpose or definite
- object." So, then, the national honor, security of the future, and every
- thing but territorial indemnity, may be considered the no purposes and
- indefinite objects of the war! But having it now settled that territorial
- indemnity is the only object, we are urged to seize, by legislation here,
- all that he was content to take a few months ago, and the whole province
- of Lower California to boot, and to still carry on the war,&mdash;to take
- all we are fighting for, and still fight on. Again, the President is
- resolved, under all circumstances, to have full territorial indemnity for
- the expenses of the war; but he forgets to tell us how we are to get the
- excess after those expenses shall have surpassed the value of the whole of
- the Mexican territory. So, again, he insists that the separate national
- existence of Mexico shall be maintained; but he does not tell us how this
- can be done after we shall have taken all her territory. Lest the
- questions I here suggest be considered speculative merely, let me be
- indulged a moment in trying to show they are not.
- </p>
- <p>
- The war has gone on some twenty months; for the expenses of which,
- together with an inconsiderable old score, the President now claims about
- one-half of the Mexican territory, and that by far the better half, so far
- as concerns our ability to make any thing out of it. It is comparatively
- uninhabited; so that we could establish land-offices in it, and raise some
- money in that way. But the other half is already inhabited, as I
- understand it, tolerably densely for the nature of the country; and all
- its lands, or all that are valuable, already appropriated as private
- property. How, then, are we to make any thing out of these lands with this
- encumbrance on them, or how remove the encumbrance? I suppose no one will
- say we should kill the people, or drive them out, or make slaves of them,
- or even confiscate their property? How, then, can we make much out of this
- part of the territory? If the prosecution of the war has, in expenses,
- already equalled the better half of the country, how long its future
- prosecution will be in equalling the less valuable half is not a
- speculative but a practical question, pressing closely upon us; and yet it
- is a question which the President seems never to have thought of.
- </p>
- <p>
- As to the mode of terminating the war and securing peace, the President is
- equally wandering and indefinite. First, it is to be done by a more
- vigorous prosecution of the war in the vital parts of the enemy's country;
- and, after apparently talking himself tired on this point, the President
- drops down into a half-despairing tone, and tells us, that "with a people
- distracted and divided by contending factions, and a government subject to
- constant changes, by successive revolutions, <i>the continued success of
- our arms may fail to obtain a satisfactory peace."</i> Then he suggests
- the propriety of wheedling the Mexican people to desert the counsels of
- their own leaders, and, trusting in our protection, to set up a government
- from which we can secure a satisfactory peace, telling us that, "<i>this
- may become the only mode of obtaining such a peace</i>." But soon he falls
- into doubt of this, too, and then drops back on to the already
- half-abandoned ground of "more vigorous prosecution." All this shows that
- the President is in no wise satisfied with his own positions. First, he
- takes up one, and, in attempting to argue us into it, he argues himself
- out of it; then seizes another, and goes through the same process; and
- then, confused at being able to think of nothing new, he snatches up the
- old one again, which he has some time before cast off. His mind, tasked
- beyond its power, is running hither and thither, like some tortured
- creature on a burning surface, finding no position on which it can settle
- down and be at ease.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, it is a singular omission in this Message, that it nowhere
- intimates <i>when</i> the President expects the war to terminate. At its
- beginning, Gen. Scott was, by this same President, driven into disfavor,
- if not disgrace, for intimating that peace could not be conquered in less
- than three or four months. But now at the end of about twenty months,
- during which time our arms have given us the most splendid successes,&mdash;every
- department, and every part, land and water, officers and privates,
- regulars and volunteers, doing all that men could do, and hundreds of
- things which it had ever before been thought that men could not do,&mdash;after
- all this, this same President gives us a long Message without showing us
- that, <i>as to the end,</i> he has himself even an imaginary conception.
- As I have before said, he knows not where he is. He is a bewildered,
- confounded, and miserably perplexed man. God grant he may be able to show
- that there is not something about his conscience more painful than all his
- mental perplexity.
- </p>
- <p>
- This speech he hastened to send home as soon as it was printed; for, while
- throughout he trod on unquestionable Whig ground, he had excellent reasons
- to fear the result. The following is the first letter to Mr. Herndon after
- the delivery of the speech, and notifying him of the fact:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Jan. 19, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Enclosed you find a letter of Louis W. Candler. What
- is wanted is, that you shall ascertain whether the claim upon the note
- described has received any dividend in the Probate Court of Christian
- County, where the estate of Mr. Overton Williams has been administered on.
- If nothing is paid on it, withdraw the note and send it to me, so that
- Candler can see the indorser of it. At all events, write me all about it,
- till I can somehow get it off hands. I have already been bored more than
- enough about it; not the least of which annoyance is his cursed,
- unreadable, and ungodly handwriting.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have made a speech, a copy of which I will send you by next mail.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- About the last of January, or the first of February, he began to hear the
- first murmurs of alarm and dissatisfaction from his district. He was now
- on the defensive, and compelled to write long and tedious letters to
- pacify some of the Whigs. Of this character are two extremely interesting
- epistles to Mr. Herndon:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Feb. 1, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your letter of the 19th ult. was received last night,
- and for which I am much obliged. The only thing in it that I wish to talk
- to you about at once is, that, because of my vote for Ashmun's amendment,
- you fear that you and I disagree about the war. I regret this, not because
- of any fear we shall remain disagreed after you have read this letter, but
- because if you misunderstand, I fear other good friends may also. That
- vote affirms, that the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally
- commenced by the President; and I will stake my life, that, if you had
- been in my place, you would have voted just as I did. Would you have voted
- what you felt and knew to be a lie? I know you would not. Would you have
- gone out of the House,&mdash;skulked the vote? I expect not. If you had
- skulked one vote, you would have had to skulk many more before the end of
- the session. Richardson's resolutions, introduced before I made any move,
- or gave any vote upon the subject, make the direct question of the justice
- of the war; so that no man can be silent if he would. You are compelled to
- speak; and your only alternative is to tell the <i>truth or tell a lie</i>.
- I cannot doubt which you would do.
- </p>
- <p>
- This vote has nothing to do in determining my votes on the questions of
- supplies. I have always intended, and still intend, to vote supplies;
- perhaps not in the precise form recommended by the President, but in a
- better form for all purposes, except Locofoco party purposes. It is in
- this particular you seem mistaken. The Locos are untiring in their efforts
- to make the impression that all who vote supplies, or take part in the
- war, do, of necessity, approve the President's conduct in the beginning of
- it; but the Whigs have, from the beginning, made and kept the distinction
- between the two. In the very first act nearly all the Whigs voted against
- the preamble declaring that war existed by the act of Mexico; and yet
- nearly all of them voted for the supplies. As to the Whig men who have
- participated in the war, so far as they have spoken to my hearing, they do
- not hesitate to denounce as unjust the President's conduct in the
- beginning of the war. They do not suppose that such denunciation is
- directed by undying hatred to them, as "The Register" would have it
- believed. There are two such Whigs on this floor (Col. Haskell and Major
- James). The former fought as a colonel by the side of Col. Baker, at Cerro
- Gordo, and stands side by side with me in the vote that you seem
- dissatisfied with. The latter, the history of whose capture with Cassius
- Clay you well know, had not arrived here when that vote was given; but, as
- I understand, he stands ready to give just such a vote whenever an
- occasion shall present. Baker, too, who is now here, says the truth is
- undoubtedly that way; and, whenever he shall speak out, he will say so.
- Col. Donaphin, too, the favorite Whig of Missouri, and who overrun all
- Northern Mexico, on his return home, in a public speech at St. Louis,
- condemned the administration in relation to the war, if I remember. G. T.
- M. Davis, who has been through almost the whole war, declares in favor of
- Mr. Clay; from which I infer that he adopts the sentiments of Mr. Clay,
- generally at least. On the other hand, I have heard of but one Whig who
- has been to the war attempting to justify the President's conduct. That
- one was Capt. Bishop; editor of "The Charleston Courier," and a very
- clever fellow. I do not mean this letter for the public, but for you.
- Before it reaches you, you will have seen and read my pamphlet speech,
- and, perhaps, scared anew by it. After you get over your scare, read it
- over again, sentence by sentence, and tell me honestly what you think of
- it. I condensed all I could for fear of being cut off by the hour rule;
- and, when I got through, I had spoken but forty-five minutes. Yours
- forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Feb. 15, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your letter of the 29th January was received last
- night. Being exclusively a constitutional argument, I wish to submit some
- reflections upon it in the same spirit of kindness that I know actuates
- you. Let me first state what I understand to be your position. It is,
- that, if it shall become necessary <i>to repel invasion</i>, the President
- may, without violation of the Constitution, cross the line, and <i>invade</i>
- the territory of another country; and that whether such <i>necessity</i>
- exists in any given case, the President is the <i>sole</i> judge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before going farther, consider well whether this is, or is not, your
- position. If it is, it is a position that neither the President himself,
- nor any friend of his, so far as I know, has ever taken. Their only
- positions are, first, that the soil was ours where the hostilities
- commenced; and second, that, whether it was rightfully ours or not,
- Congress had annexed it, and the President, for that reason, was bound to
- defend it, both of which are as clearly proved to be false in fact as you
- can prove that your house is mine. That soil was not ours; and Congress
- did not annex, or attempt to annex it. But to return to your position.
- Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation whenever he shall deem
- it necessary to repel an invasion, and you allow him to do so <i>whenever
- he may choose to say</i> he deems it necessary for such purpose, and you
- allow him to make war at pleasure. Study to see if you can fix <i>any
- limit</i> to his power in this respect, after having given him so much as
- you propose. If to-day he should choose to say he thinks it necessary to
- invade Canada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could you stop
- him? You may say to him, "I see no probability of the British invading
- us;" but he will say to you, "Be silent: I see it, if you don't."
- </p>
- <p>
- The provision of the Constitution giving the war-making power to Congress
- was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons: kings had
- always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending
- generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object. This
- our convention understood to be the most oppressive of all kingly
- oppressions; and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that <i>no one
- man</i> should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us. But
- your view destroys the whole matter, and places our President where kings
- have always stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- Write soon again.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Whig National Convention to nominate a candidate for the
- Presidency was to meet at Philadelphia on the 1st of June, and Mr. Lincoln
- was to be a member. He was not a Clay man: he wanted a candidate that
- could be elected; and he was for "Old Rough," as the only available
- material at hand. But let him explain himself:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, April 30, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Williams,&mdash;I have not seen in the papers any evidence of a
- movement to send a delegate from your circuit to the June Convention. I
- wish to say that I think it all important that a delegate should be sent.
- Mr. Clay's chance for an election is just no chance at all. He might get
- New York; and that would have elected in 1844, but it will not now,
- because he must now, at the least, lose Tennessee, which he had then, and
- in addition the fifteen new votes of Florida, Texas, Iowa, and Wisconsin.
- I know our good friend Browning is a great admirer of Mr. Clay, and I
- therefore fear he is favoring his nomination. If he is, ask him to discard
- feeling, and try if he can possibly, as a matter of judgment, count the
- votes necessary to elect him.
- </p>
- <p>
- In my judgment we can elect nobody but Gen. Taylor; and we cannot elect
- him without a nomination. Therefore don't fail to send a delegate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- To Archibald Williams, Esq.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, June 12, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Williams,&mdash;On my return from Philadelphia, where I had been
- attending the nomination of "Old Rough," I found your letter in a mass of
- others which had accumulated in my absence. By many, and often, it had
- been said they would not abide the nomination of Taylor; but, since the
- deed has been done, they are fast falling in, and in my opinion we shall
- have a most overwhelming, glorious triumph. One unmistakable sign is, that
- all the odds and ends are with us,&mdash;Barnburners, Native Americans,
- Tyler men, disappointed, office-seeking Locofocos, and the Lord knows
- what. This is important, if in nothing else, in showing which way the wind
- blows. Some of the sanguine men here set down all the States as certain
- for Taylor but Illinois, and it is doubtful. Cannot something be done even
- in Illinois? Taylor's nomination takes the Locos on the blind side. It
- turns the war thunder against them. The war is now to them the gallows of
- Haman, which they built for us, and on which they are doomed to be hanged
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- Excuse this short letter. I have so many to write that I cannot devote
- much time to any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- But his young partner in the law gave him a great deal of annoyance. Mr.
- Herndon seems to have been troubled by patriotic scruples. He could not
- understand how the war had been begun unconstitutionally and unnecessarily
- by President Polk, nor how the Whigs could vote supplies to carry on the
- war without indorsing the war itself. Besides all this, he sent news of
- startling defections; and the weary Representative took up his pen again
- and again to explain, defend, and advise:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, June 22,1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Last night I was attending a sort of caucus of the
- Whig members, held in relation to the coming Presidential election. The
- whole field of the nation was scanned; and all is high hope and
- confidence. Illinois is expected to better her condition in this race.
- Under these circumstances, judge how heart-rending it was to come to my
- room and find and read your discouraging letter of the 15th. We have made
- no gains, but have lost "H. R. Robinson, Turner, Campbell, and four or
- five more." Tell Arney to reconsider, if he would be saved. Baker and I
- used to do something, but I think you attach more importance to our
- absence than is just. There is another cause: in 1840, for instance, we
- had two Senators and five Representatives in Sangamon; now, we have part
- of one Senator and two Representatives. With quite one-third more people
- than we had then, we have only half the sort of offices which are sought
- by men of the speaking sort of talent. This, I think, is the chief cause.
- Now, as to the young men. You must not wait to be brought forward by the
- older men. For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into
- notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men.
- You young men get together and form a Rough and Ready Club, and have
- regular meetings and speeches. Take in everybody that you can get.
- Harrison, Grimsley, Z. A. Enos, Lee Kimball, and C. W. Matheny will do to
- begin the thing; but, as you go along, gather up all the shrewd, wild boys
- about town, whether just of age or a little under age,&mdash;Chris. Logan,
- Reddick Ridgely, Lewis Zwizler, and hundreds such. Let every one play the
- part he can play best,&mdash;some speak, some sing, and all hollow (holler
- ED). Your meetings will be of evenings; the older men, and the women, will
- go to hear you; so that it will not only contribute to the election of
- "Old Zack," but will be an interesting pastime, and improving to the
- intellectual faculties of all engaged. Don't fail to do this.
- </p>
- <p>
- You ask me to send you all the speeches made about "Old Zack," the war,
- &amp;c., &amp;c. Now, this makes me a little impatient. I have regularly
- sent you "The Congressional Globe" and "Appendix," and you cannot have
- examined them, or you would have discovered that they contain every speech
- made by every man in both Houses of Congress, on every subject, during the
- session. Can I send any more? Can I send speeches that nobody has made?
- Thinking it would be most natural that the newspapers would feel
- interested to give at least some of the speeches to their readers, I, at
- the beginning of the session, made arrangements to have one copy of "The
- Globe" and "Appendix" regularly sent to each Whig paper of the district.
- And yet, with the exception of my own little speech, which was published
- in two only of the then five, now four, Whig papers, I do not remember
- having seen a single speech, or even extract from one, in any single one
- of those papers. With equal and full means on both sides, I will venture
- that "The State Register" has thrown before its readers more of Locofoco
- speeches in a month than all the Whig papers of the district have done of
- Whig speeches during the session.
- </p>
- <p>
- If you wish a full understanding of the war, I repeat what I believe I
- said to you in a letter once before, that the whole, or nearly so, is to
- be found in the speech of Dixon of Connecticut. This I sent you in
- pamphlet, as well, as in "The Globe." Examine and study every sentence of
- that speech thoroughly, and you will understand the whole subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- You ask how Congress came to declare that war had existed by the act of
- Mexico. Is it possible you don't understand that yet? You have at least
- twenty speeches in your possession that fully explain it. I will, however,
- try it once more. The news reached Washington of the commencement of
- hostilities on the Rio Grande, and of the great peril of Gen. Taylor's
- army. Everybody, Whigs and Democrats, was for sending them aid, in men and
- money. It was necessary to pass a bill for this. The Locos had a majority
- in both Houses, and they brought in a bill with a preamble, saying, <i>Whereas</i>,
- War exists by the act of Mexico, therefore we send Gen. Taylor money. The
- Whigs moved to strike out the preamble, so that they could vote to send
- the men and money, without saying any thing about how the war commenced;
- but, being in the minority, they were voted down, and the preamble was
- retained. Then, on the passage of the bill, the question came upon them,
- "Shall we vote for preamble and bill both together, or against both
- together?" They did not want to vote against sending help to Gen. Taylor,
- and therefore they voted for both together. Is there any difficulty in
- understanding this? Even my little speech shows how this was; and, if you
- will go to the library, you may get "The Journal" of 1845-46, in which you
- can find the whole for yourself.
- </p>
- <p>
- We have nothing published yet with special reference to the Taylor race;
- but we soon will have, and then I will send them to everybody. I made an
- internal-improvement speech day before yesterday, which I shall send home
- as soon as I can get it written out and printed,&mdash;and which I suppose
- nobody will read.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, July 10, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your letter covering the newspaper slips was received
- last night. The subject of that letter is exceedingly painful to me; and I
- cannot but think there is some mistake in your impression of the motives
- of the old men. I suppose I am now one of the old men; and I declare, on
- my veracity, which I think is good with you, that nothing could afford me
- more satisfaction than to learn that you and others of my young friends at
- home were doing battle in the contest, and endearing themselves to the
- people, and taking a stand far above any I have ever been able to reach in
- their admiration. I cannot conceive that other old men feel differently.
- Of course, I cannot demonstrate what I say; but I was young once, and I am
- sure I was never ungenerously thrust back. I hardly know what to say. The
- way for a young man to rise is to improve himself every way he can, never
- suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder him. Allow me to assure you that
- suspicion and jealousy never did help any man in any situation. There may
- sometimes be ungenerous attempts to keep a young man down; and they will
- succeed, too, if he allows his mind to be diverted from its true channel,
- to brood over the attempted injury. Cast about, and see if this feeling
- has not injured every person you have ever known to fall into it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, in what I have said, I am sure you will suspect nothing but sincere
- friendship. I would save you from a fatal error. You have been a
- laborious, studious young man. You are far better informed on almost all
- subjects than I have ever been. You cannot fail in any laudable object,
- unless you allow your mind to be improperly directed. I have some the
- advantage of you in the world's experience, merely by being older; and it
- is this that induces me to advise.
- </p>
- <p>
- You still seem to be a little mistaken about "The Congressional Globe" and
- "Appendix." They contain <i>all</i> of the speeches that are published in
- any way. My speech and Dayton's speech, which you say you got in pamphlet
- form, are both, word for word, in the "Appendix." I repeat again, all are
- there.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend, as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- The "internal-improvement" speech to which Mr. Lincoln alludes in one of
- these letters was delivered on the 20th of June, and contained nothing
- remarkable or especially characteristic. It was in the main merely the
- usual Whig argument in favor of the constitutionality of Mr. Clay's
- "American System."
- </p>
- <p>
- But, after the nominations at Baltimore and Philadelphia, everybody in
- either House of Congress who could compose any thing at all "on his legs,"
- or in the closet, felt it incumbent upon him to contribute at least one
- electioneering speech to the political literature of the day. At last, on
- the 27th of July, Mr. Lincoln found an opportunity to make his. Few like
- it have ever been heard in either of those venerable chambers. It is a
- common remark of those who know nothing of the subject, that Mr. Lincoln
- was devoid of imagination; but the reader of this speech will entertain a
- different opinion. It opens to us a mind fertile in images sufficiently
- rare and striking, but of somewhat questionable taste. It must have been
- heard in amazement by those gentlemen of the House who had never known a
- Hanks, or seen a New Salem.
- </p>
- <p>
- SPEECH ON THE PRESIDENCY AND GENERAL POLITICS. DELIVERED IN THE HOUSE,
- JULY 27, 1848.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Speaker,&mdash;Our Democratic friends seem to be in great distress
- because they think our candidate for the Presidency don't suit us. Most of
- them cannot find out that Gen. Taylor has any principles at all; some,
- however, have discovered that he has one, but that that one is entirely
- wrong. This one principle is his position on the veto power. The gentleman
- from Tennessee (Mr. Stanton), who has just taken his seat, indeed, has
- said there is very little, if any, difference on this question between
- Gen. Taylor and all the Presidents; and he seems to think it sufficient
- detraction from Gen. Taylor's position on it, that it has nothing new in
- it. But all others whom I have heard speak assail it furiously. A new
- member from Kentucky (Mr. Clarke) of very considerable ability, was in
- particular concern about it. He thought it altogether novel and
- unprecedented for a President, or a Presidential candidate, to think of
- approving bills whose constitutionality may not be entirely clear to his
- own mind. He thinks the ark of our safety is gone, unless Presidents shall
- always veto such bills as, in their judgment, may be of doubtful
- constitutionality. However clear Congress may be of their authority to
- pass any particular act, the gentleman from Kentucky thinks the President
- must veto it if he has doubts about it. Now, I have neither time nor
- inclination to argue with the gentleman on the veto power as an original
- question; but I wish to show that Gen. Taylor, and not he, agrees with the
- earliest statesmen on this question. When the bill chartering the first
- Bank of the United States passed Congress, its constitutionality was
- questioned; Mr. Madison, then in the House of Representatives, as well as
- others, had opposed it on that ground. Gen. Washington, as President, was
- called on to approve or reject it. He sought and obtained, on the
- constitutional question, the separate written opinions of Jefferson,
- Hamilton, and Edmund Randolph; they then being respectively Secretary of
- State, Secretary of the Treasury, and Attorney-General. Hamilton's opinion
- was for the power; while Randolph's and Jefferson's were both against it.
- Mr. Jefferson, in his letter dated Feb. 15, 1791, after giving his opinion
- decidedly against the constitutionality of that bill, closed with the
- paragraph which I now read:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "It must be admitted, however, that, unless the President's mind, on a
- view of every thing which is urged for and against this bill, is tolerably
- clear that it is unauthorized by the Constitution; if the pro and the con
- hang so even as to balance his judgment, a just respect for the wisdom of
- the Legislature would naturally decide the balance in favor of their
- opinion; it is chiefly for cases where they are clearly misled by error,
- ambition, or interest, that the Constitution has placed a check in the
- negative of the President."
- </p>
- <p>
- Gen. Taylor's opinion, as expressed in his Allison letter, is as I now
- read:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "The power given by the veto is a high conservative power, but, in my
- opinion, should never be exercised, except in cases of clear violation of
- the Constitution, or manifest haste and want of consideration by
- Congress."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is here seen, that, in Mr. Jefferson's opinion, if, on the
- constitutionality of any given bill, the President doubts, he is not to
- veto it, as the gentleman from Kentucky would have him to do, but is to
- defer to Congress, and approve it. And if we compare the opinions of
- Jefferson and Taylor, as expressed in these paragraphs, we shall find them
- more exactly alike than we can often find any two expressions having any
- literal difference. None but interested fault-finders can discover any
- substantial variation.
- </p>
- <p>
- But gentlemen on the other side are unanimously agreed that Gen. Taylor
- has no other principle. They are in utter darkness as to his opinions on
- any of the questions of policy which occupy the public attention. But is
- there any doubt as to what he will do on the prominent question, if
- elected? Not the least. It is not possible to know what he will or would
- do in every imaginable case, because many questions have passed away, and
- others doubtless will arise, which none of us have yet thought of; but on
- the prominent questions of currency, tariff, internal improvements, and
- Wilmot Proviso, Gen. Taylor's course is at least as well defined as is
- Gen. Cass's. Why, in their eagerness to get at Gen. Taylor, several
- Democratic members here have desired to know whether, in case of his
- election, a bankrupt-law is to be established. Can they tell us Gen.
- Cass's opinion on this question? (Some member answered, He is against
- it.") Ay, how do you know he is? There is nothing about it in the
- platform, nor elsewhere, that I have seen. If the gentleman knows any
- thing which I do not, he can show it. But to return: Gen. Taylor, in his
- Allison letter, says,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Upon the subject of the tariff, the currency, the improvement of our
- great highways, rivers, lakes, and harbors, the will of the people, as
- expressed through their Representatives in Congress, ought to be respected
- and carried out by the Executive."
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, this is the whole matter: in substance, it is this: The people say to
- Gen. Taylor, "If you are elected, shall we have a national bank?" He
- answers, "Your will, gentlemen, not mine"&mdash;"What about the tariff?"&mdash;"Say
- yourselves."&mdash;"Shall our rivers and harbors be improved?"&mdash;"Just
- as you please."&mdash;"If you desire a bank, an alteration of the tariff,
- internal improvements, any or all, I will not hinder you: if you do not
- desire them, I will not attempt to force them on you. Send up your members
- of Congress from the various districts, with opinions according to your
- own, and if they are for these measures, or any of them, I shall have
- nothing to oppose: if they are not for them, I shall not, by any
- appliances whatever, attempt to dragoon them into their adoption." Now,
- can there be any difficulty in understanding this? To you, Democrats, it
- may not seem like principle; but surely you cannot fail to perceive the
- position plain enough. The distinction between it and the position of your
- candidate is broad and obvious, and I admit you have a clear right to show
- it is wrong, if you can; but you have no right to pretend you cannot see
- it at all. We see it, and to us it appears like principle, and the best
- sort of principle at that,&mdash;the principle of allowing the people to
- do as they please with their own business. My friend from Indiana (Mr. C.
- B. Smith) has aptly asked, "Are you willing to trust the people?" Some of
- you answered substantially, "We are willing to trust the people; but the
- President is as much the representative of the people as Congress." In a
- certain sense, and to a certain extent, he is the representative of the
- people. He is elected by them as well as Congress is. But can he, in the
- nature of things, know the wants of the people as well as three hundred
- other men coming from all the various localities of the nation? If so,
- where is the propriety of having a Congress? That the Constitution gives
- the President a negative on legislation, all know; but that this negative
- should be so combined with platforms and other appliances as to enable
- him, and, in fact, almost compel him, to take the whole of legislation
- into his own hands, is what we object to, is what Gen. Taylor objects to,
- and is what constitutes the broad distinction between you and us. To thus
- transfer legislation is clearly to take it from those who understand with
- minuteness the interests of the people, and give it to one who does not
- and cannot so well understand it. I understand your idea,&mdash;that if a
- Presidential candidate avow his opinion upon a given question, or rather
- upon all questions, and the people, with full knowledge of this, elect
- him, they thereby distinctly approve all those opinions. This, though
- plausible, is a most pernicious deception. By means of it, measures are
- adopted or rejected contrary to the wishes of the whole of one party, and
- often nearly half of the other. The process is this: Three, four, or half
- a dozen questions are prominent at a given time; the party selects its
- candidate, and he takes his position on each of these questions. On all
- but one his positions have already been indorsed at former elections, and
- his party fully committed to them; but that one is new, and a large
- portion of them are against it. But what are they to do? The whole are
- strung together, and they must take all or reject all. They cannot take
- what they like, and leave the rest. What they are already committed to
- being the majority, they shut their eyes and gulp the whole. Next
- election, still another is introduced in the same way. If we run our eyes
- along the line of the past, we shall see that almost, if not quite, all
- the articles of the present Democratic creed have been at first forced
- upon the party in this very way. And just now, and just so, opposition to
- internal improvements is to be established if Gen. Cass shall be elected.
- Almost half the Democrats here are for improvements, but they will vote
- for Cass; and, if he succeeds, their votes will have aided in closing the
- doors against improvements. Now, this is a process which we think is
- wrong. We prefer a candidate, who, like Gen. Taylor, will allow the people
- to have their own way, regardless of his private opinion; and I should
- think the internal-improvement Democrats, at least, ought to prefer such a
- candidate. He would force nothing on them which they don't want; and he
- would allow them to have improvements which their own candidate, if
- elected, will not.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Speaker, I have said Gen. Taylor's position is as well defined as is
- that of Gen. Cass. In saying this, I admit I do not certainly know what he
- would do on the Wilmot Proviso. I am a Northern man, or, rather, a Western
- Free State man, with a constituency I believe to be, and with personal
- feelings I know to be, against the extension of slavery. As such, and with
- what information I have, I hope and <i>believe</i> Gen. Taylor, if
- elected, would not veto the proviso; but I do not <i>know</i> it. Yet, if
- I knew he would, I still would vote for him. I should do so, because, in
- my judgment, his election alone can defeat Gen. Cass; and because, <i>should</i>
- slavery thereby go into the territory we now have, just so much will
- certainly happen by the election of Cass, and, in addition, a course of
- policy leading to new wars, new acquisitions of territory, and still
- farther extensions of slavery. One of the two is to be President; which is
- preferable?
- </p>
- <p>
- But there is as much doubt of Cass on improvements as there is of Taylor
- on the proviso. I have no doubt myself of Gen. Cass on this question, but
- I know the Democrats differ among themselves as to his position. My
- internal-improvement colleague (Mr. Wentworth) stated on this floor the
- other day, that he was satisfied Cass was for improvements, because he had
- voted for all the bills that he (Mr. W.) had. So far, so good. But Mr.
- Polk vetoed some of these very bills; the Baltimore Convention passed a
- set of resolutions, among other things, approving these vetoes; and Cass
- declares, in his letter accepting the nomination, that he has carefully
- read these resolutions, and that he adheres to them as firmly as he
- approves them cordially. In other words, Gen. Cass voted for the bills,
- and thinks the President did right to veto them; and his friends here are
- amiable enough to consider him as being on one side or the other, just as
- one or the other may correspond with their own respective inclinations. My
- colleague admits that the platform declares against the constitutionality
- of a general system of improvement, and that Gen. Cass indorses the
- platform; but he still thinks Gen. Cass is in favor of some sort of
- improvements. Well, what are they? As he is against <i>general</i>
- objects, those he is for must be particular and local. Now, this is taking
- the subject precisely by the wrong end.
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Particularity</i>&mdash;expending the money of the <i>whole</i> people
- for an object which will benefit only a <i>portion</i> of them&mdash;is
- the greatest real objection to improvements, and has been so held by Gen.
- Jackson, Mr. Polk, and all others, I believe, till now. But now, behold,
- the objects most general, nearest free from this objection, are to be
- rejected, while those most liable to it are to be embraced. To return: I
- cannot help believing that Gen. Cass, when he wrote his letter of
- acceptance, well understood he was to be claimed by the advocates of both
- sides of this question, and that he then closed the door against all
- further expressions of opinion, purposely to retain the benefits of that
- double position. His subsequent equivocation at Cleveland, to my mind,
- proves such to have been the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- One word more, and I shall have done with this branch of the subject. You
- Democrats and your candidate, in the main, are in favor of laying down in
- advance a platform,&mdash;a set of party positions, as a unit; and then of
- enforcing the people, by every sort of appliance, to ratify them, however
- unpalatable some of them may be. We and our candidate are in favor of
- making Presidential elections and the legislation of the country distinct
- matters; so that the people can elect whom they please, and afterward
- legislate just as they please, without any hinderance, save only so much
- as may guard against infractions of the Constitution, undue haste, and
- want of consideration. The difference between us is clear as noonday. That
- we are right, we cannot doubt. We hold the true republican position. In
- leaving the people's business in their hands, we cannot be wrong. We are
- willing, and even anxious, to go to the people on this issue.
- </p>
- <p>
- But I suppose I cannot reasonably hope to convince you that we have any
- principles. The most I can expect is, to assure you that we think we have,
- and are quite contented with them. The other day, one of the gentlemen
- from Georgia (Mr. Iverson), an eloquent man, and a man of learning, so far
- as I can judge, not being learned myself, came down upon us astonishingly.
- He spoke in what "The Baltimore American" calls the "scathing and
- withering style." At the end of his second severe flash I was struck
- blind, and found myself feeling with my fingers for an assurance of my
- continued physical existence. A little of the bone was left, and I
- gradually revived. He eulogized Mr. Clay in high and beautiful terms, and
- then declared that we had deserted all our principles, and had turned
- Henry Clay out, like an old horse, to root. This is terribly severe. It
- cannot be answered by argument; at least, I cannot so answer it. I merely
- wish to ask the gentleman if the Whigs are the only party he can think of,
- who sometimes turn old horses out to root? Is not a certain Martin Van
- Buren an old horse which your own party have turned out to root? and is he
- not rooting a little to your discomfort about now? But, in not nominating
- Mr. Clay, we deserted our principles, you say. Ah! in what? Tell us, ye
- men of principles, what principle we violated? We say you did violate
- principle in discarding Van Buren, and we can tell you how. You violated
- the primary, the cardinal, the one great living principle of all
- Democratic representative government,&mdash;the principle that the
- representative is bound to carry out the known will of his constituents. A
- large majority of the Baltimore Convention of 1844 were, by their
- constituents, instructed to procure Van Buren's nomination if they could.
- In violation, in utter, glaring contempt of this, you rejected him,&mdash;rejected
- him, as the gentleman from New York (Mr. Birdsall), the other day
- expressly admitted, for <i>availability</i>,&mdash;that same "general
- availability" which you charge upon us, and daily chew over here, as
- something exceedingly odious and unprincipled. But the gentleman from
- Georgia (Mr. Iverson) gave us a second speech yesterday, all well
- considered and put down in writing, in which Van Buren was scathed and
- withered a "few" for his present position and movements. I cannot remember
- the gentleman's precise language, but I do remember he put Van Buren down,
- down, till he got him where he was finally to "stink" and "rot."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Speaker, it is no business or inclination of mine to defend Martin Van
- Buren. In the war of extermination now waging between him and his old
- admirers, I say, Devil take the hindmost&mdash;and the foremost. But there
- is no mistaking the origin of the breach; and, if the curse of "stinking"
- and "rotting" is to fall on the first and greatest violators of principle
- in the matter, I disinterestedly suggest, that the gentleman from Georgia
- and his present co-workers are bound to take it upon themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- While I have Gen. Cass in hand, I wish to say a word about his political
- principles. As a specimen, I take the record of his progress on the Wilmot
- Proviso. In "The Washington Union" of March 2, 1847, there is a report of
- the speech of Gen. Cass, made the day before in the Senate, on the Wilmot
- Proviso, during the delivery of which, Mr. Miller of New Jersey is
- reported to have interrupted him as follows, to wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Miller expressed his great surprise at the change in the sentiments
- of the Senator from Michigan, who had been regarded as the great champion
- of freedom in the North-west, of which he was a distinguished ornament.
- Last year the Senator from Michigan was understood to be decidedly in
- favor of the Wilmot Proviso; and, as no reason had been stated for the
- change, he (Mr. Miller) could not refrain from the expression of his
- extreme surprise."
- </p>
- <p>
- To this, Gen. Cass is reported to have replied as follows, to wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Cass said, that the course of the Senator from New Jersey was most
- extraordinary. Last year he (Mr. Cass) should have voted for the
- proposition had it come up. But circumstances had altogether changed. The
- honorable Senator then read several passages from the remarks as given
- above which he had committed to writing, in order to refute such a charge
- as that of the Senator from New Jersey."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the "remarks above committed to writing," is one numbered 4, as
- follows, to wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "4th. Legislation would now be wholly imperative, because no territory
- hereafter to be acquired can be governed without an act of Congress
- providing for its government. And such an act, on its passage, would open
- the whole subject, and leave the Congress called on to pass it free to
- exercise its own discretion, entirely uncontrolled by any declaration
- found in the statute-book."
- </p>
- <p>
- In "Niles's Register," vol. lxxiii., p. 293, there is a letter of Gen.
- Cas? to A. O. P. Nicholson of Nashville, Tenn., dated Dec. 24, 1847, from
- which the following are correct extracts:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "The Wilmot Proviso has been before the country some time. It has been
- repeatedly discussed in Congress, and by the public press. I am strongly
- impressed with the opinion that a great change has been going on in the
- public mind upon this subject,&mdash;in my own as well as others; and that
- doubts are resolving themselves into convictions, that the principle it
- involves should be kept out of the national Legislature, and left to the
- people of the Confederacy in their respective local governments.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Briefly, then, I am opposed to the exercise of any jurisdiction by
- Congress over this matter; and I am in favor of leaving the people of any
- territory which may be hereafter acquired, the right to regulate it
- themselves, under the general principles of the Constitution. Because,
- </p>
- <p>
- "1. I do not see in the Constitution any grant of the requisite power to
- Congress; and I am not disposed to extend a doubtful precedent beyond its
- necessity,&mdash;the establishment of territorial governments when needed,&mdash;leaving
- to the inhabitants all the rights compatible with the relations they bear
- to the Confederation."
- </p>
- <p>
- These extracts show, that, in 1846, Gen. Cass was for the Proviso <i>at
- once</i>; that, in March, 1847, he was still for it, <i>but not just then</i>;
- and that in December, 1847, he was <i>against</i> it altogether. This is a
- true index to the whole man. When the question was raised in 1846, he was
- in a blustering hurry to take ground for it. He sought to be in advance,
- and to avoid the uninteresting position of a mere follower; but soon he
- began to see glimpses of the great Democratic ox-gad waving in his face,
- and to hear indistinctly a voice saying, "Back!" "Back, sir!" "Back a
- little!" He shakes his head, and bats his eyes, and blunders back to his
- position of March, 1847; but still the gad waves, and the voice grows more
- distinct, and sharper still,&mdash;"Back, sir!" "Back, I say!" "Further
- back!" and back he goes to the position of December, 1847; at which the
- gad is still, and the voice soothingly says, "So!" "Stand still at that."
- </p>
- <p>
- Have no fears, gentlemen, of your candidate: he exactly suits you, and we
- congratulate you upon it. However much you may be distressed about our
- candidate, you have all cause to be contented and happy with your own. If
- elected, he may not maintain all, or even any, of his positions previously
- taken; but he will be sure to do whatever the party exigency, for the time
- being, may require; and that is precisely what you want. He and Van Buren
- are the same "manner of men;" and, like Van Buren, he will never desert
- you till you first desert him.
- </p>
- <p>
- [After referring at some length to extra "charges" of Gen. Cass upon the
- Treasury, Mr. Lincoln continued:&mdash;-]
- </p>
- <p>
- But I have introduced Gen. Cass's accounts here chiefly to show the
- wonderful physical capacities of the man. They show that he not only did
- the labor of several men at the same <i>time</i>, but that he often did
- it, at several <i>places</i> many hundred miles apart, <i>at the same time</i>.
- And at eating, too, his capacities are shown to be quite as wonderful.
- From October, 1821, to May, 1822, he ate ten rations a day in Michigan,
- ten rations a day here in Washington, and nearly five dollars' worth a day
- besides, partly on the road between the two places. And then there is an
- important discovery in his example,&mdash;the art of being paid for what
- one eats, instead of having to pay for it. Hereafter, if any nice young
- man shall owe a bill which he cannot pay in any other way, he can just
- board it out. Mr. Speaker, we have all heard of the animal standing in
- doubt between two stacks of hay, and starving to death: the like of that
- would never happen to Gen. Cass. Place the stacks a thousand miles apart,
- he would stand stock-still, midway between them, and eat them both at
- once; and the green grass along the line would be apt to suffer some, too,
- at the same time. By all means make him President, gentlemen. He will feed
- you bounteously&mdash;if&mdash;if&mdash;there is any left after he shall
- have helped himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- But as Gen. Taylor is, par excellence, the hero of the Mexican War, and as
- you Democrats say we Whigs have always opposed the war, you think it must
- be very awkward and embarrassing for us to go for Gen. Taylor. The
- declaration that we have always opposed the war is true or false
- accordingly as one may understand the term "opposing the war." If to say
- "the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
- President," by opposing the war, then the Whigs have very generally
- opposed it. Whenever they have spoken at all, they have said this; and
- they have said it on what has appeared good reason to them: the marching
- an army into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement, frightening the
- inhabitants away, leaving their growing crops and other property to
- destruction, to you may appear a perfectly amiable, peaceful, unprovoking
- procedure; but it does not appear so to us. So to call such an act, to us
- appears no other than a naked, impudent absurdity, and we speak of it
- accordingly. But if when the war had begun, and had become the cause of
- the country, the giving of our money and our blood, in common with yours,
- was support of the war, then it is not true that we have always opposed
- the war. With few individual exceptions, you have constantly had our votes
- here for all the necessary supplies. And, more than this, you have had the
- services, the blood, and the lives of our political brethren in every
- trial, and on every field. The beardless boy and the mature man, the
- humble and the distinguished,&mdash;you have had them. Through suffering
- and death, by disease and in battle, they have endured and fought and
- fallen with you. Clay and Webster each gave a son, never to be returned.
- From the State of my own residence, besides other worthy but less known
- Whig names, we sent Marshall, Morrison, Baker, and Hardin: they all
- fought, and one fell, and in the fall of that one we lost our best Whig
- man. Nor were the Whigs few in number, or laggard in the day of danger. In
- that fearful, bloody, breathless struggle at Buena Vista, where each man's
- hard task was to beat back five foes or die himself, of the five high
- officers who perished, four were Whigs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In speaking of this, I mean no odious comparison between the lion-hearted
- Whigs and Democrats who fought there. On other occasions, and among the
- lower officers and privates on that occasion, I doubt not the proportion
- was different. I wish to do justice to all. I think of all those brave men
- as Americans, in whose proud fame, as an American, I, too, have a share.
- Many of them, Whigs and Democrats, are my constituents and personal
- friends; and I thank them,&mdash;more than thank them,&mdash;one and all,
- for the high, imperishable honor they have conferred on our common State.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the distinction between the <i>cause of the President in beginning the
- war,</i> and the <i>cause of the country after it was begun</i>, is a
- distinction which you cannot perceive. To you, the President and the
- country seem to be all one. You are interested to see no distinction
- between them; and I venture to suggest that possibly your interest blinds
- you a little. We see the distinction, as we think, clearly enough; and our
- friends, who have fought in the war, have no difficulty in seeing it also.
- What those who have fallen would say, were they alive and here, of course
- we can never know; but with those who have returned there is no
- difficulty. Col. Haskell and Major Gaines, members here, both fought in
- the war; and one of them underwent extraordinary perils and hardships;
- still they, like all other Whigs here, vote on the record that the war was
- unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the President. And even
- Gen. Taylor himself, the noblest Roman of them all, has declared that, as
- a citizen, and particularly as a soldier, it is sufficient for him to know
- that his country is at war with a foreign nation, to do all in his power
- to bring it to a speedy and honorable termination, by the most vigorous
- and energetic operations, without inquiring about its justice, or any
- thing else connected with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Speaker, let our Democratic friends be comforted with the assurance
- that we are content with our position, content with our company, and
- content with our candidate; and that although they, in their generous
- sympathy, think we ought to be miserable, we really are not, and that they
- may dismiss the great anxiety they have on our account.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The following passage has generally been omitted from this speech, as
- published in the "Lives of Lincoln." The reason for the omission is
- quite obvious.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- "But the gentleman from Georgia further says, we have deserted all our
- principles, and taken shelter under Gen. Taylor's military coat-tail; and
- he seems to think this is exceedingly degrading. Well, as his faith is, so
- be it unto him. But can he remember no other military coat-tail, under
- which a certain other party have been sheltering for near a quarter of a
- century? Has he no acquaintance with the ample military coat-tail of Gen.
- Jackson? Does he not know that his own party have run the last five
- Presidential races under that coat-tail? and that they are now running the
- sixth under the same cover? Yes, sir, that coat-tail was used, not only
- for Gen, Jackson himself, but has been clung to with the grip of death by
- every Democratic candidate since. You have never ventured, and dare not
- now venture, from under it. Your campaign papers have constantly been 'Old
- Hickories,' with rude likenesses of the old general upon them; hickory
- poles and hickory brooms your never-ending emblems. Mr. Polk himself was
- 'Young Hickory.' 'Little Hickory,' or something so; and even now your
- campaign paper here is proclaiming that Cass and Butler are of the
- 'Hickory stripe.' No, sir, you dare not give it up. Like a horde of hungry
- ticks, you have stuck to the tail of the Hermitage lion to the end of his
- life; and you are still sticking to it, and drawing a loathsome sustenance
- from it, after he is dead. A fellow once advertised that he had made a
- discovery by which he could make a new man out of an old one, and have
- enough of the stuff left to make a little yellow dog. Just such a
- discovery has Gen. Jackson's popularity been to you. You not only twice
- made President of him out of it, but you have enough of the stuff left to
- make Presidents of several comparatively small men since; and it is your
- chief reliance now to make still another.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Speaker, old horses and military coat-tails, or tails of any sort,
- are not figures of speech such as I would be the first to introduce into
- discussions here; but, as the gentleman from Georgia has thought fit to
- introduce them, he and you are welcome to all you have made, or can make,
- by them. If you have any more old horses, trot them out; any more tails,
- just cock them, and come at us.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I repeat, I would not introduce this mode of discussion here; but I wish
- gentlemen on the other side to understand, that the use of degrading
- figures is a game at which they may find themselves unable to take all the
- winnings. ["We give it up."] Ay, you give it up, and well you may; but for
- a very different reason from that which you would have us understand. The
- point&mdash;the power to hurt&mdash;of all figures, consists in the <i>truthfulness</i>
- of their application; and, understanding this, you may well give it up.
- They are weapons which hit you, but miss us.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But, in my hurry, I was very near closing on this subject of military
- tails before I was done with it. There is one entire article of the sort I
- have not discussed yet; I mean the military tail you Democrats are now
- engaged in dovetailing on to the great Michigander. Yes, sir, all his
- biographers (and they are legion) have him in hand, tying him to a
- military tail, like so many mischievous boys tying a dog to a bladder of
- beans. True, the material is very limited, but they are at it might and
- main. He invaded Canada without resistance, and he <i>out</i>vaded it
- without pursuit. As he did both under orders, I suppose there was, to him,
- neither credit nor discredit; but they are made to constitute a large part
- of the tail. He was not at Hull's surrender, but he was close by; he was
- volunteer aid to Gen. Harrison on the day of the battle of the Thames;
- and, as you said in 1840 Harrison was picking whortleberries two miles off
- while the battle was fought, I suppose it is a just conclusion, with you,
- to say Cass was aiding Harrison to pick whortleberries. This is about all,
- except the mooted question of the broken sword. Some authors say he broke
- it; some say he threw it away; and some others, who ought to know, say
- nothing about it. Perhaps it would be a fair historical compromise to say,
- if he did not break it, he did not do any thing else with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero? Yes sir: in
- the days of the Black-Hawk War, I fought, bled, and came away. Speaking of
- Gen. Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at Stillman's defeat,
- but I was about as near it as Cass was to Hull's surrender; and, like him,
- I saw the place very soon afterwards. It is quite certain I did not break
- my sword, for I had none to break; but I bent my musket pretty badly on
- one occasion. If Cass broke his sword, the idea is, he broke it in
- desperation: I bent the musket by accident. If Gen. Cass went in advance
- of me picking whortleberries,
- </p>
- <p>
- I guess I surpassed him in charges upon the wild onions. If he saw any
- live fighting Indians, it was more than I did, but I had a good many
- bloody struggles with the mosquitoes; and, although I never fainted from
- loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry, "Mr. Speaker, if
- ever I should conclude to doff whatever our Democratic friends may suppose
- there is of black-cockade Federalism about me, and, thereupon, they shall
- take me up as their candidate for the Presidency, I protest that they
- shall not make fun of me, as they have of Gen. Cass, by attempting to
- write me into a military hero."
- </p>
- <p>
- Congress adjourned on the 14th of August; but Mr. Lincoln went up to New
- England, and made various campaign speeches before he returned home. They
- were not preserved, and were probably of little importance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon after his return to Washington, to take his seat at the second
- session of the Thirtieth Congress, he received a letter from his father,
- which astonished and perhaps amused him. His reply intimates grave doubts
- concerning the veracity of his correspondent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, Dec. 24, 1848. My dear Father,&mdash;Your letter of the 7th
- was received night before last. I very cheerfully send you the twenty
- dollars, which sum you say is necessary to save your land from sale. It is
- singular that you should have forgotten a judgment against you; and it is
- more singular that the plaintiff should have let you forget it so long;
- particularly as I suppose you always had property enough to satisfy a
- judgment of that amount. Before you pay it, it would be well to be sure
- you have not paid, or at least that you cannot prove you have paid it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Give my love to mother and all the connections.
- </p>
- <p>
- Affectionately your son,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second session was a quiet one. Mr. Lincoln did nothing to attract
- public attention in any marked degree. He attended diligently and
- unobtrusively to the ordinary duties of his office, and voted generally
- with the Whig majority. One Mr. Gott, however, of New York, offered a
- resolution looking to the abolition of the slave-trade in the District of
- Columbia, and Mr. Lincoln was one of only three or four Northern Whigs who
- voted to lay the resolution on the table. At another time, however, Mr.
- Lincoln proposed a substitute for the Gott resolution, providing for
- gradual and compensated emancipation, with the consent of the people of
- the District, to be ascertained at a general election. This measure he
- evidently abandoned, and it died a natural death among the rubbish of
- "unfinished business." His record on the Wilmot Proviso has been
- thoroughly exposed, both by himself and Mr. Douglas, and in the
- Presidential campaign by his friends and foes. He said himself, that he
- had voted for it "about forty-two times." It is not likely that he had
- counted the votes when he made this statement, but spoke according to the
- best of his "knowledge and belief."
- </p>
- <p>
- The following letters are printed, not because they illustrate the
- author's character more than a thousand others would, but because they
- exhibit one of the many perplexities of Congressional life.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, April 25, 1849.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Thompson,&mdash;A tirade is still kept up against me here for
- recommending T. R. King. This morning it is openly avowed that my supposed
- influence at Washington shall be broken down generally, and King's
- prospects defeated in particular. Now, what I have done in this matter, I
- have done at the request of you and some other friends in Tazewell; and I
- therefore ask you to either admit it is wrong, or come forward and sustain
- me. If the truth will permit, I propose that you sustain me in the
- following manner: copy the enclosed scrap in your own handwriting, and get
- everybody (not three or four, but three or four hundred) to sign it, and
- then send it to me. Also, have six, eight, or ten of our best known Whig
- friends there to write me individual letters, stating the truth in this
- matter as they understand it. Don't neglect or delay in the matter. I
- understand information of an indictment having been found against him
- about three years ago for gaming, or keeping a gaming-house, has been sent
- to the Department. I shall try to take care of it at the Department till
- your action can be had and forwarded on.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Washington, June 5, 1849.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear William,&mdash;Your two letters were received last night. I have a
- great many letters to write, and so cannot write very long ones. There
- must be some mistake about Walter Davis saying I promised him the
- Post-office. I did not so promise him. I did tell him, that, if the
- distribution of the offices should fall into my hands, he should have
- something; and, if I shall be convinced he has said any more than this, I
- shall be disappointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- I said this much to him, because, as I understand, he is of good
- character, is one of the young men, is of the mechanics, and always
- faithful, and never troublesome, a Whig and is poor, with the support of a
- widow-mother thrown almost exclusively on him by the death of his brother.
- If these are wrong reasons, then I have been wrong; but I have certainly
- not been selfish in it, because, in my greatest need of friends, he was
- against me and for Baker.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. S.&mdash;Let the above be confidential.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII
- </h2>
- <p>
- LIKE most other public men in America, Mr. Lincoln made his bread by the
- practice of his profession, and the better part of his fame by the
- achievements of the politician. He was a lawyer of some note, and,
- compared with the crowds who annually take upon themselves the responsible
- office of advocate and attorney, he might very justly have been called a
- good one; for he regarded his office as a trust, and selected and tried
- his cases, not with a view to personal gain, but to the administration of
- justice between suitors. And here, midway in his political career, it is
- well enough to pause, and take a leisurely survey of him in his other
- character of country lawyer, from the time he entered the bar at
- Springfield until he was translated from it to the Presidential chair. It
- is unnecessary to remind the reader (for by this time it must be obvious
- enough) that the aim of the writer is merely to present facts and
- contemporaneous opinions, with as little comment as possible.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the courts and at the bar-meetings immediately succeeding his death,
- his professional brethren poured out in volumes their testimony to his
- worth and abilities as a lawyer. But, in estimating the value of this
- testimony, it is fair to consider the state of the public mind at the time
- it was given,&mdash;the recent triumph of the Federal arms under his
- direction; the late overwhelming indorsement of his administration; the
- unparalleled devotion of the people to his person as exhibited at the
- polls; the fresh and bitter memories of the hideous tragedy that took him
- off; the furious and deadly passions it inspired in the one party, and the
- awe, indignation, and terror it inspired in the other. It was no time for
- nice and critical examinations, either of his mental or his moral
- character; and it might have been attended with personal danger to attempt
- them. For days and nights together it was considered treason to be seen in
- public with a smile on the face. Men who spoke evil of the fallen chief,
- or even ventured a doubt concerning the ineffable purity and saintliness
- of his life, were pursued by mobs, were beaten to death with
- paving-stones, or strung up by the neck to lampposts. If there was any
- rivalry, it was as to who should be foremost and fiercest among his
- avengers, who should canonize him in the most solemn words, who should
- compare him to the most sacred character in all history, sacred and
- profane. He was prophet, priest, and king; he was Washington; he was
- Moses; and there were not wanting even those who likened him to the God
- and Redeemer of all the earth. These latter thought they discovered in his
- lowly origin, his kindly nature, his benevolent precepts, and the homely
- anecdotes in which he taught the people, strong points of resemblance
- between him and the divine Son of Mary. Even at this day, men are not
- wanting in prominent positions in life, who knew Mr. Lincoln well, and who
- do not hesitate to make such a comparison.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0009" id="image-0009">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/349.jpg" alt="Judge David Davis 349 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- For many years, Judge David Davis was the near friend and the intimate
- associate of Mr. Lincoln. He presided in the court where Lincoln was
- oftenest heard: year in and year out they travelled together from town to
- town, from county to county, riding frequently in the same conveyance, and
- lodging in the same room. Although a judge on the bench, Mr. Davis watched
- the political course of his friend with affectionate solicitude, and more
- than once interposed most effectually to advance his fortunes. When Mr.
- Lincoln ascended to the Presidency, it was well understood that no man
- enjoyed more confidential relations with him than Judge Davis. At the
- first opportunity, he commissioned Judge Davis an Associate Justice of
- that august tribunal, the Supreme Court of the United States; and, upon
- his death, Judge Davis administered upon his estate at the request of his
- family. Add to this the fact, that, among American jurists, Judge Davis's
- fame is, if not peerless, at least not excelled by that of any man whose
- reputation rests upon his labors as they appear in the books of Reports,
- and we may very fairly consider him a competent judge of the professional
- character of Mr. Lincoln. At Indianapolis, Judge Davis spoke of him as
- follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I enjoyed for over twenty years the personal friendship of Mr. Lincoln.
- We were admitted to the bar about the same time, and travelled for many
- years what is known in Illinois as the Eighth Judicial Circuit. In 1848,
- when I first went on the bench, the circuit embraced fourteen counties,
- and Mr. Lincoln went with the court to every county. Railroads were not
- then in use, and our mode of travel was either on horseback or in buggies.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This simple life he loved, preferring it to the practice of the law in a
- city, where, although the remuneration would be greater, the opportunity
- would be less for mixing with the great body of the people, who loved him,
- and whom he loved. Mr. Lincoln was transferred from the bar of that
- circuit to the office of President of the United States, having been
- without official position since he left Congress in 1849. In all the
- elements that constitute the great lawyer, he had few equals. He was great
- both at <i>nisi prius</i> and before an appellate tribunal. He seized the
- strong points of a cause, and presented them with clearness and great
- compactness. His mind was logical and direct, and he did not indulge in
- extraneous discussion. Generalities and platitudes had no charms for him.
- An unfailing vein of humor never deserted him; and he was always able to
- chain the attention of court and jury, when the cause was the most
- uninteresting, by the appropriateness of his anecdotes.
- </p>
- <p>
- "His power of comparison was large, and he rarely failed in a legal
- discussion to use that mode of reasoning. The framework of his mental and
- moral being was honesty, and a wrong cause was poorly defended by him. The
- ability which some eminent lawyers possess, of explaining away the bad
- points of a cause by ingenious sophistry, was denied him. In order to
- bring into full activity his great powers, it was necessary that he should
- be convinced of the right and justice of the matter which he advocated.
- When so convinced, whether the cause was great or small, he was usually
- successful. He read law-books but little, except when the cause in hand
- made it necessary; yet he was usually self-reliant, depending on his own
- resources, and rarely consulting his brother lawyers, either on the
- management of his case or on the legal questions involved.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln was the fairest and most accommodating of practitioners,
- granting all favors which he could do consistently with his duty to his
- client, and rarely availing himself of an unwary oversight of his
- adversary.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He hated wrong and oppression everywhere; and many a man whose fraudulent
- conduct was undergoing review in a court of justice has writhed under his
- terrific indignation and rebukes. He was the most simple and
- unostentatious of men in his habits, having few wants, and those easily
- supplied.
- </p>
- <p>
- "To his honor be it said, that he never took from a client, even when the
- cause was gained, more than he thought the service was worth and the
- client could reasonably afford to pay. The people where he practised law
- were not rich, and his charges were always small.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When he was elected President, I question whether there was a lawyer in
- the circuit, who had been at the bar as long a time, whose means were not
- larger. It did not seem to be one of the purposes of his life to
- accumulate a fortune. In fact, outside of his profession, he had no
- knowledge of the way to make money, and he never even attempted it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln was loved by his brethren of the bar; and no body of men will
- grieve more at his death, or pay more sincere tributes to his memory. His
- presence on the circuit was watched for with interest, and never failed to
- produce joy and hilarity. When casually absent, the spirits of both bar
- and people were depressed. He was not fond of controversy, and would
- compromise a lawsuit whenever practicable."
- </p>
- <p>
- More or other evidence than this may, perhaps, be superfluous. Such an
- eulogium, from such a source, is more than sufficient to determine the
- place Mr. Lincoln is entitled to occupy in the history, or, more properly
- speaking, the traditions, of the Western bar. If Sir Matthew Hale had
- spoken thus of any lawyer of his day, he would have insured to the subject
- of his praise a place in the estimation of men only less conspicuous and
- honorable than that of the great judge himself. At the risk, however, of
- unnecessary accumulation, we venture to record an extract from Judge
- Drummond's address at Chicago:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "With a probity of character known to all, with an intuitive insight into
- the human heart, with a clearness of statement which was in itself an
- argument, with uncommon power and felicity of illustration,&mdash;often,
- it is true, of a plain and homely kind,&mdash;and with that sincerity and
- earnestness of manner which carried conviction, he was, perhaps, one of
- the most successful jury lawyers we ever had in the State. He always tried
- a case fairly and honestly. He never intentionally misrepresented the
- evidence of a witness, nor the argument of an opponent. He met both
- squarely, and, if he could not explain the one or answer the other,
- substantially admitted it. He never misstated the law, according to his
- own intelligent view of it. Such was the transparent candor and integrity
- of his nature, that he could not well, or strongly, argue a side or a
- cause that he thought wrong. Of course, he felt it his duty to say what
- could be said, and to leave the decision to others; but there could be
- seen in such cases the inward struggles of his own mind. In trying a case,
- he might occasionally dwell too long upon, or give too much importance to,
- an inconsiderable point; but this was the exception, and generally he went
- straight to the citadel of the cause or question, and struck home there,
- knowing, if that were won, the outworks would necessarily fall. He could
- hardly be called very learned in his profession, and yet he rarely tried a
- cause without fully understanding the law applicable to it; and I have no
- hesitation in saying he was one of the ablest lawyers I have ever known.
- If he was forcible before a jury, he was equally so with the court. He
- detected, with unerring sagacity, the weak points of an opponent's
- argument, and pressed his own views with overwhelming strength. His
- efforts were quite unequal; and it might happen that he would not, on some
- occasions, strike one as at all remarkable. But let him be thoroughly
- roused,&mdash;let him feel that he was right, and that some principle was
- involved in his cause,&mdash;and he would come out with an earnestness of
- conviction, a power of argument, and a wealth of illustration, that I have
- never seen surpassed."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln's partnership with John T. Stuart began on the 27th of April,
- 1837, and continued until the 14th of April, 1841, when it was dissolved,
- in consequence of Stuart's election to Congress. In that same year (1841),
- Mr. Lincoln united in practice with Stephen T. Logan, late presiding judge
- of the district, and they remained together until 1845.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon afterwards he formed a copartnership with William H. Herndon, his
- friend, familiar, and, we may almost say, biographer,&mdash;a connection
- which terminated only when the senior partner took an affectionate leave
- of the old circuit, the old office, home, friends, and all familiar
- things, to return no more until he came a blackened corpse. "He once told
- me of you," says Mr. Whitney in one of his letters to Mr. Herndon, "that
- he had taken you in as partner, supposing that you had a system, and would
- keep things in order, but that he found that you had no more system than
- he had, but that you were a fine lawyer; so that he was doubly
- disappointed." 1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 The following letter exhibits the character of his early practice, and
- gives us a glimpse into his social and political life;&mdash;
- Springfield, Dec. 23,1839. Dear&mdash;,&mdash;Dr. Henry will write you
- all the political news. I write this about some little matters of
- business. You recollect you told me you had drawn the Chicago Masack
- money, and sent it to the claimants. A d&mdash;&mdash;d hawk-billed
- Yankee is here besetting me at every turn I take, saying that Robert
- Kenzie never received the eighty dollars to which he was entitled. Can
- you tell any thing about the matter? Again, old Mr. Wright, who lives up
- South Fork somewhere, is teasing me continually about some deeds, which
- he says he left with you, but which I can find nothing of. Can you tell
- where they are? The Legislature is in session, and has suffered the bank
- to forfeit its charter without benefit of clergy. There seems but little
- disposition to resuscitate it. Whenever a letter comes from you to Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;,
- I carry it to her, and then I see Betty: she is a tolerable nice fellow
- now. Maybe I will write again when I get more time. Your friend as ever,
- A. Lincoln. P. S.&mdash;The Democratic giant is here, but he is not now
- worth talking about. A. L.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- As already stated by Judge Davis, Mr. Lincoln was not "a great reader of
- law-books;" but what he knew he knew well, and within those limits was
- self-reliant and even intrepid. He was what is sometimes called "a
- case-lawyer,"&mdash;a man who reasoned almost entirely to the court and
- jury from analagous causes previously decided and reported in the books,
- and not from the elementary principles of the law, or the great underlying
- reasons for its existence. In consultation he was cautious, conscientious,
- and painstaking, and was seldom prepared to advise, except after careful
- and tedious examination of the authorities. He did not consider himself
- bound to take every case that was brought to him, nor to press all the
- points in favor of a client who in the main was right and entitled to
- recover. He is known to have been many times on the verge of quarrelling
- with old and valued friends, because he could not see the justice of their
- claims, and, therefore, could not be induced to act as their counsel.
- Henry McHenry, one of his New-Salem associates, brought him a case
- involving the title to a piece of land. McHenry had placed a family in a
- cabin which Mr. Lincoln believed to be situated on the other side of the
- adversary's line. He told McHenry that he must move the family out.
- "McHenry said he should not do it. 'Well,' said Mr. Lincoln, 'if you do
- not, I shall not attend to the suit.' McHenry said he did not care a d&mdash;n
- whether he did or not; that he (Lincoln) was not all the lawyer there was
- in town. Lincoln studied a while, and asked about the location of the
- cabin,... and then said, 'McHenry, you are right: I will attend to the
- suit,' and did attend to it, and gained it; and that was all the harsh
- words that passed."
- </p>
- <p>
- "A citizen of Springfield," says Mr. Herndon, "who visited our office on
- business about a year before Mr. Lincoln's nomination, relates the
- following:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Mr. Lincoln was seated at his table, listening very attentively to a man
- who was talking earnestly in a low tone. After the would-be client had
- stated the facts of his case, Mr. Lincoln replied, "Yes, there is no
- reasonable doubt but that I can gain your case for you. I can set a whole
- neighborhood at loggerheads; I can distress a widowed mother and her six
- fatherless children, and thereby get for you six hundred dollars, which
- rightfully belongs, it appears to me, as much to the woman and her
- children as it does to you. You must remember that some things that are
- legally right are not morally right. I shall not take your case, but will
- give you a little advice, for which I will charge you nothing. You seem to
- be a sprightly, energetic man. I would advise you to try your hand at
- making six hundred dollars in some other way."'"
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1841, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a curious case. The
- circumstances impressed him very deeply with the insufficiency and danger
- of "circumstantial evidence;" so much so, that he not only wrote the
- following account of it to Speed, but another more extended one, which was
- printed in a newspaper published at Quincy, 111. His mind was full of it:
- he could think of nothing else. It is apparent that in his letter to Speed
- he made no pause to choose his words: there is nothing constrained, and
- nothing studied or deliberate about it; but its simplicity, perspicuity,
- and artless grace make it a model of English composition. What Goldsmith
- once said of Locke may better be said of this letter: "He never says more
- nor less than he ought, and never makes use of a word that he could have
- changed for a better."
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, June 19,1841.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;We have had the highest state of excitement here for a
- week past that our community has ever witnessed; and although the public
- feeling is somewhat allayed, the curious affair which aroused it is very
- far from being over yet, cleared of mystery. It would take a quire of
- paper to give you any thing like a full account of it, and I therefore
- only propose a brief outline. The chief personages in the drama are
- Archibald Fisher, supposed to be murdered, and Archibald Trailor, Henry
- Trailor, and William Trailor, supposed to have murdered him. The three
- Trailors are brothers: the first, Arch., as you know, lives in town; the
- second, Henry, in Clary's Grove; and the third, William, in Warren County;
- and Fisher, the supposed murdered, being without a family, had made his
- home with William. On Saturday evening, being the 29th of May, Fisher and
- William came to Henry's in a one-horse dearborn, and there staid over
- Sunday; and on Monday all three came to Springfield (Henry on horseback),
- and joined Archibald at Myers's, the Dutch carpenter. That evening at
- supper Fisher was missing, and so next morning some ineffectual search was
- made for him; and on Tuesday, at 1 o'clock, p.m., William and Henry
- started home without him. In a day or two Henry and one or two of his
- Clary-Grove neighbors came back for him again, and advertised his
- disappearance in the papers. The knowledge of the matter thus far had not
- been general, and here it dropped entirely, till about the 10th inst.,
- when Keys received a letter from the postmaster in Warren County, that
- William had arrived at home, and was telling a very mysterious and
- improbable story about the disappearance of Fisher, which induced the
- community there to suppose he had been disposed of unfairly. Keys made
- this letter public, which immediately set the whole town and adjoining
- county agog. And so it has continued until yesterday. The mass of the
- people commenced a systematic search for the dead body, while Wickersbam
- was despatched to arrest Henry Trailor at the Grove, and Jim Maxcy to
- Warren to arrest William. On Monday last, Henry was brought in, and showed
- an evident inclination to insinuate that he knew Fisher to be dead, and
- that Arch, and William had killed him. He said he guessed the body could
- be found in Spring Creek, between the Beardstown Road and Hickox's mill.
- Away the people swept like a herd of buffalo, and cut down Hickox's
- mill-dam <i>nolens volens</i>, to draw the water out of the pond, and then
- went up and down, and down and up the creek, fishing and raking, and
- raking and ducking, and diving for two days, and, after all, no dead body
- found. In the mean time a sort of a scuffling-ground had been found in the
- brush in the angle, or point, where the road leading into the woods past
- the brewery, and the one leading in past the brick grove meet. From the
- scuffle-ground was the sign of something about the size of a man having
- been dragged to the edge of the thicket, where joined the track of some
- small wheeled carriage drawn by one horse, as shown by the road-tracks.
- The carriage-track led off toward Spring Creek. Near this drag-trail Dr.
- Merryman found two hairs, which, after a long scientific examination, he
- pronounced to be triangular human hair, which term, he says, includes
- within it the whiskers, the hair growing under the arms, and on other
- parts of the body; and he judged that these two were of the whiskers,
- because the ends were cut, showing that they had flourished in the
- neighborhood of the razor's operations. On Thursday last Jim Maxcy brought
- in William Trailor from Warren. On the same day Arch, was arrested, and
- put in jail. Yesterday (Friday) William was put upon his examining trial
- before May and Lavely. Archibald and Henry were both present. Lamborn
- prosecuted, and Logan, Baker, and your humble servant defended. A great
- many witnesses were introduced and examined, but I shall only mention
- those whose testimony seemed most important. The first of these was Capt.
- Ransdell. He swore, that, when William and Henry left Springfield for home
- on Tuesday before mentioned, they did not take the direct route,&mdash;which,
- you know, leads by the butcher-shop,&mdash;but that they followed the
- street north until they got opposite, or nearly opposite, May's new house,
- after which he could not see them from where he stood; and it was
- afterwards proved, that, in about an hour after they started, they came
- into the street by the butcher's shop from towards the brick-yard. Dr.
- Merryman and others swore to what is stated about the scuffle-ground,
- drag-trail, whiskers, and carriage-tracks. Henry was then introduced by
- the prosecution. He swore, that, when they started for home, they went out
- north, as Ransdell stated, and turned down west by the brick-yard into the
- woods, and there met Archibald; that they proceeded a small distance
- farther, when he was placed as a sentinel to watch for and announce the
- approach of any one that might happen that way; that William and Arch,
- took the dearborn out of the road a small distance to the edge of the
- thicket, where they stopped, and he saw them lift the body of a man into
- it; that they then moved off with the carriage in the direction of
- Hickox's mill, and he loitered about for something like an hour, when
- William returned with the carriage, but without Arch., and said they had
- put him in a safe place; that they went somehow, he did not know exactly
- how, into the road close to the brewery, and proceeded on to Clary's
- Grove. He also stated that some time during the day William told him that
- he and Arch, had killed Fisher the evening before; that the way they did
- it was by him (William) knocking him down with a club, and Arch, then
- choking him to death. An old man from Warren, called Dr. Gilmore, was then
- introduced on the part of the defence. He swore that he had known Fisher
- for several years; that Fisher had resided at his house a long time at
- each of two different spells,&mdash;once while he built a barn for him,
- and once while he was doctored for some chronic disease; that two or three
- years ago Fisher had a serious hurt in his head by the bursting of a gun,
- since which he had been subject to continued bad health and occasional
- aberration of mind. He also stated that on last Tuesday, being the same
- day that Maxcy arrested William Trailor, he (the doctor) was from home in
- the early part of the day, and on his return, about 11 o'clock, found
- Fisher at his house in bed, and apparently very unwell; that he asked him
- how he had come from Springfield; that Fisher said he had come by Peoria,
- and also told of several other places he had been at, more in the
- direction of Peoria, which showed that he at the time of speaking did not
- know where he had been wandering about in a state of derangement. He
- further stated, that in about two hours he received a note from one of
- Trail-or's friends, advising him of his arrest, and requesting him to go
- on to Springfield as a witness, to testify as to the state of Fisher's
- health in former times; that he immediately set off, calling up two of his
- neighbors as company, and, riding all evening and all night, overtook
- Maxcy and William at Lewiston in Fulton. County; That Maxcy refusing to
- discharge Trailor upon his statement, his two neighbors returned, and he
- came on to Springfield. Some question being made as to whether the
- doctor's story was not a fabrication, several acquaintances of his (among
- whom was the same postmaster who wrote to Keys, as before mentioned) were
- introduced as sort of compurgators, who swore that they knew the doctor to
- be of good character for truth and veracity, and generally of good
- character in every way. Here the testimony ended, and the Trailors were
- discharged, Arch, and William expressing, both in word and manner, their
- entire confidence that Fisher would be found alive at the doctor's by
- Galloway, Mallory, and Myers, who a day before had been despatched for
- that purpose; while Henry still protested that no power on earth could
- ever show Fisher alive. Thus stands this curious affair. When the doctor's
- story was first made public, it was amusing to scan and contemplate the
- countenances, and hear the remarks, of those who had been actively engaged
- in the search for the dead body: some looked quizzical, some melancholy,
- and some furiously angry. Porter, who had been very active, swore he
- always knew the man was not dead, and that he had not stirred an inch to
- hunt for him: Langford, who had taken the lead in cutting down Hickox's
- mill-dam, and wanted to hang Hickox for objecting, looked most awfully
- woebegone; he seemed the "<i>wictim of hunrequited affection</i>," as
- represented in the comic almanacs we used to laugh over. And Hart, the
- little drayman that hauled Molly home once, said it was too damned bad to
- have so much trouble, and no hanging, after all.
- </p>
- <p>
- I commenced this letter on yesterday, since which I received yours of the
- 13th. I stick to my promise to come to Louisville. Nothing new here,
- except what I have written. I have not seen&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;since my
- last trip; and I am going out there as soon as I mail this letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 3d of December, 1839, Mr. Lincoln was admitted to practice in the
- Circuit Court of the United States; and on the same day the names of
- Stephen A. Douglas, S. H. Treat, Schuyler Strong, and two other gentlemen,
- were placed on the same roll. The "Little Giant" is always in sight!
- </p>
- <p>
- The first speech he delivered in the Supreme Court of the State was one
- the like of which will never be heard again, and must have led the judges
- to doubt the sanity of the new attorney. We give it in the form in which
- it seems to be authenticated by Judge Treat:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "A case being called for hearing in the Court, Mr. Lincoln stated that he
- appeared for the appellant, and was ready to proceed with the argument. He
- then said, 'This is the first case I have ever had in this court, and I
- have therefore examined it with great care. As the Court will perceive, by
- looking at the abstract of, the record, the only question in the case is
- one of authority. I have not been able to find any authority sustaining <i>my</i>
- side of the case, but I <i>have found</i> several cases directly in point
- on the <i>other</i> side. I will now give <i>these</i> cases, and then
- submit the case.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- The testimony of all the lawyers, his contemporaries and rivals, is in the
- same direction. "But Mr. Lincoln's love of justice and fair play," says
- Mr. Gillespie, "was his predominating trait. I have often listened to him
- when I thought he would certainly state his case out of Court. It was not
- in his nature to assume, or to attempt to bolster up, a false position. He
- would abandon his case first. He did so in the case of Buckmaster for the
- use of Denham vs. Beenes and Arthur, in our Supreme Court, in which I
- happened to be opposed to him. Another gentleman, less fastidious, took
- Mr. Lincoln's place, and gained the case."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Patterson trial&mdash;a case of murder which attained some
- celebrity&mdash;in Champaign County, Ficklin and Lamon prosecuted, and
- Lincoln and Swett defended. After hearing the testimony, Mr. Lincoln felt
- himself morally paralyzed, and said, "Swett, the man is guilty: you defend
- him; I can't." They got a fee of five hundred or a thousand dollars; of
- which Mr. Lincoln declined to take a cent, on the ground that it justly
- belonged to Swett, whose ardor, courage, and eloquence had saved the
- guilty man from justice.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was probably his deep sense of natural justice, his irresistible
- propensity to get at the equities of the matter in hand, that made him so
- utterly impatient of all arbitrary or technical rules. Of these he knew
- very little,&mdash;less than an average student of six months: "Hence,"
- says Judge Davis, "a child could make use of the simple and technical
- rules, the means and mode of getting at justice, better than Lincoln
- could." "In this respect," says Mr. Herndon, "I really think he was very
- deficient."
- </p>
- <p>
- Sangamon County was originally in the First Judicial Circuit; but under
- the Constitution of 1848, and sundry changes in the Judiciary Acts, it
- became the Eighth Circuit. It was in 1848 that Judge Davis came on the
- bench for the first time. The circuit was a very large one, containing
- fourteen counties, and comprising the central portion of the State.
- Lincoln travelled all over it&mdash;first with Judge Treat and then with
- Judge Davis&mdash;twice every year, and was thus absent from Springfield
- and home nearly, if not quite, six months out of every twelve. "In my
- opinion," says Judge Davis, "Lincoln was as happy as <i>he</i> could be,
- on this circuit, and happy in no other place. This was his place of
- enjoyment. As a general rule, of a Saturday evening, when all the lawyers
- would go home [the judge means those who were close enough to get there
- and back by the time their cases were called] and see their families and
- friends, Lincoln would refuse to go." "It was on this circuit," we are
- told by an authority equally high, "that he shone as a <i>nisi prius</i>
- lawyer; it was on this circuit Lincoln thought, spoke, and acted; it was
- on this circuit that the people met, greeted, and cheered on the man; it
- was on this circuit that he cracked his jokes, told his stories, made his
- money, and was happy as nowhere in the world beside." When, in 1857,
- Sangamon County was cut off from the Eighth Circuit by the act creating
- the Eighteenth, "Mr. Lincoln would still continue with Judge Davis, first
- finishing his business in Sangamon."
- </p>
- <p>
- On his return from one of these long journeys, he found that Mrs. Lincoln
- had taken advantage of his absence, and, with the connivance and
- assistance of his neighbor, Gourly, had placed a second story and a new
- roof on his house. Approaching it for the first time after this rather
- startling alteration, and pretending not to recognize it, he called to a
- man on the street, "Stranger, can you tell me where Lincoln lives? He used
- to live here."
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mr. Lincoln first began to "ride the circuit," he was too poor to own
- horseflesh or vehicle, and was compelled to borrow from his friends. But
- in due time he became the proprietor of a horse, which he fed and groomed
- himself, and to which he was very much attached. On this animal he would
- set out from home, to be gone for weeks together, with no baggage but a
- pair of saddle-bags, containing a change of linen, and an old cotton
- umbrella, to shelter him from sun or rain. When he got a little more of
- this world's goods, he set up a one-horse buggy,&mdash;a very sorry and
- shabby-looking affair, which he generally used when the weather promised
- to be bad. But the lawyers were always glad to see him, and the landlords
- hailed his coming with pleasure. Yet he was one of those peculiar, gentle,
- uncomplaining men, whom those servants of the public who keep "hotels"
- would generally put off with the most indifferent accommodations. It was a
- very significant remark of a lawyer thoroughly acquainted with his habits
- and disposition, that "Lincoln was never seated next the landlord at a
- crowded table, and never got a chicken liver or the best cut from the
- roast." If rooms were scarce, and one, two, three, or four gentlemen were
- required to lodge together, in order to accommodate some surly man who
- "stood upon his rights," Lincoln was sure to be one of the unfortunates.
- Yet he loved the life, and never went home without reluctance.
- </p>
- <p>
- From Mr. S. O. Parks of Lincoln, himself a most reputable lawyer, we have
- two or three anecdotes, which we give in his own language:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have often said, that, for a man who was for the quarter of a century
- both a lawyer and a politician, he was the most honest man I ever knew. He
- was not only morally honest, but intellectually so. He could not reason
- falsely: if he attempted it, he failed. In politics he never would try to
- mislead. At the bar, when he thought he was wrong, he was the weakest
- lawyer I ever saw. You know this better than I do. But I will give you an
- example or two which occurred in this county, and which you may not
- remember.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A man was indicted for larceny: Lincoln, Young, and myself defended him.
- Lincoln was satisfied by the evidence that he was guilty, and ought to be
- convicted. He called Young and myself aside, and said, 'If you can say any
- thing for the man, do it. I can't: if I attempt, the jury will see that I
- think he is guilty, and convict him, of course.' The case was submitted by
- us to the jury without a word. The jury failed to agree; and before the
- next term the man died. Lincoln's honesty undoubtedly saved him from the
- penitentiary.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In a closely-contested civil suit, Lincoln had proved an account for his
- client, who was, though he did not know it at the time, a very slippery
- fellow. The opposing attorney then proved a receipt clearly covering the
- entire cause of action. By the time he was through, Lincoln was missing.
- The court sent for him to the hotel. 'Tell the judge,' said he, 'that I
- can't come: <i>my hands are dirty; and I came over to clean them!</i>'
- </p>
- <p>
- "In the case of Harris and Jones vs. Buckles, Harris wanted Lincoln to
- assist you and myself. His answer was characteristic: 'Tell Harris it's no
- use to <i>waste money on me</i> in that case: he'll get beat.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was prone to adventures in which <i>pigs</i> were the other
- party. The reader has already enjoyed one from the pen of Miss Owen; and
- here is another, from an incorrigible humorist, a lawyer, named J. H.
- Wickizer:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In 1855 Mr. Lincoln and myself were travelling by buggy from Woodford
- County Court to Bloomington, 111.; and, in passing through a little grove,
- we suddenly heard the terrific squealing of a little pig near by us. Quick
- as thought Mr. Lincoln leaped out of the buggy, seized a club, pounced
- upon the old sow, and beat her lustily: she was in the act of eating one
- of her young ones. Thus he saved the pig, and then remarked, 'By jing! the
- unnatural old brute shall not devour her own progeny!' This, I think, was
- his first proclamation of freedom."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Mr. Wickizer gives us another story, which most happily illustrates
- the readiness of Mr. Lincoln's wit:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In 1858, in the court at Bloomington, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a case
- of no great importance; but the attorney on the other side, Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;,
- a young lawyer of fine abilities (now a judge of the Supreme Court of the
- State), was always very sensitive about being beaten, and in this case
- manifested unusual zeal and interest. The case lasted until late at night,
- when it was finally submitted to the jury. Mr. S&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;spent
- a sleepless night in anxiety, and early next morning learned, to his great
- chagrin, that he had lost the case. Mr. Lincoln met him at the Court
- House, and asked him what had become of his case. With lugubrious
- countenance and melancholy tone, Mr. S-said, 'It's gone to hell.'&mdash;'Oh,
- well!' replied Lincoln, 'then you'll see it again!'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Although the humble condition and disreputable character of some of his
- relations and connections were the subject of constant annoyance and most
- painful reflections, he never tried to shake them off, and never abandoned
- them when they needed his assistance. A son of his foster-brother, John
- Johnston, was arrested in&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;County for stealing a watch.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln went to the same town to address a mass meeting while the poor
- boy was in jail. He waited until the dusk of the evening, and then, in
- company with Mr. H. C. Whitney, visited the prison. "Lincoln knew he was
- guilty," says Mr. Whitney, "and was very deeply affected,&mdash;more than
- I ever saw him. At the next term of the court, upon the State's Attorney's
- consent, Lincoln and I went to the prosecution witnesses, and got them to
- come into open court, and state that they did not care to presecute." The
- boy was released; and that evening, as the lawyers were leaving the town
- in their buggies, Mr. Lincoln was observed to get down from his, and walk
- back a short distance to a poor, distressed-looking young man who stood by
- the roadside. It was young Johnston. Mr. Lincoln engaged for a few moments
- apparently in earnest and nervous conversation with him, then giving him
- some money, and returning to his buggy, drove on.
- </p>
- <p>
- A thousand tales could be told of Mr. Lincoln's amusing tricks and
- eccentricities on these quiet rides from county to county, in company with
- judges and lawyers, and of his quaint sayings and curious doings at the
- courts in these Western villages. But, much against our will, we are
- compelled to make selections, and present a few only, which rest upon the
- most undoubted authority.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is well known that he used to carry with him, on what Mr. Stuart calls
- "the tramp around the circuit," ordinary school-books,&mdash;from Euclid
- down to an English grammar,&mdash;and study them as he rode along, or at
- intervals of leisure in the towns where he stopped. He supplemented these
- with a copy of Shakspeare, got much of it by rote, and recited long
- passages from it to any chance companion by the way.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was intensely fond of cutting wood with an axe; and he was often seen
- to jump from his buggy, seize an axe out of the hands of a roadside
- chopper, take his place on the log in the most approved fashion, and, with
- his tremendous long strokes, cut it in two before the man could recover
- from his surprise.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was this free life that charmed him, and reconciled him to existence.
- Here he forgot the past, with all its cruelties and mortifications: here
- were no domestic afflictions to vex his weary spirit and to try his
- magnanimous heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- "After he had returned from Congress," says Judge Davis, "and had lost his
- practice, Goodrich of Chicago proposed to him to open a law-office in
- Chicago, and go into partnership with him. Goodrich had an extensive
- practice there. Lincoln refused to accept, and gave as a reason, that he
- tended to consumption; that, if he went to Chicago, he would have to sit
- down and study hard, and it would kill him; that he would rather go around
- the circuit&mdash;the Eighth Judicial Circuit&mdash;than to sit down and
- die in Chicago."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1857, at a camp-meeting in Mason County, one Metzgar was
- most brutally murdered. The affray took place about half a mile from the
- place of worship, near some wagons loaded with liquors and provisions. Two
- men, James H. Norris and William D. Armstrong, were indicted for the
- crime. Norris was tried in Mason County, convicted of manslaughter, and
- sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of eight years. But Armstrong,
- the popular feeling being very high against him in Mason, "took a change
- of venue to Cass County," and was there tried (at Beardstown) in the
- spring of 1858. Hitherto Armstrong had had the services of two able
- counsellors, but now their efforts were supplemented by those of a most
- determined and zealous volunteer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Armstrong was the son of Jack and Hannah Armstrong of New Salem, the child
- whom Mr. Lincoln had rocked in the cradle while Mrs. Armstrong attended to
- other household duties. His life was now in imminent peril: he seemed
- clearly guilty; and, if he was to be saved, it must be by the
- interposition of some power which could deface that fatal record in the
- Norris trial, refute the senses of witnesses, and make a jury forget
- themselves and their oaths. Old Hannah had one friend whom she devoutly
- believed could accomplish this. She wrote to Mr. Lincoln, and he replied
- that he would defend the boy. (She says she has lost his letter.)
- Afterwards she visited him at Springfield, and prepared him for the event
- as well as she could, with an understanding weakened by a long strain of
- severe and almost hopeless reflection.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the trial came on, Mr. Lincoln appeared for the defence. His
- colleague, Mr. Walker, had possessed him of the record in the Norris case;
- and, upon close and anxious examination, he was satisfied that the
- witnesses could, by a well-sustained and judicious cross-examination, be
- made to contradict each other in some important particulars. Mr. Walker
- "handled" the victims of this friendly design, while Mr. Lincoln sat by
- and suggested questions. Nevertheless, to the unskilled mind, the
- testimony seemed to be absolutely conclusive against the prisoner, and
- every word of it fell like a new sentence of death. Norris had beaten the
- murdered man with a club from behind, while Armstrong had pounded him in
- the face with a slung-shot deliberately prepared for the occasion; and,
- according to the medical men, either would have been fatal without the
- other. But the witness whose testimony bore hardest upon Armstrong swore
- that the crime was committed about eleven o'clock at night, and that he
- saw the blows struck by the light of a moon nearly full, and standing in
- the heavens about where the sun would stand at ten o'clock in the morning.
- It is easy to pervert and even to destroy evidence like this; and here Mr.
- Lincoln saw an opportunity which nobody had dreamed of on the Norris
- trial. He handed to an officer of the court an almanac, and told him to
- give it back to him when he should call for it in presence of the jury. It
- was an almanac of the year previous to the murder.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln," says Mr. Walker, "made the closing argument for the
- defence. At first he spoke slowly, and carefully reviewed the whole
- testimony,&mdash;picked it all to pieces, and showed that the man had not
- received his wounds at the place or time named by the witnesses, <i>but
- afterwards, and at the hands of some one else</i>" "The evidence bore
- heavily upon his client," says Mr. Shaw, one of the counsel for the
- prosecution. "There were many witnesses, and each one seemed to add one
- more cord that seemed to bind him down, until Mr. Lincoln was something in
- the situation of Gulliver after his first sleep in Lilliput. But, when he
- came to talk to the jury (that was always his forte), he resembled
- Gulliver again. He skilfully untied here and there a knot, and loosened
- here and there a peg, until, fairly getting warmed up, he raised himself
- in his full power, and shook the arguments of his opponents from him as if
- they were cobwebs." In due time he called for the almanac, and easily
- proved by it, that, at the time the main witness declared the moon was
- shining in great splendor, there was, in fact, no moon at all, but black
- darkness over the whole scene. In the "roar of laughter" and undisguised
- astonishment succeeding this apparent demonstration, court, jury, and
- counsel forgot to examine that seemingly conclusive almanac, and let it
- pass without a question concerning its genuineness.1
- </p>
- <p>
- In conclusion, Mr. Lincoln drew a touching picture of Jack Armstrong
- (whose gentle spirit alas! had gone to that place of coronation for the
- meek), and Hannah,&mdash;this sweet-faced old lady with the silver locks,&mdash;welcoming
- to their humble cabin a strange and penniless boy, to whom Jack, with that
- Christian benevolence which distinguished him through life, became as a
- father, and the guileless Hannah even more than a mother. The boy, he
- said, stood before them pleading for the life of his benefactors' son,&mdash;the
- staff of the widow's declining years.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 Mr. E. J. Loomis, assistant in charge of the "Nautical Almanac"
- office, Washington, D.C., under date of Aug. 1,1871, says,&mdash;
- "Referring to the 'Nautical Almanac' for 1857, I find, that, between the
- hours of ten and eleven o'clock on the night of the 29th of August,
- 1857, the moon was within one hour of setting. "The computed time of its
- setting on that night is 11 h. 57 m.,&mdash;three minutes before
- midnight. "The moon was only two days past its first quarter, and could
- hardly be mistaken for 'nearly full.'" "In the case of the People vs.
- Armstrong, I was assisting prosecuting counsel. The prevailing belief at
- that time, and I may also say at the present, in Cass County, was as
- follows:&mdash; "Mr. Lincoln, previous to the trial, handed an almanac
- of the year previous to the murder to an officer of the court, stating
- that he might call for one during the trial, and, if he did, to send him
- that one. An important witness for the People had fixed the time of the
- murder to be in the night, near a camp-meeting; 'that the moon was about
- in the same place that the sun would be at ten o'clock in the morning,
- and was nearly full,'therefore he could see plainly, &amp;c. At the
- proper time, Mr. Lincoln called to the officer for an almanac; and the
- one prepared for the occasion was shown by Mr. 'Lincoln, he reading from
- it at the time referred to by the witness 'The moon had already set;'
- that in the roar of laughter the jury and opposing counsel forgot to
- look at the date. Mr. Carter, a lawyer of this city (Beardstown), who
- was present at, but not engaged in, the Armstrong case, says he is
- satisfied that the almanac was of the year previous, and thinks he
- examined it at the time. This was the general impression in the
- court-room. I have called on the sheriff who officiated at that time
- (James A. Dick), who says that he saw a 'Goudy's Almanac' lying upon Mr.
- Lincoln's table during the trial, and that Mr. Lincoln took it out of
- his own pocket. Mr. Dick does not know the date of it. I have seen
- several of the petit jurymen who sat upon the case, who only recollect
- that the almanac floored the witness. But one of the jurymen, the
- foreman, Mr. Milton Logan, says that it was the one for the year of the
- murder, and no trick about it; that he is willing to make an affidavit
- that he examined it as to date, and that it was an almanac of the year
- of the murder. My own opinion is, that when an almanac was called for by
- Mr. Lincoln, two were brought, one of the year of the murder, and one of
- the year previous; that Mr. Lincoln was entirely innocent of any
- deception in the matter. I the more think this, from the fact that
- Armstrong was not cleared by any want of testimony against him, but by
- the irresistible appeal of Mr. Lincoln in his favor."&mdash;Henry Shaw.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- "The last fifteen minutes of his speech," his colleague declares, "was as
- eloquent as I ever heard; and such the power and earnestness with which he
- spoke to that jury, that all sat as if entranced, and, when he was
- through, found relief in a gush of tears." "He took the jury by storm,"
- says one of the prosecutors. "There were tears in Mr. Lincoln's eyes while
- he spoke, but they were genuine. His sympathies were fully enlisted in
- favor of the young man, and his terrible sincerity could not help but
- arouse the same passion in the jury. I have said a hundred times that it
- was Lincoln's speech that saved that criminal from the gallows." In the
- language of Hannah, who sat by enchanted, "he told the stories about our
- first acquaintance,&mdash;what I did for him, and how I did it;" and she
- thinks it "was truly eloquent."
- </p>
- <p>
- "As to the trial," continues Hannah, "Lincoln said to me, 'Hannah, your
- son will be cleared before sundown.' He and the other lawyers addressed
- the jury, and closed the case. I went down at Thompson's pasture: Stator
- came to me, and told me soon that my son was cleared and a free man. I
- went up to the Court House: the jury shook hands with me, so did the
- Court, so did Lincoln. We were all affected, and tears, streamed down
- Lincoln's eyes. He then remarked to me, 'Hannah, what did I tell you? I
- pray to God that William may be a good boy hereafter; that this lesson may
- prove in the end a good lesson to him and to all.'... After the trial was
- over, Lincoln came down to where I was in Beardstown. I asked him what he
- charged me; told him I was poor. He said, 'Why, Hannah, I sha'n't charge
- you a cent,&mdash;never. Any thing I can do for you I will do for you
- willing and freely without charges.' He wrote to me about some land which
- some men were trying to get from me, and said, 'Hannah, they can't get
- your land. Let them try it in the Circuit Court, and then you appeal it;
- bring it to Supreme Court, and I and Herndon will attend to it for
- nothing.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- This boy William enlisted in the Union army. But in 1863 Hannah concluded
- she "wanted" him. She does not say that William was laboring under any
- disability, or that he had any legal right to his discharge. She merely
- "wanted" him, and wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect. He replied promptly by
- telegraph:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- September, 1863.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Hannah Armstrong,&mdash;I have just ordered the discharge of your boy
- William, as you say, now at Louisville, Ky.
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- For many years Mr. Lincoln was the attorney of the Illinois Central
- Railway Company; and, having rendered in some recent causes most important
- and laborious services, he presented a bill in 1857 for five thousand
- dollars. He pressed for his money, and was referred to some under-official
- who was charged with that class of business. Mr. Lincoln would probably
- have modified his bill, which seemed exorbitant as charges went among
- country lawyers, but the company treated him with such rude insolence,
- that he contented himself with a formal demand, and then immediately
- instituted suit on the claim. The case was tried at Bloomington before
- Judge Davis; and, upon affidavits of N. B. Judd, O. H.
- </p>
- <p>
- Browning, S. T. Logan, and Archy Williams, respecting the value of the
- services, was decided in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment given for
- five thousand dollars. This was much more money than Mr. Lincoln had ever
- had at one time.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the summer of 1859 Mr. Lincoln went to Cincinnati to argue the
- celebrated McCormick reaping-machine case. Mr. Edwin M. Stanton, whom he
- never saw before, was one of his colleagues, and the leading counsel in
- the case; and although the other gentlemen engaged received him with
- proper respect, Mr. Stanton treated him with such marked and habitual
- discourtesy, that he was compelled to withdraw from the case. When he
- reached home he said that he had "never been so brutally treated as by
- that man Stanton;" and the facts justified the statement.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV
- </h2>
- <p>
- WE have seen already, from one of his letters to Mr. Herndon, that Mr.
- Lincoln was personally quite willing to be a candidate for Congress the
- second time. But his "honor" forbade: he had given pledges, and made
- private arrangements with other gentlemen, to prevent "the district from
- going to the enemy." Judge Logan was nominated in his place; and, although
- personally one of the most popular men in Illinois, he was sadly beaten,
- in consequence of the record which the Whig party had made "against the
- war." It was well as it was; for, if Mr. Lincoln had been the candidate,
- he would have been still more disastrously defeated, since it was mainly
- the votes he had given in Congress which Judge Logan found it so difficult
- to explain and impossible to defend.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0010" id="image-0010">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/371.jpg" alt="Stephen T. Logan 371 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was an applicant, and a very urgent one, for the office of
- Commissioner of the General Land-Office in the new Whig administration. He
- moved his friends to urge him in the newspapers, and wrote to some of his
- late associates in Congress (among them Mr. Schenck of Ohio), soliciting
- their support. But it was all of no avail; Mr. Justin Butterfield (also an
- Illinoisian) beat him in the race to Washington, and got the appointment.
- It is said by one of Mr. Lincoln's numerous biographers, that he often
- laughed over his failure to secure this great office, pretending to think
- it beneath his merits; but we can find no evidence of the fact alleged,
- and have no reason to believe it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Fillmore subsequently offered him the governorship of Oregon. The news
- reached him whilst away at court at Tremont or Bloomington. Mr. Stuart and
- others "coaxed him to take it;" the former insisting that Oregon would
- soon become a State, and he one of its senators. Mr. Lincoln saw it all,
- and said he would accept "if his wife would consent." But his wife
- "refused to do so;" and time has shown that she was right, as she usually
- was when it came to a question of practical politics.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the time of his retirement from Congress to 1854, when the repeal of
- the Missouri Compromise and the Kansas-Nebraska Bill broke the hollow
- truce of 1856, which Mr. Clay and his compeers fondly regarded as a peace,
- Mr. Lincoln's life was one of comparative political inactivity. He did not
- believe that the sectional agitations could be permanently stilled by the
- devices which then seemed effectual to the foremost statesmen of either
- party and of both sections. But he was not disposed to be forward in the
- renewal of them. He probably hoped against conviction that time would
- allay the animosities which endangered at once the Union and the
- principles of free government, which had thus far preserved a precarious
- existence among the North American States.
- </p>
- <p>
- Coming home to Springfield from the Tremont court in 1850 in company with
- Mr. Stuart, he said, "The time will come when we must all be Democrats or
- Abolitionists. When that time comes, my mind is made up. The 'slavery
- question' can't be compromised."&mdash;"So is my mind made up," replied
- his equally firm companion; and at that moment neither doubted on which
- side he would find the other when the great struggle took place.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Whig party everywhere, in Congress and in their conventions, local and
- national, accepted the compromise of 1850 under the leadership of Mr. Clay
- and Mr. Webster. Mr. Lincoln did the same; for, from the hour that party
- lines were distinctly and closely drawn in his State, he was an unswerving
- party man. But although he said nothing against those measures, and much
- in favor of them, it is clear that he accepted the result with reluctance.
- He spoke out his disapproval of the Fugitive Slave Law as it was passed,
- believing and declaring wherever he went, that a negro man apprehended as
- a slave should have the privilege of a trial by jury, instead of the
- summary processes provided by the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln and I were going to Petersburg in 1850, I think," says Mr.
- Herndon. "The political world was dead: the compromises of 1850 seemed to
- settle the negro's fate. Things were stagnant; and all hope for progress
- in the line of freedom seemed to be crushed out. Lincoln was speculating
- with me about the deadness of things, and the despair which arose out of
- it, and deeply regretting that his human strength and power were limited
- by his nature to rouse and stir up the world. He said gloomily,
- despairingly, sadly, 'How hard, oh! how hard it is to die and leave one's
- country no better than if one had never lived for it! The world is dead to
- hope, deaf to its own death-struggle, made known by a universal cry, What
- is to be done? Is any thing to be done? Who can do any thing? and how is
- it to be done? Did you ever think of these things?'"
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1850 Mr. Lincoln again declined to be a candidate for Congress; and a
- newspaper called "The Tazewell Mirror" persisting in naming him for the
- place, he published a letter, refusing most emphatically to be considered
- a candidate. The concluding sentence alleged that there were many men
- among the Whigs of the district who would be as likely as he to bring "the
- district right side up."
- </p>
- <p>
- Until the death of his excellent step-mother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, Mr.
- Lincoln never considered himself free for a moment from the obligation to
- look after and care for her family. She had made herself his mother; and
- he regarded her and her children as near relatives,&mdash;much nearer than
- any of the Hankses.
- </p>
- <p>
- The limit of Thomas Lincoln's life was rapidly approaching. Mrs. Chapman,
- his step-daughter, wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect; and so did John
- Johnston. He began to fear that the straitened circumstances of the
- household might make them think twice before they sent for a doctor, or
- procured other comforts for the poor old man, which he needed, perhaps,
- more than drugs. He was too busy to visit the dying man, but sent him a
- kind message, and directed the family to get whatever was wanted upon his
- credit.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Jan. 12,1851.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Brother,&mdash;On the day before yesterday I received a letter from
- Harriet, written at Greenup. She says she has just returned from your
- house, and that father is very low, and will hardly recover. She also says
- that you have written me two letters, and that, although you do not expect
- me to come now, you wonder that I do not write. I received both your
- letters; and, although I have not answered them, it is not because I have
- forgotten them, or not been interested about them, but because it appeared
- to me I could write nothing which could do any good. You already know I
- desire that neither father nor mother shall be in want of any comfort,
- either in health or sickness, while they live; and I feel sure you have
- not failed to use my name, if necessary, to procure a doctor or any thing
- else for father in his present sickness. My business is such that I could
- hardly leave home now, if it were not, as it is, that my own wife is sick
- a-bed. (It is a case of baby sickness, and, I suppose, is not dangerous.)
- I sincerely hope father may yet recover his health; but, at all events,
- tell him to remember to call upon and confide in our great and good and
- merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any extremity. He notes
- the fall of a sparrow, and numbers the hairs of our heads; and he will not
- forget the dying man who puts his trust in him. Say to him, that, if we
- could meet now, it is doubtful whether it would not be more painful than
- pleasant; but that, if it be his lot to go now, he will soon have a joyous
- meeting with loved ones gone before, and where the rest of us, through the
- help of God, hope ere long to join them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Write me again when you receive this.
- </p>
- <p>
- Affectionately,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before and after the death of Thomas Lincoln, John Johnston and Mr.
- Lincoln had a somewhat spirited correspondence regarding John's present
- necessities and future plans. John was idle, thriftless, penniless, and as
- much disposed to rove as poor old Tom had been in his earliest and worst
- days. This lack of character and enterprise on John's part added seriously
- to Mr. Lincoln's anxieties concerning his step-mother, and greatly
- embarrassed his attempts to provide for her. At length he wrote John the
- following energetic exhortation, coupled with a most magnanimous pecuniary
- offer. It is the letter promised in a previous chapter, and makes John an
- intimate acquaintance of the reader:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Johnston,&mdash;Your request for eighty dollars, I do not think it
- best to comply with now. At the various times when I have helped you a
- little, you have said to me, "We can get along very well now;" but in a
- very short time I find you in the same difficulty again. Now, this can
- only happen by some defect in your conduct. What that defect is, I think I
- know. You are not <i>lazy</i>, and still you are an <i>idler</i>. I doubt
- whether, since I saw you, you have done a good whole day's work in any one
- day. You do not very much dislike to work, and still you do not work much,
- merely because it does not seem to you that you could get much for it.
- This habit of uselessly wasting time is the whole difficulty; and it is
- vastly important to you, and still more so to your children, that you
- should break the habit. It is more important to them, because they have
- longer to live, and can keep out of an idle habit before they are in it
- easier than they can get out after they are in.
- </p>
- <p>
- You are now in need of some money; and what I propose is, that you shall
- go to work, "tooth and nail," for somebody who will give you money for it.
- Let father and your boys take charge of things at home, prepare for a
- crop, and make the crop, and you go to work for the best money-wages, or
- in discharge of any debt you owe, that you can get; and, to secure you a
- fair reward for your labor, I now promise you, that, for every dollar you
- will, between this and the first of next May, get for your own labor,
- either in money or as your own indebtedness, I will then give you one
- other dollar. By this, if you hire yourself at ten dollars a month, from
- me you will get ten more, making twenty dollars a month for your work. In
- this I do not mean you shall go off to St. Louis, or the lead-mines, or
- the gold-mines in California; but I mean for you to go at it for the best
- wages you can get close to home, in Cole's County. Now, if you will do
- this, you will be soon out of debt, and, what is better, you will have a
- habit that will keep you from getting in debt again. But, if I should now
- clear you out of debt, next year you would be just as deep in as ever. You
- say you would almost give your place in heaven for $70 or $80. Then you
- value your place in heaven very cheap; for I am sure you can, with the
- offer I make, get the seventy or eighty dollars for four or five months'
- work. You say, if I will furnish you the money, you will deed me the land,
- and, if you don't pay the money back, you will deliver possession.
- Nonsense! If you can't now live with the land, how will you then live
- without it? You have always been kind to me, and I do not mean to be
- unkind to you. On the contrary, if you will but follow my advice, you will
- find it worth more than eighty times eighty dollars to you.
- </p>
- <p>
- Affectionately your brother,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln
- </p>
- <p>
- Again he wrote:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Shelbyville, Nov. 4, 1851.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Brother,&mdash;When I came into Charleston day before yesterday, I
- learned that you are anxious to sell the land where you live, and move to
- Missouri. I have been thinking of this ever since, and cannot but think
- such a notion is utterly foolish. What can you do in Missouri better than
- here? Is the land any richer? Can you there, any more than here, raise
- corn and wheat and oats without work? Will anybody there, any more than
- here, do your work for you? If you intend to go to work, there is no
- better place than right where you are: if you do not intend to go to work,
- you cannot get along anywhere. Squirming and crawling about from place to
- place can do no good. You have raised no crop this year; and what you
- really want is to sell the land, get the money, and spend it. Part with
- the land you have, and, my life upon it, you will never after own a spot
- big enough to bury you in. Half you will get for the land you will spend
- in moving to Missouri, and the other half you will eat and drink and wear
- out, and no foot of land will be bought. Now, I feel it is my duty to have
- no hand in such a piece of foolery. I feel that it is so even on your own
- account, and particularly on <i>mother's</i> account. The eastern forty
- acres I intend to keep for mother while she lives: if you <i>will not
- cultivate it</i>, it will rent for enough to support her; at least, it
- will rent for something. Her dower in the other two forties she can let
- you have, and no thanks to me. Now, do not misunderstand this letter: I do
- not write it in any unkindness. I write it in order, if possible, to get
- you to <i>face</i> the truth, which truth is, you are destitute because
- you have idled away all your time. Your thousand pretences for not getting
- along better are all nonsense: they deceive nobody but yourself. <i>Go to
- work</i> is the only cure for your case.
- </p>
- <p>
- A word to mother. Chapman tells me he wants you to go and live with him.
- If I were you, I would try it a while. If you get tired of it (as I think
- you will not), you can return to your own home. Chapman feels very kindly
- to you; and I have no doubt he will make your situation very pleasant.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sincerely your son,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- And again:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Shelbyville, Nov. 9,1851.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Brother,&mdash;When I wrote you before, I had not received your
- letter. I still think as I did; but if the land can be sold so that I get
- three hundred dollars to put to interest for mother, I will not object, if
- she does not. But, before I will make a deed, the money must be had, or
- secured beyond all doubt, at ten per cent.
- </p>
- <p>
- As to Abram, I do not want him, <i>on my own account</i>; but I understand
- he wants to live with me, so that he can go to school, and get a fair
- start in the world, which I very much wish him to have. When I reach home,
- if I can make it convenient to take, I will take him, provided there is no
- mistake between us as to the object and terms of my taking him.
- </p>
- <p>
- In haste as ever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 1st of July, 1852, Mr. Lincoln was chosen by a public meeting of
- his fellow-citizens at Springfield to deliver in their hearing a eulogy
- upon the life and character of Henry Clay; and on the 16th of the same
- month he complied with their request. Such addresses are usually called
- orations; but this one scarcely deserved the name. He made no effort to be
- eloquent, and in no part of it was he more than ordinarily animated. It is
- true that he bestowed great praise upon Mr. Clay; but it was bestowed in
- cold phrases and a tame style, wholly unlike the bulk of his previous
- compositions. In truth, Mr. Lincoln was never so devoted a follower of Mr.
- Clay as some of his biographers have represented him. He was for another
- man in 1836, most probably for another in 1840, and very ardently for
- another in 1848. Dr. Holland credits him with a visit to Mr. Clay at
- Ashland, and an interview which effectually cooled his ardor in behalf of
- the brilliant statesman. But, in fact, Mr. Lincoln never troubled himself
- to make such a pilgrimage to see or hear any man,&mdash;much less Mr.
- Clay. None of his friends&mdash;Judge Davis, Mr. Herndon, Mr. Speed, or
- any one else, so far as we are able to ascertain&mdash;ever heard of the
- visit. If it had been made at any time after 1838, it could scarcely have
- been concealed from Mr. Speed; and we are compelled to place it along with
- the multitude of groundless stories which have found currency with Mr.
- Lincoln's biographers.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the address upon Clay is of any historical value at all, it is because
- it discloses Mr. Lincoln's unreserved agreement with Mr. Clay in his
- opinions concerning slavery and the proper method of extinguishing it.
- They both favored gradual emancipation by the voluntary action of the
- people of the Slave States, and the transportation of the whole negro
- population to Africa as rapidly as they should be freed from service to
- their masters: it was a favorite scheme with Mr. Lincoln then, as it was
- long after he became President of the United States. "Compensated" and
- "voluntary emancipation," on the one hand, and "colonization" of the
- freedmen on the other, were essential parts of every "plan" which sprung
- out of his own individual mind. On this occasion, after quoting Mr. Clay,
- he said, "This suggestion of the possible ultimate redemption of the
- African race and African continent was made twenty-five years ago. Every
- succeeding year has added strength to the hope of its realization. May it
- indeed be realized! Pharaoh's country was cursed with plagues, and his
- hosts were drowned in the Red Sea, for striving to retain a captive people
- who had already served them more than four hundred years. May like
- disasters never befall us! If, as the friends of colonization hope, the
- present and coming generations of our countrymen shall by any means
- succeed in freeing our land from the dangerous presence of slavery, and at
- the same time restoring a captive people to their long-lost fatherland,
- with bright prospects for the future, and this, too, so gradually that
- neither races nor individuals shall have suffered by the change, it will
- indeed be a glorious consummation. And if to such a consummation the
- efforts of Mr. Clay shall have contributed, it will be what he most
- ardently wished; and none of his labors will have been more valuable to
- his country and his kind."
- </p>
- <p>
- During the campaign of 1852, Judge Douglas took the stump for Pierce "in
- twenty-eight States out of the thirty-one." His first speech was at
- Richmond, Va. It was published extensively throughout the Union, and
- especially in Illinois. Mr. Lincoln felt an ardent desire to answer it,
- and, according to his own account, got the "permission" of the "Scott
- Club" of Springfield to make the speech under its auspices. It was a very
- poor effort. If it was distinguished by one quality above another, it was
- by its attempts at humor; and all those attempts were strained and
- affected, as well as very coarse. He displayed a jealous and petulant
- temper from the first sentence to the last, wholly beneath the dignity of
- the occasion and the importance of the topic. Considered as a whole, it
- may be said that none of his public performances was more unworthy of its
- really noble author than this one. The reader has doubtless observed in
- the course of this narrative, as he will in the future, that Mr. Douglas's
- great success in obtaining place and distinction was a standing offence to
- Mr. Lincoln's self-love and individual ambition. He was intensely jealous
- of him, and longed to pull him down, or outstrip him in the race for
- popular favor, which they united in considering "the chief end of man."
- Some of the first sentences of this speech before the "Scott Club" betray
- this feeling in a most unmistakable and painful manner. "This speech [that
- of Mr. Douglas at Richmond] has been published with high commendations in
- at least one of the Democratic papers in this State, and I suppose it has
- been and will be in most of the others. When I first saw it and read it, I
- was reminded of old times, <i>when Judge Douglas was not so much greater
- man than all the rest of us, as he is now</i>,&mdash;of the Harrison
- campaign twelve years ago, when I used to hear and try to answer many of
- his speeches; and believing that the Richmond speech, though marked with
- the same species of 'shirks and quirks' as the old ones, was not marked
- with any greater ability, I was seized with a strange inclination to
- attempt an answer to it; and this inclination it was that prompted me to
- seek the privilege of addressing you on this occasion."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the progress of his remarks, Mr. Lincoln emphatically indorsed Mr.
- Douglas's great speech at Chicago in 1850, in defence of the compromise
- measures, which Mr. Lincoln pronounced the work of no party, but which,
- "for praise or blame," belonged to Whigs and Democrats alike. The rest of
- the address was devoted to a humorous critique upon Mr. Douglas's language
- in the Richmond speech, to ridicule of the campaign biographies of Pierce,
- to a description of Gens. Shields and Pierce wallowing in the ditch in the
- midst of a battle, and to a most remarkable account of a militia muster
- which might have been seen at Springfield a few years previous. Mr.
- Douglas had expressed great confidence in the sober judgment of the
- people, and at the same time had, rather inconsistently as well as
- indecently, declared that Providence had saved us from one military
- administration by the timely removal of Gen. Taylor. To this Mr. Lincoln
- alluded in his closing paragraph, which is given as a fair sample of the
- whole:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Let us stand by our candidate as faithfully as he has always stood by our
- country, and I much doubt if we do not perceive a slight abatement in
- Judge Douglas's confidence in Providence, as well as in the people. I
- suspect that confidence is not more firmly fixed with the judge than it
- was with the old woman whose horse ran away with her in a buggy. She said
- she 'trusted in Providence till the britchin' broke, and then she didn't
- know what on airth to do.' The chance is, the judge will see the
- 'britchin' broke;' and then he can at his leisure bewail the fate of
- Locofocoism as the victim of misplaced confidence."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 4th of January, 1854, Mr. Douglas, Chairman of the Committee on
- Territories, of the Senate of the United States, reported a bill to
- establish a territorial government in Nebraska. This bill contained
- nothing in relation to the Missouri Compromise, which still remained upon
- the statute-book, although the principle on which it was based had been
- violated in the Compromise legislation of 1850. A Whig Senator from
- Kentucky gave notice, that, when the Committee's bill came before the
- Senate, he would move an amendment repealing the Missouri Compromise. With
- this admonition in mind, the Committee instructed Mr. Douglas to report a
- substitute, which he did on the 23d of the same month. The substitute made
- two Territories out of Nebraska, and called one of them Kansas. It
- annulled the Missouri Compromise, forbade its application to Kansas,
- Nebraska, or any other territory, and, as amended and finally passed,
- fixed the following rules:... "It being the true intent and meaning of
- this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or State, nor to
- exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free to
- form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way, subject
- only to the Constitution of the United States." Mr. Douglas had long since
- denounced his imprecations upon "the ruthless hand" that should disturb
- that ancient compact of peace between the sections; and now he put forth
- his own ingenious hand to do the deed, and to take the curse, in both of
- which he was eminently successful. Not that the Missouri Act may not have
- been repugnant to the Constitution, for no court had ever passed upon it;
- but it was enacted for a holy purpose, was venerable in age, was
- consecrated in the hearts of the people by the unsurpassed eloquence of
- the patriots of a previous generation, and having the authority of law, of
- reason, and of covenant, it had till then preserved the Union, as its
- authors designed it should; and, being in truth a sacred thing, it was not
- a proper subject for the "ruthless" interference of mere politicians, like
- those who now devoted it to destruction. If, upon a regularly heard and
- decided issue, the Supreme Court should declare it unconstitutional, the
- recision of the compact could be attributed to no party,&mdash;neither to
- slavery nor to antislavery,&mdash;and the peace of the country might still
- subsist. But its repeal by the party that did it&mdash;a coalition of
- Southern Whigs and Democrats with Northern Democrats&mdash;was evidence of
- a design to carry slavery into the region north of 36° 30'; or the
- legislation was without a purpose at all. It was the first aggression of
- the South; but be it remembered in common justice, that she was tempted to
- it by the treacherous proffers of a restless but powerful Northern leader,
- who asked no recompense but her electoral votes. In due time he opened her
- eyes to the nature of the fraud; and, if he carried through the
- Kansas-Nebraska Act to catch the votes of the South in 1856, it cost him
- no inconvenience to give it a false and startling construction to catch
- the votes of the North in 1860. In the repeal of the Compromise, the
- Northern Democrats submitted with reluctance to the dictation of Douglas
- and the South. It was the great error of the party,&mdash;the one
- disastrous error of all its history. The party succeeded in 1856 only by
- the nomination of Mr. Buchanan, who was out of the country when the
- Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, and who was known to have opposed it. But
- the questions which grew out of it, the false and disingenuous
- construction of the act by its author, the slavery agitations in Kansas
- and throughout the country, disrupted the party at Charleston, and made
- possible Mr. Lincoln's election by a minority of the votes cast. And to
- the Whig party, whose Senators and Representatives from the South voted
- for the Douglas Bill in a body, the renewal of the slavery agitation,
- invited and insured by their action, was the signal of actual dissolution.
- </p>
- <p>
- Up to this date, Mr. Lincoln's views of slavery, and how they were formed,
- are as well known to the reader as they can be made known from the
- materials left behind for a history of them. It is clear that his <i>feelings</i>
- on the subject were inspired by individual cases of apparent hardship
- which had come under his observation. John Hanks, on the last trip to New
- Orleans, was struck by Lincoln's peculiarly active sympathy for the
- servile race, and insists, that, upon sight of their wrongs, "the iron
- entered his heart." In a letter to Mr. Speed, which will shortly be
- presented, Mr. Lincoln confesses to a similar experience in 1841, and
- speaks with great bitterness of the pain which the actual presence of
- chained and manacled slaves had given him. Indeed, Mr. Lincoln was not an
- ardent sympathizer with sufferings of any sort, which he did not witness
- with the eye of flesh. His compassion might be stirred deeply by an object
- present, but never by an object absent and unseen. In the former case he
- would most likely extend relief, with little inquiry into the merits of
- the case, because, as he expressed it himself, it "took a pain out of his
- own heart;" and he devoutly believed that every such act of charity or
- mercy sprung from motives purely selfish. None of his public acts, either
- before or after he became President, exhibits any special tenderness for
- the African race, or any extraordinary commiseration of their lot. On the
- contrary, he invariably, in words and deeds, postponed the interests of
- the blacks to the interests of the whites, and expressly subordinated the
- one to the other. When he was compelled, by what he deemed an overruling
- necessity, founded on both military and political considerations, to
- declare the freedom of the public enemy's slaves, he did so with avowed
- reluctance, and took pains to have it understood that his resolution was
- in no wise affected by sentiment. He never at any time favored the
- admission of negroes into the body of electors, in his own State or in the
- States of the South. He claimed that those who were incidentally liberated
- by the Federal arms were poor-spirited, lazy, and slothful; that they
- could be made soldiers only by force, and willing laborers not at all;
- that they seemed to have no interest in the cause of their own race, but
- were as docile in the service of the Rebellion as the mules that ploughed
- the fields or drew the baggage-trains; and, as a people, were useful only
- to those who were at the same time their masters and the foes of those who
- sought their good. With such views honestly formed, it is no wonder that
- he longed to see them transported to Hayti, Central America, Africa, or
- anywhere, so that they might in no event, and in no way, participate in
- the government of his country. Accordingly, he was, from the beginning, as
- earnest a colonizationist as Mr. Clay, and, even during his Presidency,
- zealously and persistently devised schemes for the deportation of the
- negroes, which the latter deemed cruel and atrocious in the extreme. He
- believed, with his rival, that this was purely a "white man's government;"
- but he would have been perfectly willing to share its blessings with the
- black man, had he not been very certain that the blessings would disappear
- when divided with such a partner. He was no Abolitionist in the popular
- sense; did not want to break over the safeguards of the Constitution to
- interfere with slavery where it had a lawful existence; but, wherever his
- power rightfully extended, he was anxious that the negro should be
- protected, just as women and children and unnaturalized men are protected,
- in life, limb, property, reputation, and every thing that nature or law
- makes sacred. But this was all: he had no notion of extending to the negro
- the <i>privilege of governing</i> him and other white men, by making him
- an elector. That was a political trust, an office to be exercised only by
- the superior race.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was therefore as a white man, and in the interests of white men, that
- he threw himself into the struggle to keep the blacks out of the
- Territories. He did not want them there either as slaves or freemen; but
- he wanted them less as slaves than as freemen. He perceived clearly enough
- the motives of the South in repealing the Missouri Compromise. It did, in
- fact, arouse him "like a fire-bell in the night." He felt that a great
- conflict impended; and, although he had as yet no idea that it was an
- "irrepressible conflict between opposing and enduring forces," which must
- end in making all free or all slave, he thought it was serious enough to
- demand his entire mind and heart; and he freely gave them both.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Gillespie gives the substance of a conversation with him, which,
- judging from the context, must have taken place about this time. Prefacing
- with the remark that the slavery question was the only one "on which he
- (Mr. Lincoln) would become excited," he says,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I recollect meeting with him once at Shelbyville, when he remarked that
- something must be done, or slavery would overrun the whole country. He
- said there were about six hundred thousand non-slaveholding whites in
- Kentucky to about thirty-three thousand slaveholders; that, in the
- convention then recently held, it was expected that the delegates would
- represent these classes about in proportion to their respective numbers;
- but, when the convention assembled, there was not a single representative
- of the non-slaveholding class: every one was in the interest of the
- slaveholders; 'and,' said he, 'the thing is spreading like wildfire over
- the country. In a few years we will be ready to accept the institution in
- Illinois, and the whole country will adopt it.' I asked him to what he
- attributed the change that was going on in public opinion. He said he had
- put that question to a Kentuckian shortly before, who answered by saying,
- 'You might have any amount of land, money in your pocket, or bank-stock,
- and, while travelling around, nobody would be any wiser; but, if you had a
- darkey trudging at your heels, everybody would see him, and know that you
- owned a slave.' 'It is the most glittering, ostentatious, and displaying
- property in the world; and now,' says he, 'if a young man goes courting,
- the only inquiry is, how many negroes he or she owns. The love for slave
- property was swallowing up every other mercenary possession. Its ownership
- betokened, not only the possession of wealth, but indicated the gentleman
- of leisure, who was above and scorned labor.' These things Mr. Lincoln
- regarded as highly seductive to the thoughtless and giddy-headed young men
- who looked upon work as vulgar and ungentlemanly. Mr. Lincoln was really
- excited, and said, with great earnestness, that this spirit ought to be
- met, and, if possible, checked; that slavery was a great and crying
- injustice, an enormous national crime, and that we could not expect to
- escape punishment for it. I asked him how he would proceed in his efforts
- to check the spread of slavery. <i>He confessed he did not see his way
- clearly. I think he made up his mind from that time that he would oppose
- slavery actively</i>. I know that Mr. Lincoln always contended that no man
- had any right other than mere brute force gave him to a slave. He used to
- say that it was singular that the courts would hold that a man never lost
- his right to his property that had been stolen from him, but that he
- instantly lost his right to himself if he was stolen. Mr. Lincoln always
- contended that the cheapest way of getting rid of slavery was for the
- nation to buy the slaves, and set them free."
- </p>
- <p>
- If the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill awakened Lincoln from his dream
- of security regarding the slavery question, which he hoped had been put to
- rest by the compromises of 1820 and 1850, it did the same with all
- likeminded people in the North. From that moment the Abolitionists, on the
- one hand, discerned a hope, not only of restricting slavery, but of
- ultimate emancipation; and the Southern Disunionists, on the other, who
- had lately met with numerous and signal defeats in their own section,
- perceived the means of inflaming the popular heart to the point of
- disunion. A series of agitations immediately began,&mdash;incessant,
- acrimonious, and in Kansas murderous and bloody,&mdash;which destroyed the
- Whig party at once, and continued until they severed the Democratic party
- at Charleston. All other issues were as chaff to this,&mdash;slavery or no
- slavery in the Territories,&mdash;while the discussion ranged far back of
- this practical question, and involved the much broader one, whether
- slavery possessed inherent rights under the Constitution. The Whigs South
- having voted for the repeal of the compromise, and the Whigs North against
- it, that party was practically no more. Some of its members went into the
- Know-Nothing lodges; some enlisted under the Abolition flag, and others
- drifted about and together until they formed themselves into a new
- organization, which they called Republican. It was a disbanded army; and,
- released from the authority of discipline and party tradition, a great
- part of the members engaged for a while in political operations of a very
- disreputable character. But the better class, having kept themselves
- unspotted from the pollution of Know-Nothingism, gradually but speedily
- formed the Republican party, which in due time drew into its mighty ranks
- nearly all the elements of opposition to the Democracy. Such a Whig was
- Mr. Lincoln, who lost no time in taking his ground. In Illinois the new
- party was not (in 1854) either Abolitionist, Republican, Know-Nothing,
- Whig, or Democratic, for it was composed of odds and ends of all; but
- simply the Anti-Nebraska party, of which Mr. Lincoln soon became the
- acknowledged leader.
- </p>
- <p>
- Returning from Washington, Mr. Douglas attempted to speak at Chicago; but
- he was not heard, and, being hissed and hooted by the populace of the
- city, betook himself to more complaisant audiences in the country. Early
- in October, the State Fair being in progress there, he spoke at
- Springfield. His speech was ingenious, and, on the whole, able: but he was
- on the defensive; and the consciousness of the fact, both on his own part
- and that of the audience, made him seem weaker than he really was. By
- common consent the Anti-Nebraska men put up Mr. Lincoln to reply; and he
- did reply with such power as he had never exhibited before. He was not the
- Lincoln who had spoken that tame address over Clay in 1852, or he who had
- deformed his speech before the "Scott Club" with petty jealousies and
- gross vulgarisms, but a new and greater Lincoln, the like of whom no one
- in that vast multitude had ever heard before. He felt that he was
- addressing the people on a living and vital question, not merely for the
- sake of speaking, but to produce conviction, and achieve a great practical
- result. How he succeeded in his object may be gathered from the following
- extracts from a leading editorial in "The Springfield Journal," written by
- Mr. Herndon:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "This Anti-Nebraska speech of Mr. Lincoln was the profoundest, in our
- opinion, that he has made in his whole life. He felt upon his soul the
- truths burn which he uttered, and all present felt that he was true to his
- own soul. His feelings once or twice swelled within, and came near
- stifling utterance.... He quivered with emotion. The whole house was as
- still as death.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He attacked the Nebraska Bill with unusual warmth and energy; and all
- felt that a man of strength was its enemy, and that he intended to blast
- it if he could by strong and manly efforts. He was most successful, and
- the house approved the glorious triumph of truth by loud and continued
- huzzas. Women waved their white handkerchiefs in token of woman's silent
- but heartfelt assent. Douglas felt the sting: the animal within was
- roused, because he frequently interrupted Mr. Lincoln. His friends felt
- that he was crushed by Lincoln's powerful argument, manly logic, and
- illustrations from nature around us. The Nebraska Bill was shivered, and,
- like a tree of the forest, was torn and rent asunder by hot bolts of
- truth.... Mr. Lincoln exhibited Douglas in all the attitudes he could be
- placed in a friendly debate. He exhibited the bill in all its aspects to
- show its humbuggery and falsehood; and, when thus torn to rags, cut into
- slips, held up to the gaze of the vast crowd, a kind of scorn and mockery
- was visible upon the face of the crowd and upon the lips of the most
- eloquent speaker.... At the conclusion of this speech, every man, woman,
- and child felt that it was unanswerable.... He took the heart captive, and
- broke like a sun over the understanding."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Douglas rose to reply. He was excited, angry, imperious in his tone
- and manner, and his voice loud and shrill. Shaking his forefinger at the
- Democratic malcontents with furious energy, and declaiming rather than
- debating, he occupied to little purpose the brief interval remaining until
- the adjournment for supper. Then, promising to resume his address in the
- evening, he went his way; and that audience "saw him no more." Evening
- came, but not the orator. Many fine speeches were made during the
- continuance of that fair upon the one absorbing topic,&mdash;speeches by
- the ablest men in Illinois,&mdash;Judge Trumbull, Judge Breese, Col.
- Taylor (Democratic recusants), and Stephen A. Douglas and John Calhoun
- (then Surveyor-General of Nebraska). But it is no shame to any one of
- these, that their really impressive speeches were but slightly
- appreciated, nor long remembered, beside Mr. Lincoln's splendid and
- enduring performance,&mdash;enduring in the memory of his auditors,
- although preserved upon no written or printed page.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among those whom the State Fair brought to Springfield for political
- purposes, were some who were neither Whigs, Democrats, Know-Nothings, nor
- yet mere Anti-Nebraska men: there were the restless leaders of the then
- insignificant Abolition faction. Chief among them was Owen Lovejoy; and
- second to him, if second to any, was William H. Herndon. But the position
- of this latter gentleman was one of singular embarrassment. According to
- himself, he was an Abolitionist "sometime before he was born," and
- hitherto he had made his "calling and election sure" by every word and act
- of a life devoted to political philanthropy and disinterested political
- labors. While the two great national parties divided the suffrages of the
- people, North and South, every thing in his eyes was "dead." He detested
- the bargains by which those parties were in the habit of composing
- sectional troubles, and sacrificing the "principle of freedom." When the
- Whig party "paid its breath to time," he looked upon its last agonies as
- but another instance of divine retribution. He had no patience with
- time-servers, and regarded with indignant contempt the "policy" which
- would postpone the natural rights of an enslaved race to the success of
- parties and politicians. He stood by at the sacrifice of the Whig party in
- Illinois with the spirit of Paul when he "held the clothes of them that
- stoned Stephen." He believed it was for the best, and hoped to see a new
- party rise in its place, great in the fervor of its faith, and animated by
- the spirit of Wilberforce, Garrison, and the Lovejoys. He was a fierce
- zealot, and gloried proudly in his title of "fanatic;" for it was his
- conviction that fanatics were at all times the salt of the earth, with
- power to save it from the blight that follows the wickedness of men. He
- believed in a God, but it was the God of nature,&mdash;the God of Socrates
- and Plato, as well as the God of Jacob. He believed in a Bible, but it was
- the open scroll of the universe; and in a religion clear and well defined,
- but it was a religion that scorned what he deemed the narrow slavery of
- verbal inspiration. Hot-blooded, impulsive, brave morally and physically,
- careless of consequences when moved by a sense of individual duty, he was
- the very man to receive into his inmost heart the precepts of Mr. Seward's
- "higher law." If he had pledged faith to slavery, no peril of life or body
- could have induced him to violate it. But he held himself no party to the
- compromises of the Constitution, nor to any law which recognized the
- justice of human bondage; and he was therefore free to act as his God and
- nature prompted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, Mr. Herndon had determined to make an Abolitionist out of Mr. Lincoln
- when the proper time should arrive; and that time would be only when Mr.
- Lincoln could change front and "come out" without detriment to his
- personal aspirations. For, although Mr. Herndon was a zealot in the cause,
- he loved his partner too dearly to wish him to espouse it while it was
- unpopular and politically dangerous to belong to it. "I cared nothing for
- the ruin of myself," said he; "but I did not wish to see Mr. Lincoln
- sacrificed." He looked forward to a better day, and, in the mean time, was
- quite willing that Mr. Lincoln should be no more than a nominal Whig, or a
- strong Anti-Nebraska man; being quite sure, that, when the auspicious
- moment arrived, he would be able to present him to his brethren as a
- convert over whom there would surely be great joy. Still, there was a bare
- chance that he might lose him. Mr. Lincoln was beset by warm friends and
- by old coadjutors, and besought to pause in his antislavery course while
- there was yet time. Among these there was none more earnest or persuasive
- than John T. Stuart, who was but the type of a class. Tempted on the one
- side to be a Know-Nothing, and on the other side to be an Abolitionist,
- Mr. Lincoln said, as if in some doubt of his real position, "I <i>think</i>
- I am still a Whig." But Mr. Herndon was more than a match for the full
- array against him. An earnest man, instant in season and out of season, he
- spoke with the eloquence of apparent truth and of real personal love.
- Moreover, Mr. Lincoln's preconceptions inclined him to the way in which
- Mr. Herndon desired him to walk; and it is not surprising that in time he
- was, not only almost, but altogether, persuaded by a friend and partner,
- whose opportunities to reach and convince his wavering mind were, daily
- and countless. "From 1854 to 1860," says Mr. Herndon, "I kept putting in
- Lincoln's hands the speeches and sermons of Theodore Parker, the speeches
- of Phillips and Beecher. I took 'The Anti-slavery Standard' for years
- before 1856, 'The Chicago Tribune,' and 'The New York Tribune;' kept them
- in my office, kept them purposely on my table, and would read to Lincoln
- good, sharp, and solid things well put. Lincoln was a natural antislavery
- man, as I think, and yet he needed watching,&mdash;needed hope, faith,
- energy; and I think I warmed him. Lincoln and I were just the opposite one
- of another. He was cautious and practical; I was spontaneous, ideal, and
- speculative. He arrived at truths by reflection; I, by intuition; he, by
- reason; I, by my soul. He calculated; I went to toil asking no questions,
- never doubting. Lincoln had great faith in my intuitions, and I had great
- faith in his reason."
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course such a man as we have described Mr. Herndon to be could have
- nothing but loathing and disgust for the secret oaths, the midnight
- lurking, and the proscriptive spirit of Know-Nothingism. "A number of
- gentlemen from Chicago," says he, "among them the editor of 'The Star of
- the West,' an Abolitionist paper published in Chicago, waited on me in my
- office, and asked my advice as to the policy of going into Know-Nothing
- Lodges, and ruling them for freedom. I opposed it as being wrong in
- principle, as well as a fraud on the lodges, and wished to fight it out in
- open daylight. Lincoln was opposed to Know-Nothingism, but did not say
- much in 1854 or 1855 (did afterwards). I told Lincoln what was said, and
- argued the question with him often, insisting that, as we were advocating
- <i>freedom for the slave in tendency</i> under the Kansas-Nebraska Bill,
- it was radically wrong to enslave the religious ideas and faith of men.
- The gentlemen who waited on me as before stated asked me if I thought that
- Mr. Lincoln could be trusted for freedom. I said to them, 'Can you trust
- yourselves? If you can, you can trust Lincoln forever.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0011" id="image-0011">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/392.jpg" alt="John T. Stuart 392 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- With this explanation of the political views of Mr. Herndon, and his
- personal relations to Mr. Lincoln, the reader will more easily understand
- what follows.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This State Fair," continues Mr. Herndon, "called thousands to the city.
- We Abolitionists all assembled here, taking advantage of the fair to
- organize and disseminate our ideas. As soon as Lincoln had finished his
- speech, Lovejoy, who had been in the hall, rushed up to the stand, and
- notified the crowd that there would be a meeting there in the evening:
- subject, <i>Freedom</i>. I had been with the Abolitionists that day, and
- knew their intentions: namely, to force Lincoln with our organization, and
- to take broader and deeper and more radical views and ideas than in his
- speech, which was simply <i>Historic Kansas</i>.... He (Lincoln) had not
- then announced himself for freedom, only discussed the inexpediency of
- repealing the Missouri Compromise Line. The Abolitionists that day
- determined to make Lincoln take a stand. I determined he should <i>not at
- that time</i>, because the time had not yet come when Lincoln should show
- his hand. When Lovejoy announced the Abolition gathering in the evening, I
- rushed to Lincoln, and said, 'Lincoln, go home; take Bob and the buggy,
- and leave the county: go quickly, go right off, and never mind the order
- of your going.' Lincoln took a hint, got his horse and buggy, and did
- leave quickly, not noting the order of his going. He staid away till all
- conventions and fairs were over."
- </p>
- <p>
- But the speech against the repeal of the Compromise signally impressed all
- parties opposed to Mr. Douglas's late legislation,&mdash;Whigs,
- Abolitionists, and Democratic Free-soilers,&mdash;who agreed with perfect
- unanimity, that Mr. Lincoln should be pitted against Mr. Douglas wherever
- circumstances admitted of their meeting. As one of the evidences of this
- sentiment, Mr. William Butler drew up a paper addressed to Mr. Lincoln,
- requesting and "urging him to follow Douglas up until the election." It
- was signed by Mr. Butler, William Jayne, P. P. Eads, John Cassady, B. F.
- Irwin, and many others. Accordingly, Lincoln "followed" Douglas to Peoria,
- where the latter had an appointment, and again replied to him, in much the
- same spirit, and with the same arguments, as before. The speech was really
- a great one, almost perfectly adapted to produce conviction upon a
- doubting mind. It ought to be carefully read by every one who desires to
- know Mr. Lincoln's power as a debater, after his intellect was matured and
- ripened by years of hard experience. On the general subject of slavery and
- negroes in the Union, he spoke as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Before proceeding, let me say, I think I have no prejudice against the
- Southern people: they are just what we would be in their situation. If
- slavery did not now exist among them, they would not introduce it: if it
- did now exist amongst us, we should not instantly give it up. This I
- believe of the masses North and South. Doubtless there are individuals on
- both sides who would not hold slaves under any circumstances, and others
- would gladly introduce slavery anew if it were out of existence. We know
- that some Southern men do free their slaves, go North, and become tip-top
- Abolitionists; while some Northern men go South, and become cruel
- slave-masters.
- </p>
- <p>
- "When Southern people tell us they are no more responsible for the origin
- of slavery than we, I acknowledge the fact. When it is said that the
- institution exists, and that it is very difficult to get rid of it in any
- satisfactory way, I can understand and appreciate the saying. <i>I surely
- will not blame them for not doing what I should not know how to do myself.
- If all earthly power were given me, I should not know what to do as to the
- existing institution</i>. My first impulse would be to free all the
- existing slaves, and send them to Liberia,&mdash;to their own native land;
- but a moment's reflection would convince me that whatever of high hope (as
- I think there is) there may be in this, in the long run, its sudden
- execution is impossible. If they were all landed there in a day, they
- would all perish in the next ten days; and there are not surplus shipping
- and surplus money enough in the world to carry them there in many times
- ten days. What then? Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings?
- Is it quite certain that this betters their condition? <i>I think I would
- not hold</i> one in slavery at any rate, yet the point is not clear enough
- to me to denounce people upon. What next? Free them, and make them
- politically and socially our equals? My own feelings will not admit of
- this; and, if mine would, we all know that those of the great mass of
- white people would not. Whether this feeling accords with justice and
- sound judgment is not the sole question, if, indeed, it is any part of it.
- A universal feeling, whether well or ill founded, cannot be safely
- disregarded. <i>We cannot, then, make them equals</i>. It does seem to me
- that systems of gradual emancipation might be adopted; but for their
- tardiness in this I will not undertake to judge our brethren of the South.
- When they remind us of their constitutional rights, I acknowledge them,
- not grudgingly, but fully and fairly; <i>and I would give them any
- legislation for the reclaiming of their fugitives which should not in its
- stringency be more likely to carry a free man into slavery than our
- ordinary criminal laws are to hang an innocent one</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But all this, to my judgment, furnishes no more excuse for permitting
- slavery to go into our own free territory than it would for reviving the
- African slave-trade by law. The law which forbids the bringing of slaves
- <i>from</i> Africa, and that which has so long forbidden the taking them
- <i>to</i> Nebraska, can hardly be distinguished on any moral principle;
- and the repeal of the former could find quite as plausible excuses as that
- of the latter.
- </p>
- <p>
- "But Nebraska is urged as a great Union-saving measure. Well, I, too, go
- for saving the Union. Much as I hate slavery, I would consent to the
- extension of it, rather than see the Union dissolved, just as I would
- consent to any great evil to avoid a greater one. But, when I go to
- Union-saving, I must believe, at least, that the means I employ have
- adaptation to the end. To my mind, Nebraska has no such adaptation. 'It
- hath no relish of salvation in it.' It is an aggravation, rather, of the
- only one thing which ever endangers the Union. When it came upon us, all
- was peace and quiet. The nation was looking to the forming of new bonds of
- Union, and a long course of peace and prosperity seemed to lie before us.
- In the whole range of possibility, there scarcely appears to me to have
- been any thing out of which the slavery agitation could have been revived,
- except the project of repealing the Missouri Compromise. Every inch of
- territory we owned already had a definite settlement of the slavery
- question, and by which all parties were pledged to abide. Indeed, there
- was no uninhabited country on the continent which we could acquire, if we
- except some extreme Northern regions, which are wholly out of the
- question. In this state of the case, the Genius of Discord himself could
- scarcely have invented a way of getting us by the ears, but by turning
- back and destroying the peace measures of the past.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The structure, too, of the Nebraska Bill is very peculiar. The people are
- to decide the question of slavery for themselves; but <i>when</i> they are
- to decide, or <i>how</i> they are to decide, or whether, when the question
- is once decided, it is to remain so, or is to be subject to an indefinite
- succession of new trials, the law does not say. Is it to be decided by the
- first dozen settlers who arrive there, or is it to await the arrival of a
- hundred? Is it to be decided by a vote of the people, or a vote of the
- Legislature, or, indeed, on a vote of any sort? To these questions the law
- gives no answer. There is a mystery about this; for, when a member
- proposed to give the Legislature express authority to exclude slavery, it
- was hooted down by the friends of the bill. This fact is worth
- remembering. Some Yankees in the East are sending emigrants to Nebraska to
- exclude slavery from it; and, so far as I can judge, they expect the
- question to be decided by voting in some way or other. But the Missourians
- are awake too. They are within a stone's-throw of the contested ground.
- They hold meetings and pass resolutions, in which not the slightest
- allusion to voting is made. They resolve that slavery already exists in
- the Territory; that more shall go there; and that they, remaining in
- Missouri, will protect it, and that Abolitionists shall be hung or driven
- away. Through all this, bowie-knives and six-shooters are seen plainly
- enough, but never a glimpse of the ballot-box. And really, what is the
- result of this? Each party within having numerous and determined backers
- without, is it not probable that the contest will come to blows and
- bloodshed? Could there be a more apt invention to bring about a collision
- and violence on the slavery question than this Nebraska project is? I do
- not charge or believe that such was intended by Congress; but if they had
- literally formed a ring, and placed champions within it to fight out the
- controversy, the fight could be no more likely to come off than it is.
- And, if this fight should begin, is it likely to take a very peaceful,
- Union-saving turn? Will not the first drop of blood so shed be the real
- knell of the Union?"
- </p>
- <p>
- No one in Mr. Lincoln's audience appreciated the force of this speech more
- justly than did Mr. Douglas himself. He invited the dangerous orator to a
- conference, and frankly proposed a truce. What took place between them was
- explicitly set forth by Mr. Lincoln to a little knot of his friends, in
- the office of Lincoln &amp; Herndon, about two days after the election. We
- quote the statement of B. F. Irwin, explicitly indorsed by P. L. Harrison
- and Isaac Cogdale, all of whom are already indifferently well known to the
- reader. "W. H. Herndon, myself, P. L. Harrison, and Isaac Cogdale were
- present. What Lincoln said was about this: that the day after the Peoria
- debate in 1854, Douglas came to him (Lincoln), and flattered him that he
- (Lincoln) understood the Territorial question from the organization of the
- government better than all the opposition in the Senate of the United
- States; and he did not see that he could make any thing by debating it
- with him; and then reminded him (Lincoln) of the trouble they had given
- him, and remarked that Lincoln had given him more trouble than all the
- opposition in the Senate combined; and followed up with the proposition,
- that he would go home, and speak no more during the campaign, if Lincoln
- would do the same: to which proposition Lincoln acceded." This, according
- to Mr. Irwin's view of the thing, was running Douglas "into his hole," and
- making "him holler, Enough."
- </p>
- <p>
- Handbills and other advertisements announced that Judge Douglas would
- address the people of Lacon the day following the Peoria encounter; and
- the Lacon Anti-Nebraska people sent a committee to Peoria to secure Mr.
- Lincoln for a speech in reply. He readily agreed to go, and on the way
- said not a word of the late agreement to the gentleman who had him in
- charge. Judge Douglas observed the same discreet silence among his
- friends. Whether they had both agreed to go to Lacon before this agreement
- was made, or had mutually contrived this clever mode of deception, cannot
- now be determined. But, when they arrived at Lacon, Mr. Douglas said he
- was too hoarse to speak, although, "a large portion of the people of the
- county assembled to hear him." Mr. Lincoln, with unheard-of magnanimity,
- "informed his friends that he would not like to take advantage of the
- judge's indisposition, and would not address the people." His friends
- could not see the affair in the same light, and "pressed him for a
- speech;" but he persistently and unaccountably "refused."
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas met no more during the campaign.
- Mr. Douglas did speak at least once more (at Princeton), but Mr. Lincoln
- scrupulously observed the terms of the agreement. He came home, wrote out
- his Peoria speech, and published it in seven consecutive issues of "The
- Illinois Daily Journal;" but he never spoke nor thought of speaking again.
- When his friends insisted upon having a reason for this most unexpected
- conduct, he gave the answer already quoted from Mr. Irwin.
- </p>
- <p>
- The election took place on the 7th of November. During his absence, Mr.
- Lincoln had been announced as a candidate for the House of Representatives
- of the Illinois Legislature. William Jayne took the responsibility of
- making him a candidate. Mrs. Lincoln, however, "saw Francis, the editor,
- and had Lincoln's name taken out." When Mr. Lincoln returned, Jayne (Mrs.
- Lincoln's old friend "Bill") went to see him. "I went to see him," says
- Jayne, "in order to get his consent to run. This was at his house. He was
- then the saddest man I ever saw,&mdash;the gloomiest. He walked up and
- down the floor, almost crying; and to all my persuasions to let his name
- stand in the paper, he said, 'No, I can't. You don't know all. I say you
- don't begin to know one-half, and that's enough.' I did, however, go and
- have his name re-instated; and there it stood. He and Logan were elected
- by about six hundred majority." Mr. Jayne had caused originally both Judge
- Logan and Mr. Lincoln to be announced, and they were both elected. But,
- after all, Mrs. Lincoln was right, and Jayne and Lincoln were both wrong.
- Mr. Lincoln was a well-known candidate for the United States Senate, in
- the place of Mr. Shields, the incumbent, who had voted for the
- Kansas-Nebraska Bill; and, when the Legislature met and showed a majority
- of Anti-Nebraska men, he thought it a necessary preliminary of his
- candidacy that he should resign his seat in the House. He did so, and Mr.
- Jayne makes the following acknowledgment: "Mr. Lincoln resigned his seat,
- finding out that the Republicans, the Anti-Nebraska men, had carried the
- Legislature. A. M. Broadwell ran as a Whig Anti-Nebraska man, and was
- badly beaten. The people of Sangamon County was down on Lincoln,&mdash;hated
- him." None can doubt that even the shame of taking a woman's advice might
- have been preferable to this!
- </p>
- <p>
- But Mr. Lincoln "had set his heart on going to the United States Senate."
- Counting in the Free-soil Democrats, who had revolted against Mr.
- Douglas's leadership, and been largely supported the Whigs in the late
- elections, there was now on joint ballot a clear Anti-Nebraska majority of
- two. A Senator was to be chosen to succeed Mr. Shields; and Mr. Lincoln
- had a right to expect the place. He had fairly earned the distinction, and
- nobody in the old Whig party was disposed to withhold it. But a few
- Abolitionists doubted his fidelity to their extreme views; and five
- Anti-Nebraska Senators and Representatives, who had been elected as
- Democrats, preferred to vote for a Senator with antecedents like their
- own. The latter selected Judge Trumbull as their candidate, and clung to
- him manfully through the whole struggle. They were five only in number;
- but in the situation of affairs then existing they were the sovereign
- five. They were men of conceded integrity, of good abilities in debate,
- and extraordinary political sagacity. Their names ought to be known to
- posterity, for their unfriendliness at this juncture saved Mr. Lincoln to
- the Republicans of Illinois, to be brought forward at the critical moment
- as a fresh and original candidate for the Presidency. They were Judd of
- Cook County, Palmer of Macoupin, Cook of La Salle, Baker and Allen of
- Madison. They called themselves Democrats, and, with the modesty peculiar
- to bolters, claimed to be the only "Simon-pure." "They could not act with
- the Democrats from principle, and would not act with the Whigs from
- policy;" but, holding off from the caucuses of both parties, they demanded
- that all Anti-Nebraska should come to them, or sacrifice the most
- important fruits of their late victory at the polls. But these were not
- the only enemies Mr. Lincoln could count in the body of his party. The
- Abolitionists suspected him, and were slow to come to his support. Judge
- Davis went to Springfield, and thinks he "got some" of this class "to go
- for" him; but it is probable they were "got" in another way. Mr. Lovejoy
- was a member, and required, as the condition of his support and that of
- his followers, that Mr. Lincoln should pledge himself to favor the
- exclusion of slavery from <i>all</i> the Territories of the United States.
- This was a long step in advance of any that Mr. Lincoln had previously
- taken. He was, as a matter of course, opposed to the introduction of
- slavery into the Territories north of the line of 36° 30'; but he had, up
- to this time, regarded all south of that as being honestly open to
- slavery. The villany of obliterating that line, and the necessity of its
- immediate restoration,&mdash;in short, the perfect sanctity of the
- Missouri settlement,&mdash;had formed the burden of all his speeches
- in-the preceding canvass. But these opinions by no means suited the
- Abolitionists, and they required him to change them forthwith. He thought
- it would be wise to do so, considering the peculiar circumstances of his
- case; but, before committing himself finally, he sought an understanding
- with Judge Logan. He told the judge what he was disposed to do, and said
- he would act upon the inclination, if the judge would not regard it as
- "treading upon his toes." The judge said he was opposed to the doctrine
- proposed; but, for the sake of the cause in hand, he would cheerfully risk
- his "toes." And so the Abolitionists were accommodated: Mr. Lincoln
- quietly made the pledge, and they voted for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the eighth day of February, 1855, the two Houses met in convention to
- choose a Senator. On the first ballot, Mr. Shields had forty-one votes,
- and three Democratic votes were scattered. Mr. Lincoln had forty-five, Mr.
- Trumbull five, and Mr. Koerner two. On the seventh ballot, the Democrats
- left Shields, and, with two exceptions, voted for Gov. Matte-son. In
- addition to the party strength, Matteson received also the votes of two of
- the anti-Nebraska Democrats. That stout little knot, it was apparent, was
- now breaking up. For many reasons the Whigs detested Matteson most
- heartily, and dreaded nothing so much as his success. But of that there
- now appeared to be great danger; for, unless the Whigs abandoned Lincoln
- and went for Trumbull, the five Anti-Nebraska men would unite on Matteson,
- and elect him. Mr. Gillespie went to Lincoln for advice. "He said
- unhesitatingly, 'You ought to drop me, and go for Trumbull: that is the
- only way you can defeat Matteson.' Judge Logan came up about that time,
- and insisted on running Lincoln still; but the latter said, 'If you do,
- you will lose both Trumbull and myself; and I think the cause, in this
- case, is to be preferred to men.' We adopted his suggestion, and turned
- upon Trumbull, and elected him, although it grieved us to the heart to
- give up Mr. Lincoln. This, I think, shows that Mr. Lincoln was capable of
- sinking himself for the cause in which he was engaged." It was with great
- bitterness of spirit that the Whigs accepted this hard alternative. Many
- of them accused the little squad of Anti-Nebraska Democrats of "ungenerous
- and selfish" motives. One of them, "Mr. Waters of McDonough, was
- especially indignant, and utterly refused to vote for Mr. Trumbull at all.
- On the last ballot he threw away his ballot on Mr. Williams."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln was very much disappointed," says Mr. Parks, a member of the
- Legislature, and one of Mr. Lincoln's special friends; "for I think, that,
- at that time, it was the height of his ambition to get into the United
- States Senate. He manifested, however, no bitterness towards Mr. Judd, or
- the other Anti-Nebraska Democrats, by whom politically he was beaten, but
- evidently thought that their motives were right. He told me several times
- afterwards, that the election of Trumbull was the best thing that could
- have happened."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the great campaign of 1858, Mr. Douglas on various occasions insisted,
- that, in 1854, Mr. Lincoln and Judge Trumbull, being until then political
- enemies, had formed a secret agreement to abolitionize, the one the Whig,
- and the other the Democratic party; and, in order that neither might go
- unrewarded for a service so timely and patriotic, Mr. Trumbull had agreed
- on the one hand that Mr. Lincoln should have Shields's seat in the United
- States Senate (in 1855); and Mr. Lincoln had agreed, on the other, that
- Judge Trumbull should have Douglas's seat (in 1859). But Mr. Douglas
- alleged, that, when the first election (in 1854) came on, Judge Trumbull
- treated his fellow-conspirator with shameful duplicity, and cheated
- himself into the Senate just four years in advance of his appointed time;
- that, Mr. Lincoln's friends being greatly incensed thereat, Col. James H.
- Matheny, Mr. Lincoln's "friend and manager for twenty years," exposed the
- plot and the treachery; that, in order to silence and conciliate the
- injured party, Mr. Lincoln was promised the senatorial nomination in 1858,
- and thus a second time became a candidate in pursuance of a bargain more
- than half corrupt. But it is enough to say here, that Mr. Lincoln
- explicitly and emphatically denied the accusation as often as it was made,
- and bestowed upon the character of Judge Trumbull encomiums as lofty and
- as warm as he ever bestowed upon any contemporary. With the exception of
- Col. Matheny, we find none of Mr. Lincoln's peculiar friends complaining
- of Judge Trumbull; but as many of them as have spoken in the records
- before us (and they are numerous and prominent) speak of the purity,
- devotion, and excellence of Judge Trumbull in the most unreserved and
- unaffected manner. In fact and in truth, he did literally nothing to
- advance his own interest: he solicited no vote, and got none which did not
- come to him by reason of the political necessities of the time. His
- election consolidated the Anti-Nebraska party in the State, and, in the
- language of Mr. Parks, his "first encounter with Mr. Douglas in the Senate
- filled the people of Illinois with admiration for his abilities; and the
- ill feeling caused by his election gradually passed away."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Mr. Douglas had a graver charge to make against Mr. Lincoln than that
- of a simple conspiracy with Trumbull to dispose of a great office. He
- seems to have known nothing of Mr. Lincoln's secret understanding with
- Lovejoy and his associates; but he found, that, on the day previous to the
- election for Senator, Lovejoy had introduced a series of extreme
- antislavery resolutions; and with these he attempted to connect Mr.
- Lincoln, by showing, that, with two exceptions, every member who voted for
- the resolutions on the 7th of February voted also for Mr. Lincoln on the
- 8th. The first of the resolutions favored the restoration of the
- prohibition of slavery north of 36° 30', and also a similar prohibition as
- to "<i>all</i> territory which now belongs to the United States, or which
- may hereafter come under their jurisdiction." The second resolution
- declared against the admission of any Slave State, no matter out of what
- Territory, or in what manner formed; and the third demanded, first, the
- unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law, or, failing that, the
- right of <i>habeas corpus</i> and trial by jury for the person claimed as
- a slave. The first resolution was carried by a strict party vote; while
- the second and third were defeated. But Mr. Douglas asserted that Mr.
- Lincoln was committed in favor of all three, because the members that
- supported them subsequently supported him. Of all this Mr. Lincoln took no
- further notice than to say that Judge Douglas might find the Republican
- platform in the resolutions of the State Convention of that party, held at
- Bloomington in 1856. In fact, he maintained a singular reticence about the
- whole affair, probably dreading to go into it too deeply, lest his rival
- should unearth the private pledge to Lovejoy, of which Judge Logan has
- given us the history. When Judge Douglas produced a set of resolutions
- which he said had been passed by the Abolitionists at their Convention at
- Springfield, during the State Fair (the meeting alluded to by Mr.
- Herndon), and asserted that Mr. Lincoln was one of the committee that
- reported them, the latter replied with great spirit, and said what he
- could say with perfect truth,&mdash;that he was not near Springfield when
- that body met, and that his name had been used without his consent.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV
- </h2>
- <p>
- MR. LINCOLN predicted a bloody conflict in Kansas as the immediate effect
- of the repeal of the Missouri restriction. He had not long to wait for the
- fulfilment of his prophecy: it began, in fact, before he spoke; and if
- blood had not actually flowed on the plains of Kansas, occurrences were
- taking place on the Missouri border which could not avoid that result. The
- South invited the struggle by repealing a time-honored compromise, in such
- a manner as to convince the North that she no longer felt herself bound by
- any Congressional restrictions upon the institution of slavery; and that
- she intended, as far as her power would permit, to push its existence into
- all the Territories of the Union. The Northern States accepted the
- challenge promptly. The people of the Free States knew how to colonize and
- settle new Territories. The march of their westward settlements had for
- years assumed a steady tread as the population of these States augmented,
- and the facility for emigrating increased. When, therefore, the South
- threw down the barriers which had for thirty years consecrated all the
- Territories north of 36° 30' to free labor, and announced her intention of
- competing therein for the establishment of her "peculiar institution," the
- North responded by using the legitimate means at her command to throw into
- the exposed regions settlers who would organize the Territories in the
- interest of free labor. The "irrepressible conflict" was therefore opened
- in the Territories, with the people of the two sections of the country
- arrayed against each other as participants in, as well as spectators of,
- the contest. As participants, each section aided its representatives. The
- struggle opened in Kansas, and in favor of the South. During the passage
- of the bill organizing the Territory, preparations had been extensively
- made along the Missouri border, by "Blue Lodges" and "Social Bands," for
- the purpose of getting control of its Territorial government. The whole
- eastern border of the Territory was open to these marauders; and they were
- not slow to embrace the opportunity of meeting their enemies with so man y
- advantages in their favor. Public meetings were held in many of the
- frontier counties of Missouri, in which the people were not only advised
- to go over and take early possession of the Territory, but to hold
- themselves in readiness to remove all emigrants who should go there under
- the auspices of the Northern Aid Societies. It was with these "Border
- Ruffians," and some volunteers from Alabama and South Carolina, with a few
- vagabond "colonels" and "generals" from the Slave States generally, that
- the South began the struggle. Of course, the North did not look with
- complacency upon such a state of things. If the repeal of the Missouri
- Compromise startled the people of the Free States from their sense of
- security, the manner of applying "popular sovereignty," as indicated at
- its first introduction, was sufficient to arouse public sentiment to an
- unwonted degree. Kansas became at once a subject of universal interest.
- Societies were formed for throwing into her borders, with the utmost
- expedition, settlers who could be relied upon to mould her government in
- the interest of freedom. At the same time there was set in train all the
- political machinery that could be used to agitate the question, until the
- cry of "Bleeding Kansas" was heard throughout the land.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is not necessary in this connection to set down, in order, the raids,
- assassinations, burnings, robberies, and election frauds which followed.
- Enough if their origin and character be understood. For this present
- purpose, a brief summary only will be given of what occurred during the
- long struggle to make Kansas a Slave State; for upon the practical issues
- which arose during the contest followed the discussions between Mr.
- Lincoln and Mr. Douglas, upon the merits of which the former was carried
- into the Presidential office.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first Territorial governor appointed under the provisions of the
- Kansas-Nebraska Act was Andrew H. Reeder of Pennsylvania. He was appointed
- by President Pierce. He reached Kansas in the autumn of 1854, and
- proceeded to establish a Territorial Government. The first election was
- for a delegate to Congress. By the aid of the people of Missouri, it
- resulted in favor of the Democrats. The governor then ordered an election
- for a first Territorial Legislature, to be held on the 31st of March,
- 1855. To this election the Missourians came in greater force than before;
- and succeeded in electing proslavery men to both Houses of the
- Legislature, with a single exception in each house. The governor, a
- proslavery man, set aside the returns in six districts, as being
- fraudulent; whereupon new elections were held, which, with one exception,
- resulted in favor of the Free-State men. These parties, however, were
- refused their seats in the Legislature; while the persons chosen at the
- previous election were accepted.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Legislature thus organized proceeded to enact the most hostile
- measures against the Free-State men. Many of these acts were promptly
- vetoed by the governor. The Legislature then petitioned the President for
- his removal. Their wishes were complied with; and Wilson G. Shannon of
- Ohio was appointed in his stead. In the mean time, the Free-State men
- entirely repudiated the Legislature, and refused to be bound by its
- enactments.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such was the situation in Kansas when Mr. Lincoln addressed to Mr. Speed
- the following letter:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Aug. 24, 1855.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Speed,&mdash;You know what a poor correspondent I am. Ever since I
- received your very agreeable letter of the 22d of May, I have been
- intending to write you an answer to it. You suggest that in political
- action now you and I would differ. I suppose we would; not quite as much,
- however, as you may think. You know I dislike slavery; and you fully admit
- the abstract wrong of it. So far there is no cause of difference. But you
- say, that, sooner than yield your legal right to the slave,&mdash;especially
- at the bidding of those who are not themselves interested,&mdash;you would
- see the Union dissolved. I am not aware that <i>any one</i> is bidding you
- yield that right: very certainly I am not. I leave that matter entirely to
- yourself. I also acknowledge your rights and my obligations under the
- Constitution in regard to your slaves. I confess I hate to see the poor
- creatures hunted down, and caught and carried back to their stripes and
- unrequited toils; but I bite my lip, and keep quiet. In 1841 you and I had
- together a tedious low-water trip on a steamboat from Louisville to St.
- Louis. You may remember, as I well do, that, from Louisville to the mouth
- of the Ohio, there were on board ten or a dozen slaves shackled together
- with irons. That sight was a continued torment to me; and I see something
- like it every time I touch the Ohio, or any other slave border. It is not
- fair for you to assume that I have no interest in a thing which has, and
- continually exercises, the power of making me miserable. You ought rather
- to appreciate how much the great body of the Northern people do crucify
- their feelings, in order to maintain their loyalty to the Constitution and
- the Union. I do oppose the extension of slavery because my judgment and
- feeling so prompt me; and I am under no obligations to the contrary. If
- for this you and I must differ, differ we must. You say, if you were
- President, you would send an army, and hang the leaders of the Missouri
- outrages upon the Kansas elections; still, if Kansas fairly votes herself
- a Slave State, she must be admitted, or the Union must be dissolved. But
- how if she votes herself a Slave State <i>unfairly</i>,&mdash;that is, by
- the very means for which you say you would hang men? Must she still be
- admitted, or the Union dissolved? That will be the phase of the question
- when it first becomes a practical one. In your assumption that there may
- be a fair decision of the slavery question in Kansas, I plainly see you
- and I would differ about the Nebraska law. I look upon that enactment, <i>not
- as a law, but a violence</i> from the beginning. It was conceived in
- violence, is maintained in violence, and is being executed in violence. I
- say it was conceived in violence, because the destruction of the Missouri
- Compromise, under the circumstances, was nothing less than violence. It
- was passed in violence, because it could not have passed at all but for
- the votes of many members in violence of the known will of their
- constituents. It is maintained in violence, because the elections since
- clearly demand its repeal; and the demand is openly disregarded.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say men ought to be hung for the way they are executing that law; and
- I say the way it is being executed is quite as good as any of its
- antecedents. It is being executed in the precise way which was intended
- from the first; else why does no Nebraska man express astonishment or
- condemnation? Poor Reeder is the only public man who has been silly enough
- to believe that any thing like fairness was ever intended; and he has been
- bravely undeceived.
- </p>
- <p>
- That Kansas will form a slave constitution, and with it will ask to be
- admitted into the Union, I take to be already a settled question, and so
- settled by the very means you so pointedly condemn. By every principle of
- law ever held by any court, North or South, every negro taken to Kansas is
- free; yet, in utter disregard of this,&mdash;in the spirit of violence
- merely,&mdash;that beautiful Legislature gravely passes a law to hang any
- man who shall venture to inform a negro of his legal rights. This is the
- substance and real object of the law. If, like Haman, they should hang
- upon the gallows of their own building, I shall not be among the mourners
- for their fate. In my humble sphere, I shall advocate the restoration of
- the Missouri Compromise so long as Kansas remains a Territory; and when,
- by all these foul means, it seeks to come into the Union as a Slave State,
- I shall oppose it. I am very loath, in any case, to withhold my assent to
- the enjoyment of property acquired or located in good faith; but I do not
- admit that good faith in taking a negro to Kansas to be held in slavery is
- a probability with any man. Any man who has sense enough to be the
- controller of his own property has too much sense to misunderstand the
- outrageous character of the whole Nebraska business. But I digress. In my
- opposition to the admission of Kansas, I shall have some company; but we
- may be beaten. If we are, I shall not, on that account, attempt to
- dissolve the Union. I think it probable, however, we shall be beaten.
- Standing as a unit among yourselves, you can, directly and indirectly,
- bribe enough of our men to carry the day, as you could on the open
- proposition to establish a monarchy. Get hold of some man in the North
- whose position and ability is such that he can make the support of your
- measure, whatever it may be, a Democratic party necessity, and the thing
- is done. Apropos of this, let me tell you an anecdote. Douglas introduced
- the Nebraska Bill in January. In February afterwards, there was a called
- session of the Illinois Legislature. Of the one hundred members composing
- the two branches of that body, about seventy were Democrats. These latter
- held a caucus, in which the Nebraska Bill was talked of, if not formally
- discussed. It was thereby discovered that just three, and no more, were in
- favor of the measure. In a day or two Douglas's orders came on to have
- resolutions passed approving the bill; and they were passed by large
- majorities!!! The truth of this is vouched for by a bolting Democratic
- member. The masses, too, Democratic as well as Whig, were even nearer
- unanimous against it; but, as soon as the party necessity of supporting it
- became apparent, the way the Democracy began to see the wisdom and justice
- of it was perfectly astonishing.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say, that, if Kansas fairly votes herself a Free State, as a Christian
- you will rather rejoice at it. All decent slaveholders talk that way; and
- I do not doubt their candor. But they never vote that way. Although in a
- private letter, or conversation, you will express your preference that
- Kansas shall be free, you would vote for no man for Congress who would say
- the same thing publicly. No such man could be elected from any district in
- a Slave State. You think Stringfellow &amp; Co. ought to be hung; and yet,
- at the next Presidential election, you will vote for the exact type and
- representative of Stringfellow. The slave-breeders and slave-traders are a
- small, odious, and detested class among you; and yet in politics they
- dictate the course of all of you, and are as completely your masters as
- you are the master of your own negroes. You inquire where I now stand.
- That is a disputed point. I think I am a Whig; but others say there are no
- Whigs, and that I am an Abolitionist. When I was at Washington, I voted
- for the Wilmot Proviso as good as forty times; and I never heard of any
- one attempting to un whig me for that. I now do no more than oppose the
- extension of slavery. I am not a Know-Nothing: that is certain. How could
- I be? How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of
- degrading classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to
- me to be pretty rapid. As a nation, we began by declaring that"<i>all men
- are created equal.</i>" We now practically read it "all men are created
- equal, except negroes." When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read
- "all men are created equal, except negroes and foreigners and Catholics."
- When it comes to this, I should prefer emigrating to some country where
- they make no pretence of loving liberty,&mdash;to Russia, for instance,
- where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base, alloy of
- hypocrisy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary will probably pass a day or two in Louisville in October. My kindest
- regards to Mrs. Speed. On the leading subject of this letter, I have more
- of her sympathy than I have of yours; and yet let me say I am
- </p>
- <p>
- Your friend forever,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gov. Shannon arrived in the Territory Sept. 1,1855. On his way thither, he
- declared himself in favor of making Kansas a Slave State. He found affairs
- in a turbulent condition, which his policy by no means tended to mitigate
- or assuage. The Free-State party held a mass-meeting at Big Springs in the
- early part of September, at which they distinctly and earnestly repudiated
- the legislative government, which claimed to have been elected in March,
- as well as all laws passed by it; and they decided not to participate in
- an election for a delegate to Congress, which the Legislature had
- appointed to be held on the 1st of October following. They also held a
- Delegate Convention at Topeka, on the 19th of September, and appointed an
- Executive Committee for the Territory; and also an election for a Delegate
- to Congress, to be held on the second Tuesday in October. These two rival
- elections for a congressional delegate took place on different days; at
- the former of which, Whitfield, representing the proslavery party, was
- elected; while at the other, Gov. Reeder, representing the Free-State
- party, was chosen. On the 28d of October, the Free-State party held a
- constitutional Convention at Topeka, and formed a State constitution in
- their interest, under the provisions of which they subsequently acted, and
- also asked for admission into the Union.
- </p>
- <p>
- While we are upon this phase of the Kansas question, it may not be amiss
- to postpone the relation of some intermediate events, in order to give the
- reader the benefit of an expression of Mr. Lincoln's views, which thus far
- has found place in no printed record.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sometime in 1856 an association of Abolitionists was formed in Illinois to
- go to Kansas and aid the Free-State men in opposing the Government. The
- object of those engaged in this work was, in their opinion, a very
- laudable one,&mdash;no other than the defence of freedom, which they
- thought foully menaced in that far-off region. Among these gentlemen, and
- one of the most courageous and disinterested, was William H. Herndon. He
- says,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln was informed of our intents by some means. Probably the idea
- of resistance was more known than I now remember. He took the first
- opportunity he could to dissuade us from our partially-formed purpose. We
- spoke of liberty, justice, and God's higher law, and invoked the spirit of
- these as our holiest inspiration. In 1856 he addressed us on this very
- subject, substantially in these words:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Friends, I agree with you in Providence; but I believe in the providence
- of the most men, the largest purse, and the longest cannon. You are in the
- minority,&mdash;in a sad minority; and you can't hope to succeed,
- reasoning from all human experience. You would rebel against the
- Government, and redden your hands in the blood of your countrymen. If you
- are in the minority, as you are, you can't succeed. I say again and again,
- against the Government, with a great majority of its best citizens backing
- it, and when they have the most men, the longest purse, and the biggest
- cannon, you can't succeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- "'If you have the majority, as some of you say you have, you can succeed
- with the ballot, throwing away the bullet. You can peaceably, then, redeem
- the Government, and preserve the liberties of mankind, through your votes
- and voice and moral influence. Let there be peace. In a democracy, where
- the majority rule by the ballot through the forms of law, these physical
- rebellions and bloody resistances are radically wrong, unconstitutional,
- and are treason. Better bear the ills you have than fly to those you know
- not of. Our own Declaration of Independence says, that governments long
- established, for trivial causes should not be resisted. Revolutionize
- through the ballot-box, and restore the Government once more to the
- affections and hearts of men, by making it express, as it was intended to
- do, the highest spirit of justice and liberty. Your attempt, if there be
- such, to resist the laws of Kansas by force, is criminal and wicked; and
- all your feeble attempts will be follies, and end in bringing sorrow on
- your heads, and ruin the cause you would freely die to preserve!'
- </p>
- <p>
- "This little speech," continues Mr. Herndon, "is not in print. It is a
- part of a much longer one, likewise not in print. This speech squelched
- the ideas of physical resistance, and directed our energies through other
- more effective channels, which his wisdom and coolness pointed out to us.
- This little speech, so timely and well made, saved many of us from great
- follies, if not our necks from the halter. The man who uttered it is no
- more; but this little speech, I hope, shall not soon be forgotten. Mr.
- Lincoln himself, after this speech, subscribed money to the people of
- Kansas <i>under conditions</i>, which I will relate in other ways. He was
- not alone in his gifts: I signed the same paper, I think, for the same
- amount, most cheerfully; and would do it again, only doubling the sum,
- adding no conditions, only the good people's wise discretion."
- </p>
- <p>
- Early in 1856 it became painfully apparent to Mr. Lincoln that he must
- take a decisive stand upon the questions of the day, and become a
- Know-Nothing, a Democrat, a Republican, or an Abolitionist. Mere
- "Anti-Nebraska" would answer no longer: the members of that ephemeral
- coalition were seeking more permanent organizations. If interrogated
- concerning his position, he would probably have answered still, "I think I
- am a Whig." With the Abolition or Liberty party, he had thus far shown not
- a particle of sympathy. In 1840, 1844, 1848, and 1852, the Abolitionists,
- Liberty-men, or Free-Soilers, ran candidates of their own for the
- Presidency, and made no little noise and stir in the politics of the
- country; but they were as yet too insignificant in number to claim the
- adhesion of a practical man like Mr. Lincoln. In fact, his partner, one of
- the most earnest of them all, had not up to this time desired his
- fellowship. But now Mr. Herndon thought the hour had arrived when his hero
- should declare himself in unmistakable terms. He found, however, one
- little difficulty in the way: he was not precisely certain of his hero.
- Mr. Lincoln might go that way, and he might go the other way: his mind was
- not altogether made up; and there was no telling on which side the
- decision would fall. "He was button-holed by three ideas, and by men
- belonging to each class: first, he was urged to remain a Whig; secondly,
- he was urged to become a Know-Nothing, Say-Nothing, Do-Nothing; and,
- thirdly, he was urged to be baptized in Abolitionism: and in my
- imagination I can see Lincoln strung out three ways. At last two cords
- were snapped, he flying to Freedom."
- </p>
- <p>
- And this is the way the cords were snapped: Mr. Herndon drew up a paper to
- be signed by men of his class in politics, calling a county convention to
- elect delegates to the State convention at Bloomington. "Mr. Lincoln was
- then backward," says Mr. Herndon, "dodge-y,&mdash;so" and so. I was
- determined to make him take a stand, if he would not do it willingly,
- which he might have done, as he was naturally inclined Abolitionward.
- Lincoln was absent when the call was signed, and circulated here. I signed
- Mr. Lincoln's name without authority; had it published in "The Journal."
- John T. Stuart was keeping his eye on Lincoln, with the view of keeping
- him on his side,&mdash;the totally-dead conservative side. Mr. Stuart saw
- the published call, and grew mad; rushed into my office, seemed mad,
- horrified, and said to me, 'Sir, did Mr. Lincoln sign that Abolition call
- which is published this morning?' I answered, 4 Mr. Lincoln did not sign
- that call.'&mdash;'Did Lincoln authorize you to sign it?' said Mr. Stuart.
- 'No: he never authorized me to sign it.'&mdash;'Then do you know that you
- have ruined Mr. Lincoln?'&mdash;'I did not know that I had ruined Mr.
- Lincoln; did not intend to do so; thought he was a made man by it; that
- the time had come when conservatism was a crime and a blunder.'&mdash;'You,
- then, take the responsibility of your acts; do you?'&mdash;'I do, most
- emphatically.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "However, I instantly sat down and wrote to Mr. Lincoln, who was then in
- Pekin or Tremont,&mdash;possibly at court. He received my letter, and
- instantly replied, either by letter or telegraph,&mdash;most likely by
- letter,&mdash;that he adopted <i>in toto</i> what I had done, and promised
- to meet the radicals&mdash;Lovejoy, and suchlike men&mdash;among us."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Bloomington Lincoln was the great figure. Beside him all the rest&mdash;even
- the oldest in the faith and the strongest in the work&mdash;were small.
- Yet he was universally regarded as a recent convert, although the most
- important one that could be made in the State of Illinois. "We met at
- Bloomington; and it was there," says Mr. Herndon in one of his lectures,
- "that Mr. Lincoln was baptized, and joined our church. He made a speech to
- us. I have heard or read all Mr. Lincoln's great speeches; and I give it
- as my opinion, on my best judgment, that the Bloomington speech was the
- grand effort of his life. Heretofore, and up to this moment, he had simply
- argued the slavery question on grounds of policy,&mdash;on what are called
- the statesman's grounds,&mdash;never reaching the question of the radical
- and the eternal right. Now he was newly baptized and freshly born: he had
- the fervor of a new convert; the smothered flame broke out; enthusiasm
- unusual to him blazed up; his eyes were aglow with an inspiration; he felt
- justice; his heart was alive to the right; his sympathies, remarkably deep
- for him, burst forth, and he stood before the throne of the eternal Right,
- in presence of his God, and then and there unburdened his penitential and
- fired soul. This speech was fresh, new, genuine, odd, original; filled
- with fervor not unmixed with a divine enthusiasm; his head breathing out
- through his tender heart its truths, its sense of right, and its feeling
- of the good and for the good. This speech was full of fire and energy and
- force: it was logic; it was pathos; it was enthusiasm; it was justice,
- equity, truth, right, and the good, set ablaze by the divine fires of a
- soul maddened by the wrong; it was hard, heavy, knotty, gnarly, edged, and
- heated. I attempted for about fifteen minutes, as was usual with me then,
- to take notes; but at the end of that time I threw pen and paper to the
- dogs, and lived only in the inspiration of the hour. If Mr. Lincoln was
- six feet four inches high usually, <i>at Bloomington</i> he was seven
- feet, and inspired at that. From that day to the day of his death, he
- stood firm on the right. He felt his great cross, had his great idea,
- nursed it, kept it, taught it to others, and in his fidelity bore witness
- of it to his death, and finally sealed it with his precious blood."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0012" id="image-0012">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/418.jpg" alt="William Herndon 418 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- If any thing in the foregoing description by Mr. Herndon seems extravagant
- to the reader, something must be pardoned to the spirit of a patient
- friend and an impatient teacher, who saw in this scene the first fruits of
- his careful husbandry, and the end of his long vigil. He appears to have
- participated even then in the belief which Mr. Lincoln himself avowed,&mdash;that
- the latter was designed by the Dispenser of all things to occupy a great
- place in the world's history; and he felt that that day's doings had fixed
- his political character forever. The Bloomington Convention was called
- "Republican," and the Republican party of Illinois was there formed: but
- the most noted Abolitionists were in it, the spirit of the Lovejoys was
- present; and Mr. Herndon had a right to say, that, if Mr. Lincoln was not
- an Abolitionist, he was tending "Abolition-ward" so surely that no doubt
- could be entertained of his ultimate destination. But, after all, the
- resolutions of the convention were very "moderate." They merely denounced
- the administration for its course regarding Kansas, stigmatized the repeal
- of the Missouri Compromise as an act of bad faith, and opposed "the
- extension of slavery into Territories heretofore free." It was surely not
- because Mr. Lincoln was present, and aiding at the passage of such
- resolutions, that Mr. Herndon and others thereafter regarded him as a
- "newborn" Abolitionist. It must have been the general warmth of his speech
- against the South,&mdash;his manifest detestation of slaveholders and
- slaveholding, as exhibited in his words,&mdash;which led them to believe
- that his feelings at least, if not his opinions, were similar to theirs.
- But the reader will see, nevertheless, as we get along in our history,
- that the Bloomington resolutions were the actual standard of Mr. Lincoln's
- views; that he continued to express his determination to maintain the
- rights of the Slave States under the Constitution, and to make
- conspicuously plain his abhorrence of negro suffrage and negro equality.
- He certainly disliked the Southern politicians very much; but even that
- sentiment, growing daily more fierce and ominous in the masses of the new
- party, was in his case counterbalanced by his prejudices or his caution,
- and he never saw the day when he would willingly have clothed the negroes
- with political privileges.
- </p>
- <p>
- Notwithstanding the conservative character of the resolutions, the
- proceedings of the Bloomington Convention were alarming to a portion of
- the community, and seem to have found little favor with the people of
- Springfield. About five days after its adjournment, Herndon and Lincoln
- bethought them of holding a ratification meeting. Mr. Herndon got out huge
- posters, announcing the event, and employed a band of musicians to parade
- the streets and "drum up a crowd." As the hour of meeting drew near, he
- "lit up the Court House with many blazes," rung the bells, and blew a
- horn. At seven o'clock the meeting should have been called to order, but
- it turned out to be extremely slim. There was nobody present, with all
- those brilliant lights, but A. Lincoln, W. H. Herndon, and John Pain.
- "When Lincoln came into the courtroom," says the bill-poster and
- horn-blower of this great demonstration, "he came with a sadness and a
- sense of the ludicrous on his face. He walked to the stand, mounted it in
- a kind of mockery,&mdash;mirth and sadness all combined,&mdash;and said,
- 'Gentlemen, this meeting is larger than I <i>knew</i> it would be. I knew
- that Herndon and myself would come, but I did not know that any one else
- would be here; and yet another has come,&mdash;you, John Pain. These are
- sad times, and seem out of joint. All seems dead, dead, dead: but the age
- is not yet dead; it liveth as sure as our Maker liveth. Under all this
- seeming want of life and motion, the world does move nevertheless. Be
- hopeful. And now let us adjourn, and appeal to the people.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "This speech is in substance just as he delivered it, and substantially in
- the same sad but determined spirit; and so we did adjourn, did go out, and
- did witness the fact that 'the world was not dead.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- The Bloomington Convention sent delegates to the general Republican
- Convention, which was to be held at Philadelphia in June. That body was to
- nominate candidates for the Presidency and Vice-Presidency, and high hopes
- were entertained of their success. But much remained to be done before
- such a revolution in sentiment could be expected. The American or
- Know-Nothing party&mdash;corrupt, hideous, and delusive, but still
- powerful&mdash;had adopted the old Whig platform on the several slavery
- questions, and planted itself decisively against the agitations of the
- Anti-Nebraska men and the Republicans. A "National Council" had taken this
- position for it the year previous, in terms beside which the resolutions
- of the Whigs and Democrats in 1852 were mild and inexpressive. Something,
- therefore, must be done to get this great organization out of the way, or
- to put its machinery under "Republican" control. We have seen a party of
- gentlemen from Chicago proposing to go into the lodges, and "rule them for
- freedom." Mr. Herndon and Mr. Lincoln rejected the plot with lofty
- indignation; but a section of the Free-Soil politicians were by no means
- so fastidious. They were for the most part bad, insincere, trading men,
- with whom the profession of principles of any kind was merely a convenient
- disguise, and who could be attached to no party, except from motives of
- self-interest. As yet, they were not quite certain whether it were
- possible to raise more hatred in the Northern mind against foreigners and
- Catholics than against slaveholders; and they prudently determined to be
- in a situation to try either. Accordingly, they went into the lodges, took
- the oaths, swore to stand by the platform of the "National Council" of
- 1855, and were perfectly ready to do that, or to betray the organization
- to the Republicans, as the prospect seemed good or bad. Believing the
- latter scheme to be the best, upon deliberation, they carried it out as
- far as in them lay, and then told the old, grim, honest, antislavery men,
- with whom they again sought association, that they had joined the
- Know-Nothings, and sworn irrevocable oaths to proscribe foreigners and
- Catholics, solely that they might rule the order "for freedom;" and, the
- Republicans standing in much need of aid just then, the excuse was
- considered very good. But it was too shameless a business for Lincoln and
- Herndon; and they most righteously despised it.
- </p>
- <p>
- In February, 1856, the Republicans held what Mr. Greeley styles their
- "first National. Convention," at Pittsburg; but they made no nominations
- there. At the same time, a Know-Nothing American "National Council" was
- sitting at Philadelphia (to be followed by a nominating convention); and
- the Republicans at Pittsburg had not adjourned before they got news by
- telegraph, that the patriots who had entered the lodges on false pretences
- were achieving a great success: the American party was disintegrating, and
- a great section of it falling away to the Republicans. A most wonderful
- political feat had been performed, and the way was now apparently clear
- for a union of the all-formidable anti-Democratic elements in the
- Presidential canvass.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 17th of June the National Republican Convention met at
- Philadelphia, and nominated John C. Fremont for President, and William L.
- Dayton for Vice-President. Mr. Williams, Chairman of the Illinois
- Delegation, presented to the convention the name of Abraham Lincoln for
- the latter office; and it was received with great enthusiasm by some of
- the Western delegates. He received, however, but 110 votes, against 259
- for Mr. Dayton, and 180 scattered; and Mr. Dayton was immediately
- thereafter unanimously declared the nominee.
- </p>
- <p>
- While this convention was sitting, Mr. Lincoln was attending court at
- Urbana, in Champaign County. When the news reached that place that Mr.
- Dayton had been nominated, and "Lincoln had received 110 votes," some of
- the lawyers insisted that the latter must have been "our [their] Lincoln;"
- but he said, "No, it could not be: it must have been the <i>great</i>
- Lincoln from Massachusetts." He utterly refused to believe in the reality
- of this unexpected distinction until he saw the proceedings in full. He
- was just then in one of his melancholy moods, his spirits depressed, and
- his heart suffering the miseries of a morbid mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- With an indorsement of the "self-evident truths" and "inalienable rights"
- of the Declaration of Independence, the Republican Convention adopted the
- following as the practical and essential features of its platform:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Resolved,... That we deny the authority of Congress, of a territorial
- Legislature, of any individual, or association of individuals, to give
- legal existence to slavery in any Territory of the United States while the
- present Constitution shall be maintained.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Resolved, That the Constitution confers upon Congress sovereign power
- over the Territories of the United States for their government; and that,
- in the exercise of this power, it is both the right and the duty of
- Congress to prohibit in the Territories those twin relics of barbarism,&mdash;polygamy
- and slavery."
- </p>
- <p>
- The National Democratic Convention had already placed in nomination
- Buchanan and Breckenridge. Their platform denounced as sectional the
- principles and purposes of their opponents; re-affirmed "the principles
- contained in the organic laws establishing the Territories of Kansas and
- Nebraska, as embodying the only sound and safe solution of the slavery
- question," and declared further,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "That by the uniform application of Democratic principles to the
- organization of Territories and the admission of new States, with or
- without slavery as they may elect, the equal rights of all the States will
- be preserved intact, the original compacts of the Constitution maintained
- inviolate, and the perpetuity and expansion of the Union insured to its
- utmost capacity of embracing, in peace and harmony, every future American
- State that may be constituted or annexed with a republican form of
- government."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the office of Presidential elector,
- and made a thorough and energetic canvass. Some of his speeches were very
- striking; and probably no man in the country discussed the main questions
- in that campaign&mdash;Kansas, and slavery in the Territories&mdash;in a
- manner more original and persuasive. From first to last, he scouted the
- intimation that the election of Fremont would justify a dissolution of the
- Union, or that it could possibly become even the occasion of a
- dissolution. In his eyes, the apprehensions of disunion were a "humbug;"
- the threat of it mere bluster, and the fear of it silly timidity.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the heat of the canvass, Mr. Lincoln wrote the following perfectly
- characteristic letter,&mdash;marked "Confidential:"&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Sept. 8, 1856.
- </p>
- <p>
- Harrison Maltby, Esq.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;I understand you are a Fillmore man. Let me prove to you
- that every vote withheld from Fremont and given to Fillmore in this State
- actually lessens Fillmore's chance of being President.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suppose Buchanan gets all the Slave States and Pennsylvania, and any other
- one State besides; then he is elected, no matter who gets all the rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- But suppose Fillmore gets the two Slave States of Maryland and Kentucky;
- then Buchanan is not elected: Fillmore goes into the House of
- Representatives, and may be made President by a compromise.
- </p>
- <p>
- But suppose, again, Fillmore's friends throw away a few thousand votes on
- him in Indiana and Illinois: it will inevitably give these States to
- Buchanan, which will more than compensate him for the loss of Maryland and
- Kentucky; will elect him, and leave Fillmore no chance in the H. R., or
- out of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- This is as plain as adding up the weights of three small hogs. As Mr.
- Fillmore has no possible chance to carry Illinois for himself, it is
- plainly to his interest to let Fremont take it, and thus keep it out of
- the hands of Buchanan. Be not deceived. Buchanan is the hard horse to beat
- in this race. Let him have Illinois, and nothing can beat him; and he will
- get Illinois if men persist in throwing away votes upon Mr. Fillmore. Does
- some one persuade you that Mr. Fillmore can carry Illinois? Nonsense!
- There are over seventy newspapers in Illinois opposing Buchanan, only
- three or four of which support Mr. Fillmore, all the rest going for
- Fremont. Are not these newspapers a fair index of the proportion of the
- votes? If not, tell me why.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, of these three or four Fillmore newspapers, two, at least, are
- supported in part by the Buchanan men, as I understand. Do not they know
- where the shoe pinches? They know the Fillmore movement helps them, and
- therefore they help it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Do think these things over, and then act according to your judgment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours very truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- (Confidential.)
- </p>
- <p>
- This letter was discovered by the Buchanan men, printed in their
- newspapers, and pronounced, as its author anticipated, "a mean trick." It
- was a dangerous document to them, and was calculated to undermine the very
- citadel of their strength.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was still in imperfect fellowship&mdash;if, indeed, in any
- fellowship at all&mdash;with the extreme Abolitionists. He had met with
- Lovejoy and his followers at Bloomington, and was apparently co-operating
- with them for the same party purposes; but the intensity of his opposition
- to their radical views is intimated very strongly in this letter to Mr.
- Whitney:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- SprinGfield, July 9, 1856.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Whitney,&mdash;I now expect to go to Chicago on the 15th, and I
- probably shall remain there or thereabout for about two weeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- It turned me blind when I first heard Swett was beaten and Lovejoy
- nominated; but, after much anxious reflection, I really believe it is best
- to let it stand. This, of course, I wish to be confidential.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lamon did get your deeds. I went with him to the office, got them, and put
- them in his hands myself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours very truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- In June, 1857, Judge Douglas made a speech at Springfield, in which he
- attempted to vindicate the wisdom and fairness of the law under which the
- people of Kansas were about to choose delegates to a convention to be held
- at Lecompton to frame a State constitution. He declared with emphasis,
- that, if the Free-State party refused to vote at this election, they alone
- would be blamable for the proslavery constitution which might be formed.
- The Free-State men professed to have a vast majority,&mdash;"three-fourths,"
- "four-fifths," "nine-tenths," of the voters of Kansas. If these wilfully
- staid away from the polls, and allowed the minority to choose the
- delegates and make the constitution, Mr. Douglas thought they ought to
- abide the result, and not oppose the constitution adopted. Mr. Douglas's
- speech indicated clearly that he himself would countenance no opposition
- to the forthcoming Lecompton Convention, and that he would hold the
- Republican politicians responsible if the result failed to be satisfactory
- to them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Judge Douglas seldom spoke in that region without provoking a reply from
- his constant and vigilant antagonist. Mr. Lincoln heard this speech with a
- critical ear, and then, waiting only for a printed report of it, prepared
- a reply to be delivered a few weeks later. The speeches were neither of
- them of much consequence, except for the fact that Judge Douglas seemed to
- have plainly committed himself in advance to the support of the Lecompton
- Constitution. Mr. Lincoln took that much for granted; and, arguing from
- sundry indications that the election would be fraudulently conducted, he
- insisted that Mr. Douglas himself, as the author of the Kansas-Nebraska
- Bill, and the inventor of "popular sovereignty," had made this "outrage"
- possible. He did not believe there were any "Free-State Democrats" in
- Kansas to make it a Free State without the aid of the Republicans, whom he
- held to be a vast majority of the population. The latter, he contended,
- were not all registered; and, because all were not registered, he thought
- none ought to vote. But Mr. Lincoln advised no bloodshed, no civil war, no
- roadside assassinations. Even if an incomplete registry might justify a
- majority of the people in an obstinate refusal to participate in the
- regulation of their own affairs, it certainly would not justify them in
- taking up arms to oppose all government in the Territory; and Mr. Lincoln
- did not say so. We have seen already how, in the "little speech" reported
- by Mr. Herndon, he deprecated "all physical rebellions" in this country,
- and applied his views to this case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln also discussed the Dred-Scott Decision at some length; and,
- while doing so, disclosed his firm belief, that, in some respects, such as
- "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," the negroes were made by
- the Declaration of Independence the equals of white men. But it did not
- follow from this that he was in favor of political or social equality with
- them. "There is," said he, "a natural disgust in the minds of nearly all
- the white people to the idea of an indiscriminate amalgamation of the
- white and black races; and Judge Douglas evidently is basing his chief
- hope upon the chances of his being able to appropriate the benefit of this
- disgust to himself. If he can, by much drumming and repeating, fasten the
- odium of that idea upon his adversaries, he thinks he can struggle through
- the storm. He therefore clings to his hope, as a drowning man to the last
- plank. He makes an occasion for lugging it in from the opposition to the
- Dred-Scott Decision. He finds the Republicans insisting that the
- Declaration of Independence includes all men,&mdash;black as well as
- white; and forthwith he boldly denies that it includes negroes at all, and
- proceeds to argue gravely, that all who contend it does, do so only
- because they want to vote, eat, sleep, and marry with negroes. Now, I
- protest against the counterfeit logic which concludes, that, because I do
- not want a black woman for a slave, I must necessarily want her for a
- wife. I need not have her for either. I can just leave her alone. In some
- respects, she certainly is not my equal; but in her natural right to eat
- the bread she earns with her own hands, without asking leave of any one
- else, she is my equal, and the equal of all others."
- </p>
- <p>
- These speeches were delivered, the one early and the other late, in the
- month of June: they present strongly, yet guardedly, the important issues
- which were to engage Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas in the famous campaign of
- 1858, and leave us no choice but to look into Kansas, and observe what had
- taken place and what was happening there.
- </p>
- <p>
- Violence still (June, 1857) prevailed throughout the Territory. The
- administration of President Pierce committed itself at the first in
- support of the proslavery party. It acknowledged the Legislature as the
- only legal government in the Territory, and gave it military assistance to
- enforce its enactments. Gov. Shannon, having by his course only served to
- increase the hostility between the parties, was recalled, and John W.
- Geary of Pennsylvania was appointed his successor. Gov. Geary, while
- adopting the policy of the administration, so far as recognizing the
- Legislative party as the only legally organized government, was yet
- disposed to see, that, so far as the two parties could be got to act
- together, each should be fairly protected. This policy, however, soon
- brought him into collision with some of the proslavery leaders in the
- Territory; and, not being sustained by Mr. Buchanan's administration,
- which had in the mean time succeeded the administration of President
- Pierce, he resigned his office. Hon. Robert J. Walker of Mississippi was
- appointed his successor, with Hon. F. P. Stanton of Tennessee as
- secretary. Both were strong Democrats; and both were earnest advocates of
- the policy of the administration, as expressed in the recent presidential
- canvass, and in Mr. Buchanan's inaugural Message,&mdash;the absolute
- freedom of the people of the Territories to form such governments as they
- saw fit, subject to the provisions of the Constitution. Gov. Walker and
- his secretary earnestly set themselves to work to carry out this policy.
- The governor, in various addresses to the people of the Territory, assured
- all parties that he would protect them in the free expression of their
- wishes in the election for a new Territorial legislature; and he besought
- the Free-State men to give up their separate Territorial organization,
- under which they had already applied for admission into the Union, and by
- virtue of which they claimed still to have an equitable legal existence.
- The governor was so earnest in his policy, and so fair-minded in his
- purposes, that he soon drew upon himself the opposition of the proslavery
- party of the Territory, now in a small minority, as well as the enmity of
- that party in the States. He assured the people they should have a fair
- election for the new Legislature to be chosen in October (1857), and which
- would come into power in January following. The people took him at his
- word; and he kept it. Enormous frauds were discovered in two districts,
- which were promptly set aside. The triumph of the Free-State party was
- complete: they elected a legislature in their interest by a handsome
- majority. And now began another phase of the struggle. The policy of the
- Governor and the Secretary was repudiated at Washington: the former
- resigned, and the latter was removed. Meanwhile, a convention held under
- the auspices of the old Legislature had formed a new constitution, known
- as the Lecompton Constitution, which the old Legislature proposed to
- submit to the people for ratification on the 21st of December. The manner
- of submitting it was singular, to say the least. The people were required
- to vote either for the constitution with slavery, or the constitution
- without slavery. As without slavery the constitution was in some of its
- provisions as objectionable as if it upheld slavery, the Free-State men
- refused to participate in its ratification. The vote on its submission,
- therefore, stood 4,206 for the constitution with slavery, and 567 without
- slavery; and it was this constitution, thus submitted and thus adopted,
- that Mr. Buchanan submitted to Congress on the 2d of February, 1858, as
- the free expression of the wishes of the people of Kansas; and its support
- was at once made an administration measure. Meantime the new Legislature
- elected by the people of the Territory in October submitted this same
- Lecompton Constitution to the people again, and in this manner: votes to
- be given for the constitution with slavery and without slavery, and also
- against the constitution entirely. The latter manner prevailed; the vote
- against the constitution in any form being over ten thousand. Thus the
- proslavery party in the Territory was overthrown. Under the auspices of
- the new Free-State Legislature, a constitutional convention was held at
- Wyandotte, in March, 1859. A Free-State constitution was adopted, under
- which Kansas was subsequently admitted into the Union.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before leaving this Kansas question, there is one phase of the closing
- part of the struggle which it is worth while to note, particularly as it
- has a direct bearing upon the fortunes of Judge Douglas, and indirectly to
- the success of Mr. Lincoln. Douglas always insisted that his plan of
- "popular sovereignty" would give to the people of the Territories the
- utmost freedom in the formation of their local governments. When Mr.
- Buchanan attempted to uphold the Lecompton Constitution as being the free
- choice of the people of Kansas, Judge Douglas at once took issue with the
- administration on this question, and the Democratic party was split in
- twain. Up to the time of the vote of the people of the Territory on the
- constitution, Douglas had been an unswerving supporter of the
- administration policy in Kansas. His speech at Springfield, in the June
- previous, could not be misunderstood. He held all the proceedings which
- led to the Lecompton issue to be in strict accordance, not only with the
- letter, but the spirit, of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and with the faith of
- the Democratic party as expounded by himself. But a few weeks later it
- became manifest that his opinions had undergone a change. Ominous rumors
- of a breach with the administration began to circulate among his friends.
- It was alleged at length that Mr. Douglas's delicate sense of justice had
- been shocked by the unfairness of certain elections in Kansas: it was even
- intimated that he, too, considered the Lecompton affair an "outrage" upon
- the sovereign people of Kansas, and that he would speedily join the
- Republicans&mdash;the special objects of his indignation in the June
- speech&mdash;in denouncing and defeating it. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill had
- borne its appropriate fruits,&mdash;the fruits all along predicted by Mr.
- Lincoln,&mdash;and Mr. Douglas commended them to anybody's eating but his
- own. His desertion was sudden and astonishing; but there was method in it,
- and a reason for it. The next year Illinois was to choose a senator to
- fill the vacancy created by the expiration of his own term; and the choice
- lay between the author of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill and its most
- conspicuous opponent in that State. The newspapers were not yet done
- publishing Mr. Lincoln's speech, in which occurred the following
- paragraph:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Three years and a half ago Judge Douglas brought forward his famous
- Nebraska Bill. The country was at once in a blaze. He scorned all
- opposition, and carried it through Congress. Since then he has seen
- himself superseded in a Presidential nomination by one indorsing the
- general doctrine of his measure, but at the same time standing clear of
- the odium of its untimely agitation and its gross' breach of national
- faith; and he has seen the successful rival constitutionally elected, not
- by the strength of friends, but by the division of his adversaries, being
- in a popular minority of nearly four hundred thousand votes. He has seen
- his chief aids in his own State, Shields and Richardson, politically
- speaking, successively tried, convicted, and executed for an offence not
- their own, but his. And now he sees his own case standing next on the
- docket for trial."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI
- </h2>
- <p>
- ALTHOUGH primarily responsible for all that had taken place in Kansas, Mr.
- Douglas appeared to be suddenly animated by a new and burning zeal in
- behalf of the Free-State party in the Territory. It struck him very
- forcibly, just when he needed most to be struck by a new idea, that the
- Lecompton Constitution was not "the act and deed of the people of Kansas."
- </p>
- <p>
- Accordingly, Mr. Douglas took his stand against Lecompton at the first
- note of the long conflict in Congress. We shall make no analysis of the
- debates, nor set out the votes of senators and representatives which
- marked the intervals of that fierce struggle between sections, parties,
- and factions which followed. It is enough to say here, that Mr. Douglas
- was found speaking and voting with the Republicans upon every phase of the
- question. He had but one or two followers in the Senate, and a mere
- handful in the House; yet these were faithful to his lead until a final
- conference committee and the English Bill afforded an opportunity for some
- of them to escape. For himself he scorned all compromises, voted against
- the English Bill, and returned to Illinois to ask the votes of the people
- upon a winter's record wholly and consistently anti-Democratic. The fact
- is mentioned, not to obscure the fame of the statesman, nor to impugn the
- honesty of the politician, but because it had an important influence upon
- the canvass of the ensuing summer.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the winter Mr. Douglas held frequent consultations with the leaders
- of the Republican party. Their meetings were secret, and for that reason
- the more significant. By this means, harmony of action was secured for the
- present, and something provided for the future. Mr. Douglas covertly
- announced himself as a convert to the Republicans, declared his
- uncompromising enmity to "the slave power," and said that, however he
- might be distrusted then, he would be seen "fighting their battles in
- 1860;" but for the time he thought it wise to conceal his ultimate
- intentions. He could manage the Democracy more effectually by remaining
- with them until better opportunities should occur. "He insisted that he
- would never be driven from the party, but would remain in it until he
- exposed the administration and the Disunionists; and, when he went out, he
- would go of his own accord. He was in the habit of remarking, that it was
- policy for him to remain in the party, in order to hold certain of the
- rank-and-file; so that, if he went over from the Democracy to any other
- party, he would be able to take the crowd along with him; and, when he got
- them all over, he would cut down the bridges, and sink the boats." When
- asked if he knew precisely where his present course was taking him, he
- answered repeatedly, "I do; and I have checked all my baggage, and taken a
- through ticket."
- </p>
- <p>
- He was a proselyte not to be despised: his weight might be sufficient to
- turn the scale in the Presidential election. The Republicans were
- naturally pleased with his protestations of friendship, and more than
- pleased with his proffers of active service; but he was not content with
- this alone. He contrived to convince many of his late opponents that the
- Kansas-Nebraska Bill itself was actually conceived in the interests of
- antislavery, and that the device was the most cunning of political tricks,
- intended to give back to "freedom" all the vast expanse of territory which
- the Missouri line had dedicated forever to slavery. "Mr. Douglas's plan
- for destroying the Missouri line," said one Republican, "and thereby
- opening the way for the march of freedom beyond the limits forever
- prohibited by that line, and the opening up of Free States in territory
- which it was conceded belonged to the Slave States, and its march
- westward, embracing the whole line of the Pacific from the British
- possessions to Mexico, struck me as the most magnificent scheme ever
- conceived by the human mind. This character of conversation, so frequently
- employed by Mr. Douglas with those with whom he talked, made the deepest
- impression upon their minds, enlisted them in his behalf, and changed, in
- almost every instance, their opinion of the man." In support of this view,
- Mr. Douglas could point to Kansas, where the battle under his bill was
- being fought out. The Free-State men had, perhaps from the very beginning,
- been in a majority, and could take possession of the Territory or the new
- State, as the case might be, whenever they could secure a fair vote. The
- laboring classes of, the North were the natural settlers of the western
- Territories. If these failed in numbers, the enormous and increasing
- European immigration was at their back; and, if both together failed, the
- churches, aid societies, and antislavery organizations were at hand to
- raise, arm, and equip great bodies of emigrants, as they would regular
- forces for a public purpose. The South had no such facilities: its social,
- political, and material conditions made a sudden exodus of its voting
- population to new countries a thing impossible. It might send here a man
- with a few negroes, and there another. It might insist vehemently upon its
- supposed rights in the common Territories, and be ready to fight for them;
- but it could never cover the surface of those Territories with cosey
- farmsteads, or crowd them with intelligent and muscular white men; and yet
- these last would inevitably give political character to the rising
- communities. Such clearly were to be the results of "popular sovereignty,"
- as Mr. Douglas had up to that time maintained it under the Nebraska Bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- It signified the right of the people of a Territory "to form and regulate
- their domestic institutions in their own way" when, and not before, they
- came to frame a State constitution. The Missouri line, on the contrary,
- had been a sort of convention, which, by common consent, gave all north of
- it to freedom, and all south of it to slavery. But popular sovereignty
- disregarded all previous compacts, all ordinances, and all laws. With this
- doctrine in practice, the North were sure to be victors in every serious
- contest. But when Mr. Douglas changed ground again, and popular
- sovereignty became squatter sovereignty, he had reason to boast himself
- the most efficient, although the wiliest and coolest, antislavery agitator
- on the continent. The new doctrine implied the right of a handful of
- settlers to determine the slavery question in their first Legislature. It
- made no difference whether they did this by direct or "unfriendly
- legislation:" the result was the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Popular sovereignty! popular sovereignty!" said Mr. Lincoln. "Let us for
- a moment inquire into this vast matter of popular sovereignty. What is
- popular sovereignty? We recollect, that, in an early period in the history
- of this struggle, there was another name for the same thing,&mdash;<i>squatter
- sovereignty</i>. It was not exactly popular sovereignty,&mdash;squatter
- sovereignty. What do these terms mean? What do those terms mean when used
- now? And vast credit is taken by our friend, the Judge, in regard to his
- support of it, when he declares the last years of his life have been, and
- all the future years of his life shall be, devoted to this matter of
- popular sovereignty. What is it? Why, it is the sovereignty of the people!
- What was squatter sovereignty? I suppose, if it had any significance at
- all, it was the right of the people to govern themselves, to be sovereign
- in their own affairs while they were squatted down in a country not their
- own, while they had squatted on a territory that did not belong to them;
- in the sense that a State belongs to the people who inhabit it, when it
- belongs to the nation. Such right to govern themselves was called
- 'squatter sovereignty.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, and on another occasion, but still before Mr. Douglas had
- substituted "squatter" for "popular" sovereignty,&mdash;a feat which was
- not performed until September, 1859,&mdash;Mr. Lincoln said,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I suppose almost every one knows, that in this controversy, whatever has
- been said has had reference to negro slavery. We have not been in a
- controversy about the right of the people to govern themselves in the
- ordinary matters of domestic concern in the States and Territories. Mr.
- Buchanan, in one of his late messages (I think when he sent up the
- Lecompton Constitution), urged that the main point to which the public
- attention had been directed was not in regard to the great variety of
- small domestic matters, but it was directed to negro slavery; and he
- asserts, that, if the people had had a fair chance to vote on that
- question, there was no reasonable ground of objection in regard to minor
- questions. Now, while I think that the people had not had given them, or
- offered them, a fair chance upon that slavery question, still, if there
- had been a fair submission to a vote upon that main question, the
- President's proposition would have been true to the uttermost. Hence, when
- hereafter I speak of popular sovereignty, I wish to be understood as
- applying what I say to the question of slavery only, not to other minor
- domestic matters of a Territory or a State.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Does Judge Douglas, when he says that several of the past years of his
- life have been devoted to the question of popular sovereignty, and that
- all the remainder of his life shall be devoted to it,&mdash;does he mean
- to say, that he has been devoting his life to securing to the people of
- the Territories the right to exclude slavery from the Territories? If he
- means so to say, he means to deceive; because he and every one knows that
- the decision of the Supreme Court, which he approves, and makes an
- especial ground of attack upon me for disapproving, forbids the people of
- a Territory to exclude slavery. This covers the whole ground, from the
- settlement of a Territory till it reaches the degree of maturity entitling
- it to form a State constitution. So far as all that ground is concerned,
- the judge is not sustaining popular sovereignty, but absolutely opposing
- it. He sustains the decision which declares that the popular will of the
- Territories has no constitutional power to exclude slavery during their
- territorial existence. This being so, the period of time from the first
- settlement of a territory till it reaches the point of forming a State
- constitution is not the thing that the Judge has fought for, or is
- fighting for; but, on the contrary, he has fought for, and is fighting
- for, the thing that annihilates and crushes out that same popular
- sovereignty."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is probable, that, in the numerous private conferences held by Mr.
- Douglas with Republican leaders in the winter of 1857-8, he managed to
- convince them that it was, after all, not popular sovereignty, but
- squatter sovereignty, that he meant to advance as his final and inevitable
- deduction from "the great principles" of the Nebraska Bill. This he knew,
- and they were sure, would give antislavery an unbroken round of solid
- victories in all the Territories. The South feared it much more than they
- did the Republican theory: it was, in the language of their first orator,
- "a shortcut to all the ends of Sewardism."
- </p>
- <p>
- But Mr. Douglas's great difficulty was to produce any belief in his
- sincerity. At home, in Illinois, the Republicans distrusted him almost to
- a man; and at Washington, among his peers in the Senate and the House, it
- seemed necessary for him to repeat his plans and promises very often, and
- to mingle with them bitter and passionate declamations against the South.
- At last, however, he succeeded,&mdash;partially, at least. Senator Wilson
- believed him devoutly; Mr. Burlingame said his record was "laid up in
- light;" Mr. Colfax, Mr. Blair, and Mr. Covode were convinced; and
- gentlemen of the press began industriously to prepare the way for his
- entrance into the Republican party. Mr. Greeley was thoroughly possessed
- by the new idea, and went about propagating and enforcing it with all his
- might. Among all the grave counsellors employed in furthering Mr.
- Douglas's defection, it is singular that only one man of note steadily
- resisted his admission to a place of leadership in the Republican ranks:
- Judge Trumbull could not be persuaded; he had no faith in the man who
- proposed to desert, and had some admonitions to deliver, based upon the
- history of recent events. He was willing enough to take him "on
- probation," but wholly opposed to giving him any power. Covode was
- employed to mollify Judge Trumbull; but he met with no success, and went
- away without so much as delivering the message with which Mr. Douglas had
- charged him. The message was a simple proposition of alliance with the
- home Republicans, to the effect, that, if they agreed to return him to the
- Senate in 1858, he would fight their Presidential battle in 1860. Judge
- Trumbull did not even hear it, but he was well assured that Mr. Douglas
- was "an applicant for admission into the Republican party." "It was
- reported to me at that time," said he, "that such was the fact; and such
- appeared to be the universal understanding, among the Republicans at
- Washington. I will state another fact,&mdash;I almost quarrelled with some
- of my best Republican friends in 'regard to this matter. I was willing to
- receive Judge Douglas into the Republican party on probation; but I was
- not, as these Republican friends were, willing to receive him, and place
- him at the head of our ranks."
- </p>
- <p>
- Toward the latter part of April, 1858, a Democratic State Convention met
- in Illinois, and, besides nominating a ticket for State officers, indorsed
- Mr. Douglas. This placed him in the field for re-election as an
- Anti-Lecompton Democrat; but it by no means shook the faith of his
- recently acquired Republican friends: they thought it very natural, under
- the circumstances, that his ways should be a little devious, and his
- policy somewhat dark. He had always said he could do more for them by
- seeming to remain within the Democratic party; and they looked upon this
- latest proceeding&mdash;his practical nomination by a Democratic
- convention&mdash;as the foundation for an act of stupendous treason
- between that time and the Presidential election. They continued to press
- the Republicans of Illinois to make no nomination against him,&mdash;to
- vote for him, to trust him, to follow him, as a sincere and manifestly a
- powerful antislavery leader. These representations had the effect of
- seducing away, for a brief time, Mr. Wash-burne and a few others among the
- lesser politicians of the State; but, when they found the party at large
- irrevocably opposed to the scheme, they reluctantly acquiesced in what
- they could not prevent,&mdash;Mr. Lincoln's nomination. But the plot made
- a profound impression on Mr. Lincoln's mind: it proved the existence of
- personal qualities in Mr. Douglas, which, to a simpler man, were
- unimaginable and inexplicable. A gentleman once inquired of Mr. Lincoln
- what he thought of Douglas's chances at Charleston. "Well," he replied,
- "were it not for certain matters that I know transpired, which I regarded
- at one time among the impossibilities, I would say he stood no possible
- chance. I refer to the fact, that, in the Illinois contest with myself, he
- had the sympathy and support of Greeley, of Burlingame, and of Wilson of
- Massachusetts, and other leading Republicans; that, at the same time, he
- received the support of Wise, and the influence of Breckinridge, and other
- Southern men; that he took direct issue with the administration, and
- secured, against all its power, one hundred and twenty-five thousand out
- of one hundred and thirty thousand Democratic votes cast in the State. A
- man that can bring such influence to bear with his own exertions may play
- the devil at Charleston."
- </p>
- <p>
- From about the 7th to the 16th of June, 1858, Mr. Lincoln was busily
- engaged writing a speech: he wrote it in scraps,&mdash;a sentence now, and
- another again. It was originally scattered over numberless little pieces
- of paper, and was only reduced to consecutive sheets and connected form as
- the hour for its delivery drew near. It was to be spoken on or about the
- 16th, when the Republican State Convention would assemble at Springfield,
- and, as Mr. Lincoln anticipated, would nominate him for senator in
- Congress.
- </p>
- <p>
- About the 13th of June, Mr. Dubois, the State auditor, entered the office
- of Lincoln &amp; Herndon, and found Mr. Lincoln deeply intent upon the
- speech. "Hello, Lincoln! what <i>are</i> you writing?" said the auditor.
- "Come, tell me."&mdash;"I sha'n't tell you," said Lincoln. "<i>It is none
- of your business</i>, Mr. Auditor. Come, sit down, and let's be jolly."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 16th, the convention, numbering, with delegates and alternates,
- about a thousand men, met, and passed unanimously the following
- resolution:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "That Hon. Abraham Lincoln is our first and only choice for United States
- senator to fill the vacancy about to be created by the expiration of Mr.
- Douglas's term of office."
- </p>
- <p>
- That evening Mr. Lincoln came early to his office, along with Mr. Herndon.
- Having carefully locked the door, and put the key in his own pocket, he
- pulled from his bosom the manuscript of his speech, and proceeded to read
- it slowly and distinctly. When he had finished the first paragraph, he
- came to a dead pause, and turned to his astounded auditor with the
- inquiry, "How do you like that? What do you think of it?"&mdash;"I think,"
- returned Mr. Herndon, "it is true; but is it entirely <i>politic</i> to
- read or speak it as it is written?"
- </p>
- <p>
- &mdash;"That makes no difference," Mr. Lincoln said. "That expression is a
- truth of all human experience,&mdash;'a house divided against itself
- cannot stand;' and 'he that runs may read.' The proposition is
- indisputably true, and has been true for more than six thousand years; and&mdash;I
- will deliver it as written. I want to use some universally known figure,
- expressed in simple language as universally known, that may strike home to
- the minds of men, in order to rouse them to the peril of the times. I
- would rather be <i>defeated with this expression in</i> the speech, and it
- held up and discussed before the people, than <i>to be victorious without
- it.</i>"
- </p>
- <p>
- It may be questioned whether Mr. Lincoln had a clear right to indulge in
- such a venture, as a representative party man in a close contest. He had
- other interests than his own in charge: he was bound to respect the
- opinions, and, if possible, secure the success, of the party which had
- made him its leader. He knew that the strange doctrine, so strikingly
- enunciated, would alienate many well-affected voters. Was it his duty to
- cast these away, or to keep them? He was not asked to sacrifice any
- principle of the party, or any opinion of his own previously expressed,
- but merely to forego the trial of an experiment, to withhold the
- announcement of a startling theory, and to leave the creed of the party as
- it came from the hands of its makers, without this individual supplement,
- of which they had never dreamed. It is evident that he had not always been
- insensible to the force of this reasoning. At the Bloomington Convention
- he had uttered the same ideas in almost the same words; and their novelty,
- their tendency, their recognition of a state of incipient civil war in a
- country for the most part profoundly peaceful,&mdash;these, and the bloody
- work which might come of their acceptance by a great party, had filled the
- minds of some of his hearers with the most painful apprehensions. The
- theory was equally shocking to them, whether as partisans or as patriots.
- Among them was Hon. T. Lyle Dickey, who sought Mr. Lincoln, and begged him
- to suppress them in future. He vindicated his speech as he has just
- vindicated it in the interview with Mr. Herndon; but, after much
- persuasion, he promised at length not to repeat it.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was now Mr. Herndon's turn to be surprised: the pupil had outstripped
- the teacher. He was intensely anxious for Mr. Lincoln's election: he
- feared the effect of this speech; and yet it was so exactly in accordance
- with his own faith, that he could not advise him to suppress it. It might
- be heresy to many others, but it was orthodoxy to him; and he was in the
- habit of telling the whole truth, without regard to consequences. If it
- cost a single defeat now, he was sure that its potency would one day be
- felt, and the wisdom of its present utterance acknowledged. He therefore
- urged Mr. Lincoln to speak it as he had written it, and to treat with the
- scorn of a prophet those who, having ears, would not hear, and, having
- eyes, would not see. The advice was not unacceptable, but Mr. Lincoln
- thought he owed it to other friends to counsel with them also.
- </p>
- <p>
- About a dozen gentlemen were called to meet in the Library Room in the
- State House. "After seating them at the round table," says John Armstrong,
- one of the number, "he read that clause or section of his speech which
- reads, 'a house divided against itself cannot stand,' &amp;c. He read it
- slowly and cautiously, so as to let each man fully understand it. After he
- had finished the reading, he asked the opinions of his friends as to the
- wisdom or policy of it. Every man among them condemned the speech in
- substance and spirit, and especially that section quoted above. They
- unanimously declared that the whole speech was too far in advance of the
- times; and they all condemned that section or part of his speech already
- quoted, as unwise and impolitic, if not false. William H. Herndon sat
- still while they were giving their respective opinions of its unwisdom and
- impolicy: then he sprang to his feet and said, 'Lincoln, deliver it just
- as it reads. If it is in advance of the times, let us&mdash;you and I, if
- no one else&mdash;lift the people to the level of this speech now, higher
- hereafter. The speech is true, wise, and politic, and will succeed now or
- in the future. Nay, it will aid you, if it will not make you President of
- the United States.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln sat still a short moment, rose from his chair, walked
- backwards and forwards in the hall, stopped and said, 'Friends, I have
- thought about this matter a great deal, have weighed the question well
- from all corners, and am thoroughly convinced the time has come when it
- should be uttered; and if it must be that I must go down because of this
- speech, then let me go down linked to truth,&mdash;die in the advocacy of
- what is right and just. This nation cannot live on injustice,&mdash;"a
- house divided against itself cannot stand," I say again and again.' This
- was spoken with some degree of emotion,&mdash;the effects of his love of
- truth, and sorrow from the disagreement of his friends with himself."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the evening of the 17th this celebrated speech&mdash;known since as
- "The House-divided-against-itself Speech"&mdash;was delivered to an
- immense audience in the hall of the House of Representatives. Mr. Lincoln
- never penned words which had a more prodigious influence upon the public
- mind, or which more directly and powerfully affected his own career. It
- was as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gentlemen of the Convention,&mdash;If we could first know where we are,
- and whither we are tending, we could then better judge what to do, and how
- to do it. We are now far on into the fifth year since a policy was
- initiated with the avowed object and confident promise of putting an end
- to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation
- had not only not ceased, but has constantly augmented. In my opinion, it
- will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed. "A house
- divided against itself cannot stand." I believe this Government cannot
- endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to
- be dissolved,&mdash;I do not expect the house to fall; but I do expect it
- will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or all the other.
- Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the farther spread of it, and
- place it where the public mind shall rest in the belief that it is in
- course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward till
- it shall become alike lawful in all the States,&mdash;old as well as new,
- North as well as South.
- </p>
- <p>
- Have we no tendency to the latter condition? Let any one who doubts
- carefully contemplate that now almost complete legal combination,&mdash;piece
- of machinery, so to speak,&mdash;compounded of the Nebraska doctrine and
- the Dred-Scott Decision. Let him consider, not only what work the
- machinery is adapted to do, and how well adapted, but also let him study
- the history of its construction, and trace, if he can, or rather fail, if
- he can, to trace, the evidences of design and concert of action among its
- chief master-workers from the beginning.
- </p>
- <p>
- But so far Congress only had acted; and an indorsement by the people, real
- or apparent, was indispensable, to save the point already gained and give
- chance for more. The New Year of 1854 found slavery excluded from more
- than half the States by State constitutions, and from most of the national
- territory by congressional prohibition. Four days later commenced the
- struggle which ended in repealing that congressional prohibition. This
- opened all the national territory to slavery, and was the first point
- gained.
- </p>
- <p>
- This necessity had not been overlooked, but had been provided for, as well
- as might be, in the notable argument of "<i>squatter sovereignty</i>"
- otherwise called "<i>sacred right of self-government;</i>" which latter
- phrase, though expressive of the only rightful basis of any government,
- was so perverted in this attempted use of it as to amount to just this:
- that, if any one man choose to enslave another, no third man shall be
- allowed to object. That argument was incorporated into the Nebraska Bill
- itself, in the language which follows: "It being the true intent and
- meaning of this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or State,
- nor exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof perfectly free
- to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way, subject
- only to the Constitution of the United States."
- </p>
- <p>
- Then opened the roar of loose declamation in favor of "squatter
- sovereignty" and "sacred right of self-government."
- </p>
- <p>
- "But," said opposition members, "let us be more specific,&mdash;let us
- amend the bill so as to expressly declare that the people of the Territory
- may exclude slavery."&mdash;"Not we," said the friends of the measure; and
- down they voted the amendment.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the Nebraska Bill was passing through Congress, a law-case involving
- the question of a negro's freedom, by reason of his owner having
- voluntarily taken him first into a Free State, and then a Territory
- covered by the congressional prohibition, and held him as a slave,&mdash;for
- a long time in each,&mdash;was passing through the United-States Circuit
- Court for the District of Missouri; and both the Nebraska Bill and lawsuit
- were brought to a decision in the same month of May, 1854. The negro's
- name was Dred Scott, which name now designates the decision finally made
- in the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before the then next Presidential election, the law-case came to, and was
- argued in, the Supreme Court of the United States; but the decision of it
- was deferred until after the election. Still, before the election, Senator
- Trumbull, on the floor of the Senate, requests the leading advocate of the
- Nebraska Bill to state his opinion whether a people of a Territory can
- constitutionally exclude slavery from their limits; and the latter
- answers, "That is a question for the Supreme Court."
- </p>
- <p>
- The election came. Mr. Buchanan was elected, and the indorsement, such as
- it was, secured. That was the second point gained. The indorsement,
- however, fell short of a clear popular majority by nearly four hundred
- thousand votes; and so, perhaps, was not overwhelmingly reliable and
- satisfactory. The outgoing President, in his last annual Message, as
- impressively as possible echoed back upon the people the weight and
- authority of the indorsement.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Supreme Court met again; did not announce their decision, but ordered
- a re-argument. The Presidential inauguration came, and still no decision
- of the court; but the incoming President, in his inaugural address,
- fervently exhorted the people to abide by the forthcoming decision,
- whatever it might he. Then, in a few days, came the decision.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was the third point gained.
- </p>
- <p>
- The reputed author of the Nebraska Bill finds an early occasion to make a
- speech at this Capitol indorsing the Dred-Scott Decision, and vehemently
- denouncing all opposition to it. The new President, too, seizes the early
- occasion of the Silliman letter to indorse and strongly construe that
- decision, and to express his astonishment that any different view had ever
- been entertained. At length a squabble springs up between the President
- and the author of the Nebraska Bill, on the mere question of fact whether
- the Lecompton Constitution was, or was not, in any just sense, made by the
- people of Kansas; and, in that squabble, the latter declares that all he
- wants is a fair vote for the people, and that he cares not whether slavery
- be voted down or voted up. I do not understand his declaration, that he
- cares not whether slavery be voted down or voted up, to be intended by him
- other than as an apt definition of the policy he would impress upon the
- public mind,&mdash;the principle for which he declares he has suffered
- much, and is ready to suffer to the end.
- </p>
- <p>
- And well may he cling to that principle! If he has any parental feeling,
- well may he cling to it! That principle is the only shred left of his
- original Nebraska doctrine. Under the Dred-Scott Decision, squatter
- sovereignty squatted out of existence,&mdash;tumbled down like temporary
- scaffolding; like the mould at the foundery, served through one blast, and
- fell back into loose sand; helped to carry an election, and then was
- kicked to the winds. His late joint struggle with the Republicans against
- the Lecompton Constitution involves nothing of the original Nebraska
- doctrine. That struggle was made on a point&mdash;the right of a people to
- make their own constitution&mdash;upon which he and the Republicans have
- never differed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The several points of the Dred-Scott Decision, in connection with Senator
- Douglas's "care-not" policy, constitute the piece of machinery in its
- present state of advancement. The working-points of that machinery are,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- First, That no negro slave, imported as such from Africa, and no
- descendant of such, can ever be a citizen of any State, in the sense of
- that term as used in the Constitution of the United States.
- </p>
- <p>
- This point is made in order to deprive the negro, in every possible event,
- of the benefit of this provision of the United States Constitution, which
- declares that "The citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the
- privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States.
- </p>
- <p>
- Secondly, That, "subject to the Constitution of the United States,"
- neither Congress nor a Territorial Legislature can exclude slavery from
- any United States Territory.
- </p>
- <p>
- This point is made in order that individual men may fill up the
- Territories with slaves, without danger of losing them as property, and
- thus to enhance the chances of permanency to the institution through all
- the future.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thirdly, That whether the holding a negro in actual slavery in a Free
- State makes him free, as against the holder, the United States courts will
- not decide, but will leave it to be decided by the courts of any Slave
- State the negro may be forced into by the master.
- </p>
- <p>
- This point is made, not to be pressed immediately; but if acquiesced in
- for a while, and apparently indorsed by the people at an election, then to
- sustain the logical conclusion, that, what Dred Scott's master might
- lawfully do with Dred Scott in the free State of Illinois, every other
- master may lawfully do with any other one or one thousand slaves in
- Illinois, or in any other Free State.
- </p>
- <p>
- Auxiliary to all this, and working hand in hand with it, the Nebraska
- doctrine, or what is left of it, is to educate and mould public opinion,
- at least Northern public opinion, not to care whether slavery is voted
- down or voted up.
- </p>
- <p>
- This shows exactly where we now are, and partially, also, whither we are
- tending.
- </p>
- <p>
- It will throw additional light on the latter to go back and run the mind
- over the string of historical facts already stated. Several things will
- now appear less dark and mysterious than they did when they were
- transpiring.
- </p>
- <p>
- The people were to be left "perfectly free," "subject only to the
- Constitution." What the Constitution had to do with it, outsiders could
- not then see. Plainly enough now, it was an exactly fitted niche for the
- Dred-Scott Decision afterward to come in, and declare that perfect freedom
- of the people to be just no freedom at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was the amendment expressly declaring the right of the people to
- exclude slavery voted down? Plainly enough now: the adoption of it would
- have spoiled the niche for the Dred-Scott Decision.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why was the court decision held up? Why even a senator's individual
- opinion withheld till after the Presidential election? Plainly enough now:
- the speaking out then would have damaged the "perfectly free" argument
- upon which the election was to be carried.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why the outgoing President's felicitation on the indorsement? Why the
- delay of a re-argument? Why the incoming President's advance exhortation
- in favor of the decision? These things look like the cautious patting and
- petting of a spirited horse preparatory to mounting him, when it is
- dreaded that he may give the rider a fall. And why the hasty
- after-indorsements of the decision by the President and others?
- </p>
- <p>
- We cannot absolutely know that all these exact adaptations are the result
- of preconcert. But when we see a lot of framed timbers, different portions
- of which we know have been gotten out at different times and places, and
- by different workmen,&mdash;Stephen, Franklin, Roger, and James, for
- instance,&mdash;and when we see these timbers joined together, and see
- they exactly make the frame of a house or a mill, all the tenons and
- mortises, exactly fitting, and all the lengths and proportions of the
- different pieces exactly adapted to their respective places, and not a
- piece too many or too few,&mdash;not omitting even scaffolding&mdash;or,
- if a single piece be lacking, we can see the place in the frame exactly
- fitted and prepared to yet bring such piece in,&mdash;in such a case, we
- find it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and
- James all understood one another from the beginning, and all worked upon a
- common plan or draft drawn up before the first blow was struck.
- </p>
- <p>
- It should not be overlooked, that, by the Nebraska Bill, the people of a
- State as well as Territory were to be left "perfectly free" "subject only
- to the Constitution." Why mention a State? They were legislating for
- Territories, and not for or about States. Certainly the people of a State
- are and ought to be subject to the Constitution of the United States; but
- why is mention of this lugged into this merely territorial law? Why are
- the people of a Territory and the people of a State therein lumped
- together, and their relation to the Constitution therein treated as being
- precisely the same?
- </p>
- <p>
- While the opinion of the court by Chief-Justice Taney, in the Dred-Scott
- case, and the separate opinions of all the concurring judges, expressly
- declare that the Constitution of the United States neither permits
- Congress nor a Territorial Legislature to exclude slavery from any United
- States
- </p>
- <p>
- Territory, they all omit to declare whether or not the same Constitution
- permits a State, or the people of a State, to exclude it. Possibly, this
- was a mere omission; but who can be quite sure, if McLean or Curtis had
- sought to get into the opinion a declaration of unlimited power in the
- people of a State to exclude slavery from their limits, just as Chase and
- Mace sought to get such declaration, in behalf of the people of a
- Territory, into the Nebraska Bill,&mdash;I ask, who can be quite sure that
- it would not have been voted down in the one case as it had been in the
- other?
- </p>
- <p>
- The nearest approach to the point of declaring the power of a State over
- slavery is made by Judge Nelson. He approaches it more than once, using
- the precise idea, and almost the language too, of the Nebraska Act. On one
- occasion his exact language is, "Except in cases where the power is
- restrained by the Constitution of the United States, the law of the State
- is supreme over the subject of slavery within its jurisdiction."
- </p>
- <p>
- In what cases the power of the State is so restrained by the United States
- Constitution is left an open question, precisely as the same question, as
- to the restraint on the power of the Territories, was left open in the
- Nebraska Act. Put that and that together, and we have another nice little
- niche, which we may ere long see filled with another Supreme Court
- decision, declaring that the Constitution of the United States does not
- permit a State to exclude slavery from its limits. And this may especially
- be expected if the doctrine of "care not whether slavery be voted down or
- voted up" shall gain upon the public mind sufficiently to give promise
- that such a decision can be maintained when made.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such a decision is all that slavery now lacks of being alike lawful in all
- the States. Welcome or unwelcome, such decision is probably coming, and
- will soon be upon us, unless the power of the present political dynasty
- shall be met and overthrown. We shall lie down pleasantly dreaming that
- the people of Missouri are on the verge of making their State free; and we
- shall awake to the reality, instead, that the Supreme Court has made
- Illinois a Slave State.
- </p>
- <p>
- To meet and overthrow the power of that dynasty is the work now before all
- those who would prevent that consummation. That is what we have to do. But
- how can we best do it?
- </p>
- <p>
- There are those who denounce us openly to their own friends, and yet
- whisper softly, that Senator Douglas is the aptest instrument there is
- with which to effect that object. They do not tell us, nor has he told us,
- that he wishes any such object to be effected. They wish us to infer all,
- from the facts that he now has a little quarrel with the present head of
- the dynasty; and that he has regularly voted with us, on a single point,
- upon which he and we have never differed.
- </p>
- <p>
- They remind us that he is a very great man, and that the largest of us are
- very small ones. Let this be granted. But "a <i>living dog</i> is better
- than a <i>dead lion</i>." Judge Douglas, if not a dead lion for this work,
- is at least a caged and toothless one. How can he oppose the advances of
- slavery? He don't care any thing about it. His avowed mission is
- impressing the "public heart" to care nothing about it.
- </p>
- <p>
- A leading Douglas Democrat newspaper thinks Douglas's superior talent will
- be needed to resist the revival of the African slave-trade. Does Douglas
- believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? He has not said so.
- Does he really think so? But, if it is, how can he resist it? For years he
- has labored to prove it a sacred right of white men to take negro slaves
- into the new Territories. Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred
- right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest? And unquestionably
- they can be bought cheaper in Africa than in Virginia.
- </p>
- <p>
- He has done all in his power to reduce the whole question of slavery to
- one of a mere right of property; and as such, how can he oppose the
- foreign slave-trade,&mdash;how can he refuse that trade in that "property"
- shall be "perfectly free,"&mdash;unless he does it as a protection to the
- home production? And, as the home producers will probably not ask the
- protection, he will be wholly without a ground of opposition.
- </p>
- <p>
- Senator Douglas holds, we know, that a man may rightfully be wiser to-day
- than he was yesterday; that he may rightfully change when he finds himself
- wrong. But can we for that reason run ahead, and infer that he will make
- any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation? Can we
- safely base our action upon any such vague inferences?
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, as ever, I wish not to misrepresent Judge Douglas's position,
- question his motives, or do aught that can be personally offensive to him.
- Whenever, if ever, he and we can come together on principle, so that our
- great cause may have assistance from his great ability, I hope to have
- interposed no adventitious obstacle.
- </p>
- <p>
- But clearly he, is not now with us; he does not pretend to be; he does not
- promise ever to be. Our cause, then, must be intrusted to, and conducted
- by, its own undoubted friends,&mdash;those whose hands are free, whose
- hearts are in the work, who do care for the result.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two years ago the Republicans of the nation mustered over thirteen hundred
- thousand strong. We did this under the single impulse of resistance to a
- common danger, with every external circumstance against us. Of strange,
- discordant, and even hostile elements, we gathered from the four winds,
- and formed and fought the battle through, under the constant hot fire of a
- disciplined, proud, and pampered enemy. Did we brave all then to falter
- now?&mdash;now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and
- belligerent?
- </p>
- <p>
- The result is not doubtful. We shall not fail,&mdash;if we stand firm, we
- shall not fail. Wise counsels may accelerate or mistakes delay it; but,
- sooner or later, the victory is sure to come.
- </p>
- <p>
- The speech produced a profound impression upon men of all parties: the
- Democrats rejoiced in it, and reprobated it; the conservative Republicans
- received it coldly, and saw in it the sign of certain defeat. In the eyes
- of the latter it was a disheartening mistake at the outset of a momentous
- campaign,&mdash;a fatal error, which no policy or exertion could retrieve.
- Alone of all those directly affected by it, the Abolitionists, the
- compatriots of Mr. Herndon, heard in it the voice of a fearless leader,
- who had the wisdom to comprehend an unwelcome fact, and the courage to
- proclaim it at the moment when the delusion of fancied security and peace
- was most generally and fondly entertained. It was the "irrepressible
- conflict" which Mr. Seward had been preaching, and to which the one party
- had given almost as little credit as the other. Except a few ultraists
- here and there, nobody as yet had actually prepared his armor for this
- imaginary conflict, to which the nation was so persistently summoned,&mdash;and,
- indeed, none but those few seriously believed in the possibility of its
- existence. The Republican party had heretofore disavowed the doctrine with
- a unanimity nearly as great as that exhibited by the little council of Mr.
- Lincoln's immediate friends. It was therefore to be expected, that, when a
- slow, cautious, moderate man like Mr. Lincoln came forward with it in this
- startling fashion, it would carry dismay to his followers, and a cheering
- assurance to his enemies. But Mr. Lincoln was looking farther than this
- campaign: he was quietly dreaming of the Presidency, and edging himself to
- a place in advance, where he thought the tide might take him up in 1860.
- He was sure that sectional animosities, far from subsiding, would grow
- deeper and stronger with time; and for that reason the next nominee of the
- exclusively Northern party must be a man of radical views. "I think," says
- Mr. Herndon, "the speech was intended to take the wind out of Seward's
- sails;" and Mr. Herndon is not alone in his opinion.
- </p>
- <p>
- A day or two after Mr. Lincoln spoke, one Dr. Long came into his office,
- and delivered to him a foretaste of the remarks he was doomed to hear for
- several months. "Well, Lincoln," said he, "that foolish speech of yours
- will kill you,&mdash;will defeat you in this contest, and probably for all
- offices for all time to come. I am sorry, sorry,&mdash;very sorry: I wish
- it was wiped out of existence. Don't you wish it, now?" Mr. Lincoln had
- been writing during the doctor's lament; but at the end of it he laid down
- his pen, raised his head, lifted his spectacles, and, with a look half
- quizzical, half contemptuous, replied, "Well, doctor, if I had to draw a
- pen across, and erase my whole life from existence, and I had one poor
- gift or choice left, as to what I should save from the wreck, I should
- choose that speech, and leave it to the world unerased."
- </p>
- <p>
- Leonard Swett, than whom there was no more gifted man, nor a better judge
- of political affairs, in Illinois, is convinced that "the first ten lines
- of that speech defeated him." "The sentiment of the 'house divided against
- itself' seemed wholly inappropriate," says Mr. Swett. "It was a speech
- made at the commencement of a campaign, and apparently made for the
- campaign. Viewing it in this light alone, nothing could have been more
- unfortunate or inappropriate. It was saying first the wrong thing; yet he
- saw that it was an abstract truth, and standing by the speech would
- ultimately find him in the right place. I was inclined at the time to
- believe these words were hastily and inconsiderately uttered; but
- subsequent facts have convinced me they were deliberate and had been
- matured.... In the summer of 1859, when he was dining with a party of his
- intimate friends at Bloomington, the subject of his Springfield speech was
- discussed. We all insisted that it was a great mistake; but he justified
- himself, and finally said, 'Well, gentlemen, you may think that speech was
- a mistake; but I never have believed it was, and you will see the day when
- you will consider it was the wisest thing I ever said.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- John T. Stuart was a family connection of the Todds and Edwardses, and
- thus also of Lincoln. Mr. C. C. Brown married Mr. Stuart's daughter, and
- speaks of Mr. Lincoln as "our relative." This gentleman says, "The
- Todd-Stuart-Edwards family, with preacher and priest, dogs and servants,
- got mad at Mr. Lincoln because he made 'The House-divided-against-itself
- Speech.' He flinched, dodged, said he would explain, and did explain, in
- the Douglas debates."
- </p>
- <p>
- But it was difficult to explain: explanations of the kind are generally
- more hurtful than the original offence. Accordingly, Mr. Herndon reports
- in his broad, blunt way, that "Mr. Lincoln met with many cold shoulders
- for some time,&mdash;nay, during the whole canvass with Douglas." At the
- great public meetings which characterized that campaign, "you could hear,
- from all quarters in the crowd, Republicans saying, 'Damn that fool
- speech! it will be the cause of the death of Lincoln and the Republican
- party. Such folly! such nonsense! Damn it!'"
- </p>
- <p>
- Since 1840 Lincoln and Douglas had appeared before the people, almost as
- regularly as the elections came round, to discuss, the one against the
- other, the merits of parties, candidates, and principles. Thus far Mr.
- Lincoln had been in a certain sense the pursuer: he had lain in wait for
- Mr. Douglas; he had caught him at unexpected turns and upon sharp points;
- he had mercilessly improved the advantage of Mr. Douglas's long record in
- Congress to pick apart and to criticise, while his own was so much more
- humble and less extensive. But now at last they were abreast, candidates
- for the same office, with a fair field and equal opportunities. It was the
- great crisis in the lives of both. Let us see what they thought of each
- other; and, in the extracts which convey the information, we may also get
- a better idea of the character of each for candor, generosity, and
- truthfulness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dr. Holland quotes from one of Mr. Lincoln's unpublished manuscripts as
- follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Twenty-two years ago, Judge Douglas and I first became acquainted: we
- were both young then,&mdash;he a trifle younger than I. Even then we were
- both ambitious,&mdash;I, perhaps, quite as much so as he. With me the race
- of ambition has been a failure,&mdash;a flat failure; with him it has been
- one of splendid success. His name fills the nation, and is not unknown
- even in foreign lands. I affect no contempt for the high eminence he has
- reached,&mdash;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."
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, in the pending campaign, Mr. Lincoln said, "There is still another
- disadvantage under which we labor, and to which I will invite your
- attention. It arises out of the relative positions of the two persons who
- stand before the State as candidates for the Senate. Senator Douglas is of
- worldwide renown. All the anxious politicians of his party, or who had
- been of his party for years past, have been looking upon him as certainly,
- at no distant day, to be the President of the United States. They have
- seen, in his round, jolly, fruitful face, post-offices, land-offices,
- marshalships, and cabinet appointments, chargéships and foreign missions,
- bursting and sprouting out in wonderful exuberance, ready to be laid hold
- of by their greedy hands. And as they have been gazing upon this
- attractive picture so long, they cannot, in the little distraction that
- has taken place in the party, bring themselves to give up the charming
- hope; but, with greedier anxiety, they rush about him, sustain him, and
- give him marches, triumphal entries, and receptions, beyond what, even in
- the days of his highest prosperity, they could have brought about in his
- favor. On the contrary, nobody has ever expected me to be President. In my
- poor, lean, lank face, nobody has ever seen that any cabbages were
- sprouting out. These are disadvantages, all taken together, that the
- Republicans labor under. We have to fight this battle upon principle, and
- principle alone."
- </p>
- <p>
- Now hear Mr. Douglas. In their first joint debate at Ottawa, he said, "In
- the remarks I have made on this platform, and the position of Mr. Lincoln
- upon it, I mean nothing personally disrespectful or unkind to that
- gentleman. I have known him for nearly twenty-five years. There were many
- points of sympathy between us when we first got acquainted. We were both
- comparatively boys, and both struggling with poverty in a strange land. I
- was a schoolteacher in the town of Winchester, and he a flourishing
- grocery-keeper in the town of Salem. He was more successful in his
- occupation than I was in mine, and hence more fortunate in this world's
- goods. Lincoln is one of those peculiar men who perform with admirable
- skill every thing which they undertake. I made as good a school-teacher as
- I could; and, when a cabinet-maker, I made a good bedstead and tables,
- although my old boss said I succeeded better with bureaus and secretaries
- than with any thing else; but I believe that Lincoln was always more
- successful in business than I, for his business enabled him to get into
- the Legislature. I met him there, however, and had a sympathy with him,
- because of the up-hill struggle we both had in life. He was then just as
- good at telling an anecdote as now. He could beat any of the boys
- wrestling, or running a foot-race, in pitching quoits, or tossing a
- copper; could ruin more liquor than all of the boys of the town together;
- and the dignity and impartiality with which he presided at a horse-race or
- fist-fight excited the admiration and won the praise of everybody that was
- present and participated. I sympathized with him because he was struggling
- with difficulties; and so was I. Mr. Lincoln served with me in the
- Legislature in 1836, when we both retired, and he subsided, or became
- submerged; and he was lost sight of as a public man for some years. In
- 1846, when Wilmot introduced his celebrated proviso, and the abolition
- tornado swept over the country, Lincoln again turned up as a member of
- Congress from the Sangamon district. I was then in the Senate of the
- United States, and was glad to welcome my old friend and companion. Whilst
- in Congress, he distinguished himself by his opposition to the Mexican
- War, taking the side of the common enemy against his own country; and,
- when he returned home, he found that the indignation of the people
- followed him everywhere, and he was again submerged, or obliged to retire
- into private life, forgotten by his former friends. He came up again in
- 1854, just in time to make this abolition or Black Republican platform, in
- company with Giddings, Lovejoy, Chase, and Fred. Douglas, for the
- Republican party to stand upon. Trumbull, too, was one of our own
- contemporaries."
- </p>
- <p>
- Previous pages of this book present fully enough for our present purpose
- the issues upon which this canvass was made to turn. The principal
- speeches, the joint debates, with five separate and independent speeches
- by Mr. Lincoln, and three by Mr. Douglas, have been collected and
- published under Mr. Lincoln's supervision in a neat and accessible volume.
- It is, therefore, unnecessary, and would be unjust, to reprint them here.
- They obtained at the time a more extensive circulation than such
- productions usually have, and exerted an influence which is very
- surprising to the calm reader of the present day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Douglas endeavored to prove, from Mr. Lincoln's Springfield speech,
- that he (Mr. Lincoln) was a self-declared Disunionist, in favor of
- reducing the institutions of all the States "to a dead uniformity," in
- favor of abolishing slavery everywhere,&mdash;an old-time abolitionist, a
- negropolist, an amalgamationist. This, with much vaunting of himself for
- his opposition to Lecompton, and a loud proclamation of "popular
- sovereignty," made the bulk of Mr. Douglas's speeches.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln denied these accusations; he had no "thought of bringing about
- civil war," nor yet uniformity of institutions: he would not interfere
- with slavery where it had a lawful existence, and was not in favor of
- negro equality or miscegenation. He did, however, believe that Congress
- had the right to exclude slavery from the Territories, and ought to
- exercise it. As to Mr. Douglas's doctrine of popular sovereignty, there
- could be no issue concerning it; for everybody agreed that the people of a
- Territory might, when they formed a State constitution, adopt or exclude
- slavery as they pleased. But that a Territorial Legislature possessed
- exclusive power, or any power at all, over the subject, even Mr Douglas
- could not assert, inasmuch as the Dred-Scott Decision was plain and
- explicit the other way; and Mr. Douglas boasted that decision as the rule
- of his political conduct, and sought to impose it upon all parties as a
- perfect definition of the rights and duties of government, local and
- general.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Ottawa, Mr. Douglas put to Mr. Lincoln a series of questions, which,
- upon their next meeting (at Freeport), Mr. Lincoln answered as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- I have supposed myself, since the organization of the Republican party at
- Bloomington, in May, 1856, bound as a party man by the platforms of the
- party, then and since. If, in any interrogatories which I shall answer, I
- go beyond the scope of what is within these platforms, it will be
- perceived that no one is responsible but myself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having said thus much, I will take up the judge's interrogatories as I
- find them printed in "The Chicago Times," and answer them <i>seriatim</i>.
- In order that there may be no mistake about it, I have copied the
- interrogatories in writing, and also my answers to them. The first one of
- these interrogatories is in these words:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Question 1.&mdash;"I desire to know whether Lincoln to-day stands, as he
- did in 1854, in favor of the unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave
- Law."
- </p>
- <p>
- Answer.&mdash;I do not now, nor ever did, stand in favor of the
- unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law.
- </p>
- <p>
- Q. 2.&mdash;"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to-day, as
- he did in 1854, against the admission of any more Slave States into the
- Union, even if the people want them."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I do not now, nor ever did, stand pledged against the admission
- of any more Slave States into the Union.
- </p>
- <p>
- Q. 3.&mdash;"I want to know whether he stands pledged against the
- admission of a new State into the Union with such a constitution as the
- people of that State may see fit to make."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I do not stand pledged against the admission of a new State into
- the Union, with such a constitution as the people of that State may see
- fit to make.
- </p>
- <p>
- Q. 4.&mdash;"I want to know whether he stands to-day pledged to the
- abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I do not stand to-day pledged to the abolition of slavery in the
- District of Columbia.
- </p>
- <p>
- Q. 5.&mdash;"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to the
- prohibition of the slave-trade between the different States."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I do not stand pledged to the prohibition of the slave-trade
- between the different States.
- </p>
- <p>
- Q. 6.&mdash;"I desire to know whether he stands pledged to prohibit
- slavery in all the Territories of the United States, north as well as
- south of the Missouri Compromise line."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I am impliedly, if not expressly, pledged to a belief in the
- right and duty of Congress to prohibit slavery in all the United States
- Territories. [Great applause.]
- </p>
- <p>
- Q 7.&mdash;"I desire him to answer whether he is opposed to the
- acquisition of any new territory unless slavery is first prohibited
- therein."
- </p>
- <p>
- A.&mdash;I am not generally opposed to honest acquisition of territory;
- and, in any given case, I would or would not oppose such acquisition,
- accordingly as I might think such acquisition would or would not agitate
- the slavery question among ourselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, my friends, it will be perceived, upon an examination of these
- questions and answers, that so far I have only answered that I was not
- pledged to this, that, or the other. The judge has not framed his
- interrogatories to ask me any thing more than this, and I have answered in
- strict accordance with the interrogatories, and have answered truly that I
- am not pledged at all upon any of the points to which I have answered. But
- I am not disposed to hang upon the exact form of his interrogatory. I am
- rather disposed to take up at least some of these questions, and state
- what I really think upon them.
- </p>
- <p>
- As to the first one, in regard to the Fugitive-Slave Law, I have never
- hesitated to say, and I do not now hesitate to say, that I think, under
- the Constitution of the United States, the people of the Southern States
- are entitled to a congressional slave law. Having said that, I have had
- nothing to say in regard to the existing Fugitive-Slave Law, further than
- that I think it should have been framed so as to be free from some of the
- objections that pertain to it, without lessening its efficiency. And
- inasmuch as we are not now in an agitation in regard to an alteration or
- modification of that law, I would not be the man to introduce it as a new
- subject of agitation upon the general question of slavery.
- </p>
- <p>
- In regard to the other question, of whether I am pledged to the admission
- of any more Slave States into the Union, I state to you very frankly, that
- I would be exceedingly sorry ever to be put in a position of having to
- pass upon that question. I should be exceedingly glad to know that there
- would never be another Slave State admitted into the Union; but I must
- add, that, if slavery shall be kept out of the Territories during the
- Territorial existence of any one given Territory, and then the people
- shall, having a fair chance and a clear field, when they come to adopt the
- constitution, do such an extraordinary thing as to adopt a slave
- constitution, uninfluenced by the actual presence of the institution among
- them, I see no alternative, if we own the country, but to admit them into
- the Union. [Applause.]
- </p>
- <p>
- The third interrogatory is answered by the answer to the second, it being,
- as I conceive, the same as the second.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fourth one is in regard to the abolition of slavery in the District of
- Columbia. In relation to that, I have my mind very distinctly made up. I
- should be exceedingly glad to see slavery abolished in the District of
- Columbia. I believe that Congress possesses the constitutional power to
- abolish it. Yet, as a member of Congress, I should not, with my present
- views, be in favor of endeavoring to abolish slavery in the District of
- Columbia, unless it would be upon these conditions: First, that the
- abolition should be gradual; Second, That it should be on a vote of the
- majority of qualified voters in the District; and Third, That compensation
- should be made to unwilling owners. With these three conditions, I confess
- I would be exceedingly glad to see Congress abolish slavery in the
- District of Columbia, and, in the language of Henry Clay, "sweep from our
- capital that foul blot upon our nation."
- </p>
- <p>
- In regard to the fifth interrogatory, I must say here, that as to the
- question of the abolition of the slave-trade between the different States,
- I can truly answer, as I have, that I am pledged to nothing about it. It
- is a subject to which I have not given that mature consideration that
- would make me feel authorized to state a position so as to hold myself
- entirely bound by it. In other words, that question has never been
- prominently enough before me to induce me to investigate whether we really
- have the constitutional power to do it. I could investigate it if I had
- sufficient time to bring myself to a conclusion upon that subject; but I
- have not done so, and I say so frankly to you here and to Judge Douglas. I
- must say, however, that, if I should be of opinion that Congress does
- possess the constitutional power to abolish slave-trading among the
- different States, I should still not be in favor of the exercise of that
- power unless upon some conservative principle as I conceive it, akin to
- what I have said in relation to the abolition of slavery in the District
- of Columbia.
- </p>
- <p>
- My answer as to whether I desire that slavery should be prohibited in all
- Territories of the United States is full and explicit within itself, and
- cannot be made clearer by any comments of mine. So I suppose, in regard to
- the question whether I am opposed to the acquisition of any more territory
- unless slavery is first prohibited therein, my answer is such that I could
- add nothing by way of illustration, or making myself better understood,
- than the answer which I have placed in writing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, in all this the Judge has me, and he has me on the record. I suppose
- he had flattered himself that I was really entertaining one set of
- opinions for one place, and another set for another place,&mdash;that I
- was afraid to say at one place what I uttered at another. What I am saying
- here I suppose I say to a vast audience as strongly tending to
- abolitionism as any audience in the State of Illinois; and I believe I am
- saying that which, if it would be offensive to any persons, and render
- them enemies to myself, would be offensive to persons in this audience.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Douglas had presented his interrogatories on the 21st of August, and
- Mr. Lincoln did not answer them until the 27th. They had no meetings
- between those days; and Mr. Lincoln had ample time to ponder his replies,
- and consult his friends. But he did more: he improved the opportunity to
- prepare a series of insidious questions, which he felt sure Mr. Douglas
- could not possibly answer without utterly ruining his political prospects.
- Mr. Lincoln struggled for a great prize, unsuspected by the common mind,
- but the thought of which was ever present to his own. Mr. Douglas was a
- standing candidate for the Presidency; but as yet Mr. Lincoln was a very
- quiet one, nursing hopes which his modesty prevented him from obtruding
- upon others. He was wise enough to keep the fact of their existence to
- himself, and in the mean time to dig pitfalls and lay obstructions in the
- way of his most formidable competitors. His present purpose was not only
- to defeat Mr. Douglas for the Senate, but to "kill him,"&mdash;to get him
- out of the way finally and forever. If he could make him evade the
- Dred-Scott Decision, and deny the right of a Southern man to take his
- negroes into a Territory, and keep them there while it was a Territory, he
- would thereby sever him from the body of the Democratic party, and leave
- him the leader of merely a little half-hearted antislavery faction. Under
- such circumstances, Mr. Douglas could never be the candidate of the party
- at large; but he might serve a very useful purpose by running on a
- separate ticket, and dividing the great majority of conservative votes,
- which would inevitably elect a single nominee.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln went to Chicago, and there intimated to some of his friends
- what he proposed to do. They attempted to dissuade him, because, as they
- insisted, if Mr. Douglas should answer that the Dred-Scott Decision might
- be evaded by the people of a Territory, and slavery prohibited in the face
- of it, the answer would draw to him the sympathies of the antislavery
- voters, and probably, of itself, defeat Mr. Lincoln. But, so long as Mr.
- Douglas held to the decision in good faith, he had no hope of more aid
- from that quarter than he had already received. It was therefore the part
- of wisdom to let him alone as to that point. Mr. Lincoln, on the contrary,
- looked forward to 1860, and was determined that the South should
- understand the antagonism between Mr. Douglas's latest conception of
- "squatter sovereignty," on the one hand, and the Dred-Scott Decision, the
- Nebraska Bill, and all previous platforms of the party, on the other. Mr.
- Douglas taught strange doctrines and false ones; and Mr. Lincoln thought
- the faithful, far and near, should know it. If Mr. Douglas was a
- schismatic, there ought to be a schism, of which the Republicans would
- reap the benefit; and therefore he insisted upon his questions. "That is
- no business of yours," said his friends. "Attend exclusively to your
- senatorial race, and let the slaveholder and Douglas fight out that
- question among themselves and for themselves. If you put the question to
- him, he will answer that the Dred-Scott Decision is simply an abstract
- rule, having no practical application."&mdash;"If he answers that way,
- he's a dead cock in the pit," responded Mr. Lincoln. "But that," said
- they, "is none of your business: you are concerned only about the
- senator-ship."&mdash;"No," continued Mr. Lincoln, "not alone <i>exactly</i>:
- I am killing larger game. The great battle of 1860 is worth a thousand of
- this senatorial race."
- </p>
- <p>
- He did accordingly propound the interrogatories as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- 1. If the people of Kansas shall, by means entirely unobjectionable in all
- other respects, adopt a State constitution, and ask admission into the
- Union under it, before they have the requisite number of inhabitants
- according to the English Bill,&mdash;some ninety-three thousand,&mdash;will
- you vote to admit them?
- </p>
- <p>
- 2. Can the people of a United States Territory, in any lawful way, against
- the wish of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery from its
- limits?
- </p>
- <p>
- 3. If the Supreme Court of the United States shall decide that States
- cannot exclude slavery from their limits, are you in favor of acquiescing
- in, adopting, and following such decision as a rule of political action?
- </p>
- <p>
- 4. Are you in favor of acquiring additional territory, in disregard of how
- such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?
- </p>
- <p>
- The first and fourth questions Mr. Douglas answered substantially in the
- affirmative. To the third he replied, that no judge would ever be guilty
- of the "moral treason" of making such a decision. But to the second&mdash;the
- main question, to which all the others were riders and make-weights&mdash;he
- answered as he was expected to answer. "It matters not," said he, "what
- way the Supreme Court may hereafter decide as to the abstract question
- whether slavery may or may not go into a Territory under the Constitution:
- the people have the lawful means to introduce it or exclude it, as they
- please, for the reason that slavery cannot exist a day or an hour
- anywhere, unless it is supported by local police regulations. Those police
- regulations can only be established by the local Legislature; and, if the
- people are opposed to slavery, they will elect representatives to that
- body who will, by unfriendly legislation, effectually prevent the
- introduction of it into their midst."
- </p>
- <p>
- The reply was more than enough for Mr. Lincoln's purpose. It cut Mr.
- Douglas off from his party, and put him in a state of perfect antagonism
- to it. He firmly denied the power of Congress to restrict slavery; and he
- admitted, that, under the Dred-Scott Decision, all Territories were open
- to its entrance. But he held, that, the moment the slaveholder passed the
- boundary of a Territory, he was at the mercy of the squatters, a dozen or
- two of whom might get together in a legislature, and rob him of the
- property which the Constitution, the Supreme Court, and Mr. Douglas
- himself said he had an indefeasible right to take there. Mr. Lincoln knew
- that the Southern people would feel infinitely safer in the hands of
- Congress than in the hands of the squatters. If they regarded the
- Republican mode of excluding slavery as a barefaced usurpation, they would
- consider Mr. Douglas's system of confiscation by "unfriendly legislation"
- mere plain stealing. The Republicans said to them, "We will regulate the
- whole subject by general laws, which you participate with us in passing;"
- but Mr. Douglas offered them, as sovereign judges and legislators, the
- territorial settlers themselves,&mdash;squatters they might be,&mdash;whom
- the aid societies rushed into the new Territories for the very purpose of
- keeping slavery away. The new doctrine was admirably calculated to alarm
- and incense the South; and, following so closely Mr. Douglas's conduct in
- the Lecompton affair, it was very natural that he should now be
- universally regarded by his late followers as a dangerous heretic and a
- faithless turncoat. The result justified Mr. Lincoln's anticipations. Mr.
- Douglas did not fully develop his new theory, nor personally promulgate it
- as the fixed tenet of his faction, until the next year, when he embodied
- it in the famous article contributed by him to "Harper's Magazine." But it
- did its work effectually; and, when parties began to marshal for the great
- struggle of 1860, Mr. Douglas was found to be, not precisely what he had
- promised,&mdash;a Republican, "fighting their battles,"&mdash;but an
- independent candidate, upon an independent platform, dividing the
- opposition.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln pointed out on the spot the wide difference between Mr.
- Douglas's present views and those he had previously maintained with such
- dogged and dogmatic persistence. "The new state of the case" had induced
- "the Judge to sheer away from his original ground." The new theory was
- false in law, and could have no practical application. The history of the
- country showed it to be a naked humbug, a demagogue's imposture. Slavery
- was established in all this country, without "local police regulations" to
- protect it. Dred Scott himself was held in a Territory, not only without
- "local police regulations" to favor his bondage, but in defiance of a
- general law which prohibited it. A man who believed that the Dred-Scott
- Decision was the true interpretation of the Constitution could not refuse
- to negro slavery whatever protection it needed in the Territories without
- incurring the guilt of perjury. To say that slave property might be
- constitutionally confiscated, destroyed, or driven away from a place where
- it was constitutionally protected, was such an absurdity as Mr. Douglas
- alone in this evil strait was equal to; the proposition meaning, as he
- said on a subsequent occasion, "no less than that a thing may lawfully be
- driven away from a place where it has a lawful right to be."
- </p>
- <p>
- "Of that answer at Freeport," as Mr. Herndon has it, Douglas "instantly
- died. The red-gleaming Southern tomahawk flashed high and keen. Douglas
- was removed out of Lincoln's way. The wind was taken out of Seward's sails
- (by the House-divided Speech), and Lincoln stood out prominent."
- </p>
- <p>
- The State election took place on the 2d of November, 1858. Mr. Lincoln had
- more than four thousand majority of the votes cast; but this was not
- enough to give him a majority in the Legislature. An old and inequitable
- apportionment law was still in operation; and a majority of the members
- chosen under it were, as it was intended by the law-makers they should be,
- Democrats. In the Senate were fourteen Democrats to eleven Republicans;
- and in the House, forty Democrats to thirty-five Republicans. Mr. Douglas
- was, of course, re-elected, and Mr. Lincoln bitterly disappointed. Some
- one asked Mr. Lincoln how he felt when the returns came in. He replied,
- "that he felt like the boy that stumped his toe,&mdash;'it hurt too bad to
- laugh, and he was too big to cry!'"
- </p>
- <p>
- In this canvass Mr. Lincoln earned a reputation as a popular debater
- second to that of no man in America,&mdash;certainly not second to that of
- his famous antagonist. He kept his temper; he was not prone to
- personalities; he indulged in few anecdotes, and those of a decent
- character; he was fair, frank, and manly; and, if the contest had shown
- nothing else, it would have shown, at least, that "Old Abe" could behave
- like a well-bred gentleman under very trying circumstances. His marked
- success in these discussions was probably no surprise to the people of the
- Springfield District, who knew him as well as, or better than, they did
- Mr. Douglas. But in the greater part of the State, and throughout the
- Union the series of brilliant victories successively won by an obscure man
- over an orator of such wide experience and renown was received with
- exclamations of astonishment, alike by listeners and readers. It is true
- that many believed, or pretended to believe, that he was privately tutored
- and "crammed" by politicians of greater note than himself; and, when the
- speeches were at last collected and printed together, it was alleged that
- Mr. Lincoln's had been re-written or extensively revised by Mr. Judd,
- Judge Logan, Judge Davis, or some one else of great and conceded
- abilities.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII
- </h2>
- <p>
- IN the winter of 1858-9, Mr. Lincoln, having no political business on
- hand, appeared before the public in the character of lecturer, having
- prepared himself with much care. His lecture was, or might have been,
- styled, "All Creation is a mine, and every man a miner." He began with
- Adam and Eve, and the invention of the "fig-leaf apron," of which he gave
- a humorous description, and which he said was a "joint operation." The
- invention of letters, writing, printing, of the application of steam, of
- electricity, he classed under the comprehensive head of "inventions and
- discoveries," along with the discovery of America, the enactment of
- patent-laws, and the "invention of negroes, or the present mode of using
- them." Part of the lecture was humorous; a very small part of it actually
- witty; and the rest of it so commonplace that it was a genuine
- mortification to his friends. He delivered it at two or three points, and
- then declined all further invitations. To one of these he replied, in
- March, as follows: "Your note, inviting me to deliver a lecture in
- Gales-burgh, is received. I regret to say I cannot do so now: I must stick
- to the courts a while. I read a sort of a lecture to three different
- audiences during the last month and this; but I did so under circumstances
- which made it a waste of no time whatever."
- </p>
- <p>
- From the Douglas discussion many of the leaders of the Republican party
- believed, and the reader will agree had some foundation for the belief,
- that Mr. Lincoln was one of the greatest and best men in the party. It was
- natural, therefore, that many eyes should be turned towards him for the
- coming Presidential nomination. He had all the requisites of an available
- candidate: he had not been sufficiently prominent in national politics to
- excite the jealousies of powerful rivals; he was true, manly, able; he was
- pre-eminently a man of the people; he had sprung from a low family in the
- lowest class of society; he had been a rail-splitter, a flat-boatman, a
- grocery-keeper,&mdash;every thing that could commend him to the "popular
- heart." His manners, his dress, his stories, and his popular name and
- style of "Honest Old Abe," pointed to him as a man beside whose "running
- qualities" those of Taylor and Harrison were of slight comparison. That he
- knew all this, and thought of it a great deal, no one can doubt; and in
- the late campaign he had most adroitly opened the way for the realization
- of his hopes. But he knew very well that a becoming modesty in a "new man"
- was about as needful as any thing else. Accordingly, when a Mr. Pickett
- wrote him on the subject in March, 1859, he replied as follows: "Yours of
- the 2d instant, inviting me to deliver my lecture on 'Inventions' in Rock
- Island, is at hand, and I regret to be unable from press of business to
- comply therewith. In regard to the other matter you speak of, I beg that
- you will not give it a further mention. I do not think I am fit for the
- Presidency."
- </p>
- <p>
- But in April the project began to be agitated in his own town. On the 27th
- of that month, he was in the office of "The Central Illinois Gazette,"
- when the editor suggested his name. Mr. Lincoln, "with characteristic
- modesty, declined." But the editor estimated his "No" at its proper value;
- and he "was brought out in the next issue, May 4." Thence the movement
- spread rapidly and strongly. Many Republicans welcomed it, and,
- appreciating the pre-eminent fitness of the nomination, saw in it the
- assurance of certain victory.
- </p>
- <p>
- The West was rapidly filling with Germans and other inhabitants of foreign
- birth. Dr. Canisius, a German, foreseeing Mr. Lincoln's strength in the
- near future, wrote to inquire what he thought about the restrictions upon
- naturalization recently adopted in Massachusetts, and whether he favored
- the fusion of all the opposition elements in the next canvass. He replied,
- that, as to the restrictions, he was wholly and unalterably opposed to
- them; and as to fusion, he was ready for it upon "Republican grounds," but
- upon no other. He would not lower "the Republican standard even by a
- hair's breadth." The letter undoubtedly had a good effect, and brought him
- valuable support from the foreign population.
- </p>
- <p>
- To a gentleman who desired his views about the tariff question, he replied
- cautiously and discreetly as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Dr. Edward Wallace.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear Sir,&mdash;I am here just now attending court. Yesterday, before I
- left Springfield, your brother, Dr. William S. Wallace, showed me a letter
- of yours, in which you kindly mention my name, inquire for my
- tariff-views, and suggest the propriety of my writing a letter upon the
- subject. I was an old Henry-Clay Tariff Whig. In old times I made more
- speeches on that subject than on any other.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have not since changed my views. I believe yet, if we could have a
- moderate, carefully adjusted, protective tariff, so far acquiesced in as
- not to be a perpetual subject of political strife, squabbles, changes, and
- uncertain, ties, it would be better for us. Still, it is my opinion, that,
- just now, the revival of that question will not <i>advance the cause
- itself, or the man who revives it.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- I have not thought much on the subject recently; but my general impression
- is, that the necessity for a protective tariff will ere long force its old
- opponents to take it up; and then its old friends can join in and
- establish it on a more firm and durable basis. We, the old Whigs, have
- been entirely beaten out on the tariff question; and we shall not be able
- to re-establish the policy until the absence of it shall have demonstrated
- the necessity for it in the minds of men heretofore opposed to it. With
- this view, I should prefer to not now write a public letter upon the
- subject.
- </p>
- <p>
- I therefore wish this to be considered confidential.
- </p>
- <p>
- I shall be very glad to receive a letter from you.
- </p>
- <p>
- In September Mr. Lincoln made a few masterly speeches in Ohio, where Mr.
- Douglas had preceded him on his new hobby of "squatter sovereignty," or
- "unfriendly legislation."
- </p>
- <p>
- Clinton, Oct. 11,1859.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- He spoke at Columbus, Cincinnati, and several other points, each time
- devoting the greater part of his address to Mr. Douglas and his theories,
- as if the habit of combating that illustrious chieftain was hard to break.
- </p>
- <p>
- In December he went to Kansas, speaking at Elwood, Don-aphan, Troy,
- Atchison, and twice at Leavenworth. Wherever he went, he was met by vast
- assemblages of people. His speeches were principally repetitions of those
- previously made in Illinois; but they were very fresh and captivating to
- his new audiences. These journeys, which turned out to be continuous
- ovations, spread his name and fame far beyond the limits to which they had
- heretofore been restricted.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the winter of 1859-60, he saw that his reputation had reached such
- a height, that he might honorably compete with such renowned men as
- Seward, Chase, and Bates, for the Presidential nomination. Mr. Jackson
- Grimshaw of Quincy urged him very strongly on the point. At length Mr.
- Lincoln consented to a conference with Grimshaw and some of his more
- prominent friends. It took place in a committee-room in the State House.
- Mr. Bushnell, Mr. Hatch (the Secretary of State), Mr. Judd (Chairman of
- the Republican State Central Committee), Mr. Peck, and Mr. Grimshaw were
- present,&mdash;all of them "intimate friends." They were unanimous in
- opinion as to the expediency and propriety of making him a candidate. But
- "Mr. Lincoln, with his characteristic modesty, doubted whether he could
- get the nomination, even if he wished it, and asked until the next morning
- to answer us.... The next day he authorized us to consider him, and work
- for him, if we pleased, as a candidate for the Presidency."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was in October, 1859, that Mr. Lincoln received an invitation to speak
- in New York. It enchanted him: no event of his life had given him more
- heartfelt pleasure. He went straight to his office, and, Mr. Herndon says,
- "looked pleased, not to say <i>tickled</i>. He said to me, 'Billy, I am
- invited to deliver a lecture in New York. Shall I go?'&mdash;'By all
- means,' I replied; 'and it is a good opening too.'&mdash;'If you were in
- my fix, what subject would you choose?' said Lincoln. 'Why, a political
- one: that's your forte,' I answered." Mr. Herndon remembered his partner's
- previous "failure,&mdash;utter failure," as a lecturer, and, on this
- occasion, dreaded excessively his choice of a subject. "In the absence of
- a friend's advice, Lincoln would as soon take the Beautiful for a subject
- as any thing else, when he had absolutely no sense of it." He wrote in
- response to the invitation, that he would avail himself of it the coming
- February, provided he might be permitted to make a political speech, in
- case he found it inconvenient to get up one of another kind. He had
- purposely set the day far ahead, that he might thoroughly prepare himself;
- and it may safely be said, that no effort of his life cost him so much
- labor as this one. Some of the party managers who were afterwards put to
- work to verify its statements, and get it out as a campaign document, are
- alleged to have been three weeks in finding the historical records
- consulted by him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 25th of February, 1860, he arrived in New York. It was Saturday,
- and he spent the whole day in revising and retouching his speech. The next
- day he heard Beecher preach, and on Monday wandered about the city to see
- the sights. When the committee under whose auspices he was to speak waited
- upon him, they found him dressed in a sleek and shining suit of new black,
- covered with very apparent creases and wrinkles, acquired by being packed
- too closely and too long in his little valise. He felt uneasy in his new
- clothes and a strange place. His confusion was increased when the
- reporters called to get the printed slips of his speech in advance of its
- delivery. Mr. Lincoln knew nothing of such a custom among the orators, and
- had no slips. He was, in fact, not quite sure that the press would desire
- to publish his speech. When he reached the Cooper Institute, and was
- ushered into the vast hall, he was surprised to see the most cultivated
- men of the city awaiting him on the stand, and an immense audience
- assembled to hear him. Mr. Bryant introduced him as "an eminent citizen of
- the West, hitherto known to you only by reputation." Mr. Lincoln then
- began, in low, monotonous tones, which gradually became louder and
- clearer, the following speech:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. President and Fellow-Citizens of New York,&mdash;The facts with which
- I shall deal this evening are mainly old and familiar; nor is there any
- thing new in the general use I shall make of them. If there shall be any
- novelty, it will be in the mode of presenting the facts, and the
- inferences and observations following that presentation.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his speech last autumn, at Columbus, Ohio, as reported in "The New-York
- Times," Senator Douglas said,&mdash;"Our fathers, when they framed the
- government under which we live, understood this question just as well, and
- even better than we do now."
- </p>
- <p>
- I fully indorse this, and I adopt it as a text for this discourse. I so
- adopt it, because it furnishes a precise and agreed starting-point for the
- discussion between Republicans and that wing of Democracy headed by
- Senator Douglas. It simply leaves the inquiry, "What was the understanding
- those fathers had of the questions mentioned?"
- </p>
- <p>
- What is the frame of government under which we live?
- </p>
- <p>
- The answer must be, "The Constitution of the United States." That
- Constitution consists of the original, framed in 1787 (and under which the
- present Government first went into operation), and twelve subsequently
- framed amendments, the first ten of which were framed in 1789.
- </p>
- <p>
- Who were our fathers that framed the Constitution? I suppose the
- "thirty-nine" who signed the original instrument may be fairly called our
- fathers who framed that part of the present Government. It is almost
- exactly true to say they framed it; and it is altogether true to say they
- fairly represented the opinion and sentiment of the whole nation at that
- time. Their names, being familiar to nearly all, and accessible to quite
- all, need not now be repeated.
- </p>
- <p>
- I take these "thirty-nine," for the present, as being "our fathers, who
- framed the Government under which we live."
- </p>
- <p>
- What is the question which, according to the text, those fathers
- understood just as well, and even better than we do now?
- </p>
- <p>
- It is this: Does the proper division of local from Federal authority, or
- any thing in the Constitution, forbid our Federal Government control as to
- slavery in our Federal Territories?
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon this, Douglas holds the affirmative, and Republicans the negative.
- This affirmative and denial form an issue; and this issue, this question,
- is precisely what the text declares our fathers understood better than we.
- </p>
- <p>
- Let us now inquire whether the "thirty-nine," or any of them, ever acted
- upon this question; and, if they did, how they acted upon it,&mdash;how
- they expressed that better understanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1784,&mdash;three years before the Constitution,&mdash;the United
- States then owning the North-western Territory, and no other, the Congress
- of the Confederation had before them the question of prohibiting slavery
- in that Territory; and four of the "thirty-nine" who afterward framed the
- Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on that question. Of these,
- Roger Sherman, Thomas Mifflin, and Hugh Williamson voted for the
- prohibition; thus showing, that, in their understanding, no line dividing
- local from Federal authority, nor any thing else, properly forbade the
- Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal territory. The
- other of the four, James McHenry, voted against the prohibition, showing
- that, for some cause, he thought it improper to vote for it.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1787&mdash;still before the Constitution, but while the Convention was
- in session framing it, and while the North-western Territory still was the
- only Territory owned by the United States&mdash;the same question of
- prohibiting slavery in the Territory again came before the Congress of the
- Confederation; and three more of the "thirty-nine" who afterward signed
- the Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on the question. They
- were William Blount, William Few, and Abraham Baldwin; and they all voted
- for the prohibition, thus showing that, in their understanding, no line
- dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing else, properly
- forbids the Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal
- territory. This time the prohibition became a law, being part of what is
- now well known as the Ordinance of '87.
- </p>
- <p>
- The question of Federal control of slavery in the Territories seems not to
- have been directly before the convention which framed the original
- Constitution; and hence it is not recorded that the "thirty-nine," or any
- of them, while engaged on that instrument, expressed any opinion on that
- precise question.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1789, by the First Congress which sat under the Constitution, an act
- was passed to enforce the Ordinance of '87, including the prohibition of
- slavery in the North-western Territory. The bill for this act was reported
- by one of the "thirty-nine,"&mdash;Thomas Fitzsimmons, then a member of
- the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. It went through all its
- stages without a word of opposition, and finally passed both branches
- without yeas and nays, which is equivalent to a unanimous passage. In this
- Congress there were sixteen of the "thirty-nine" fathers who framed the
- original Constitution. They were John Langdon, Nicholas Gilman, William S.
- Johnson, Roger Sherman, Robert Morris, Thomas Fitzsimmons, William Few,
- Abraham Baldwin, Rufus King, William Patterson, George Clymer, Richard
- Bassett, George Read, Pierce Butler, Daniel Carrol, James Madison.
- </p>
- <p>
- This shows that, in their understanding, no line dividing local from
- Federal authority, nor any thing in the Constitution, properly forbade
- Congress to prohibit slavery in the Federal territory; else both their
- fidelity to correct principle, and their oath to support the Constitution,
- would have constrained them to oppose the prohibition.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, George Washington, another of the "thirty-nine," was then President
- of the United States, and, as such, approved and signed the bill, thus
- completing its validity as a law, and thus showing, that, in his
- understanding, no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor any
- thing in the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control as to
- slavery in Federal territory.
- </p>
- <p>
- No great while after the adoption of the original Constitution, North
- Carolina ceded to the Federal Government the country now constituting the
- State of Tennessee; and a few years later Georgia ceded that which now
- constitutes the States of Mississippi and Alabama. In both deeds of
- cession it was made a condition by the ceding States that the Federal
- Government should not prohibit slavery in the ceded country. Besides this,
- slavery was then actually in the ceded country. Under these circumstances,
- Congress, on taking charge of these countries, did not absolutely prohibit
- slavery within them. But they did interfere with it, take control of it,
- even there, to a certain extent. In 1798, Congress organized the Territory
- of Mississippi. In the act of organization they prohibited the bringing of
- slaves into the Territory, from any place without the United States, by
- fine, and giving freedom to slaves so brought. This act passed both
- branches of Congress without yeas and nays. In that Congress were three of
- the "thirty-nine" who framed the original Constitution: they were John
- Langdon, George Read, and Abraham Baldwin. They all, probably, voted for
- it. Certainly they would have placed their opposition to it upon record,
- if, in their understanding, any line dividing local from Federal
- authority, or any thing in the Constitution, properly forbade the Federal
- Government to control as to slavery in Federal territory.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1803 the Federal Government purchased the Louisiana country. Our former
- territorial acquisitions came from certain of our own States; but this
- Louisiana country was acquired from a foreign nation. In 1804 Congress
- gave a territorial organization to that part of it which now constitutes
- the State of Louisiana. New Orleans, lying within that part, was an old
- and comparatively large city. There were other considerable towns and
- settlements, and slavery was extensively and thoroughly intermingled with
- the people. Congress did not, in the Territorial Act, prohibit slavery;
- but they did interfere with it, take control of it, in a more marked and
- extensive way than they did in the case of Mississippi. The substance of
- the provision therein made, in relation to slaves, was,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- First, That no slave should be imported into the Territory from foreign
- parts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Second, That no slave should be carried into it who had been imported into
- the United States since the first day of May, 1798.
- </p>
- <p>
- Third, That no slave should be carried into it, except by the owner, and
- for his own use as a settler; the penalty in all the cases being a fine
- upon the violator of the law, and freedom to the slave.
- </p>
- <p>
- This act also was passed without yeas and nays. In the Congress which
- passed it there were two of the "thirty-nine:" they were Abraham Baldwin
- and Jonathan Dayton. As stated in the case of Mississippi, it is probable
- they both voted for it. They would not have allowed it to pass without
- recording their opposition to it, if, in their understanding, it violated
- either the line proper dividing local from Federal authority or any
- provision of the Constitution.
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1819-20 came and passed the Missouri question. Many votes were taken by
- yeas and nays, in both branches of Congress, upon the various phases of
- the general question. Two of the "thirty-nine"&mdash;Rufus King and
- Charles Pinckney&mdash;were members of that Congress. Mr. King steadily
- voted for slavery prohibition and against all compromises; while Mr.
- Pinckney as steadily voted against slavery prohibition and against all
- compromises. By this Mr. King showed, that, in his understanding, no line
- dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing in the Constitution,
- was violated by Congress prohibiting slavery in Federal territory; while
- Mr. Pinckney, by his votes, showed, that, in his understanding, there was
- some sufficient reason for opposing such prohibition in that case.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cases I have mentioned are the only acts of the "thirty-nine," or of
- any of them, upon the direct issue, which I have been able to discover.
- </p>
- <p>
- To enumerate the persons who thus acted as being four in 1784, three in
- 1787, seventeen in 1789, three in 1798, two in 1804, and two in 1819-20,&mdash;there
- would be thirty-one of them. But this would be counting John Lang-don,
- Roger Sherman, William Few, Rufus King, and George Read each twice, and
- Abraham Baldwin four times. The true number of those of the "thirty-nine"
- whom I have shown to have acted upon the question, which, by the text,
- they understood better than we, is twenty-three, leaving sixteen not shown
- to have acted upon it in any way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, then, we have twenty-three out of our "thirty-nine" fathers, who
- framed the government under which we live, who have, upon their official
- responsibility and their corporal oaths, acted upon the very question
- which the text affirms they "understood just as well, and even better than
- we do now;" and twenty-one of them&mdash;a clear majority of the
- "thirty-nine"&mdash;so acting upon it as to make them guilty of gross
- political impropriety and wilful perjury if, in their understanding, any
- proper division between local and Federal authority, or any thing in the
- Constitution they had made themselves, and sworn to support, forbade the
- Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories.
- Thus the twenty-one acted; and, as actions speak louder than words, so
- actions under such responsibility speak still louder.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two of the twenty-three voted against congressional prohibition of slavery
- in the Federal Territories in the instances in which they acted upon the
- question; but for what reasons they so voted is not known. They may have
- done so because they thought a proper division of local from Federal
- authority, or some provision or principle of the Constitution, stood in
- the way; or they may, without any such question, have voted against the
- prohibition, on what appeared to them to be sufficient grounds of
- expediency. No one who has sworn to support the Constitution can
- conscientiously vote for what he understands to be an unconstitutional
- measure, however expedient he may think it; but one may and ought to vote
- against a measure which he deems constitutional if, at the same time, he
- deems it inexpedient. It, therefore, would be unsafe to set down even the
- two who voted against the prohibition as having done so because, in their
- understanding, any proper division of local from Federal authority, or any
- thing in the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control as to
- slavery in Federal territory.
- </p>
- <p>
- The remaining sixteen of the "thirty-nine," so far as I have discovered,
- have left no record of their understanding upon the direct question of
- Federal control of slavery in the Federal Territories. But there is much
- reason to believe that their understanding upon that question would not
- have appeared different from that of their twenty-three compeers, had it
- been manifested at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- For the purpose of adhering rigidly to the text, I have purposely omitted
- whatever understanding may have been manifested by any person, however
- distinguished, other than the "thirty-nine" fathers who framed the
- original Constitution; and, for the same reason, I have also omitted
- whatever understanding may have been manifested by any of the
- "thirty-nine" even, on any other phase of the general question of slavery.
- If we should look into their acts and declarations on those other phases,
- as the foreign slave-trade, and the morality and policy of slavery
- generally, it would appear to us, that, on the direct question of Federal
- control of slavery in Federal Territories, the sixteen, if they had acted
- at all, would probably have acted just as the twenty-three did. Among that
- sixteen were several of the most noted antislavery men of those times,&mdash;as
- Dr. Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, and Gouverneur Morris; while there was
- not one now known to have been otherwise, unless it may be John Rutledge
- of South Carolina.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sum of the whole is, that of our "thirty-nine" fathers who framed the
- original Constitution, twenty-one&mdash;a clear majority of the whole&mdash;certainly
- understood that no proper division of local from Federal authority, nor
- any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control
- slavery in the Federal Territories; while all the rest probably had the
- same understanding. Such, unquestionably, was the understanding of our
- fathers who framed the original Constitution; and the text affirms that
- they understood the question better than we.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, so far, I have been considering the understanding of the question
- manifested by the framers of the original Constitution. In and by the
- original instrument, a mode was provided for amending it; and, as I have
- already stated, the present frame of government under which we live
- consists of that original, and twelve amendatory articles framed and
- adopted since. Those who now insist that Federal control of slavery in
- Federal Territories violates the Constitution point us to the provisions
- which they suppose it thus violates; and, as I understand, they all fix
- upon provisions in these amendatory articles, and not in the original
- instrument. The Supreme Court, in the Dred-Scott case, plant themselves
- upon the fifth amendment, which provides that "no person shall be deprived
- of property without due process of law;" while Senator Douglas and his
- peculiar adherents plant themselves upon the tenth amendment, providing
- that "the powers not granted by the Constitution are reserved to the
- States respectively and to the people."
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, it so happens that these amendments were framed by the first Congress
- which sat under the Constitution,&mdash;the identical Congress which
- passed the act already mentioned, enforcing the prohibition of slavery in
- the North-western Territory. Not only was it the same Congress, but they
- were the identical, same individual men, who, at the same time within the
- session, had under consideration, and in progress toward maturity, these
- constitutional amendments, and this act prohibiting slavery in all the
- territory the nation then owned. The constitutional amendments were
- introduced before, and passed after, the act enforcing the Ordinance of
- '87; so that, during the whole pendency of the act to enforce the
- Ordinance, the constitutional amendments were also pending.
- </p>
- <p>
- That Congress, consisting in all of seventy-six members, including sixteen
- of the framers of the original Constitution, as before stated, were
- preeminently our fathers who framed that part of the government under
- which we live, which is now claimed as forbidding the Federal Government
- to control slavery in the Federal Territories.
- </p>
- <p>
- Is it not a little presumptuous in any one at this day to affirm that the
- two things which that Congress deliberately framed, and earned to maturity
- at the same time, are absolutely inconsistent with each other? And does
- not such affirmation become impudently absurd when coupled with the other
- affirmation, from the same mouth, that those who did the two things
- alleged to be inconsistent understood whether they were really
- inconsistent better than we,&mdash;better than he who affirms that they
- are inconsistent?
- </p>
- <p>
- It is surely safe to assume that the "thirty-nine" framers of the original
- Constitution, and the seventy-six members of the Congress which framed the
- amendments thereto, taken together, do certainly include those who may be
- fairly called "our fathers who framed the government under which we live."
- And so assuming, I defy any man to show that any one of them ever, in his
- whole life, declared, that, in his understanding, any proper division of
- local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitution, forbade the
- Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories. I
- go a step farther. I defy any one to show that any living man in the whole
- world ever did, prior to the beginning of the present century (and I might
- almost say prior to the beginning of the last half of the present
- century), declare, that, in his understanding, any proper division of
- local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitution, forbade the
- Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories. To
- those who now so declare, I give, not only "our fathers, who framed the
- government under which we live," but with them all other living men within
- the century in which it was framed, among whom to search, and they shall
- not be able to find the evidence of a single man agreeing with them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now, and here, let me guard a little against being misunderstood. I do not
- mean to say we are bound to follow implicitly in whatever our fathers did.
- To do so would be to discard all the lights of current experience,&mdash;to
- reject all progress,&mdash;all improvement. What I do say is, that, if we
- would supplant the opinions and policy of our fathers in any case, we
- should do so upon evidence so conclusive, and argument so clear, that even
- their great authority, fairly considered and weighed, cannot stand; and
- most surely not in a case whereof we ourselves declare they understood the
- question better than we.
- </p>
- <p>
- If any man, at this day, sincerely believes that a proper division of
- local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitution, forbids the
- Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories, he
- is right to say so, and to enforce his position by all truthful evidence
- and fair argument which he can. But he has no right to mislead others, who
- have less access to history and less leisure to study it, into the false
- belief that "our fathers, who framed the government under which we live,"
- were of the same opinion, thus substituting falsehood and deception for
- truthful evidence and fair argument. If any man at this day sincerely
- believes "our fathers, who framed the government under which we live,"
- used and applied principles, in other cases, which ought to have led them
- to understand that a proper division of local from Federal authority, or
- some part of the Constitution, forbids the Federal Government to control
- as to slavery in the Federal Territories, he is right to say so. But he
- should, at the same time, brave the responsibility of declaring, that, in
- his opinion, he understands their principles better than they did
- themselves; and especially should he not shirk that responsibility by
- asserting that they "understood the question just as well, and even better
- than we do now."
- </p>
- <p>
- But enough. Let all who believe that "our fathers, who framed the
- government under which we live, understood this question just as well, and
- even better than we do now," speak as they spoke, and act as they acted
- upon it. This is all Republicans ask, all Republicans desire, in relation
- to slavery. As those fathers marked it, so let it be again marked, as an
- evil not to be extended, but to be tolerated and protected only because of
- and so far as its actual presence among us makes that toleration and
- protection a necessity. Let all the guaranties those fathers gave it be,
- not grudgingly, but fully and fairly maintained. For this Republicans
- contend, and with this, so far as I know or believe, they will be content.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, if they would listen,&mdash;as I suppose they will not,&mdash;I
- would address a few words to the Southern people.
- </p>
- <p>
- I would say to them, You consider yourselves a reasonable and a just
- people; and I consider, that, in the general qualities of reason and
- justice, you are not inferior to any other people. Still, when you speak
- of us Republicans, you do so only to denounce us as reptiles, or, at the
- best, as no better than outlaws. You will grant a hearing to pirates or
- murderers, but nothing like it to "Black Republicans." In all your
- contentions with one another, each of you deems an unconditional
- condemnation of "Black Republicanism" as the first thing to be attended
- to. Indeed, such condemnation of us seems to be an indispensable
- prerequisite&mdash;license, so to speak&mdash;among you to be admitted or
- permitted to speak at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now can you, or not, be prevailed upon to pause and to consider whether
- this is quite just to us, or even to yourselves?
- </p>
- <p>
- Bring forward your charges and specifications, and then be patient long
- enough to hear us deny or justify.
- </p>
- <p>
- You say we are sectional. We deny it. That makes an issue; and the burden
- of proof is upon you. You produce your proof; and what is it? Why, that
- our party has no existence in your section,&mdash;gets no votes in your
- section. The fact is substantially true; but does it prove the issue? If
- it does, then in case we should, without change of principle, begin to get
- votes in your section, we should thereby cease to be sectional. You cannot
- escape this conclusion; and yet are you willing to abide by it? If you
- are, you will probably soon find that we have ceased to be sectional, for
- we shall get votes in your section this very year. You will then begin to
- discover, as the truth plainly is, that your proof does not touch the
- issue. The fact that we get no votes in your section is a fact of your
- making, and not of ours. And if there be fault in that fact, that fault is
- primarily yours, and remains so until you show that we repel you by some
- wrong principle or practice. If we do repel you by any wrong principle or
- practice, the fault is ours; but this brings us to where you ought to have
- started,&mdash;to a discussion of the right or wrong of our principle. If
- our principle, put in practice, would wrong your section for the benefit
- of ours, or for any other object, then our principle, and we with it, are
- sectional, and are justly opposed and denounced as such. Meet us, then, on
- the question of whether our principle, put in practice, would wrong your
- section; and so meet it as if it were possible that something may be said
- on our side. Do you accept the challenge? No? Then you really believe that
- the principle which our fathers, who framed the government under which we
- live, thought so clearly right as to adopt it, and indorse it again and
- again upon their official oaths, is, in fact, so clearly wrong as to
- demand your condemnation without a moment's consideration.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of you delight to flaunt in our faces the warning against sectional
- parties given by Washington in his Farewell Address. Less than eight years
- before Washington gave that warning, he had, as President of the United
- States, approved and signed an act of Congress enforcing the prohibition
- of slavery in the North-western Territory, which act embodied the policy
- of the Government upon that subject up to and at the very moment he penned
- that warning; and about one year after he penned it he wrote Lafayette
- that he considered that prohibition a wise measure, expressing, in the
- same connection, his hope that we should some time have a confederacy of
- Free States.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bearing this in mind, and seeing that sectionalism has since arisen upon
- this same subject, is that warning a weapon in your hands against us, or
- in our hands against you? Could Washington himself speak, would he cast
- the blame of that sectionalism upon us, who sustain his policy, or upon
- you, who repudiate it? We respect that warning of Washington; and we
- commend it to you, together with his example pointing to the right
- application of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- But you say you are conservative,&mdash;eminently conservative; while we
- are revolutionary, destructive, or something of the sort. What is
- conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried against the new and
- untried? We stick to, contend for, the identical old-policy on the point
- in controversy which was adopted by our fathers who framed the government
- under which we live; while you, with one accord, reject and scout and spit
- upon that old policy, and insist upon substituting something new. True,
- you disagree among yourselves as to what that substitute shall be. You
- have considerable variety of new propositions and plans; but you are
- unanimous in rejecting and denouncing the old policy of the fathers. Some
- of you are for reviving the foreign slave-trade; some for a Congressional
- Slave-code for the Territories; some for Congress forbidding the
- Territories to prohibit slavery within their limits; some for maintaining
- slavery in the Territories through the judiciary; some for the "gur-reat
- pur-rinciple" that, "if one man would enslave another, no third man should
- object," fantastically called "popular sovereignty;" but never a man among
- you in favor of Federal prohibition of slavery in Federal Territories,
- according to the practice of our fathers, who framed the government under
- which we live. Not one of all your various plans can show a precedent or
- an advocate in the century within which our Government originated.
- Consider, then, whether your claim of conservatism for yourselves, and
- your charge of destructiveness against us, are based on the most clear and
- stable foundations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, you say we have made the slavery question more prominent than it
- formerly was. We deny it. We admit that it is more prominent, but we deny
- that we made it so. It was not we, but you, who discarded the old policy
- of the fathers. We resisted, and still resist, your innovation; and thence
- comes the greater prominence of the question. Would you have that question
- reduced to its former proportions? Go back to that old policy. What has
- been will be again, under the same conditions. If you would have the peace
- of the old times, re-adopt the precepts and policy of the old times.
- </p>
- <p>
- You charge that we stir up insurrections among your slaves. We deny it.
- And what is your proof? Harper's Ferry! John Brown! John Brown was no
- Republican; and you have failed to implicate a single Republican in his
- Harper's Ferry enterprise. If any member of our party is guilty in that
- matter, you know it, or you do not know it. If you do know it, you are
- inexcusable to not designate the man, and prove the fact. If you do not
- know it, you are inexcusable to assert it, and especially to persist in
- the assertion after you have tried and failed to make the proof. You need
- not be told that persisting in a charge which one does not know to be true
- is simply malicious slander.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of you admit that no Republican designedly aided or encouraged the
- Harper's-Ferry affair, but still insist that our doctrines and
- declarations necessarily lead to such results. We do not believe it. We
- know we hold to no doctrine, and make no declarations, which were not held
- to and made by our fathers, who framed the government under which we live.
- You never deal fairly by us in relation to this affair. When it occurred,
- some important State elections were near at hand; and you were in evident
- glee with the belief, that, by charging the blame upon us, you could get
- an advantage of us in those elections. The elections came; and your
- expectations were not quite fulfilled. Every Republican man knew, that, as
- to himself at least, your charge was a slander, and he was not much
- inclined by it to cast his vote in your favor. Republican doctrines and
- declarations are accompanied with a continual protest against any
- interference whatever with your slaves, or with you about your slaves.
- Surely this does not encourage them to revolt. True, we do, in common with
- our fathers who framed the government under which we live, declare our
- belief that slavery is wrong; but the slaves do not hear us declare even
- this. For any thing we say or do, the slaves would scarcely know there is
- a Republican party. I believe they would not, in fact, generally know it
- but for your misrepresentations of us in their hearing. In your political
- contest among yourselves, each faction charges the other with sympathy
- with Black Republicanism; and then, to give point to the charge, defines
- Black Republicanism to simply be insurrection, blood, and thunder among
- the slaves.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slave insurrections are no more common now than they were before the
- Republican party was organized. What induced the Southampton Insurrection,
- twenty-eight years ago, in which, at least, three times as many lives were
- lost as at Harper's Ferry? You can scarcely stretch your very elastic
- fancy to the conclusion that Southampton was got up by Black
- Republicanism. In the present state of things in the United States, I do
- not think a general, or even a very extensive slave insurrection, is
- possible. The indispensable concert of action cannot be attained. The
- slaves have no means of rapid communication; nor can incendiary free men,
- black or white, supply it. The explosive materials are everywhere in
- parcels; but there neither are, nor can be supplied, the indispensable
- connecting trains.
- </p>
- <p>
- Much is said by Southern people about the affection of slaves for their
- masters and mistresses; and a part of it, at least, is true. A plot for an
- uprising could scarcely be devised and communicated to twenty individuals
- before some one of them, to save the life of a favorite master or
- mistress, would divulge it. This is the rule; and the slave revolution in
- Hayti was not an exception to it, but a case occurring under peculiar
- circumstances. The gunpowder plot of British history, though not connected
- with the slaves, was more in point. In that case, only about twenty were
- admitted to the secret; and yet one of them, in his anxiety to save a
- friend, betrayed the plot to that friend, and, by consequence, averted the
- calamity. Occasional poisoning from the kitchen, and open or stealthy
- assassinations in the field, and local revolts extending to a score or so,
- will continue to occur as the natural results of slavery; but no general
- insurrection of slaves, as I think, can happen in this country for a long
- time. Whoever much fears, or much hopes, for such an event will be alike
- disappointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the language of Mr. Jefferson, uttered many years ago, "It is still in
- our power to direct the process of emancipation and deportation peaceably,
- and in such slow degrees, as that the evil will wear off insensibly; and
- their places be, <i>pari passu</i>, filled up by free white laborers. If,
- on the contrary, it is left to force itself on, human nature must shudder
- at the prospect held up."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Jefferson did not mean to say, nor do I, that the power of
- emancipation is in the Federal Government. He spoke of Virginia; and, as
- to the power of emancipation, I speak of the slaveholding States only.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Federal Government, however, as we insist, has the power of
- restraining the extension of the institution,&mdash;the power to insure
- that a slave insurrection shall never occur on any American soil which is
- now free from slavery.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Brown's effort was peculiar. It was not a slave insurrection. It was
- an attempt by white men to get up a revolt among slaves, in which the
- slaves refused to participate. In fact, it was so absurd that the slaves,
- with all their ignorance, saw plainly enough it could not succeed. 'That
- affair, in its philosophy, corresponds with the many attempts, related in
- history, at the assassination of kings and emperors. An enthusiast broods
- over the oppression of a people till he fancies himself commissioned by
- Heaven to liberate them. He ventures the attempt, which ends in little
- else than in his own execution. Orsini's attempt on Louis Napoleon, and
- John Brown's attempt at Harper's Ferry, were, in their philosophy,
- precisely the same. The eagerness to cast blame on old England in the one
- case, and on New England in the other, does not disprove the sameness of
- the two things.
- </p>
- <p>
- And how much would it avail you, if you could, by the use of John Brown,
- Helper's book, and the like, break up the Republican organization? Human
- action can be modified to some extent; but human nature cannot be changed.
- There is a judgment and a feeling against slavery in this nation, which
- cast at least a million and a half of votes. You cannot destroy that
- judgment and feeling, that sentiment, by breaking up the political
- organization which rallies around it. You can scarcely scatter and
- disperse an army which has been formed into order in the face of your
- heaviest fire; but, if you could, how much would you gain by forcing the
- sentiment which created it out of the peaceful channel of the ballot-box,
- into some other channel? What would that other channel probably be? Would
- the number of John Browns be lessened or enlarged by the operation?
- </p>
- <p>
- But you will break up the Union rather than submit to a denial of your
- constitutional rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- That has a somewhat reckless sound; but it would be palliated, if not
- fully justified, were we proposing by the mere force of numbers to deprive
- you of some right plainly written down in the Constitution. But we are
- proposing no such thing.
- </p>
- <p>
- When you make these declarations, you have a specific and well-under-stood
- allusion to an assumed constitutional right of yours to take slaves into
- the Federal Territories, and hold them there as property; but no such
- right is specifically written in the Constitution. That instrument is
- literally silent about any such right. We, on the contrary, deny that such
- a right has any existence in the Constitution, even by implication.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your purpose then, plainly stated, is, that you will destroy the
- government, unless you be allowed to construe and enforce the Constitution
- as you please on all points in dispute between you and us. You will rule
- or ruin in all events.
- </p>
- <p>
- This, plainly stated, is your language to us. Perhaps you will say the
- Supreme Court has decided the disputed constitutional question in your
- favor. Not quite so. But waiving the lawyer's distinction between dictum
- and decision, the courts have decided the question for you in a sort of
- way. The courts have substantially said, it is your constitutional right
- to take slaves into the Federal Territories, and to hold them there as
- property.
- </p>
- <p>
- When I say the decision was made in a sort of way, I mean it was made in a
- divided court by a bare majority of the judges, and they not quite
- agreeing with one another in the reasons for making it; that it is so made
- as that its avowed supporters disagree with one another about its meaning,
- and that it was mainly based upon a mistaken statement of fact,&mdash;the
- statement in the opinion that "the right of property in a slave is
- distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution."
- </p>
- <p>
- An inspection of the Constitution will show that the right of property in
- a slave is not distinctly and expressly affirmed in it. Bear in mind, the
- judges do not pledge their judicial opinion that such right is impliedly
- affirmed in the Constitution; but they pledge their veracity that it is
- distinctly and expressly affirmed there,&mdash;"distinctly," that is, not
- mingled with any thing else; "expressly," that is, in words meaning just
- that, without the aid of any inference, and susceptible of no other
- meaning.
- </p>
- <p>
- If they had only pledged their judicial opinion that such right is
- affirmed in the instrument by implication, it would be open to others to
- show that neither the word "slave" nor "slavery" is to be found in the
- Constitution, nor the word "property" even, in any connection with
- language alluding to the things slave or slavery, and that, wherever in
- that instrument the slave is alluded to, he is called a "person;" and
- wherever his master's legal right in relation to him is alluded to, it is
- spoken of as "service or labor due,"&mdash;as a "debt" payable in service
- or labor. Also it would be open to show, by contemporaneous history, that
- this mode of alluding to slaves and slavery, instead of speaking of them,
- was employed on purpose to exclude from the Constitution the idea that
- there could be property in man.
- </p>
- <p>
- To show all this is easy and certain.
- </p>
- <p>
- When this obvious mistake of the judges shall be brought to their notice,
- is it not reasonable to expect that they will withdraw the mistaken
- statement, and reconsider the conclusion based upon it?
- </p>
- <p>
- And then it is to be remembered that "our fathers, who framed the
- government under which we live,"&mdash;the men who made the Constitution,&mdash;decided
- this same constitutional question in our favor long ago,&mdash;decided it
- without a division among themselves, when making the decision; without
- division among themselves about the meaning of it after it was made, and,
- so far as any evidence is left, without basing it upon any mistaken
- statement of facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under all these circumstances, do you really feel yourselves justified to
- break up this Government, unless such a court decision as yours is shall
- be at once submitted to, as a conclusive and final rule of political
- action?
- </p>
- <p>
- But you will not abide the election of a Republican President. In that
- supposed event, you say, you will destroy the Union; and then, you say,
- the great crime of having destroyed it will be upon us!
- </p>
- <p>
- That is cool. A highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through
- his teeth, "Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you; and then you will be a
- murderer!"
- </p>
- <p>
- To be sure, what the robber demanded of me&mdash;my money&mdash;was my
- own; and I had a clear right to keep it; but it was no more my own than my
- vote is my own; and threat of death to me to extort my money, and threat
- of destruction to the Union to extort my vote, can scarcely be
- distinguished in principle.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few words now to Republicans. It is exceedingly desirable that all parts
- of this great Confederacy shall be at peace, and in harmony, one with
- another. Let us Republicans do our part to have it so. Even though much
- provoked, let us do nothing through passion and ill-temper. Even though
- the Southern people will not so much as listen to us, let us calmly
- consider their demands, and yield to them if, in our deliberate view of
- our duty, we possibly can. Judging by all they say and do, and by the
- subject and nature of their controversy with us, let us determine, if we
- can, what will satisfy them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Will they be satisfied if the Territories be unconditionally surrendered
- to them? We know they will not. In all their present complaints against
- us, the Territories are scarcely mentioned. Invasions and insurrections
- are the rage now. Will it satisfy them if, in the future, we have nothing
- to do with invasions and insurrections? We know it will not. We so know
- because we know we never had any thing to do with invasions and
- insurrections; and yet this total abstaining does not exempt us from the
- charge and the denunciation.
- </p>
- <p>
- The question recurs, what will satisfy them? Simply this: We must not only
- let them alone, but we must, somehow, convince them that we do let them
- alone. This we know by experience is no easy task. We have been so trying
- to convince them from the very beginning of our organization, but with no
- success. In all our platforms and speeches we have constantly protested
- our purpose to let them alone; but this has had no tendency to convince
- them. Alike unavailing to convince them is the fact that they have never
- detected a man of us in any attempt to disturb them.
- </p>
- <p>
- These natural, and apparently adequate means all failing, what will
- convince them? This, and this only: cease to call slavery <i>wrong</i>,
- and join them in calling it <i>right</i>. And this must be done
- thoroughly,&mdash;done in <i>acts</i> as well as in <i>words</i>. Silence
- will not be tolerated: we must place ourselves avowedly with them.
- Douglas's new sedition law must be enacted and enforced, suppressing all
- declarations that slavery is wrong, whether made in politics, in presses,
- in pulpits, or in private. We must arrest and return their fugitive slaves
- with greedy pleasure. We must pull down our Free-State Constitutions. The
- whole atmosphere must be disinfected from all taint of opposition to
- slavery, before they will cease to believe that all their troubles proceed
- from us.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am quite aware they do not state their case precisely in this way. Most
- of them would probably say to us, "Let us alone, do nothing to us, and say
- what you please about slavery." But we do let them alone, have never
- disturbed them; so that, after all, it is what we say which dissatisfies
- them. They will continue to accuse us of doing until we cease saying.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am also aware they have not as yet, in terms, demanded the overthrow of
- our Free-State constitutions. Yet those constitutions declare the wrong of
- slavery with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings against it;
- and when all these other sayings shall have been silenced, the overthrow
- of these constitutions will be demanded, and nothing be left to resist the
- demand. It is nothing to the contrary, that they do not demand the whole
- of this just now. Demanding what they do, and for the reason they do, they
- can voluntarily stop nowhere short of this consummation. Holding, as they
- do, that slavery is morally right, and socially elevating, they cannot
- cease to demand a full national recognition of it, as a legal right and a
- social blessing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nor can we justifiably withhold this on any ground, save our conviction
- that slavery is wrong. If slavery is right, all words, acts, laws, and
- constitutions against it are themselves wrong, and should be silenced and
- swept away. If it is right, we cannot justly object to its nationality,
- its universality; if it is wrong, they cannot justly insist upon its
- extension, its enlargement. All they ask, we could readily grant, if we
- thought slavery right; all we ask, they could as readily grant, if they
- thought it wrong. Their thinking it right, and our thinking it wrong, is
- the precise fact upon which depends the whole controversy. Thinking it
- right, as they do, they are not to blame for desiring its full
- recognition, as being right; but thinking it wrong, as we do, can we yield
- to them? Can we cast our votes with their view, and against our own? In
- view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this?
- </p>
- <p>
- Wrong as we think slavery is, we can yet afford to let it alone where it
- is, because that much is due to the necessity arising from its actual
- presence in the nation; but can we, while our votes will prevent it, allow
- it to spread into the national Territories, and to overrun us here in
- these Free States?
- </p>
- <p>
- If our sense of duty forbids this, then let us stand by our duty
- fearlessly and effectively. Let us be diverted by none of those
- sophistical contrivances wherewith we are so industriously plied and
- belabored,&mdash;contrivances such as groping for some middle ground
- between the right and the wrong, vain as the search for a man who should
- be neither a living man nor a dead man,&mdash;such as a policy of "don't
- care" on a question about which all true men do care,&mdash;such as Union
- appeals beseeching true Union men to yield to Dis-unionists, reversing the
- divine rule, and calling, not the sinners, but the righteous, to
- repentance,&mdash;such as invocations to Washington, imploring men to
- unsay what Washington said, and undo what Washington did.
- </p>
- <p>
- Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against us,
- nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the Government, nor of
- dungeons to ourselves. Let us have faith that right makes might; and in
- that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning "The Tribune" presented a report of the speech, but, in
- doing so, said, "the tones, the gestures, the kindling eye, and the
- mirth-provoking look defy the reporter's skill.... No man ever before made
- such an impression on his first appeal to a New York audience." "The
- Evening Post" said, "We have made room for Mr. Lincoln's speech,
- notwithstanding the pressure of other matters; and our readers will see
- that it was well worthy of the deep attention with which it was heard."
- For the publication of such arguments the editor was "tempted to wish"
- that his columns "were indefinitely elastic." And these are but fair
- evidences of the general tone of the press.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was much annoyed, after his return home, by the allegation
- that he had sold a "political speech," and had been generally governed by
- mercenary motives in his Eastern trip. Being asked to explain it, he
- answered as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, April 6, 1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- C. F. McNeill, Esq.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;Reaching home yesterday, I found yours of the 23d March,
- enclosing a slip from "The Middleport Press." It is not true that I ever
- charged any thing for a political speech in my life; but this much is
- true. Last October I was requested by letter to deliver some sort of
- speech in Mr. Beecher's church in Brooklyn,&mdash;$200 being offered in
- the first letter. I wrote that I could do it in February, provided they
- would take a political speech if I could find time to get up no other.
- They agreed; and subsequently I informed them the speech would have to be
- a political one. When I reached New York, I, for the first, learned that
- the place was changed to "Cooper Institute." I made the speech, and left
- for New Hampshire, where I have a son at school, neither asking for pay
- nor having any offered me. Three days after, a check for $200 was sent to
- me at N.H.; and I took it, <i>and did not know it was wrong</i>. My
- understanding now is, though I knew nothing of it at the time, that they
- did charge for admittance at the Cooper Institute, and that they took in
- more than twice $200.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have made this explanation to you as a friend; but I wish no explanation
- made to our enemies. What they want is a squabble and a fuss: and that
- they can have if we explain; and they cannot have it if we don't.
- </p>
- <p>
- When I returned through New York from New England, I was told by the
- gentlemen who sent me the check, that a drunken vagabond in the club,
- having learned something about the $200, made the exhibition out of which
- "The Herald" manufactured the article quoted by "The Press" of your town.
- </p>
- <p>
- My judgment is, and therefore my request is, that you give no denial, and
- no explanations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thanking you for your kind interest in the matter, I remain
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- From New York Mr. Lincoln travelled into New England, to visit his son
- Robert, who was a student at Harvard; but he was overwhelmed with
- invitations to address Republican meetings. In Connecticut he spoke at
- Hartford, Norwich, New Haven, Meriden, and Bridgeport; in Rhode Island, at
- Woonsocket; in New Hampshire, at Concord and Manchester. Everywhere the
- people poured out in multitudes, and the press lavished encomiums. Upon
- his speech at Manchester, "The Mirror," a neutral paper, passed the
- following criticisms of his style of oratory,&mdash;criticisms familiar
- enough to the people of his own State: "He spoke an hour and a half with
- great fairness, great apparent candor, and with wonderful interest. He did
- not abuse the South, the administration, or the Democrats, or indulge in
- any personalities, with the exception of a few hits at Douglas's notions.
- He is far from prepossessing in personal appearance, and his voice is
- disagreeable; and yet he wins your attention and good-will from the
- start.... He indulges in no flowers of rhetoric, no eloquent passages. He
- is not a wit, a humorist, or a clown; yet so great a vein of pleasantry
- and good-nature pervades what he says, gilding over a deep current of
- practical argument, he keeps his hearers in a smiling mood, with their
- mouths open ready to swallow all he says. His sense of the ludicrous is
- very keen; and an exhibition of that is the clincher of all his arguments,&mdash;not
- the ludicrous acts of persons, but ludicrous ideas. Hence he is never
- offensive, and steals away willingly into his train of belief persons who
- were opposed to him. For the first half-hour his opponents would agree
- with every word he uttered; and from that point he began to lead them off
- little by little, until it seemed as if he had got them all into his fold.
- He displays more shrewdness, more knowledge of the masses of mankind, than
- any public speaker we have heard since Long Jim Wilson left for
- California."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the morning after the Norwich speech, Mr. Lincoln was met, or is said
- to have been met, in the cars by a preacher, one Gulliver,&mdash;a name
- suggestive of fictions. Gulliver says he told Mr. Lincoln that he thought
- his speech "the most remarkable one he ever heard." Lincoln doubted his
- sincerity; but Gulliver persisted. "Indeed, sir," said he, "I learned more
- of the art of public speaking last evening than I could from a whole
- course of lectures on rhetoric." Lincoln found he had in hand a clerical
- sycophant, and a little politician at that,&mdash;a class of beings whom
- he most heartily despised. Whereupon he began to quiz the fellow, and told
- him, for a most "remarkable circumstance," that the professors of Yale
- College were running all around after him, taking notes of his speeches,
- and lecturing about him to the classes. "Now," continued he, "I should
- like very much to know what it was in my speech which you thought so
- remarkable, and which interested my friend the professor so much?"
- Gulliver was equal to the occasion, and answered with an opinion which Mr.
- Bunsby might have delivered, and died, leaving to the world a reputation
- perfected by that single saying. "The clearness of your statements," said
- Gulliver, "the unanswerable style of your reasoning, and especially your
- illustrations, which were romance and pathos, and fun and logic, all
- welded together." Gulliver closed the interview with the cant peculiar to
- his kind. "Mr. Lincoln," said he, "may I say one thing to you before we
- separate?"&mdash;"Certainly; any thing you please," replied the
- good-natured old Abe. "You have just spoken," preached Gulliver, "of the
- tendency of political life in Washington to debase the moral convictions
- of our representatives there by the admixture of mere political
- expediency. You have become, by the controversy with Mr. Douglas, one of
- our leaders in this great struggle with slavery, which is undoubtedly the
- struggle of the nation and the age. What I would like to say is this, and
- I say it with a full heart: Be true to your principles; and we will be
- true to you, and God will be true to us all." To which modest, pious, and
- original observation, Mr. Lincoln responded, "I say Amen to that! Amen to
- that!"
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII
- </h2>
- <p>
- IT was not until May 9 and 10 that the Republican State Convention of
- Illinois met at Decatur. Mr. Lincoln was present, and is said to have been
- there as a mere "spectator." He had no special interest in the
- proceedings, and appears to have had no notion that any business relating
- to him was to be transacted that day. It was a very large and spirited
- body, comprising an immense number of delegates, among whom were the most
- brilliant, as well as the shrewdest men in the party. It was evident that
- something of more than usual importance was expected to transpire. A few
- moments after the convention organized, "Old Abe" was seen squatting, or
- sitting on his heels, just within the door of the Wigwam. Gov. Oglesby
- rose and said amid increasing silence, "I am informed that a distinguished
- citizen of Illinois, and one whom Illinois will ever delight to honor, is
- present; and I wish to move that this body invite him to a seat on the
- stand." Here the governor paused, as if to tease and dally, and work
- curiosity up to the highest point; but at length he shouted the magic name
- "<i>Abraham Lincoln!</i>" Not a shout, but a roar of applause, long and
- deep, shook every board and joist of the Wigwam. The motion was seconded
- and passed. A rush was made for the hero that sat on his heels. He was
- seized, and jerked to his feet. An effort was made to "jam him through the
- crowd" to his place of honor on the stage; but the crowd was too dense,
- and it failed. Then he was "troosted,"&mdash;lifted up bodily,&mdash;and
- lay for a few seconds sprawling and kicking upon the heads and shoulders
- of the great throng. In this manner he was gradually pushed toward the
- stand, and finally reached it, doubtless to his great relief, "in the arms
- of some half-dozen gentlemen," who set him down in full view of his
- clamorous admirers. "The cheering was like the roar of the sea. Hats were
- thrown up by the Chicago delegation, as if hats were no longer useful."
- Mr. Lincoln rose, bowed, smiled, blushed, and thanked the assembly as well
- as he could in the midst of such a tumult. A gentleman who saw it all
- says, "I then thought him one of the most diffident and worst-plagued men
- I ever saw."
- </p>
- <p>
- At another stage of the proceedings, Gov. Oglesby rose again with another
- provoking and mysterious speech. "There was," he said, "an old Democrat
- outside who had something he wished to present to this Convention."&mdash;"Receive
- it!" "Receive it!" cried some. "What is it?" "What is it?" screamed some
- of the lower Egyptians, who had an idea the old Democrat might want to
- blow them up with an infernal machine. But the party for Oglesby and the
- old Democrat was the stronger, and carried the vote with a tremendous
- hurrah. The door of the Wigwam opened; and a fine, robust old fellow, with
- an open countenance and bronzed cheeks, marched into the midst of the
- assemblage, bearing on his shoulder "two small triangular heart rails,"
- surmounted by a banner with this inscription:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- TWO RAILS,
- </p>
- <p>
- FROM A LOT MADE BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND JOHN HANKS, IN THE SANGAMON BOTTOM,
- IN THE YEAR 1830.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0013" id="image-0013">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/489.jpg" alt="Uncle John Hanks 489 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- The sturdy bearer was old John Hanks himself, enjoying the great field-day
- of his life. He was met with wild and tumultuous cheers, prolonged through
- several minutes; and it was observed that the Chicago and Central-Illinois
- men put up the loudest and longest. The whole scene was for a time simply
- tempestuous and bewildering. But it ended at last; and now the whole body,
- those in the secret and those out of it, clamored like men beside
- themselves for a speech from Mr. Lincoln, who in the mean time "blushed,
- but seemed to shake with inward laughter." In response to the repeated
- appeals he rose and said,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Gentlemen, I suppose you want to know something about those things"
- (pointing to old John and the rails). "Well, the truth is, John Hanks and
- I did make rails in the Sangamon Bottom. I don't know whether we made
- those rails or not; fact is, I don't think they are a credit to the
- makers" (laughing as he spoke). "But I do know this: I made rails then,
- and I think I could make better ones than these now."
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time the innocent Egyptians began to open their eyes: they saw
- plainly enough now the admirable Presidential scheme unfolded to their
- view. The result of it all was a resolution declaring that "Abraham
- Lincoln <i>is the first choice of the Republican party of Illinois for the
- Presidency, and instructing the delegates to the Chicago Convention to use
- all honorable means to secure his nomination, and to cast the vote of the
- State as a unit for him</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- The crowd at Decatur, delegates and private citizens, who took part in
- these proceedings, was estimated at five thousand. Neither the numbers nor
- the enthusiasm was a pleasant sight to the divided and demoralized
- Democrats. They disliked to hear so much about "honest Old Abe," "the
- rail-splitter," "the flat-boatman," "the pioneer." These cries had an
- ominous sound in their ears. Leaving Decatur on the cars, an old man out
- of Egypt, devoted to the great principles of Democracy, and excessively
- annoyed by the demonstration in progress, approached Mr. Lincoln and said,
- "So you're Abe Lincoln?"&mdash;"That's my name, sir," answered Mr.
- Lincoln. "They say you're a self-made man," said the Democrat. "Well,
- yes," said Mr. Lincoln, "what there is of me is self-made."&mdash;"Well,
- all I've got to say," observed the old man, after a careful survey of the
- statesman before him, "is, that it was a d&mdash;n bad job."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time Mr. Lincoln's claims had been attractively presented to
- the politicians of other States. So early as 1858, Mr. Herndon had been to
- Boston partly, if not entirely, on this mission; and latterly Judge Davis,
- Leonard Swett, and others had visited Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and
- Maryland in his behalf. Illinois was, of course, overwhelmingly and
- vociferously for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 16th of May, the Republican Convention assembled at Chicago. The
- city was literally crammed with delegates, alternates, "outside workers,"
- and spectators. No nominating convention had ever before attracted such
- multitudes to the scene of its deliberations.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first and second days were spent in securing a permanent organization,
- and the adoption of a platform. The latter set out by reciting the
- Declaration of Independence as to the equality of all men, not forgetting
- the usual quotation about the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of
- happiness." The third resolution denounced disunion in any possible event;
- the fourth declared the right of each State to "order and control its own
- domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively;" the
- fifth denounced the administration and its treatment of Kansas, as well as
- its general support of the supposed rights of the South under the
- Constitution; the sixth favored "economy;" the seventh denied the "new
- dogma, that the Constitution, of its own force, carries slavery into any
- or all of the Territories of the United States;" the eighth denied the
- "authority of Congress, of a Territorial Legislature, or of any
- individuals, to give legal existence to slavery in any Territory of the
- United States;" the ninth called the African slave-trade a "burning
- shame;" the tenth denounced the governors of Kansas and Nebraska for
- vetoing certain antislavery bills; the eleventh favored the admission of
- Kansas; the twelfth was a high-tariff manifesto, and a general stump
- speech to the mechanics; the thirteenth lauded the Homestead policy; the
- fourteenth opposed any Federal or State legislation "by which the rights
- of citizenship, hitherto accorded to immigrants from foreign lands, shall
- be abridged or impaired," with some pretty words, intended as a further
- bid for the foreign vote; the fifteenth declared for "river and harbor
- improvements," and the sixteenth for a "Pacific Railroad." It was a very
- comprehensive "platform;" and, if all classes for whom planks were
- provided should be kind enough to stand upon them, there could be no
- failure in the election.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the third day the balloting for a candidate was to begin. Up to the
- evening of the second day, Mr. Seward's prospects were far the best. It
- was certain that he would receive the largest vote on the first ballot;
- and outside of the body itself the "crowd" for him was more numerous and
- boisterous than for any other, except Mr. Lincoln. For Mr. Lincoln,
- however, the "pressure" from the multitude, in the Wigwam, in the streets,
- and in the hotels, was tremendous. It is sufficiently accounted for by the
- fact that the "spot" was Chicago, and the State Illinois. Besides the vast
- numbers who came there voluntarily to urge his claims, and to cheer for
- him, as the exigency demanded, his adherents had industriously "drummed
- up" their forces in the city and country, and were now able to make
- infinitely more noise than all the other parties put together. There was a
- large delegation of roughs there for Mr. Seward, headed by Tom Hyer, the
- pugilist. These, and others like them, filled the Wigwam toward the
- evening of the second day in expectation that the voting would begin. The
- Lincoln party found it out, and determined to call a check to that game.
- They spent the whole night in mustering and organizing their "loose
- fellows" from far and near, and at daylight the next morning "took charge"
- of the Wigwam, filling every available space, and much that they had no
- business to fill. As a result, the Seward men were unable to get in, and
- were forced to content themselves with curbstone enthusiasm.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln seemed to be very sure, all along, that the contest would be
- ultimately between him and Mr. Seward. The "Bates men" were supposed to be
- conservative, that is, not Abolitionists; and the object of the move in
- favor of Mr. Bates was to lower the fanatical tone of the party, and save
- the votes of certain "Union men" who might otherwise be against it. But a
- Seward man had telegraphed to St. Louis, to the friends of Mr. Bates, to
- say that Lincoln was as bad as Seward, and to urge them to go for Mr.
- Seward in case their own favorite should fail. The despatch was printed in
- "The Missouri Democrat," but was not brought to Mr. Lincoln's attention
- until the meeting of the Convention. He immediately caught up the paper,
- and "wrote on its broad margin," "Lincoln agrees with Seward in his
- irrepressible-conflict idea, and in negro equality; but he is opposed to
- Seward's Higher Law." With this he immediately despatched a friend to
- Chicago, who handed it to Judge Davis or Judge Logan.
- </p>
- <p>
- Simon Cameron of Pennsylvania was nominally a candidate; but, in the
- language of Col. McClure, "it meant nothing:" it was a mere sham, got up
- to enable Cameron to make a bargain with some real candidate, and thus
- secure for himself and his friends the lion's share of the spoils in the
- event of a victory at the polls. The genuine sentiment of the Pennsylvania
- delegation was divided between Judge Bates and Judge McLean. But Cameron
- was in a fine position to trade, and his friends were anxious for
- business. On the evening of the second day, these gentlemen were
- gratified. A deputation of them&mdash;Casey, Sanderson, Reeder, and
- perhaps others&mdash;were invited to the Lincoln Head-quarters at the
- Tremont House, where they were met by Messrs. Davis, Swett, Logan, and
- Dole, on the part of Mr. Lincoln. An agreement was there made, that, if
- the Cameron men would go for Lincoln, and he should be nominated and
- elected, Cameron should have a seat in his Cabinet, <i>provided</i> the
- Pennsylvania delegation could be got to recommend him. The bargain was
- fulfilled, but not without difficulty. Cameron's strength was more
- apparent than real. There was, however, "a certain class of the delegates
- under his immediate influence;" and these, with the aid of Mr. Wilmot and
- his friends, who were honestly for Lincoln, managed to carry the
- delegation by a very small majority,&mdash;"about six."
- </p>
- <p>
- About the same time a similar bargain was made with the friends of Caleb
- B. Smith of Indiana; and with these two contracts quietly ratified, the
- Lincoln men felt strong and confident on the morning of the third day.
- </p>
- <p>
- While the candidates were being named, and when the ballotings began,
- every mention of Mr. Lincoln's name was received with thundering shouts by
- the vast mass of his adherents by whom the building had been packed. In
- the phrase of the day, the "outside pressure" was all in his favor. On the
- first ballot, Mr. Seward had 173 1/2 votes; Mr. Lincoln, 102; Mr. Cameron,
- 50 1/2; Mr. Chase, 49; Mr. Bates, 48; Mr. Dayton, 14; Mr. McLean, 12; Mr.
- Collamer, 10; and 6 were scattered. Mr. Cameron's name was withdrawn on
- the second ballot, according to the previous understanding; Mr. Seward had
- 184 1/2; Mr. Lincoln, 181; Mr. Chase, 42 1/2; Mr. Bates, 35; Mr. Dayton,
- 10; Mr. McLean, 8; and the rest scattered. It was clear that the
- nomination lay between Mr. Seward and Mr. Lincoln, and the latter was
- receiving great accessions of strength. The third ballot came, and Mr.
- Lincoln ran rapidly up to 231 1/2 votes; 233 being the number required to
- nominate. Hundreds of persons were keeping the count; and it was well
- known, without any announcement, that Mr. Lincoln lacked but a vote and a
- half to make him the nominee. At this juncture, Mr. Cartter of Ohio rose,
- and changed four votes from Mr. Chase to Mr. Lincoln. He was nominated.
- The Wigwam shook to its foundation with the roaring cheers. The multitude
- in the streets answered the multitude within, and in a moment more all the
- holiday artillery of Chicago helped to swell the grand acclamation. After
- a time, the business of the convention proceeded amid great excitement.
- All the votes that had heretofore been cast against Mr. Lincoln were cast
- for him before this ballot concluded; and, upon motion, the nomination was
- made unanimous. The convention then adjourned for dinner, and in the
- afternoon finished its work by the nomination of Hannibal Hamlin of Maine
- for Vice-President.
- </p>
- <p>
- All that day and all the day previous Mr. Lincoln was in Springfield,
- trying to behave as usual, but watching the proceedings of the Convention,
- as they were reported by telegraph, with nervous anxiety. Mr. Baker, the
- friend who had taken "The Missouri Democrat" to Chicago with Mr. Lincoln's
- pregnant indorsement upon it, returned on the night of the 18th. Early in
- the morning, he and Mr. Lincoln went to the balll-alley to play at
- "fives;" but the alley was pre-engaged. They went to an "excellent and
- neat beer saloon" to play a game of billiards; but the table was occupied.
- In this strait they contented themselves with a glass of beer, and
- repaired to "The Journal" office for news.
- </p>
- <p>
- C. P. Brown says that Lincoln played ball a great deal that day,
- notwithstanding the disappointment when he went with Baker; and Mr. Zane
- informs us that he was engaged in the same way the greater part of the day
- previous. It is probable that he took this physical mode of working off or
- keeping down the unnatural excitement that threatened to possess him.
- </p>
- <p>
- About nine o'clock in the morning, Mr. Lincoln came to the office of
- Lincoln &amp; Herndon. Mr. Zane was then conversing with a student, "Well,
- boys," said Mr. Lincoln, "what do you know?"&mdash;"Mr. Rosette," answered
- Zane, "who came from Chicago this morning, thinks your chances for the
- nomination are good." Mr. Lincoln wished to know what Mr. Rosette's
- opinion was founded upon; and, while Zane was explaining, Mr. Baker
- entered with a telegram, "which said the names of the candidates for
- nomination had been announced," and that Mr. Lincoln's had been received
- with more applause than any other. Mr. Lincoln lay down on a sofa to rest.
- Soon after, Mr. Brown entered; and Mr. Lincoln said to him, "Well, Brown,
- do you know any thing?" Brown did not know much; and so Mr. Lincoln,
- secretly nervous and impatient, rose and exclaimed, "Let's go to the
- telegraph-office." After waiting some time at the office, the result of
- the first ballot came over the wire. It was apparent to all present that
- Mr. Lincoln thought it very favorable. He believed that if Mr. Seward
- failed to get the nomination, or to "come very near it," on the first
- ballot, he would fail altogether. Presently the news of the second ballot
- arrived, and Mr. Lincoln showed by his manner that he considered the
- contest no longer doubtful. "I've got him," said he. He then went over to
- the office of "The Journal," where other friends were awaiting decisive
- intelligence. The local editor of that paper, Mr. Zane, and others,
- remained behind to receive the expected despatch. In due time it came: the
- operator was intensely excited; at first he threw down his pencil, but,
- seizing it again, wrote off the news that threw Springfield into a frenzy
- of delight. The local editor picked it up, and rushed to "The Journal"
- office. Upon entering the room, he called for three cheers for the next
- President. They were given, and then the despatch was read. Mr. Lincoln
- seemed to be calm, but a close observer could detect in his countenance
- the indications of deep emotion. In the mean time cheers for Lincoln
- swelled up from the streets, and began to be heard throughout the town.
- Some one remarked, "Mr. Lincoln, I suppose now we will soon have a book
- containing your life."&mdash;"There is not much," he replied, "in my past
- life about which to write a book, as it seems to me." Having received the
- hearty congratulations of the company in the office, he descended to the
- street, where he was immediately surrounded by "Irish and American
- citizens;" and, so long as he was willing to receive it, there was great
- handshaking and felicitating. "Gentlemen," said the great man with a happy
- twinkle in his eye, "you had better come up and shake my hand while you
- can: honors elevate some men, you know." But he soon bethought him of a
- person who was of more importance to him than all this crowd. Looking
- toward his house, he said, "Well, gentlemen, there is a little short woman
- at our house who is probably more interested in this despatch than I am;
- and, if you will excuse me, I will take it up and let her see it."
- </p>
- <p>
- During the day a hundred guns were fired at Springfield; and in the
- evening a great mass meeting "ratified" the nomination, and, after doing
- so, adjourned to the house of the nominee. Mr. Lincoln appeared, made a
- "model" speech, and invited into his house everybody that could get in. To
- this the immense crowd responded that they would give him a larger house
- the next year, and in the mean time beset the one he had until after
- midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the following day the Committee of the Convention, with Mr. Ashmun, the
- president, at its head, arrived at Springfield to notify Mr. Lincoln of
- his nomination. Contrary to what might have been expected, he seemed sad
- and dejected. The re-action from excessive joy to deep despondency&mdash;a
- process peculiar to his constitution&mdash;had already set in. To the
- formal address of the Committee, he responded with admirable taste and
- feeling;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee,&mdash;I tender to you, and
- through you to the Republican National Convention, and all the people
- represented in it, my profoundest thanks for the high honor done me, which
- you now formally announce. Deeply and even painfully sensible of the great
- responsibility which is inseparable from this high honor,&mdash;a
- responsibility which I could almost wish had fallen upon some one of the
- far more eminent men and experienced statesmen whose distinguished names
- were before the Convention, I shall, by your leave, consider more fully
- the resolutions of the Convention, denominated the platform, and, without
- unnecessary and unreasonable delay, respond to you, Mr. Chairman, in
- writing, not doubting that the platform will be found satisfactory, and
- the nomination gratefully accepted. And now I will not longer defer the
- pleasure of taking you, and each of you, by the hand."
- </p>
- <p>
- The Committee handed him a letter containing the official notice,
- accompanied by the resolutions of the Convention; and to this he replied
- on the 23d as follows:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill, May 23,1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hon. George Ashmun, President of the Republican National Convention.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sir,&mdash;I accept the nomination tendered me by the Convention over
- which you presided, and of which I am formally apprised in the letter of
- yourself and others, acting as a Committee of the Convention for that
- purpose.
- </p>
- <p>
- The declaration of principles and sentiments which accompanies your letter
- meets my approval; and it shall be my care not to violate or disregard it
- in any part.
- </p>
- <p>
- Imploring the assistance of Divine Providence, and with due regard to the
- views and feelings of all who were represented in the Convention; to the
- rights of all the States and Territories, and people of the nation; to the
- inviolability of the Constitution, and the perpetual union, harmony, and
- prosperity of all,&mdash;I am most happy to co-operate for the practical
- success of the principles declared by the Convention.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your obliged friend and fellow-citizen,
- </p>
- <p>
- Abraham Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time the National Democratic Convention had met at Charleston,
- S.C., and split in twain. The South utterly repudiated Mr. Douglas's new
- heresy; and Mr. Douglas insisted that the whole party ought to become
- heretics with him, and, turning their backs on the Dred-Scott Decision and
- the Cincinnati Platform, give up slavery in the Territories to the tender
- mercies of "squatter sovereignty" and "unfriendly legislation." Neither
- party to the controversy would be satisfied with a simple re-affirmation
- of the Cincinnati Platform; for under it Mr. Douglas could go to the North
- and say that it meant "squatter sovereignty," and Mr. Breckinridge could
- go to the South and say that it meant Congressional protection to slavery.
- In fact, it meant neither, and said neither, but declared, in plain
- English words, that Congress had no power to interfere with slavery in the
- Territories; and that, when the Territories were about to become States,
- they had all power to settle the question for themselves. Gen. B. F.
- Butler of Massachusetts proposed to heal the ominous divisions in the
- Convention by the re-adoption of that clear and emphatic provision; but
- his voice was soon drowned in the clamors of the fiercer disputants. The
- differences were irreconcilable. Mr. Douglas's friends had come there
- determined to nominate him at any cost; and, in order to nominate him,
- they dared not concede the platform to the South. A majority of the
- Committee on Resolutions reported the Cincinnati Platform, with the
- Southern interpretation of it; and the minority reported the same platform
- with a recitation concerning the "differences of opinion" "in the
- Democratic party," and a pledge to abide by the decision of the Supreme
- Court "on the questions of constitutional law,"&mdash;a pledge supposed to
- be of little value, since those who gave it were that moment in the very
- act of repudiating the only decision the Court had ever rendered. The
- minority report was adopted after a protracted and acrimonious debate, by
- a vote of one hundred and sixty-five to one hundred and thirty-eight.
- Thereupon the Southern delegates, most of them under instructions from
- their State conventions, withdrew, and organized themselves into a
- separate convention. The remaining delegates, called "the rump" by their
- Democratic adversaries, proceeded to ballot for a candidate for President,
- and voted fifty-seven times without effecting a nomination. Mr. Douglas,
- of course, received the highest number of votes; but, the old two-thirds
- rule being in force, he failed of a nomination. Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky
- was his principal competitor; but at one time and another Mr. Hunter of
- Virginia, Gen. Lane of Oregon, and Mr. Johnson of Tennessee, received
- flattering and creditable votes. After the fifty-seventh ballot, the
- Convention adjourned to meet at Baltimore on the 18th of June.
- </p>
- <p>
- The seceders met in another hall, adopted the majority platform, as the
- adhering delegates had adopted the minority platform, and then adjourned
- to meet at Richmond on the second Monday in June. Faint hopes of
- accommodation were still entertained; and, when the seceders met at
- Richmond, they adjourned again to Baltimore, and the 28th of June.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Douglas Convention, assuming to be the regular one, had invited the
- Southern States to fill up the vacant seats which belonged to them; but,
- when the new delegates appeared, they were met with the apprehension that
- their votes might not be perfectly secure for Mr. Douglas, and were
- therefore, in many instances, lawlessly excluded. This was the signal for
- another secession: the Border States withdrew; Mr. Butler and the
- Massachusetts delegation withdrew; Mr. Cushing deserted the chair, and
- took that of the rival Convention. The "regular" Convention, it was said,
- was now "the rump of a rump."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the first ballot for a candidate, Mr. Douglas had 173 1/2 votes; Mr.
- Guthrie, 10; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and 3 were scattered. On the second
- ballot, Mr. Douglas had 181 1/2; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and Mr. Guthrie, 5
- 1/2. It was plain that under the two-thirds rule no nomination could be
- made here. Neither Mr. Douglas nor any one else could receive two-thirds
- of a full convention. It was therefore resolved that Mr. Douglas, "having
- received two-thirds of all the votes <i>given in this Convention</i>,"
- should be declared the nominee. Mr. Fitzpatrick of Alabama was nominated
- for Vice-President, but declined to stand; and Mr. Johnson of Georgia was
- substituted for him by the Douglas "National Committee."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the seceders' Convention, twenty-one States were represented more or
- less fully. It had no trouble in selecting a candidate. John C.
- Breckinridge of Kentucky and Joseph Lane of Oregon were unanimously
- nominated for the offices of President and Vice-President.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time another party&mdash;the "Constitutional Union party"&mdash;had
- met in Baltimore on the 19th of May, and nominated John Bell of Tennessee
- for President, and Edward Everett of Massachusetts for Vice-President. Its
- platform was, in brief, "The Constitution of the Country, the Union of the
- States, and the Enforcement of the Laws." This body was composed for the
- most part of impenitent Know-Nothings and respectable old-line Whigs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The spring elections had given the democracy good reason to hope for
- success in the fall. The commercial classes, the shipping classes, and
- large numbers of the manufacturers, were thoroughly alarmed for the safety
- of the great trade dependent upon a political connection with the South.
- It seemed probable that a great re-action against antislavery agitations
- might take place. But the division at Charleston, the permanent
- organization of the two factions at Baltimore, and their mutual and
- rancorous hostility, completely reversed the delusive prospect. A majority
- of the whole people of the Union looked forward to a Republican victory
- with dread, and a large part with actual terror; and yet it was now clear
- that that majority was fatally bent upon wasting its power in the bitter
- struggles of the factions which composed it. Mr. Lincoln's election was
- assured; and for them there was nothing left but to put the house in order
- for the great convulsion which all our political fathers and prophets had
- predicted as the necessary consequence of such an event.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 6th of November, Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the
- United States. He received 1,857,610 votes; Mr. Douglas had 1,291,574; Mr.
- Breckinridge, 850,082; Mr. Bell, 646,124. Against Mr. Lincoln there was a
- majority of 980,170 of all the votes cast. Of the electoral votes, Mr.
- Lincoln had 180; Mr. Breckinridge, 72; Mr. Bell, 30; and Mr. Douglas, 12.
- It is more than likely that Mr. Lincoln owed this, his crowning triumph,
- to the skill and adroitness with which he questioned Mr. Douglas in the
- canvass of 1858, and drew out of him those fatal opinions about "squatter
- sovereignty" and "unfriendly legislation" in the Territories. But for Mr.
- Douglas's committal to those opinions, it is not likely that. Mr. Lincoln
- would ever have been President.
- </p>
- <p>
- The election over, Mr. Lincoln was sorely beset by office-seekers.
- Individuals, deputations, "delegations," from all quarters, pressed in
- upon him in a manner that might have killed a man of less robust
- constitution. The hotels of Springfield were filled with gentlemen who
- came with, light baggage and heavy schemes. The party had never been in
- office: a "clean sweep" of the "ins" was expected; and all the "outs" were
- patriotically anxious to take the vacant places. It was a party that had
- never fed; and it was voraciously hungry. Mr. Lincoln and Artemus Ward saw
- a great deal of fun in it; and in all human probability it was the fun
- alone that enabled Mr. Lincoln to bear it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Judge Davis says that Mr. Lincoln had determined to appoint "Democrats and
- Republicans alike to office." Many things confirm this statement. Mr.
- Lincoln felt deeply the responsibility of his great trust; and he felt
- still more keenly the supposed impossibility of administering the
- government for the sole benefit of an organization which had no existence
- in one-half of the Union. He was therefore willing, not only to appoint
- Democrats to office, but to appoint them to the very highest offices
- within his gift. At this time he thought very highly of Mr. Stephens of
- Georgia, and would gladly have taken him into his Cabinet but for the fear
- that Georgia might secede, and take Mr. Stephens along with her. He did
- actually authorize his friend, Mr. Speed, to offer the Treasury Department
- to Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky; and Mr. Guthrie, for good reasons of his own,
- declined it. The full significance of this act of courageous magnanimity
- cannot be understood without reference to the proceedings of the
- Charleston Convention, where Mr. Guthrie was one of the foremost
- candidates. He considered the names of various other gentlemen from the
- Border States, each of them with good proslavery antecedents. He
- commissioned Thurlow Weed to place a seat in the Cabinet at the disposal
- of Mr. Gilmore of North Carolina; but Mr. Gilmore, finding that his State
- was likely to secede, was reluctantly compelled to decline it. He was, in
- fact, sincerely and profoundly anxious that the South should be honestly
- represented in his councils by men who had an abiding-place in the hearts
- of her people. To accomplish that high purpose, he was forced to go beyond
- the ranks of his own party; and he had the manliness to do it. He felt
- that his strength lay in conciliation at the outset: that was his ruling
- conviction during all those months of preparation for the great task
- before him. It showed itself, not only in the appointments which he sought
- to make, but in those which he did make. Harboring no jealousies,
- entertaining no fears concerning his personal interests in the future, he
- called around him the most powerful of his late rivals,&mdash;Seward,
- Chase, Bates,&mdash;and unhesitatingly gave into their hands powers which
- most presidents would have shrunk from committing to their equals, and
- much more to their superiors in the conduct of public affairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cases of Cameron and Smith, however, were very distressing. He had
- authorized no one to make such bargains for him as had been made with the
- friends of these men. He would gladly have repudiated the contracts, if it
- could have been done with honor and safety. For Smith he had great regard,
- and believed that he had rendered important services in the late
- elections. But his character was now grossly assailed; and it would have
- saved Mr. Lincoln serious embarrassments if he had been able to put him
- aside altogether, and select Mr. Lane or some other Indiana statesman in
- his place. He wavered long, but finally made up his mind to keep the
- pledge of his friends; and Smith was appointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Cameron's case the contest was fierce and more protracted. At Chicago,
- Cameron's agents had demanded that he should have the Treasury Department;
- but that was too much; and the friends of Mr. Lincoln, tried, pushed, and
- anxious as they were, declined to consider it. They would say that he
- should be appointed to a Cabinet position, but no more; and to secure
- this, he must get a majority of the Pennsylvania delegation to recommend
- him. Mr. Cameron was disposed to exact the penalty of his bond, hard as
- compliance might be on the part of Mr. Lincoln. But Cameron had many and
- formidable enemies, who alleged that he was a man notorious for his evil
- deeds, shameless in his rapacity and corruption, and even more shameless
- in his mean ambition to occupy exalted stations, for which he was utterly
- and hopelessly incompetent; that he had never dared to offer himself as a
- candidate before the people of Pennsylvania, but had more than once gotten
- high offices from the Legislature by the worst means ever used by a
- politician; and that it would be a disgrace, a shame, a standing offence
- to the country, if Mr. Lincoln should consent to put him into his Cabinet.
- On the other hand, Mr. Cameron had no lack of devoted friends to deny
- these charges, and to say that his was as "white a soul" as ever yearned
- for political preferment: they came out to Springfield in numbers,&mdash;Edgar
- Cowan, J. K. Moorehead, Alexander Cummins, Mr. Sanderson, Mr. Casey, and
- many others, besides Gen. Cameron himself. On the ground, of course, were
- the powerful gentlemen who had made the original contract on the part of
- Mr. Lincoln, and who, from first to last, strenuously insisted upon its
- fulfilment. It required a hard struggle to overcome Mr. Lincoln's
- scruples; and the whole force was necessarily mustered in order to
- accomplish it. "All that I am in the world," said he,&mdash;"the
- Presidency and all else,&mdash;I owe to that opinion of me which the
- people express when they call me 'honest Old Abe.' Now, what will they
- think of their <i>honest</i> Abe, when he appoints Simon Cameron to be his
- familiar adviser?"
- </p>
- <p>
- In Pennsylvania it was supposed for a while that Cameron's audacity had
- failed him, and that he would abandon the attempt. But about the 1st of
- January Mr. Swett, one of the contracting parties, appeared at Harrisburg,
- and immediately afterwards Cameron and some of his friends took flight to
- Springfield. This circumstance put the vigilant opposition on the alert,
- and aroused them to a clear sense of the impending calamity. The sequel is
- a painful story; and it is, perhaps, better to give it in the words of a
- distinguished actor,&mdash;Col. Alexander K. McClure. "I do not know,"
- says he, "that any went there to oppose the appointment but myself. When I
- learned that Cameron had started to Springfield, and that his visit
- related to the Cabinet, I at once telegraphed Lincoln that such an
- appointment would be most unfortunate. Until that time, no one outside a
- small circle of Cameron's friends dreamed of Lincoln's calling him to the
- Cabinet. Lincoln's character for honesty was considered a complete
- guaranty against such a suicidal act. No efforts had therefore been made
- to guard against it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In reply to my telegram, Mr. Lincoln answered, requesting me to come to
- Springfield at once. I hastily got letters from Gov. Curtin, Secretary
- Slifer, Mr. Wilmot, Mr. Dayton, Mr. Stevens, and started. I took no
- affidavits with me, nor were any specific charges made against him by me,
- or by any of the letters I bore; but they all sustained me in the
- allegation, that the appointment would disgrace the administration and the
- country, because of the notorious incompetency and public and private
- villany of the candidate. I spent four hours with Mr. Lincoln alone; and
- the matter was discussed very fully and frankly. Although he had
- previously decided to appoint Cameron, he closed our interview by a
- reconsideration of his purpose, and the assurance that within twenty-four
- hours he would write me definitely on the subject. He wrote me, as he
- promised, and stated, that, if I would make specific charges against Mr.
- Cameron, and produce the proof, he would dismiss the subject. I answered,
- declining to do so for reasons I thought should be obvious to every one. I
- believe that affidavits were sent to him, but I had no hand in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Subsequently Cameron regarded his appointment as impossible, and he
- proposed to Stevens to join in pressing him. Stevens wrote me of the fact;
- and I procured strong letters from the State administration in his favor.
- A few days after Stevens wrote me a most bitter letter, saying that
- Cameron had deceived him, and was then attempting to enforce his own
- appointment. The bond was demanded of Lincoln; and that decided the
- matter."1
- </p>
- <p>
- 1 As this was one of the few public acts which Mr. Lincoln performed with
- a bad conscience, the reader ought to know the consequences of it; and,
- because it may not be convenient to revert to them in detail at another
- place, we give them here, still retaining the language of the eye-witness,
- Col. McClure:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I saw Cameron the night of the day that Lincoln removed him. We met in
- the room of a mutual friend, and he was very violent against Lincoln for
- removing him without consultation or notice. His denunciation against the
- President was extremely bitter, for attempting, as he said, his 'personal
- as well as his political destruction.' He exhibited the letter, which was
- all in Mr. Lincoln's handwriting, and was literally as follows. I quote
- from carefully-treasured recollection:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "'Hon. Simon Cameron, Secretary of War.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Dear Sir,&mdash;I have this day nominated Hon. Edwin M. Stanton to be
- Secretary of War, and you to be Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am sure there is no material error in my quotation of the letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Cameron's chief complaint was, that he had no knowledge or intimation of
- the change until Chase delivered the letter. We were then, as ever before
- and since, and as we ever shall be, not in political sympathy, but our
- personal relations were ever kind. Had he been entirely collected, he
- would probably not have said and done what I heard and witnessed; but he
- wept like a child, and appealed to me to aid in protecting him against the
- President's attempt at personal degradation, assuring me that under like
- circumstances he would defend me. In my presence the proposition was made
- and determined upon to ask Lincoln to allow a letter of resignation to be
- antedated, and to write a kind acceptance of the same in reply. The effort
- was made, in which Mr. Chase joined, although perhaps ignorant of all the
- circumstances of the case; and it succeeded. The record shows that Mr.
- Cameron voluntarily resigned; while, in point of fact, he was summarily
- removed without notice.
- </p>
- <p>
- "In many subsequent conversations with Mr. Lincoln, he did not attempt to
- conceal the great misfortune of Cameron's appointment and the painful
- necessity of his removal."
- </p>
- <p>
- Very truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. LINCOLN.'
- </p>
- <p>
- As a slight relief to the miseries of his high position, and the doleful
- tales of the office-hunters, who assailed him morning, noon, and night,
- Mr. Lincoln ran off to Chicago, where he met with the same annoyances, and
- a splendid reception besides. Here, however, he enjoyed the great
- satisfaction of a long private conference with his old friend Speed; and
- it was then that he authorized him to invite Mr. Guthrie to the Cabinet.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now he began to think very tenderly of his friends and relatives in
- Coles County, especially of his good stepmother and her daughters. By the
- first of February, he concluded that he could not leave his home to assume
- the vast responsibilities that awaited him without paying them a visit.
- Accordingly, he left Springfield on the first day of that month, and went
- straight to Charleston, where Col. Chapman and family resided. He was
- accompanied by Mr. Marshall, the State Senator from that district, and was
- entertained at his house. The people crowded by hundreds to see him; and
- he was serenaded by "both the string and brass bands of the town, but
- declined making a speech." Early the next morning, he repaired "to his
- cousin, Dennis Hanks;" and our Jolly old friend Dennis had the
- satisfaction of seeing a grand levee under his own roof. It was all very
- pleasant to Mr. Lincoln to see such multitudes of familiar faces smiling
- upon his wonderful successes. But the chief object of his solicitude was
- not here; Mrs. Lincoln lived in the southern part of the county, and he
- was all impatience to see her. As soon, therefore, as he had taken a
- frugal breakfast with Dennis, he and Col. Chapman started off in a
- "two-horse buggy" toward Farmington, where his step-mother was living with
- her daughter, Mrs. Moore. They had much difficulty in crossing "the
- Kickapoo" River, which was running full of ice; but they finally made the
- dangerous passage, and arrived at Farmington in safety. The meeting
- between him and the old lady was of a most affectionate and tender
- character. She fondled him as her own "Abe," and he her as his own mother.
- It was soon arranged that she should return with him to Charleston, so
- that they might enjoy by the way the unrestricted and uninterrupted
- intercourse which they both desired above all things, but which they were
- not likely to have where the people could get at him. Then Mr. Lincoln and
- Col. Chapman drove to the house of John Hall, who lived "on the old
- Lincoln farm," where Abe split the celebrated rails, and fenced in the
- little clearing in 1830. Thence they went to the spot where old Tom
- Lincoln was buried. The grave was unmarked and utterly neglected. Mr.
- Lincoln said he wanted to "have it enclosed, and a suitable tombstone
- erected." He told Col. Chapman to go to a "marble-dealer," ascertain the
- cost of the work proposed, and write him in full. He would then send
- Dennis Hanks the money, and an inscription for the stone; and Dennis would
- do the rest. (Col. Chapman performed his part of the business, but Mr.
- Lincoln noticed it no further; and the grave remains in the same condition
- to this day.)
- </p>
- <p>
- "We then returned," says Col. Chapman, "to Farmington, where we found a
- large crowd of citizens&mdash;nearly all old acquaintances&mdash;waiting
- to see him. His reception was very enthusiastic, and appeared to gratify
- him very much. After taking dinner at his step-sister's (Mrs. Moore), we
- returned to Charleston, his step-mother coming with us.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Our conversation during the trip was mostly concerning family affairs.
- Mr. Lincoln spoke to me on the way down to Farmington of his step-mother
- in the most affectionate manner; said she had been his best friend in the
- world, and that no son could love a mother more than he loved her. He also
- told me of the condition of his father's family at the time he married his
- step-mother, and of the change she made in the family, and of the
- encouragement he (Abe) received from her.... He spoke of his father, and
- related some amusing incidents of the old man; of the bull-dogs' biting
- the old man on his return from New Orleans; of the old man's escape, when
- a boy, from an Indian who was shot by his uncle Mordecai. He spoke of his
- uncle Mordecai as being a man of very great natural gifts, and spoke of
- his step-brother, John
- </p>
- <p>
- D. Johnston, who had died a short time previous, in the most affectionate
- manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Arriving at Charleston on our return from Farmington, we proceeded to my
- residence. Again the house was crowded by persons wishing to see him. The
- crowd finally became so great, that he authorized me to announce that he
- would hold a public reception at the Town Hall that evening at seven
- o'clock; but that, until then, he wished to be left with relations and
- friends. After supper he proceeded to the Town Hall, where large numbers
- from the town and surrounding country, irrespective of party, called to
- see him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "He left this place Wednesday morning at four o'clock to return to
- Springfield.... Mr. Lincoln appeared to enjoy his visit here remarkably
- well. His reception by his old acquaintances appeared to be very
- gratifying to him. They all appeared so glad to see him, irrespective of
- party, and all appeared so anxious that his administration might be a
- success, and that he might have a pleasant and honorable career as
- President."
- </p>
- <p>
- The parting between Mr. Lincoln and his mother was very touching. She
- embraced him with deep emotion, and said she was sure she would never
- behold him again, for she felt that his enemies would assassinate him. He
- replied, "No, no, mamma: they will not do that. Trust in the Lord, and all
- will be well: we will see each other again." Inexpressibly affected by
- this new evidence of her tender attachment and deep concern for his
- safety, he gradually and reluctantly withdrew himself from the arms of the
- only mother he had ever known, feeling still more oppressed by the heavy
- cares which time and events were rapidly augmenting.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fear that Mr. Lincoln would be assassinated was not peculiar to his
- step-mother. It was shared by very many of his neighbors at Springfield;
- and the friendly warnings he received were as numerous as they were silly
- and gratuitous. Every conceivable precaution was suggested. Some thought
- the cars might be thrown from the track; some thought he would be
- surrounded and stabbed in some great crowd; others thought he might be
- shot from a house-top as he rode up Pennsylvania Avenue on inauguration
- day; while others still were sure he would be quietly poisoned long before
- the 4th of March. One gentleman insisted that he ought, in common
- prudence, to take his cook with him from Springfield,&mdash;one from
- "among his own female friends."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mingled with the thousands who came to see him were many of his old
- New-Salem and Petersburg friends and constituents; and among these was
- Hannah Armstrong, the wife of Jack and the mother of William. Hannah had
- been to see him once or twice before, and had thought there was something
- mysterious in his conduct. He never invited her to his house, or
- introduced her to his wife; and this circumstance led Hannah to suspect
- that "there was something wrong between him and her." On one occasion she
- attempted a sort of surreptitious entrance to his house by the kitchen
- door; but it ended very ludicrously, and poor Hannah was very much
- discouraged. On this occasion she made no effort to get upon an intimate
- footing with his family, but went straight to the State House, where he
- received the common run of strangers. He talked to her as he would have
- done in the days when he ran for the Legislature, and Jack was an
- "influential citizen." Hannah was perfectly charmed, and nearly beside
- herself with pride and pleasure. She, too, was filled with the dread of
- some fatal termination to all his glory. "Well," says she, "I talked to
- him some time, and was about to bid him good-by; had told him that it was
- the last time I should ever see him: something told me that I should never
- see him; they would kill him. He smiled, and said jokingly, 'Hannah, if
- they do kill me, I shall never die another death.' I then bade him
- good-by."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- IT was now but a few weeks until Mr. Lincoln was to become the
- constitutional ruler of one of the great nations of the earth, and to
- begin to expend appropriations, to wield armies, to apportion patronage,
- powers, offices, and honors, such as few sovereigns have ever had at
- command. The eyes of all mankind were bent upon him to see how he would
- solve a problem in statesmanship to which the philosophy of Burke and the
- magnanimity of Wellington might have been unequal. In the midst of a
- political canvass in his own State but a few years before, impressed with
- the gravity of the great issues which then loomed but just above the
- political horizon, he had been the first to announce, amid the objections
- and protestations of his friends and political associates, the great
- truth, that "a house divided against itself cannot stand;" that the
- perpetuity of the Union depended upon its becoming devoted either to the
- interests of freedom or slavery. And now, by a turn of fortune
- unparalleled in history, he had been chosen to preside over the interests
- of the nation; while, as yet unseen to him, the question that perplexed
- the founders of the government, which ever since had been a disturbing
- element in the national life, and had at last arrayed section against
- section, was destined to reach its final settlement through the fierce
- struggle of civil war. In many respects his situation was exceptionally
- trying. He was the first President of the United States elected by a
- strictly sectional vote. The party which elected him, and the parties
- which had been defeated, were inflamed by the heat of the canvass. The
- former, with faith in their principles, and a natural eagerness for the
- prizes now within their reach, were not disposed to compromise their first
- success by any lowering of their standard or any concession to the beaten;
- while many of the latter saw in the success of the triumphant party an
- attack on their most cherished rights, and refused in consequence to abide
- by the result of the contest. To meet so grave an exigency, Mr. Lincoln
- had neither precedents nor experience to guide him, nor could he turn
- elsewhere for greater wisdom than he possessed. The leaders of the new
- party were as yet untried in the great responsibilities which had fallen
- upon him and them. There were men among them who had earned great
- reputation as leaders of an opposition; but their eloquence had been
- expended upon a single subject of national concern. They knew how to
- depict the wrongs of a subject race, and also how to set forth the baleful
- effects of an institution like slavery on national character. But was it
- certain that they were equally able to govern with wisdom and prudence the
- mighty people whose affairs were now given to their keeping?
- </p>
- <p>
- Until the day of his overthrow at Chicago, Mr. Seward had been the
- recognized chief of the party; had, like Mr. Lincoln, taught the existence
- of an irrepressible conflict between the North and the South, and had also
- inculcated the idea of a law higher than the Constitution, which was of
- more binding force than any human enactment, until many of his followers
- had come to regard the Constitution with little respect. It was this
- Constitution which Mr. Lincoln, having sworn to preserve, protect, and
- defend, was to attempt to administer to the satisfaction of the minority
- which had elected him, and which was alone expected to support him. To
- moderate the passions of his own partisans, to conciliate his opponents in
- the North, and divide and weaken his enemies in the South, was a task
- which no mere politician was likely to perform, yet one which none but the
- most expert of politicians and wisest of statesmen was fitted to
- undertake. It required moral as well as intellectual qualities of the
- highest order. William of Orange, with a like duty and similar
- difficulties, was ready at one time and another to give up the effort in
- despair, although aided by "the divinity that hedges round a king." Few
- men believed that Mr. Lincoln possessed a single qualification for his
- great office. His friends had indicated what they considered his chief
- merit, when they insisted that he was a very common, ordinary man, just
- like the rest of "the people,"&mdash;"Old Abe," a rail-splitter and a
- story-teller. They said he was good and honest and well-meaning; but they
- took care not to pretend that he was great. He was thoroughly convinced
- that there was too much truth in this view of his character. He felt
- deeply and keenly his lack of experience in the conduct of public affairs.
- He spoke then and afterwards about the duties of the Presidency with much
- diffidence, and said, with a story about a justice of the peace in
- Illinois, that they constituted his "great first case misunderstood." He
- had never been a ministerial or an executive officer. His most intimate
- friends feared that he possessed no administrative ability; and in this
- opinion he seems to have shared himself, at least in his calmer and more
- melancholy moments.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having put his house in order, arranged all his private business, made
- over his interest in the practice of Lincoln &amp; Herndon to Mr. Herndon,
- and requested "Billy," as a last favor, to leave his name on the old sign
- for four years at least, Mr. Lincoln was ready for the final departure
- from home and all familiar things. And this period of transition from
- private to public life&mdash;a period of waiting and preparing for the
- vast responsibilities that were to bow down his shoulders during the years
- to come&mdash;affords us a favorable opportunity to turn back and look at
- him again as his neighbors saw him from 1837 to 1861.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was about six feet four inches high,&mdash;the length of his
- legs being out of all proportion to that of his body. When he sat down on
- a chair, he seemed no taller than an average man, measuring from the chair
- to the crown of his head; but his knees rose high in front, and a marble
- placed on the cap of one of them would roll down a steep descent to the
- hip. He weighed about a hundred and eighty pounds; but he was thin through
- the breast, narrow across the shoulders, and had the general appearance of
- a consumptive subject. Standing up, he stooped slightly forward; sitting
- down, he usually crossed his long legs, or threw them over the arms of the
- chair, as the most convenient mode of disposing of them. His "head was
- long, and tall from the base of the brain and the eyebrow;" his forehead
- high and narrow, but inclining backward as it rose. The diameter of his
- head from ear to ear was six and a half inches, and from front to back
- eight inches. The size of his hat was seven and an eighth. His ears were
- large, standing out almost at right-angles from his head; his cheek-bones
- high and prominent; his eyebrows heavy, and jutting forward over small,
- sunken blue eyes; his nose long, large, and blunt, the tip of it rather
- ruddy, and slightly awry toward the right-hand side; his chin, projecting
- far and sharp, curved upward to meet a thick, material, lower lip, which
- hung downward; his cheeks were flabby, and the loose skin fell in
- wrinkles, or folds; there was a large mole on his right cheek, and an
- uncommonly prominent Adam's apple on his throat; his hair was dark brown
- in color, stiff, unkempt, and as yet showing little or no sign of
- advancing age or trouble; his complexion was very dark, his skin yellow,
- shrivelled, and "leathery." In short, to use the language of Mr. Herndon,
- "he was a thin, tall, wiry, sinewy, grizzly, raw-boned man," "looking
- woe-struck." His countenance was haggard and careworn, exhibiting all the
- marks of deep and protracted suffering. Every feature of the man&mdash;the
- hollow eyes, with the dark rings beneath; the long, sallow, cadaverous
- face, intersected by those peculiar deep lines; his whole air; his walk;
- his long, silent reveries, broken at long intervals by sudden and
- startling exclamations, as if to confound an observer who might suspect
- the nature of his thoughts&mdash;showed he was a man of sorrows,&mdash;not
- sorrows of to-day or yesterday, but long-treasured and deep,&mdash;bearing
- with him a continual sense of weariness and pain.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was a plain, homely, sad, weary-looking man, to whom one's heart warmed
- involuntarily, because he seemed at once miserable and kind.
- </p>
- <p>
- On a winter's morning, this man could be seen wending his way to the
- market, with a basket on his arm, and a little boy at his side, whose
- small feet rattled and pattered over the ice-bound pavement, attempting to
- make up by the number of his short steps for the long strides of his
- father. The little fellow jerked at the bony hand which held his, and
- prattled and questioned, begged and grew petulant, in a vain effort to
- make his father talk to him. But the latter was probably unconscious of
- the other's existence, and stalked on, absorbed in his own reflections. He
- wore on such occasions an old gray shawl, rolled into a coil, and wrapped
- like a rope around his neck. The rest of his clothes were in keeping. "He
- did not walk cunningly,&mdash;Indian-like,&mdash;but cautiously and
- firmly." His tread was even and strong. He was a little pigeon-toed; and
- this, with another peculiarity, made his walk very singular. He set his
- whole foot flat on the ground, and in turn lifted it all at once,&mdash;not
- resting momentarily upon the toe as the foot rose, nor upon the heel as it
- fell. He never wore his shoes out at the heel and the toe more, as most
- men do, than at the middle of the sole; yet his gait was not altogether
- awkward, and there was manifest physical power in his step. As he moved
- along thus silent, abstracted, his thoughts dimly reflected in his sharp
- face, men turned to look after him as an object of sympathy as well as
- curiosity: "his melancholy," in the words of Mr. Herndon, "dripped from
- him as he walked." If, however, he met a friend in the street, and was
- roused by a loud, hearty "Good-morning, Lincoln!" he would grasp the
- friend's hand with one or both of his own, and, with his usual expression
- of "Howdy, howdy," would detain him to hear a story: something reminded
- him of it; it happened in Indiana, and it must be told, for it was
- wonderfully pertinent.
- </p>
- <p>
- After his breakfast-hour, he would appear at his office, and go about the
- labors of the day with all his might, displaying prodigious industry and
- capacity for continuous application, although he never was a fast worker.
- Sometimes it happened that he came without his breakfast; and then he
- would have in his hands a piece of cheese, or Bologna sausage, and a few
- crackers, bought by the way. At such times he did not speak to his partner
- or his friends, if any happened to be present: the tears were, perhaps,
- struggling into his eyes, while his pride was struggling to keep them
- back. Mr. Herndon knew the whole story at a glance: there was no speech
- between them; but neither wished the visitors to the office to witness the
- scene; and, therefore, Mr. Lincoln retired to the back office, while Mr.
- Herndon locked the front one, and walked away with the key in his pocket.
- In an hour or more the latter would return, and perhaps find Mr. Lincoln
- calm and collected; otherwise he went out again, and waited until he was
- so. Then the office was opened, and every thing went on as usual.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mr. Lincoln had a speech to write, which happened very often, he
- would put down each thought, as it struck him, on a small strip of paper,
- and, having accumulated a number of these, generally carried them in his
- hat or his pockets until he had the whole speech composed in this odd way,
- when he would sit down at his table, connect the fragments, and then write
- out the whole speech on consecutive sheets in a plain, legible
- handwriting.
- </p>
- <p>
- His house was an ordinary two-story frame-building, with a stable and a
- yard: it was a bare, cheerless sort of a place. He planted no fruit or
- shade trees, no shrubbery or flowers. He did on one occasion set out a few
- rose-bushes in front of his house; but they speedily perished, or became
- unsightly for want of attention. Mrs. Wallace, Mrs. Lincoln's sister,
- undertook "to hide the nakedness" of the place by planting some flowers;
- but they soon withered and died. He cultivated a small garden for a single
- year, working in it himself; but it did not seem to prosper, and that
- enterprise also was abandoned. He had a horse and a cow: the one was fed
- and curried, and the other fed and milked, by his own hand. When at home,
- he chopped and sawed all the wood that was used in his house. Late one
- night he returned home, after an absence of a week or so. His neighbor,
- Webber, was in bed; but, hearing an axe in use at that unusual hour, he
- rose to see what it meant. The moon was high; and by its light he looked
- down into Lincoln's yard, and there saw him in his shirt-sleeves "cutting
- wood to cook his supper with." Webber turned to his watch, and saw that it
- was one o'clock. Besides this house and lot, and a small sum of money, Mr.
- Lincoln had no property, except some wild land in Iowa, entered for him
- under warrants, received for his service in the Black Hawk War.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Wallace thinks "Mr. Lincoln was a domestic man by nature." He was not
- fond of other people's children, but was extremely fond of his own: he was
- patient, indulgent, and generous with them to a fault. On Sundays he often
- took those that were large enough, and walked with them into the country,
- and, giving himself up entirely to them, rambled through the green fields
- or the cool woods, amusing and instructing them for a whole day at a time.
- His method of reading is thus quaintly described. "He would read,
- generally aloud (couldn't read otherwise),&mdash;would read with great
- warmth, all funny or humorous things; read Shakspeare that way. He was a
- sad man, an abstracted man. He would lean back, his head against the top
- of a rocking-chair; sit abstracted that way for minutes,&mdash;twenty,
- thirty minutes,&mdash;and all at once would burst out into a joke."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Col. Chapman, daughter of Dennis Hanks, and therefore a relative of
- Mr. Lincoln, made him a long visit previous to her marriage. "You ask me,"
- says she, "how Mr. Lincoln acted at home. I can say, and that truly, he
- was all that a husband, father, and neighbor should be,&mdash;kind and
- affectionate to his wife and child ('Bob' being the only one they had when
- I was with them), and very pleasant to all around him. Never did I hear
- him utter an unkind word. For instance: one day he undertook to correct
- his child, and his wife was determined that he should not, and attempted
- to take it from him; but in this she failed. She then tried
- tongue-lashing, but met with the same fate; for Mr. Lincoln corrected his
- child as a father ought to do, in the face of his wife's anger, and that,
- too, without even changing his countenance or making any reply to his
- wife.
- </p>
- <p>
- "His favorite way of reading, when at home, was lying down on the floor. I
- fancy I see him now, lying full-length in the hall of his old house
- reading. When not engaged reading law-books, he would read literary works,
- and was very fond of reading poetry, and often, when he would be, or
- appear to be, in deep study, commence and repeat aloud some piece that he
- had taken a fancy to, such as the one you already have in print, and 'The
- Burial of Sir John Moore,' and so on. He often told laughable jokes and
- stories when he thought we were looking gloomy."
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0014" id="image-0014">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/519.jpg"
- alt="Mr. Lincoln's Home in Springfield, Ill. 519 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was not supremely happy in his domestic relations: the
- circumstances of his courtship and marriage alone made that impossible.
- His engagement to Miss Todd was one of the great misfortunes of his life
- and of hers. He realized the mistake too late; and when he was brought
- face to face with the lie he was about to enact, and the wrong he was
- about to do, both to himself and an innocent woman, he recoiled with
- horror and remorse. For weeks together, he was sick, deranged, and on the
- verge of suicide,&mdash;a heavy care to his friends, and a source of
- bitter mortification to the unfortunate lady, whose good fame depended, in
- a great part, upon his constancy. The wedding garments and the marriage
- feast were prepared, the very hour had come when the solemn ceremony was
- to be performed; and the groom failed to appear! He was no longer a free
- agent: he was restrained, carefully guarded, and soon after removed to a
- distant place, where the exciting causes of his disease would be less
- constant and active in their operation. He recovered slowly, and at length
- returned to Springfield. He spoke out his feelings frankly and truly to
- the one person most interested in them. But he had been, from the
- beginning, except in the case of Ann Rutledge, singularly inconstant and
- unstable in his relations with the few refined and cultivated women who
- had been the objects of his attention. He loved Miss Rutledge
- passionately, and the next year importuned Miss Owens to be his wife.
- Failing in his suit, he wrote an unfeeling letter about her, apparently
- with no earthly object but to display his levity and make them both
- ridiculous. He courted Miss Todd, and at the moment of success fell in
- love with her relative, and, between the two, went crazy, and thought of
- ending all his woes with a razor or a pocket-knife. It is not impossible
- that the feelings of such a man might have undergone another and more
- sudden change. Perhaps they did. At all events, he was conscientious and
- honorable and just. There was but one way of repairing the injury he had
- done Miss Todd, and he adopted it. They were married; but they understood
- each other, and suffered the inevitable consequences, as other people do
- under similar circumstances. But such troubles seldom fail to find a
- tongue; and it is not strange, that, in this case, neighbors and friends,
- and ultimately the whole country, came to know the state of things in that
- house. Mr. Lincoln scarcely attempted to conceal it, but talked of it with
- little or no reserve to his wife's relatives, as well as his own friends.
- Yet the gentleness and patience with which he bore this affliction from
- day to day, and from year to year, was enough to move the shade of
- Socrates. It touched his acquaintances deeply, and they gave it the widest
- publicity. They made no pause to inquire, to investigate, and to apportion
- the blame between the parties, according to their deserts. Almost ever
- since Mr. Lincoln's death, a portion of the press has never tired of
- heaping brutal reproaches upon his wife and widow; whilst a certain class
- of his friends thought they were honoring his memory by multiplying
- outrages and indignities upon her, at the very moment when she was broken
- by want and sorrow, defamed, defenceless, in the hands of thieves, and at
- the mercy of spies. If ever a woman grievously expiated an offence not her
- own, this woman did. In the Herndon manuscripts, there is a mass of
- particulars under this head; but Mr. Herndon sums them all up in a single
- sentence, in a letter to one of Mr. Lincoln's biographers: "All that I
- know ennobles both."
- </p>
- <p>
- It would be very difficult to recite all the causes of Mr. Lincoln's
- melancholy disposition. That it was partly owing to physical causes there
- can be no doubt. Mr. Stuart says, that in some respects he was totally
- unlike other people, and was, in fact, a "mystery." Blue-pills were the
- medicinal remedy which he affected most. But whatever the history or the
- cause,&mdash;whether physical reasons, the absence of domestic concord, a
- series of painful recollections of his mother, of his father and master,
- of early sorrows, blows, and hardships, of Ann Rutledge and fruitless
- hopes, or all these combined, Mr. Lincoln was the saddest and gloomiest
- man of his time. "I do not think that he knew what happiness was for
- twenty years," says Mr. Herndon. "Terrible" is the word which all his
- friends use to describe him in the black mood. "It was terrible! It was
- terrible!" says one and another.
- </p>
- <p>
- His mind was filled with gloomy forebodings and strong apprehensions of
- impending evil, mingled with extravagant visions of personal grandeur and
- power. His imagination painted a scene just beyond the veil of the
- immediate future, gilded with glory yet tarnished with blood. It was his
- "destiny,"&mdash;splendid but dreadful, fascinating but terrible. His case
- bore little resemblance to those of religious enthusiasts like Bunyan,
- Cowper, and others. His was more like the delusion of the fatalist,
- conscious of his star. At all events, he never doubted for a moment but
- that he was formed for "some great or miserable end." He talked about it
- frequently and sometimes calmly. Mr. Herndon remembers many of these
- conversations in their office at Springfield, and in their rides around
- the circuit. Mr. Lincoln said the impression had grown in him "all his
- life;" but Mr. Herndon thinks it was about 1840 that it took the character
- of a "religious conviction." He had then suffered much, and, considering
- his opportunities, achieved great things. He was already a leader among
- men, and a most brilliant career had been promised him by the prophetic
- enthusiasm of many friends. Thus encouraged and stimulated, and feeling
- himself growing gradually stronger and stronger, in the estimation of "the
- plain people," whose voice was more potent than all the Warwicks, his
- ambition painted the rainbow of glory in the sky, while his morbid
- melancholy supplied the clouds that were to overcast and obliterate it
- with the wrath and ruin of the tempest. To him it was fate, and there was
- no escape or defence. The presentiment never deserted him: it was as
- clear, as perfect, as certain, as any image conveyed by the senses. He had
- now entertained it so long, that it was as much a part of his nature as
- the consciousness of identity. All doubts had faded away, and he submitted
- humbly to a power which he could neither comprehend nor resist. He was to
- fall,&mdash;fall from a lofty place, and in the performance of a great
- work. The star under which he was born was at once brilliant and
- malignant: the horoscope was cast, fixed, irreversible; and he had no more
- power to alter or defeat it in the minutest particular than he had to
- reverse the law of gravitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the election, he conceived that he would not "last" through his term
- of office, but had at length reached the point where the sacrifice would
- take place. All precautions against assassination he considered worse than
- useless. "If they want to kill me," said he, "there is nothing to
- prevent." He complained to Mr. Gillespie of the small body-guard which his
- counsellors had forced upon him, insisting that they were a needless
- encumbrance. When Mr. Gillespie urged the ease and impunity with which he
- might be killed, and the value of his life to the country, he said, "What
- is the use of putting up the <i>gap</i> when the fence is down all
- around?"
- </p>
- <p>
- "It was just after my election in 1860," said Mr. Lincoln to his
- secretary, John Hay, "when the news had been coming in thick and fast all
- day, and there had been a great 'hurrah boys!' so that I was well tired
- out, and went home to rest, throwing myself upon a lounge in my chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Opposite to where I lay was a bureau with a swinging glass upon it; and,
- in looking in that glass, I saw myself reflected nearly at full length;
- but my face, I noticed, had two separate and distinct images, the tip of
- the nose of one being about three inches from the tip of the other. I was
- a little bothered, perhaps startled, and got up and looked in the glass;
- but the illusion vanished. On lying down again, I saw it a second time,&mdash;plainer,
- if possible, than before; and then I noticed that one of the faces was a
- little paler&mdash;say five shades&mdash;than the other. I got up, and the
- thing melted away; and I went off, and in the excitement of the hour
- forgot all about it,&mdash;nearly, but not quite, for the thing would once
- in a while come up, and give me a little pang, as though something
- uncomfortable had happened. When I went home, I told my wife about it: and
- a few days after I tried the experiment again, when, sure enough, the
- thing came back again; but I never succeeded in bringing the ghost back
- after that, though I once tried very industriously to show it to my wife,
- who was worried about it somewhat. She thought it was 'a sign' that I was
- to be elected to a second term of office, and that the paleness of one of
- the faces was an omen that I should not see life through the last term."
- </p>
- <p>
- In this morbid and dreamy state of mind, Mr. Lincoln passed the greater
- part of his life. But his "sadness, despair, gloom," Mr. Herndon says,
- "were not of the kind that leads a badly-balanced mind into misanthropy
- and universal hate and scorn. His humor would assert itself from the hell
- of misanthropy: it would assert its independence every third hour or day
- or week. His abstractedness, his continuity of thought, his despair, made
- him, twice in his life, for two weeks at a time, walk that narrow line
- that divides sanity from insanity.... This peculiarity of his nature, his
- humor, his wit, kept him alive in his mind.... It was those good sides of
- his nature that made, to him, his life bearable. Mr. Lincoln was a weak
- man and a strong man by turns."
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of Mr. Lincoln's literary tastes indicated strongly his prevailing
- gloominess of mind. He read Byron extensively, especially "Childe Harold,"
- "The Dream," and "Don Juan." Burns was one of his earliest favorites,
- although there is no evidence that he appreciated highly the best efforts
- of Burns. On the contrary, "Holy Willie's Prayer" was the only one of his
- poems which Mr. Lincoln took the trouble to memorize. He was fond of
- Shakspeare, especially "King Lear," and "The Merry Wives of Windsor." But
- whatever was suggestive of death, the grave, the sorrows of man's days on
- earth, charmed his disconsolate spirit, and captivated his sympathetic
- heart. Solemn-sounding rhymes, with no merit but the sad music of their
- numbers, were more enchanting to him than the loftiest songs of the
- masters. Of these were, "Why should the Spirit of Mortal be Proud?" and a
- pretty commonplace little piece, entitled "The Inquiry." One verse of
- Holmes's "Last Leaf" he thought was "inexpressibly touching." This verse
- we give the reader:&mdash;
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "The mossy marbles rest On the lips that he has pressed In their bloom;
- And the names he loved to hear Have been carved for many a year On the
- tomb."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln frequently said that he lived by his humor, and would have
- died without it. His manner of telling a story was irresistibly comical,
- the fun of it dancing in his eyes and playing over every feature. His face
- changed in an instant: the hard lines faded out of it, and the mirth
- seemed to diffuse itself all over him, like a spontaneous tickle. You
- could see it coming long before he opened his mouth, and he began to enjoy
- the "point" before his eager auditors could catch the faintest glimpse of
- it. Telling and hearing ridiculous stories was one of his ruling passions.
- He would go a long way out of his road to tell a grave, sedate fellow a
- broad story, or to propound to him a conundrum that was not particularly
- remarkable for its delicacy. If he happened to hear of a man who was known
- to have something fresh in this line, he would hunt him up, and "swap
- jokes" with him. Nobody remembers the time when his fund of anecdotes was
- not apparently inexhaustible. It was so in Indiana; it was so in New
- Salem, in the Black-Hawk War, in the Legislature, in Congress, on the
- circuit, on the stump,&mdash;everywhere. The most trifling incident
- "reminded" him of a story, and that story reminded him of another, until
- everybody marvelled "that one small head could carry all he knew." The
- "good things" he said were repeated at second-hand, all over the counties
- through which he chanced to travel; and many, of a questionable flavor,
- were attributed to him, not because they were his in fact, but because
- they were like his. Judges, lawyers, jurors, and suitors carried home with
- them select budgets of his stories, to be retailed to itching ears as "Old
- Abe's last." When the court adjourned from village to village, the taverns
- and the groceries left behind were filled with the sorry echoes of his
- "best." He generally located his little narratives with great precision,&mdash;in
- Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois; and if he was not personally "knowing" to the
- facts himself, he was intimately acquainted with a gentleman who was.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln used his stories variously,&mdash;to illustrate or convey an
- argument; to make his opinions clear to another, or conceal them
- altogether; to cut off a disagreeable conversation, or to end an
- unprofitable discussion; to cheer his own heart, or simply to amuse his
- friends. But most frequently he had a practical object in view, and
- employed them simply "as labor-saving contrivances."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Judge Davis's opinion, that Mr. Lincoln's hilarity was mainly
- simulated, and that "his stories and jokes were intended to whistle off
- sadness." "The groundwork of his social nature was sad," says Judge Scott;
- "but for the fact that he studiously cultivated the humorous, it would
- have been very sad indeed. His mirth to me always seemed to be put on, and
- did not properly belong there. Like a plant produced in the hot-bed, it
- had an unnatural and luxuriant growth."
- </p>
- <p>
- Although Mr. Lincoln's walk among men was remarkably pure, the same cannot
- be said of his conversation. He was endowed by nature with a keen sense of
- humor, and he found great delight in indulging it. But his humor was not
- of a delicate quality; it was chiefly exercised in hearing and telling
- stories of the grosser sort. In this tendency he was restrained by no
- presence and no occasion. It was his opinion that the finest wit and
- humor, the best jokes and anecdotes, emanated from the lower orders of the
- country people. It was from this source that he had acquired his peculiar
- tastes and his store of materials. The associations which began with the
- early days of Dennis Hanks continued through his life at New Salem and his
- career at the Illinois Bar, and did not desert him when, later in life, he
- arrived at the highest dignities.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln indulged in no sensual excesses: he ate moderately, and drank
- temperately when he drank at all. For many years he was an ardent agitator
- against the use of intoxicating beverages, and made speeches, far and
- near, in favor of total abstinence. Some of them were printed; and of one
- he was not a little proud. He abstained himself, not so much upon
- principle, as because of a total lack of appetite. He had no taste for
- spirituous liquors; and, when he took them, it was a punishment to him,
- not an indulgence. But he disliked sumptuary laws, and would not prescribe
- by statute what other men should eat or drink. When the temperance men ran
- to the Legislature to invoke the power of the State, his voice&mdash;the
- most eloquent among them&mdash;was silent. He did not oppose them, but
- quietly withdrew from the cause, and left others to manage it. In 1854 he
- was induced to join the order called Sons of Temperance, but never
- attended a single meeting after the one at which he was initiated.
- </p>
- <p>
- Morbid, moody, meditative, thinking much of himself and the things
- pertaining to himself, regarding other men as instruments furnished to his
- hand for the accomplishment of views which he knew were important to him,
- and, therefore, considered important to the public, Mr. Lincoln was a man
- apart from the rest of his kind, unsocial, cold, impassive,&mdash;neither
- a "good hater" nor a fond friend. He unbent in the society of those who
- gave him new ideas, who listened to and admired him, whose attachment
- might be useful, or whose conversation amused him. He seemed to make
- boon-companions of the coarsest men on the list of his acquaintances,&mdash;"low,
- vulgar, unfortunate creatures;" but, as Judge Davis has it, "he used such
- men as tools,&mdash;things to satisfy him, to feed his desires." He felt
- sorry for them, enjoyed them, extracted from them whatever service they
- were capable of rendering, discarded and forgot them. If one of them,
- presuming upon the past, followed him to Washington with a view to
- personal profit, Mr. Lincoln would probably take him to his private room,
- lock the doors, revel in reminiscences of Illinois, new stories and old,
- through an entire evening, and then dismiss his enchanted crony with
- nothing more substantial than his blessing. It was said that "he had no
- heart;" that is, no personal attachments warm and strong enough to govern
- his actions. It was seldom that he praised anybody; and, when he did, it
- was not a rival or an equal in the struggle for popularity and power. His
- encomiums were more likely to be satirical than sincere, and sometimes
- were artfully contrived as mere stratagems to catch the applause he
- pretended to bestow, or at least to share it in equal parts. No one knew
- better how to "damn with faint praise," or to divide the glory of another
- by being the first and frankest to acknowledge it. Fully alive to the fact
- that no qualities of a public man are so charming to the people as
- simplicity and candor, he made simplicity and candor the mask of deep
- feelings carefully concealed, and subtle plans studiously veiled from all
- eyes but one. He had no reverence for great men, followed no leader with
- blind devotion, and yielded no opinion to mere authority. He felt that he
- was as great as anybody, and could do what another did. It was, however,
- the supreme desire of his heart to be right, and to do justice in all the
- relations of life. Although some of his strongest passions conflicted more
- or less directly with this desire, he was conscious of them, and strove to
- regulate them by self-imposed restraints. He was not avaricious, never
- appropriated a cent wrongfully, and did not think money for its own sake a
- fit object of any man's ambition. But he knew its value, its power, and
- liked to keep it when he had it. He gave occasionally to individual
- mendicants, or relieved a case of great destitution at his very door; but
- his alms-giving was neither profuse nor systematic. He never made
- donations to be distributed to the poor who were not of his acquaintance
- and very near at hand. There were few entertainments at his house. People
- were seldom asked to dine with him. To many he seemed inhospitable; and
- there was something about his house, an indescribable air of
- exclusiveness, which forbade the entering guest. It is not meant to be
- said that this came from mere economy. It was not at home that he wished
- to see company. He preferred to meet his friends abroad,&mdash;on a
- street-corner, in an office, at the Court House, or sitting on nail-kegs
- in a country store.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln took no part in the promotion of local enterprises, railroads,
- schools, churches, asylums. The benefits he proposed for his fellow-men
- were to be accomplished by political means alone. Politics were his world,&mdash;a
- world filled with hopeful enchantments. Ordinarily he disliked to discuss
- any other subject. "In his office," says Mr. Herndon, "he sat down, or
- spilt himself, on his lounge, read aloud, told stories, talked politics,&mdash;never
- science, art, literature, railroad gatherings, colleges, asylums,
- hospitals, commerce, education, progress, nothing that interested the
- world generally," except politics. He seldom took an active part in local
- or minor elections, or wasted his power to advance a friend. He did
- nothing out of mere gratitude, and forgot the devotion of his warmest
- partisans as soon as the occasion for their services had passed. What they
- did for him was quietly appropriated as the reward of superior merit,
- calling for no return in kind. He was always ready to do battle for a
- principle, after a discreet fashion, but never permitted himself to be
- strongly influenced by the claims of individual men. When he was a
- candidate himself, he thought the whole canvass and all the preliminaries
- ought to be conducted with reference to his success. He would say to a
- man, "Your continuance in the field injures me" and be quite sure that he
- had given a perfect reason for his withdrawal. He would have no
- "obstacles" in his way; coveted honors, was eager for power, and impatient
- of any interference that delayed or obstructed his progress. He worked
- hard enough at general elections, when he could make speeches, have them
- printed, and "fill the speaking trump of fame" with his achievements; but
- in the little affairs about home, where it was all work and no glory, his
- zeal was much less conspicuous. Intensely secretive and cautious, he
- shared his secrets with no man, and revealed just enough of his plans to
- allure support, and not enough to expose their personal application. After
- Speed left, he had no intimates to whom he opened his whole mind. This is
- the unanimous testimony of all who knew him. Feeling himself perfectly
- competent to manage his own affairs, he listened with deceptive patience
- to the views of others, and then dismissed the advice with the adviser.
- Judge Davis was supposed to have great influence over him; but he declares
- that he had literally none. "Once or twice," says he, "he asked my advice
- about the almighty dollar, but never about any thing else."
- </p>
- <p>
- Notwithstanding his overweening ambition, and the breathless eagerness
- with which he pursued the objects of it, he had not a particle of sympathy
- with the great mass of his fellow-citizens who were engaged in similar
- scrambles for place. "If ever," said he, "American society and the United
- States Government are demoralized and overthrown, it will come from the
- voracious desire of office,&mdash;this wriggle to live without toil, work,
- and labor, from which I am not free myself." Mr. Lincoln was not a
- demagogue or a trimmer. He never deserted a party in disaster, or joined
- one in triumph. Nearly the whole of his public life was spent in the
- service of a party which struggled against hopeless odds, which met with
- many reverses and few victories. It is true, that about the time he began
- as a politician, the Whigs in his immediate locality, at first united with
- the moderate Democrats, and afterwards by themselves, were strong enough
- to help him to the Legislature as often as he chose to go. But, if the
- fact had been otherwise, it is not likely that he would have changed
- sides, or even altered his position in any essential particular, to catch
- the popular favor. Subsequently he suffered many defeats,&mdash;for
- Congress, for Commissioner of the Land Office, and twice for Senator; but
- on this account he never faltered in devotion to the general principles of
- the party, or sought to better his fortune by an alliance with the common
- enemy. It cannot be denied, that, when he was first a candidate for the
- Legislature, his views of public policy were a little cloudy, and that his
- addresses to the people were calculated to make fair weather with men of
- various opinions; nor that, when first a candidate for United States
- Senator, he was willing to make a secret bargain with the extreme
- Abolitionists, and, when last a candidate, to make some sacrifice of
- opinion to further his own aspirations for the Presidency. The pledge to
- Lovejoy and the "House-divided Speech" were made under the influence of
- personal considerations, without reference to the views or the success of
- those who had chosen and trusted him as a leader for a far different
- purpose. But this was merely steering between sections of his own party,
- where the differences were slight and easily reconciled,&mdash;manoeuvring
- for the strength of one faction today and another to-morrow, with intent
- to unite them and lead them to a victory, the benefits of which would
- inure to all. He was not one to be last in the fight and first at the
- feast, nor yet one to be first in the fight and last at the feast. He
- would do his whole duty in the field, but had not the slightest objection
- to sitting down at the head of the table,&mdash;an act which he would
- perform with a modest, homely air, that disarmed envy, and silenced the
- master when he would say, "Friend, go down lower." His "master" was the
- "plain people." To be popular was to him the greatest good in life. He had
- known what it was to be without popularity, and he had known what it was
- to enjoy it. To gain it or to keep it, he considered no labor too great,
- no artifice misused or misapplied. His ambition was strong; yet it existed
- in strict subordination to his sense of party fidelity, and could by no
- chance or possibility lure him into downright social or political
- treasons. His path may have been a little devious, winding hither and
- thither, in search of greater convenience of travel, or the security of a
- larger company; but it always went forward in the same general direction,
- and never ran off at right-angles toward a hostile camp. The great body of
- men who acted with him in the beginning acted with him at the last.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the whole, he was an honest, although a shrewd, and by no means an
- unselfish politician. He
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- ................."Foresaw Which way the world began to draw,"
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- and instinctively drew with it. He had convictions, but preferred to
- choose his time to speak. He was not so much of a Whig that he could not
- receive the support of the "nominal" Jackson men, until party lines were
- drawn so tight that he was compelled to be one thing or the other. He was
- not so much of a Whig that he could not make a small diversion for White
- in 1836, nor so much of a White man that he could not lead Harrison's
- friends in the Legislature during the same winter. He was a firm believer
- in the good policy of high "protective tariffs;" but, when importuned to
- say so in a public letter, he declined on the ground that it would do him
- no good. He detested Know-Nothingism with all his heart; but, when
- Know-Nothingism swept the country, he was so far from being obtrusive with
- his views, that many believed he belonged to the order. He was an
- anti-slavery man from the beginning of his service in the Legislature; but
- he was so cautious and moderate in the expression of his sentiments, that,
- when the anti-Nebraska party disintegrated, the ultra-Republicans were any
- thing but sure of his adherence; and even after the Bloomington Convention
- he continued to pick his way to the front with wary steps, and did not
- take his place among the boldest of the agitators until 1858, when he
- uttered the "House-divided Speech," just in time to take Mr. Seward's
- place on the Presidential ticket of 1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- Any analysis of Mr. Lincoln's character would be defective that did not
- include his religious opinions. On such matters he thought deeply; and his
- opinions were positive. But perhaps no phase of his character has been
- more persistently misrepresented and variously misunderstood, than this of
- his religious belief. Not that the conclusive testimony of many of his
- intimate associates relative to his frequent expressions on such subjects
- has ever been wanting; but his great prominence in the world's history,
- and his identification with some of the great questions of our time,
- which, by their moral import, were held to be eminently religious in their
- character, have led many good people to trace in his motives and actions
- similar convictions to those held by themselves. His extremely general
- expressions of religious faith called forth by the grave exigencies of his
- public life, or indulged in on occasions of private condolence, have too
- often been distorted out of relation to their real significance or meaning
- to suit the opinions or tickle the fancies of individuals or parties.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was never a member of any church, nor did he believe in the
- divinity of Christ, or the inspiration of the Scriptures in the sense
- understood by evangelical Christians. His theological opinions were
- substantially those expounded by Theodore Parker. Overwhelming testimony
- out of many mouths, and none stronger than that out of his own, place
- these facts beyond controversy.
- </p>
- <p>
- When a boy, he showed no sign of that piety which his many biographers
- ascribe to his manhood. His stepmother&mdash;herself a Christian, and
- longing for the least sign of faith in him&mdash;could remember no
- circumstance that supported her hope. On the contrary, she recollected
- very well that he never went off into a corner, as has been said, to
- ponder the sacred writings, and to wet the page with his tears of
- penitence. He was fond of music; but Dennis Hanks is clear to the point
- that it was songs of a very questionable character that cheered his lonely
- pilgrimage through the woods of Indiana. When he went to church at all, he
- went to mock, and came away to mimic. Indeed, it is more than probable
- that the sort of "religion" which prevailed among the associates of his
- boyhood impressed him with a very poor opinion of the value of the
- article. On the whole, he thought, perhaps, a person had better be without
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he came to New Salem, he consorted with freethinkers, joined with
- them in deriding the gospel history of Jesus, read Volney and Paine, and
- then wrote a deliberate and labored essay, wherein he reached conclusions
- similar to theirs. The essay was burnt, but he never denied or regretted
- its composition. On the contrary, he made it the subject of free and
- frequent conversations with his friends at Springfield, and stated, with
- much particularity and precision, the origin, arguments, and objects of
- the work.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not until after Mr. Lincoln's death, that his alleged orthodoxy
- became the principal topic of his eulogists; but since then the effort on
- the part of some political writers and speakers to impress the public mind
- erroneously seems to have been general and systematic. It is important
- that the question should be finally determined; and, in order to do so,
- the names of some of his nearest friends are given below, followed by
- clear and decisive statements, for which they are separately responsible.
- Some of them are gentlemen of distinction, and all of them men of high
- character, who enjoyed the best opportunities to form correct opinions.
- </p>
- <p>
- James H. Matheny says in a letter to Mr. Herndon:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I knew Mr. Lincoln as early as 1834-7; know he was an infidel. He and W.
- D. Herndon used to talk infidelity in the clerk's office in this city,
- about the years 1837-40. Lincoln attacked the Bible and the New Testament
- on two grounds: first, from the inherent or apparent contradictions under
- its lids; second, from the grounds of reason. Sometimes he ridiculed the
- Bible and New Testament, sometimes seemed to scoff it, though I shall not
- use that word in its full and literal sense. I never heard that Lincoln
- changed his views, though his personal and political friend from 1834 to
- 1860. Sometimes Lincoln bordered on atheism. He went far that way, and
- often shocked me. I was then a young man, and believed what my good mother
- told me. Stuart &amp; Lincoln's office was in what was called Hoffman's
- Row, on North Fifth Street, near the public square. It was in the same
- building as the clerk's office, and on the same floor. Lincoln would come
- into the clerk's office, where I and some young men&mdash;Evan Butler,
- Newton Francis, and others&mdash;were writing or staying, and would bring
- the Bible with him; would read a chapter; argue against it. Lincoln then
- had a smattering of geology, if I recollect it. Lincoln often, if not
- wholly, was an atheist; at least, bordered on it. Lincoln was enthusiastic
- in his infidelity. As he grew older, he grew more discreet, didn't talk
- much before strangers about his religion; but to friends, close and bosom
- ones, he was always open and avowed, fair and honest; but to strangers, he
- held them off from policy. Lincoln used to quote Burns. Burns helped
- Lincoln to be an infidel, as I think; at least, he found in Burns a like
- thinker and feeler. Lincoln quoted 'Tam O'Skanter.' 'What! send one to
- heaven, and ten to hell!' &amp;c.
- </p>
- <p>
- "From what I know of Mr. Lincoln and his views of Christianity, and from
- what I know as honest and well-founded rumor; from what I have heard his
- best friends say and regret for years; from what he never denied when
- accused, and from what Lincoln has hinted and intimated, to say no more,&mdash;he
- did write a little book on infidelity at or near New Salem, in Menard
- County, about the year 1834 or 1835. I have, stated these things to you
- often. Judge Logan, John T. Stuart, yourself, know what I know, and some
- of you more.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Herndon, you insist on knowing something which you know I possess,
- and got as a secret, and that is, about Lincoln's little book on
- infidelity. Mr. Lincoln did tell me that he did write a little book on
- infidelity. This statement I have avoided heretofore; but, as you strongly
- insist upon it,&mdash;probably to defend yourself against charges of
- misrepresentations,&mdash;I give it you as I got it from Lincoln's mouth."
- </p>
- <p>
- From Hon. John T. Stuart:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I knew Mr. Lincoln when he first came here, and for years afterwards. He
- was an avowed and open infidel, sometimes bordered on atheism. I have
- often and often heard Lincoln and one W. D. Herndon, who was a
- freethinker, talk over this subject. Lincoln went further against
- Christian beliefs and doctrines and principles than any man I ever heard:
- he shocked me. I don't remember the exact line of his argument: suppose it
- was against the inherent defects, so called, of the Bible, and on grounds
- of reason. Lincoln always denied that Jesus was the Christ of God,&mdash;denied
- that Jesus was the Son of God, as understood and maintained by the
- Christian Church. The Rev. Dr. Smith, who wrote a letter, tried to convert
- Lincoln from infidelity so late as 1858, and couldn't do it."
- </p>
- <p>
- William H. Herndon, Esq.:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "As to Mr. Lincoln's religious views, he was, in short, an infidel,... a
- theist. He did not believe that Jesus was God, nor the Son of God,&mdash;was
- a fatalist, denied the freedom of the will. Mr. Lincoln told me a thousand
- times, that he did not believe the Bible was the revelation of God, as the
- Christian world contends. The points that Mr. Lincoln tried to demonstrate
- (in his book) were: First, That the Bible was not God's revelation; and,
- Second, That Jesus was not the Son of God. I assert this on my own
- knowledge, and on my veracity. Judge Logan, John T. Stuart, James H.
- Matheny, and others, will tell you the truth. I say they will confirm what
- I say, with this exception,&mdash;they all make it blacker than I remember
- it. Joshua F. Speed of Louisville, I think, will tell you the same thing."
- </p>
- <p>
- Hon. David Davis:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I do not know any thing about Lincoln's religion, and do not think
- anybody knew. The idea that Lincoln talked to a stranger about his
- religion or religious views, or made such speeches, remarks, &amp;c.,
- about it as are published, is to me absurd. I knew the man so well: he was
- the most reticent, secretive man I ever saw, or expect to see. He had no
- faith, in the Christian sense of the term,&mdash;had faith in laws,
- principles, causes, and effects&mdash;philosophically: you [Herndon] know
- more about his religion than any man. You ought to know it, of course."
- </p>
- <p>
- William H. Hannah, Esq.:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Since 1856 Mr. Lincoln told me that he was a kind of immortalist; that he
- never could bring himself to believe in eternal punishment; that man lived
- but a little while here; and that, if eternal punishment were man's doom,
- he should spend that little life in vigilant and ceaseless preparation by
- never-ending prayer."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Lincoln:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln had no hope and no faith in the usual acceptance of those
- words."
- </p>
- <p>
- Dr. C. H. Ray:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I do not know how I can aid you. You [Herndon] knew Mr. Lincoln far
- better than I did, though I knew him well; and you have served up his
- leading characteristics in a way that I should despair of doing, if I
- should try. I have only one thing to ask: that you do not give Calvinistic
- theology a chance to claim him as one of its saints and martyrs. He went
- to the Old-School Church; but, in spite of that outward assent to the
- horrible dogmas of the sect, <i>I have reason from, himself</i> to know
- that his 'vital purity' if that means belief in the impossible, was of a
- negative sort."
- </p>
- <p>
- I. W. Keys, Esq.:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In my intercourse with Mr. Lincoln, I learned that he believed in a
- Creator of all things, who had neither beginning nor end, and possessing
- all power and wisdom, established a principle, in obedience to which
- worlds move, and are upheld, and animal and vegetable life come into
- existence. A reason he gave for his belief was, that, in view of the order
- and harmony of all nature which we behold, it would have been more
- miraculous to have come about by chance than to have been created and
- arranged by some great thinking power. As to the Christian theory, that
- Christ is God, or equal to the Creator, he said that it had better be
- taken for granted; for, by the test of reason, we might become infidels on
- that subject, for evidence of Christ's divinity came to us in a somewhat
- doubtful shape; but that the system of Christianity was an ingenious one
- at least, and perhaps was calculated to do good."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Jesse W. Fell of Illinois, who had the best opportunities of knowing
- Mr. Lincoln intimately, makes the following statement of his religious
- opinions, derived from repeated conversations with him on the subject:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Though every thing relating to the character and history of this
- extraordinary personage is of interest, and should be fairly stated to the
- world, I enter upon the performance of this duty&mdash;for so I regard it&mdash;with
- some reluctance, arising from the fact, that, in stating my convictions on
- the subject, I must necessarily place myself in opposition to quite a
- number who have written on this topic before me, and whose views largely
- pre-occupy the public mind. This latter fact, whilst contributing to my
- embarrassment on this subject, is, perhaps, the strongest reason, however,
- why the truth in this matter should be fully disclosed; and I therefore
- yield to your request. If there were any traits of character that stood
- out in bold relief in the person of Mr. Lincoln, they were those of truth
- and candor. He was utterly incapable of insincerity, or professing views
- on this or any other subject he did not entertain. Knowing such to be his
- true character, that insincerity, much more duplicity, were traits wholly
- foreign to his nature, many of his old friends were not a little surprised
- at finding, in some of the biographies of this great man, statements
- concerning his religious opinions so utterly at variance with his known
- sentiments. True, he may have changed or modified those sentiments after
- his removal from among us, though this is hardly reconcilable with the
- history of the man, and his entire devotion to public matters during his
- four years' residence at the national capital. It is possible, however,
- that this may be the proper solution of this conflict of opinions; or, it
- may be, that, with no intention on the part of any one to mislead the
- public mind, those who have represented him as believing in the popular
- theological views of the times may have misapprehended him, as experience
- shows to be quite common where no special effort has been made to attain
- critical accuracy on a subject of this nature. This is the more probable
- from the well-known fact, that Mr. Lincoln seldom communicated to any one
- his views on this subject. But, be this as it may, I have no hesitation
- whatever in saying, that, whilst he held many opinions in common with the
- great mass of Christian believers, <i>he did not believe</i> in what are
- regarded as the orthodox or evangelical views of Christianity.
- </p>
- <p>
- "On the innate depravity of man, the character and office of the great
- Head of the Church, the atonement, the infallibility of the written
- revelation, the performance of miracles, the nature and design of present
- and future rewards and punishments (as they are popularly called), and
- many other subjects, he held opinions utterly at variance with what are
- usually taught in the Church. I should say that his expressed views on
- these and kindred topics were such as, in the estimation of most
- believers, would place him entirely outside the Christian pale. Yet, to my
- mind, such was not the true position, since his principles and practices
- and the spirit of his whole life were of the very kind we universally
- agree to call Christian; and I think this conclusion is in no wise
- affected by the circumstance that he never attached himself to any
- religious society whatever.
- </p>
- <p>
- "His religious views were eminently practical, and are summed up, as I
- think, in these two propositions: 'the Fatherhood of God, and the
- brotherhood of man.' He fully believed in a superintending and overruling
- Providence, that guides and controls the operations of the world, but
- maintained that law and order, and not their violation or suspension, are
- the appointed means by which this providence is exercised.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I will not attempt any specification of either his belief or disbelief on
- various religious topics, as derived from conversations with him at
- different times during a considerable period; but, as conveying a general
- view of his religious or theological opinions, will state the following
- facts. Some eight or ten years prior to his death, in conversing with him
- upon this subject, the writer took occasion to refer, in terms of
- approbation, to the sermons and writings generally of Dr. W. E. Channing;
- and, finding he was considerably interested in the statement I made of the
- opinions held by that author, I proposed to present him (Lincoln) a copy
- of Channing's entire works, which I soon after did. Subsequently, the
- contents of these volumes, together with the writings of Theodore Parker,
- furnished him, as he informed me, by his friend and law-partner, Mr.
- Herndon, became naturally the topics of conversation with us; and though
- far from believing there was an entire harmony of views on his part with
- either of those authors, yet they were generally much admired and approved
- by him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "No religious views with him seemed to find any favor, except of the
- practical and rationalistic order; and if, from my recollections on this
- subject, I was called upon to designate an author whose views most nearly
- represented Mr. Lincoln's on this subject, I would say that author was
- Theodore Parker.
- </p>
- <p>
- "As you have asked from me a candid statement of my recollections on this
- topic, I have thus briefly given them, with the hope that they may be of
- some service in rightly settling a question about which&mdash;as I have
- good reason to believe&mdash;the public mind has been greatly misled.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Not doubting that they will accord, substantially, with your own
- recollections, and that of his other intimate and confidential friends,
- and with the popular verdict after this matter shall have been properly
- canvassed, I submit them."
- </p>
- <p>
- John G. Nicolay, his private secretary at the White House:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Lincoln did not, to my knowledge, in any way change his religious
- views, opinions, or beliefs, from the time he left Springfield to the day
- of his death. I do not know just what they were, never having heard him
- explain them in detail; but I am very sure he gave no outward indication
- of his mind having undergone any change in that regard while here."
- </p>
- <p>
- The following letter from Mr. Herndon was, about the time of its date,
- extensively published throughout the United States, and met with no
- contradiction from any responsible source.
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Feb. 18, 1870.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Abbott,&mdash;-Some time since I promised you that I would send a
- letter in relation to Mr. Lincoln's religion. I do so now. Before entering
- on that question, one or two preliminary remarks will help us to
- understand why he disagreed with the Christian world in its principles, as
- well as in its theology. In the first place, Mr. Lincoln's mind was a
- purely logical mind; secondly, Mr. Lincoln was purely a practical man. He
- had no fancy or imagination, and not much emotion. He was a realist as
- opposed to an idealist. As a general rule, it is true that a purely
- logical mind has not much hope, if it ever has <i>faith in the unseen and
- unknown</i>. Mr. Lincoln had not much hope and no faith in things that lie
- outside of the domain of demonstration: he was so constituted, so
- organized, that he could believe nothing unless his senses or logic could
- reach it. I have often read to him a law point, a decision, or something I
- fancied: he could not understand it until he took the book out of my hand,
- and read the thing for himself. He was terribly, vexatiously sceptical. He
- could scarcely understand any thing, unless he had time and place fixed in
- his mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- I became acquainted with Mr. Lincoln in 1834, and I think I knew him well
- to the day of his death. His mind, when a boy in Kentucky, showed a
- certain gloom, an unsocial nature, a peculiar abstractedness, a bold and
- daring scepticism. In Indiana, from 1817 to 1830, it manifested the same
- qualities or attributes as in Kentucky: it only intensified, developed
- itself, along those lines, in Indiana. He came to Illinois in 1830, and,
- after some little roving, settled in New Salem, now in Menard County and
- State of Illinois. This village lies about twenty miles north-west of this
- city. It was here that Mr. Lincoln became acquainted with a class of men
- the world never saw the like of before or since. They were large men,&mdash;large
- in body and large in mind; hard to whip, and never to be fooled. They were
- a bold, daring, and reckless sort of men; they were men of their own
- minds,&mdash;believed what was demonstrable; were men of great common
- sense. With these men Mr. Lincoln was thrown; with them he lived, and with
- them he moved, and almost had his being. They were sceptics all,&mdash;scoffers
- some. These scoffers were good men, and their scoffs were protests against
- theology,&mdash;loud protests against the follies of Christianity: they
- had never heard of theism and the newer and better religious thoughts of
- this age. Hence, being natural sceptics, and being bold, brave men, they
- uttered their thoughts freely: they declared that Jesus was an
- illegitimate child.... They were on all occasions, when opportunity
- offered, debating the various questions of Christianity among themselves:
- they took their stand on common sense and on their own souls; and, though
- their arguments were rude and rough, no man could overthrow their homely
- logic. They riddled all divines, and not unfrequently made them sceptics,&mdash;disbelievers
- as bad as themselves. They were a jovial, healthful, generous, social,
- true, and manly set of people.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was here, and among these people, that Mr. Lincoln was thrown. About
- the year 1834, he chanced to come across Volney's "Ruins," and some of
- Paine's theological works. He at once seized hold of them, and assimilated
- them into his own being. Volney and Paine became a part of Mr. Lincoln
- from 1834 to the end of his life. In 1835 he wrote out a small work on
- "Infidelity," and intended to have it published. The book was an attack
- upon the whole grounds of Christianity, and especially was it an attack
- upon the idea that Jesus was the Christ, the true and only-begotten Son of
- God, as the Christian world contends. Mr. Lincoln was at that time in New
- Salem, keeping store for Mr. Samuel Hill, a merchant and postmaster of
- that place. Lincoln and Hill were very friendly. Hill, I think, was a
- sceptic at that time. Lincoln, one day after the book was finished, read
- it to Mr. Hill, his good friend. Hill tried to persuade him not to make it
- public, not to publish it. Hill at that time saw in Mr. Lincoln a rising
- man, and wished him success. Lincoln refused to destroy it, said it should
- be published. Hill swore it should never see light of day. He had an eye,
- to Lincoln's popularity,&mdash;his present and future success; and
- believing, that if the book were published, it would kill Lincoln forever,
- he snatched it from Lincoln's hand, when Lincoln was not expecting it, and
- ran it into an old-fashioned tin-plate stove, heated as hot as a furnace;
- and so Lincoln's book went up to the clouds in smoke. It is confessed by
- all who heard parts of it, that it was at once able and eloquent; and, if
- I may judge of it from Mr. Lincoln's subsequent ideas and opinions, often
- expressed to me and to others in my presence, it was able, strong, plain,
- and fair. His argument was grounded on the internal mistakes of the Old
- and New Testaments, and on reason, and on the experiences and observations
- of men. The criticisms from internal defects were sharp, strong, and
- manly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln moved to this city in 1837, and here became acquainted with
- various men of his own way of thinking. At that time they called
- themselves <i>free-thinkers, or free-thinking men</i>. I remember all
- these things distinctly; for I was with them, heard them, and was one of
- them. Mr. Lincoln here found other works,&mdash;Hume, Gibbon, and others,&mdash;and
- drank them in: he made no secret of his views, no concealment of his
- religion. He boldly avowed himself an infidel. When Mr. Lincoln was a
- candidate for our Legislature, he was accused of being an infidel, and of
- having said that Jesus Christ was an illegitimate child: he never denied
- his opinions, nor flinched from his religious views; he was a true man,
- and yet it may be truthfully said, that in 1837 his religion was low
- indeed. In his moments of gloom he would <i>doubt, if he did not sometimes
- deny, God</i>. He made me once erase the name of God from a speech which I
- was about to make in 1854; and he did this in the city of Washington to
- one of his friends. I cannot now name the man, nor the place he occupied
- in Washington: it will be known sometime. I have the evidence, and intend
- to keep it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln ran for Congress, against the Rev. Peter Cartwright, in the
- year 1847 or 1848. In that contest he was accused of being an infidel, if
- not an atheist; he never denied the charge; would not; "<i>would die first</i>:"
- in the first place, because he knew it could and would be proved on him;
- and in the second place he was too true to his own convictions, to his own
- soul, to deny it. From what I know of Mr. Lincoln, and from what I have
- heard and verily believe, I can say, First, That he <i>did not believe in
- a special creation, his idea being that all creation was an evolution
- under law</i>; Secondly, That he did not believe that the Bible was a
- special revelation from God, as the Christian world contends; Thirdly, He
- did not believe in miracles, as understood by the Christian world;
- Fourthly, He believed in universal inspiration and miracles under law;
- Fifthly, He did not believe that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God, as
- the Christian world contends; Sixthly, He believed that all things, both
- matter and mind, were governed by laws, universal, absolute, and eternal.
- All his speeches and remarks in Washington conclusively prove this. <i>Law
- was to Lincoln every thing, and special interferences shams and delusions</i>.
- I know whereof I speak. I used to loan him Theodore Parker's works: I
- loaned him Emerson sometimes, and other writers; and he would sometimes
- read, and sometimes would not, as I suppose,&mdash;nay, know.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mr. Lincoln left this city for Washington, I know he had undergone no
- change in his religious opinions or views. He held many of the Christian
- ideas in abhorrence, and among them there was this one; namely, that God
- would forgive the sinner for a violation of his laws. <i>Lincoln
- maintained that God could not forgive; that punishment has to follow the
- sin; that Christianity was wrong in teaching forgiveness</i>; that it
- tended to make man sin in the hope that God would excuse, and so forth.
- Lincoln contended that the minister should teach that God has affixed
- punishment to sin, and that <i>no repentance could bribe him to remit it</i>.
- In one sense of the word, Mr. Lincoln was a Universalist, and in another
- sense he was a Unitarian; but he was a theist, as we now understand that
- word: he was so fully, freely, unequivocally, boldly, and openly, when
- asked for his views. Mr. Lincoln was supposed, by many people in this
- city, to be an atheist; and some still believe it. I can put that
- supposition at rest forever. I hold a letter of Mr. Lincoln in my hand,
- addressed to his step-brother, John D. Johnston, and dated the twelfth day
- of January, 1851. He had heard from Johnston that his father, Thomas
- Lincoln, was sick, and that no hopes of his recovery were entertained. Mr.
- Lincoln wrote back to Mr. Johnston these words:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I sincerely hope that father may yet recover his health; but, at all
- events, tell him to remember to call upon and confide in One great and
- good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any extremity.
- He notes the fall of a sparrow, and numbers the hairs of our heads; and he
- will not forget the dying man who puts his trust in him. Say to him, that,
- if we could meet now, it is doubtful whether it would not be more painful
- than pleasant; but that, if it be his lot to go now, he will soon have a
- joyous meeting with many loved ones gone before, and where the rest of us,
- through the help of God, hope ere long to join them.
- </p>
- <p>
- "A. Lincoln."
- </p>
- <p>
- So it seems that Mr. Lincoln believed in God and immortality as well as
- heaven,&mdash;a place. He believed in no hell and no punishment in the
- future world. It has been said to me that Mr. Lincoln wrote the above
- letter to an old man simply to cheer him up in his last moments, and that
- the writer did not believe what he said. The question is, Was Mr. Lincoln
- an honest and truthful man? If he was, he wrote that letter honestly,
- believing it. It has to me the sound, the ring, of an honest utterance. I
- admit that Mr. Lincoln, in his moments of melancholy and terrible gloom,
- was living on the borderland between theism and atheism,&mdash;sometimes
- quite wholly dwelling in atheism. In his happier moments he would swing
- back to theism, and dwell lovingly there. It is possible that Mr. Lincoln
- was not always responsible for what he said or thought, so deep, so
- intense, so terrible, was his melancholy. I send you a lecture of mine
- which will help you to see what I mean. I maintain that Mr. Lincoln was a
- deeply-religious man at all times and places, in spite of his transient
- doubts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon after Mr. Lincoln was assassinated, Mr. Holland came into my office,
- and made some inquiries about him, stating to me his purpose of writing
- his life. I freely told him what he asked, and much more. He then asked me
- what I thought about Mr. Lincoln's religion, meaning his views of
- Christianity. I replied, "The less said, the better." Mr. Holland has
- recorded my expression to him (see Holland's "Life of Lincoln," p. 241). I
- cannot say what Mr. Holland said to me, as that was private. It appears
- that he went and saw Mr. Newton Bateman, Superintendent of Public
- Instruction in this State. It appears that Mr. Bateman told Mr. Holland
- many things, if he is correctly represented in Holland's "Life of Lincoln"
- (pp. 236-241, inclusive). I doubt whether Mr. Bateman said in full what is
- recorded there: I doubt a great deal of it. I know the whole story is
- untrue,&mdash;untrue in substance, untrue in fact and spirit. As soon as
- the "Life of Lincoln" was out, on reading that part here referred to, I
- instantly sought Mr. Bateman, and found him in his office. I spoke to him
- politely and kindly, and he spoke to me in the same manner. I said
- substantially to him that Mr. Holland, in order to make Mr. Lincoln a
- technical Christian, made him a hypocrite; and so his "Life of Lincoln"
- quite plainly says. I loved Mr. Lincoln, and was mortified, if not angry,
- to see him made a hypocrite. I cannot now detail what Mr. Bateman said, as
- it was a private conversation, and I am forbidden to make use of it in
- public. If some good gentleman can only get the seal of secrecy removed, I
- can show what was said and done. On my word, the world may take it for
- granted that Holland is wrong, that he does not state Mr. Lincoln's views
- correctly. Mr. Bateman, if correctly represented in Holland's "Life of
- Lincoln," is the only man, the sole and only man, who dare say that Mr.
- Lincoln believed in Jesus as the Christ of God, as the Christian world
- represents. This is not a pleasant situation for Mr. Bateman. I have notes
- and dates of our conversation; and the world will sometime know who is
- truthful, and who is otherwise. I doubt whether Bateman is correctly
- represented by Holland. My notes bear date Dec. 3, 12, and 28, 1866. Some
- of our conversations were in the spring of 1866 and the fall of 1865.
- </p>
- <p>
- I do not remember ever seeing the words Jesus or Christ in print, as
- uttered by Mr. Lincoln. If he has used these words, they can be found. He
- uses the word God but seldom. I never heard him use the name of Christ or
- Jesus but to confute the idea that he was the Christ, the only and truly
- begotten Son of God, as the Christian world understands it. The idea that
- Mr. Lincoln carried the New Testament or Bible in his bosom or boots, to
- draw on his opponent in debate, is ridiculous.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear sir, I now have given you my knowledge, speaking from my own
- experience, of Mr. Lincoln's religious views. I speak likewise from the
- evidences, carefully gathered, of his religious opinions. I likewise speak
- from the ears and mouths of many in this city; and, after all careful
- examination, I declare to your numerous readers, that Mr. Lincoln is
- correctly represented here, so far as I know what truth is, and how it
- should be investigated.
- </p>
- <p>
- If ever there was a moment when Mr. Lincoln might have been expected to
- express his faith in the atonement, his trust in the merits of a living
- Redeemer, it was when he undertook to send a composing and comforting
- message to a dying man. He knew, moreover, that his father had been
- "converted" time and again, and that no exhortation would so effectually
- console his weak spirit in the hour of dismay and dissolution as one which
- depicted, in the strongest terms, the perfect sufficiency of Jesus to save
- the perishing soul. But he omitted it wholly: he did not even mention the
- name of Jesus, or intimate the most distant suspicion of the existence of
- a Christ. On the contrary, he is singularly careful to employ the word
- "One" to qualify the word "Maker." It is the Maker, and not the Saviour,
- to whom he directs the attention of a sinner in the agony of death.
- </p>
- <p>
- While it is very clear that Mr. Lincoln was at all times an infidel in the
- orthodox meaning of the term, it is also very clear that he was not at all
- times equally willing that everybody should know it. He never offered to
- purge or recant; but he was a wily politician, and did not disdain to
- regulate his religious manifestations with some reference to his political
- interests. As he grew older, he grew more cautious; and as his New Salem
- associates, and the aggressive deists with whom he originally united at
- Springfield, gradually dispersed, or fell away from his side, he
- appreciated more and more keenly the violence and extent of the religious
- prejudices which freedom in discussion from his standpoint would be sure
- to arouse against him. He saw the immense and augmenting power of the
- churches, and in times past had practically felt it. The imputation of
- infidelity had seriously injured him in several of his earlier political
- contests; and, sobered by age and experience, he was resolved that that
- same imputation should injure him no more. Aspiring to lead religious
- communities, he foresaw that he must not appear as an enemy within their
- gates; aspiring to public honors under the auspices of a political party
- which persistently summoned religious people to assist in the extirpation
- of that which is denounced as the "nation's sin," he foresaw that he could
- not ask their suffrages whilst aspersing their faith. He perceived no
- reason for changing his convictions, but he did perceive many good and
- cogent reasons for not making them public.
- </p>
- <p>
- Col. Matheny alleges, that, from 1854 to 1860, Mr. Lincoln "played a sharp
- game" upon the Christians of Springfield, "treading their toes," and
- saying, "Come and convert me." Mr. Herndon is inclined to coincide with
- Matheny; and both give the obvious explanation of such conduct; that is to
- say, his morbid ambition; coupled with a mortal fear that his popularity
- would suffer by an open avowal of his deistic convictions. At any rate,
- Mr. Lincoln permitted himself to be misunderstood and misrepresented by
- some enthusiastic ministers and exhorters with whom he came in contact.
- Among these was the Rev. Mr. Smith, then pastor of the First Presbyterian
- Church of Springfield, and afterwards Consul at Dundee, in Scotland, under
- Mr. Lincoln's appointment. The abilities of this gentleman to discuss such
- a topic to the edification of a man like Mr. Lincoln seem to have been
- rather slender; but the chance of converting so distinguished a person
- inspired him with a zeal which he might not have felt for the salvation of
- an obscurer soul. Mr. Lincoln listened to his exhortations in silence,
- apparently respectful, and occasionally sat out his sermons in church with
- as much patience as other people. Finding these oral appeals unavailing,
- Mr. Smith composed a heavy tract out of his own head to suit the
- particular case. "The preparation of that work," says he, "cost me long
- and arduous labor;" but it does not appear to have been read. Mr. Lincoln
- took the "work" to his office, laid it down without writing his name on
- it, and never took it up again to the knowledge of a man who inhabited
- that office with him, and who saw it lying on the same spot every day for
- months. Subsequently Mr. Smith drew from Mr. Lincoln an acknowledgment
- that his argument was unanswerable,&mdash;not a very high compliment under
- the circumstances, but one to which Mr. Smith often referred afterwards
- with great delight. He never asserted, as some have supposed, that Mr.
- Lincoln was converted from the error of his ways; that he abandoned his
- infidel opinions, or that he united himself with any Christian church. On
- the contrary, when specially interrogated on these points by Mr. Herndon,
- he refused to answer, on the ground that Mr. Herndon was not a proper
- person to receive such a communication from Mr. Newton Bateman is reported
- to have said that a few days before the Presidential election of 1860, Mr.
- Lincoln came into his office, closed the door against intrusion, and
- proposed to examine a book which had been furnished him, at his own
- request, "containing a careful canvass of the city of Springfield, showing
- the candidate for whom each citizen had declared his intention to vote at
- the approaching election. He ascertained that only three ministers of the
- gospel, out of twenty-three, would vote for him, and that, of the
- prominent church-members, a very large majority were against him." Mr.
- Bateman does not say so directly, but the inference is plain that Mr.
- Lincoln had not previously known what were the sentiments of the Christian
- people who lived with him in Springfield: he had never before taken the
- trouble to inquire whether they were for him or against him. At all
- events, when he made the discovery out of the book, he wept, and declared
- that he "did not understand it at all." He drew from his bosom a pocket
- New Testament, and, "with a trembling voice and his cheeks wet with
- tears," quoted it against his political opponents generally, and
- especially against Douglas. He professed to believe that the opinions
- adopted by him and his party were derived from the teachings of Christ;
- averred that Christ was God; and, speaking of the Testament which he
- carried in his bosom, called it "this rock, on which him I stand." When
- Mr. Bateman expressed surprise, and told him that his friends generally
- were ignorant that he entertained such sentiments, he gave this answer
- quickly: "I know they are: I am obliged to appear different to them." Mr.
- Bateman is a respectable citizen, whose general reputation for truth and
- veracity is not to be impeached; but his story, as reported in Holland's
- Life, is so inconsistent with Mr. Lincoln's whole character, that it must
- be rejected as altogether incredible. From the time of the Democratic
- split in the Baltimore Convention, Mr. Lincoln, as well as every other
- politician of the smallest sagacity, knew that his success was as certain
- as any future event could be. At the end of October, most of the States
- had clearly voted in a way which left no lingering doubts of the final
- result of November. If there ever was a time in his life when ambition
- charmed his whole heart,&mdash;if it could ever be said of him that "hope
- elevated and joy brightened his crest," it was on the eve of that election
- which he saw was to lift him at last to the high place for which he had
- sighed and struggled so long. It was not then that he would mourn and weep
- because he was in danger of not getting the votes of the ministers and
- members of the churches he had known during many years for his steadfast
- opponents: he did not need them, and had not expected them. Those who
- understood him best are very sure that he never, under any circumstances,
- could have fallen into such weakness&mdash;not even when his fortunes were
- at the lowest point of depression&mdash;as to play the part of a hypocrite
- for their support. Neither is it possible that he was at any loss about
- the reasons which religious men had for refusing him their support; and,
- if he said that he could not understand it at all, he must have spoken
- falsely. But the worst part of the tale is Mr. Lincoln's acknowledgment
- that his "friends generally were deceived concerning his religious
- sentiments, and that he was obliged to appear different to them."
- </p>
- <p>
- According to this version, which has had considerable currency, he carried
- a Testament in his bosom, carefully hidden from his intimate associates:
- he believed that Christ was God; yet his friends understood him to deny
- the verity of the gospel: he based his political doctrines on the
- teachings of the Bible; yet before all men, except Mr. Bateman, he
- habitually acted the part of an unbeliever and reprobate, because he was
- "obliged to appear different to them." How obliged? What compulsion
- required him to deny that Christ was God if he really believed him to be
- divine? Or did he put his political necessities above the obligations of
- truth, and oppose Christianity against his convictions, that he might win
- the favor of its enemies? It may be that his mere silence was sometimes
- misunderstood; but he never made an express avowal of any religious
- opinion which he did not entertain. He did not "appear different" at one
- time from what he was at another, and certainly he never put on infidelity
- as a mere mask to conceal his Christian character from the world. There is
- no dealing with Mr. Bateman, except by a flat contradiction. Perhaps his
- memory was treacherous, or his imagination led him astray, or,
- peradventure, he thought a fraud no harm if it gratified the strong desire
- of the public for proofs of Mr. Lincoln's orthodoxy. It is nothing to the
- purpose that Mr. Lincoln said once or twice that he thought this or that
- portion of the Scripture was the product of divine inspiration; for he was
- one of the class who hold that all truth is inspired, and that every human
- being with a mind and a conscience is a prophet. He would have agreed much
- more readily with one who taught that Newton's discoveries, or Bacon's
- philosophy, or one of his own speeches, were the works of men divinely
- inspired above their fellows.1
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "As we have bodily senses to lay hold on matter, and supply bodily
- wants, through which we obtain, naturally, all needed material things;
- so we have spiritual faculties to lay hold on God and supply spiritual
- wants: through them we obtain all needed spiritual things. As we observe
- the conditions of the body, we have nature on our side: as we observe
- the law of the soul, we have God on our side. He imparts truth to all
- men who observe these conditions: we have direct access to him through
- reason, conscience, and the religious faculty, just as we have direct
- access to nature through the eye, the ear, or the hand. Through these
- channels, and by means of a law, certain, regular, and universal as
- gravitation, God inspires men, makes revelation of truth; for is not
- truth as much a phenomenon of God as motion of matter? Therefore, if God
- be omnipresent and omniactive, this inspiration is no miracle, but a
- regular mode of God's action on conscious spirit, as gravitation on
- unconscious matter. It is not a rare condescension of God, but a
- universal uplifting of man. To obtain a knowledge of duty, a man is not
- sent away, outside of himself, to ancient documents: for the only rule
- of faith and practice, the Word, is very nigh him, even in his heart,
- and by this Word he is to try all documents whatsoever. Inspiration,
- like God's omnipresence, is not limited to the few writers claimed by
- the Jews, Christians, or Mohammedans, but is co- extensive with the
- race. As God fills all space, so all spirit; as he influences and
- constrains unconscious and necessitated matter, so he inspires and helps
- free, unconscious man. "This theory does not make God limited, partial,
- or capricious: it exalts man. While it honors the excellence of a
- religious genius of a Moses or a Jesus, it does not pronounce their
- character monstrous, as the supernatural, nor fanatical, as the
- rationalistic theory; but natural, human, and beautiful, revealing the
- possibility of mankind. Prayer&mdash;whether voluntative or spontaneous,
- a word or a feeling, felt in gratitude, or penitence, or joy, or
- resignation&mdash;is not a soliloquy of the man, not a physiological
- function, nor an address to a deceased man, but a sally into the
- infinite spiritual world, whence we bring back light and truth. There
- are windows towards God, as towards the world. There is no intercessor,
- angel, mediator, between man and God; for man can speak, and God hear,
- each for himself. He requires no advocate to plead for men, who need not
- pray by attorney. Each man stands close to the omnipresent God; may feel
- his beautiful presence, and have familiar access to the All-Father; get
- truth at first hand from its Author. Wisdom, righteousness, and love are
- the Spirit of God in the soul of man: wherever these are, and just in
- proportion to their power, there is inspiration from God. Thus God is
- not the author of confusion, but concord. Faith and knowledge and
- revelation and reason tell the same tale, and so legitimate and confirm
- each one another. "God's action on matter and on man is, perhaps, the
- same thing to him, though it appear differently modified to us. But it
- is plain, from the nature of things, that there can be but one kind of
- inspiration, as of truth, faith, or love: it is the direct and intuitive
- perception of some truth, either of thought or of sentiment. There can
- be but one mode of inspiration: it is the action of the Highest within
- the soul, the divine presence imparting light; this presence, as truth,
- justice, holiness, love, infusing itself into the soul, giving it new
- life; the breathing-in of the Deity; the in-come of God to the soul, in
- the form of truth through the reason, of right through the conscience,
- of love and faith through the affections and religious element. Is
- inspiration confined to theological matter alone? Most certainly not."&mdash;
- &mdash;Parker's Discourse pertaining to Religion.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- But he never told any one that he accepted Jesus as the Christ, or
- performed a single one of the acts which necessarily follow upon such a
- conviction. At Springfield and at Washington he was beset on the one hand
- by political priests, and on the other by honest and prayerful Christians.
- He despised the former, respected the latter, and had use for both. He
- said with characteristic irreverence, that he would not undertake to "run
- the churches by military authority;" but he was, nevertheless, alive to
- the importance of letting the churches "run" themselves in the interest of
- his party. Indefinite expressions about "Divine Providence," the "justice
- of God," "the favor of the Most High," were easy, and not inconsistent
- with his religious notions. In this, accordingly, he indulged freely; but
- never in all that time did he let fall from his lips or his pen an
- expression which remotely implied the slightest faith in Jesus as the Son
- of God and the Saviour of men.
- </p>
- <p>
- The effect of Mr. Lincoln's unbelief did not affect his constitutional
- love of justice. Though he rejected the New Testament as a book of divine
- authority, he accepted the practical part of its precepts as binding upon
- him by virtue of the natural law. The benevolence of his impulses served
- to keep him, for the most part, within the limits to which a Christian is
- confined by the fear of God. It is also true beyond doubt that he was
- greatly influenced by the reflected force of Christianity. If he did not
- believe it, the masses of the "plain people" did; and no one ever was more
- anxious to do "whatsoever was of good report among men." To qualify
- himself as a witness or an officer it was frequently necessary that he
- should take oaths; and he always appealed to the Christian's God either by
- laying his hand upon the Gospels, or by some other form of invocation
- common among believers. Of course the ceremony was superfluous, for it
- imposed no religious obligation upon him; but his strong innate sense of
- right was sufficient to make him truthful without that high and awful
- sanction which faith in divine revelation would have carried with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was by no means free from a kind of belief in the
- supernatural. While he rejected the great facts of Christianity, as
- wanting the support of authentic evidence, his mind was readily impressed
- with the most absurd superstitions.1 He lived constantly in the serious
- conviction that he was himself the subject of a special decree, made by
- some unknown and mysterious power, for which he had no name. The birth and
- death of Christ, his wonderful works, and his resurrection as "the
- first-fruits of them that slept," Mr. Lincoln denied, because they seemed
- naturally improbable, or inconsistent with his "philosophy so called;" but
- his perverted credulity terrified him when he saw two images of himself in
- a mirror.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- 1 "He had great faith in the strong sense of country people; and he gave
- them credit for greater intelligence than most men do. If he found an
- idea prevailing generally amongst them, he believed there was something
- in it, although it might not harmonize with science. "He had great faith
- in the virtues of the 'mad-stone' although he could give no reason for
- it, and confessed that it looked like superstition. But, he said, he
- found the people in the neighborhood of these stones fully impressed
- with a belief in their virtues from actual experiment; and that was
- about as much as we could ever know of the properties of medicines."&mdash;Gillespie.
- "When his son 'Bob' was supposed to have been bitten by a rabid dog, Mr.
- Lincoln took him to Terre Haute, La., where there was a mad-stone, with
- the intention of having it applied, and, it is presumed, did so."&mdash;Mrs.
- Wallace.
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- It is very probable that much of Mr. Lincoln's unhappiness, the melancholy
- that "dripped from him as he walked," was due to his want of religious
- faith. When the black fit was on him, he suffered as much mental misery as
- Bunyan or Cowper in the deepest anguish of their conflicts with the evil
- one. But the unfortunate conviction fastened upon him by his early
- associations, that there was no truth in the Bible, made all consolation
- impossible, and penitence useless. To a man of his temperament,
- predisposed as it was to depression of spirits, there could be no chance
- of happiness, if doomed to live without hope and without God in the world.
- He might force himself to be merry with his chosen comrades; he might
- "banish sadness" in mirthful conversation, or find relief in a jest;
- gratified ambition might elevate his feelings, and give him ease for a
- time: but solid comfort and permanent peace could come to him only through
- "a correspondence fixed with heaven." The fatal misfortune of his life,
- looking at it only as it affected him in this world, was the influence at
- New Salem and Springfield which enlisted him on the side of unbelief. He
- paid the bitter penalty in a life of misery.
- </p>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- "It was a grievous sin in Cæsar; And grievously hath Cæsar answered it."
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- Very truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- W. H. Herndon.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX
- </h2>
- <p>
- ON the 11th of February, 1861, the arrangements for Mr. Lincoln's
- departure from Springfield were completed. It was intended to occupy the
- time remaining between that date and the 4th of March with a grand tour
- from State to State and city to city. One Mr. Wood, "recommended by
- Senator Seward," was the chief manager. He provided special trains to be
- preceded by pilot engines all the way through.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a gloomy day: heavy clouds floated overhead, and a cold rain was
- falling. Long before eight o'clock, a great mass of people had collected
- at the station of the Great Western Railway to witness the event of the
- day. At precisely five minutes before eight, Mr. Lincoln, preceded by Mr.
- Wood, emerged from a private room in the dépôt building, and passed slowly
- to the car, the people falling back respectfully on either side, and as
- many as possible shaking his hands. Having finally reached the train, he
- ascended the rear platform, and, facing about to the throng which had
- closed around him, drew himself up to his full height, removed his hat,
- and stood for several seconds in profound silence. His eye roved sadly
- over that sea of upturned faces; and he thought he read in them again the
- sympathy and friendship which he had often tried, and which he never
- needed more than he did then. There was an unusual quiver in his lip, and
- a still more unusual tear on his shrivelled cheek. His solemn manner, his
- long silence, were as full of melancholy eloquence as any words he could
- have uttered. What did he think of? Of the mighty changes which had lifted
- him from the lowest to the highest estate on earth? Of the weary road
- which had brought him to this lofty summit? Of his poor mother lying
- beneath the tangled underbrush in a distant forest? Of that other grave in
- the quiet Concord cemetery? Whatever the particular character of his
- thoughts, it is evident that they were retrospective and painful. To those
- who were anxiously waiting to catch words upon which the fate of the
- nation might hang, it seemed long until he had mastered his feelings
- sufficiently to speak. At length he began in a husky tone of voice, and
- slowly and impressively delivered his farewell to his neighbors. Imitating
- his example, every man in the crowd stood with his head uncovered in the
- fast-falling rain.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Friends,&mdash;No one who has never been placed in a like position can
- understand my feelings at this hour, nor the oppressive sadness I feel at
- this parting. For more than a quarter of a century I have lived among you,
- and during all that time I have received nothing but kindness at your
- hands. Here I have lived from my youth, until now I am an old man. Here
- the most sacred ties of earth were assumed. Here all my children were
- born; and here one of them lies buried. To you, dear friends, I owe all
- that I have, all that I am. All the strange, checkered past seems to crowd
- now upon my mind. To-day I leave you. I go to assume a task more difficult
- than that which devolved upon Washington. Unless the great God, who
- assisted him, shall be with and aid me, I must fail; but if the same
- omniscient mind and almighty arm that directed and protected him shall
- guide and support me, I shall not fail,&mdash;I shall succeed. Let us all
- pray that the God of our fathers may not forsake us now. To him I commend
- you all. Permit me to ask, that, with equal security and faith, you will
- invoke his wisdom and guidance for me. With these few words I must leave
- you: for how long I know not. Friends, one and all, I must now bid you an
- affectionate farewell."
- </p>
- <p>
- "It was a most impressive scene," said the editor of "The Journal." "We
- have known Mr. Lincoln for many years; we have heard him speak upon a
- hundred different occasions; but we never saw him so profoundly affected,
- nor did he ever utter an address which seemed to us so full of simple and
- touching eloquence, so exactly adapted to the occasion, so worthy of the
- man and the hour."
- </p>
- <p>
- At eight o'clock the train rolled out of Springfield amid the cheers of
- the populace. Four years later a funeral train, covered with the emblems
- of splendid mourning, rolled into the same city, bearing a discolored
- corpse, whose obsequies were being celebrated in every part of the
- civilized world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Along with Mr. Lincoln's family in the special car were Gov. Yates,
- Ex-Gov. Moore, Dr. Wallace (Mr. Lincoln's brother-in-law), Mr. Judd, Mr.
- Browning, Judge Davis, Col. Ellsworth, Col. Lamon, and private secretaries
- Nicolay and Hay.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has been asserted that an attempt was made to throw the train off the
- track between Springfield and Indianapolis, and also that a hand-grenade
- was found on board at Cincinnati, but no evidence of the fact is given in
- either case, and none of the Presidential party ever heard of these
- murderous doings until they read of them in some of the more imaginative
- reports of their trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- Full accounts of this journey were spread broadcast over the country at
- the time, and have been collected and printed in various books. But,
- except for the speeches of the President elect, those accounts possess no
- particular interest at this day; and of the speeches we shall present here
- only such extracts as express his thoughts and feelings about the
- impending civil war.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the heat of the late canvass, he had written the following private
- letter:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springfield, Ill., Aug. 15, 1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- John B. Fry, Esq.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear Sir,&mdash;Yours of the 9th, enclosing the letter of Hon. John M.
- Botts, was duly received. The latter is herewith returned, according to
- your request. It contains one of the many assurances I receive from the
- South, that in no probable event will there be any very formidable effort
- to break up the Union. The people of the South have too much of good sense
- and good temper to attempt the ruin of the government, rather than see it
- administered as it was administered by the men who made it. At least, so I
- hope and believe.
- </p>
- <p>
- I thank you both for your own letter and a sight of that of Mr. Botts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yours very truly,
- </p>
- <p>
- A. Lincoln.
- </p>
- <p>
- The opinion expressed in the letter as to the probability of war does not
- appear to have undergone any material change or modification during the
- eventful months which had intervened; for he expressed it in much stronger
- terms at almost every stage of his progress to Washington.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Toledo he said,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am leaving you on an errand of national importance, attended, as you
- are aware, with considerable difficulties. Let us believe, as some poet
- has expressed it, 'Behind the cloud the sun is shining still.'"
- </p>
- <p>
- At Indianapolis:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I am here to thank you for this magnificent welcome, and still more for
- the very generous support given by your State to that political cause,
- which, I think, is the true and just cause of the whole country, and the
- whole world. Solomon says, 'There is a time to keep silence;' and when men
- wrangle by the mouth, with no certainty that they mean the same thing
- while using the same words, it perhaps were as well if they would keep
- silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The words 'coercion' and 'invasion' are much used in these days, and
- often with some temper and hot blood. Let us make sure, if we can, that we
- do not misunderstand the meaning of those who use them. Let us get the
- exact definitions of these words, not from dictionaries, but from the men
- themselves, who certainly deprecate the things they would represent by the
- use of the words.
- </p>
- <p>
- "What, then, is coercion? What is invasion? Would the marching of an army
- into South Carolina, without the consent of her people, and with hostile
- intent toward them, be invasion? I certainly think it would; and it would
- be coercion also, if the South Carolinians were forced to submit. But if
- the United States should merely hold and retake its own forts and other
- property, and collect the duties on foreign importations, or even withhold
- the mails from places where they were' habitually violated, would any or
- all of these things be invasion or coercion? Do our professed lovers of
- the Union, who spitefully resolve that they will resist coercion and
- invasion, understand that such things as these, on the part of the United
- States, would be coercion or invasion of a State? If so, their idea of
- means to preserve the object of their great affection would seem to be
- exceedingly thin and airy. If sick, the little pills of the homoeopathist
- would be much too large for them to swallow. In their view, the Union, as
- a family relation, would seem to be no regular marriage, but rather a sort
- of 'free-love' arrangement, to be maintained on passional attraction."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Columbus:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Allusion has been made to the interest felt in relation to the policy of
- the new administration. In this, I have received from some a degree of
- credit for having kept silence, from others some depreciation. I still
- think I was right. In the varying and repeatedly-shifting scenes of the
- present, <i>without a precedent which could enable me to judge for the
- past</i>, it has seemed fitting, that, before speaking upon the
- difficulties of the country, I should have gained a view of the whole
- field. To be sure, after all, I would be at liberty to modify and change
- the course of policy as future events might make a change necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I have not maintained silence from any want of real anxiety. <i>It is a
- good thing that there is no more than anxiety, for there is nothing going
- wrong. It is a consoling circumstance, that when we look out there is
- nothing that really hurts anybody. We entertain different views upon
- political questions; but nobody is suffering any thing. This is a most
- consoling circumstance, and from it I judge that all we want is time and
- patience, and a reliance on that God who has never forsaken this people</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Pittsburg:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Notwithstanding the troubles across the river, <i>there is really no
- crisis springing from any thing in the Government itself. In plain words,
- there is really no crisis, except an artificial one.</i> What is there now
- to warrant the condition of affairs presented by our friends 'over the
- river'? Take even their own view of the questions involved, and there is
- nothing to justify the course which they are pursuing. <i>I repeat it,
- then, there is no crisis, except such a one as may be gotten up at any
- time by turbulent men, aided by designing politicians</i>. My advice,
- then, under such circumstances, is <i>to keep cool. If the great American
- people will only keep their temper on both sides of the line, the trouble
- will come to an end, and the question which now distracts the country will
- be settled just as surely as all other difficulties of like character
- which have originated in this Government have been adjusted. Let the
- people on both sides keep their self-possession, and, just as other clouds
- have cleared away in due time, so will this; and this great nation shall
- continue to prosper as heretofore</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Cleveland:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Frequent allusion is made to the excitement at present existing in our
- national politics, and it is as well that I should also allude to it here.
- <i>I think that there is no occasion for any excitement. The crisis, as it
- is called, is altogether an artificial crisis.... As I said before, this
- crisis is all artificial! It has no foundation in fact. It was not 'argued
- up,' as the saying is, and cannot be argued down. Let it alone, and it
- will go down itself</i>."
- </p>
- <p>
- Before the Legislature of New York:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "When the time comes, according to the custom of the Government, I shall
- speak, and speak as well as I am able for the good of the present and of
- the future of this country,&mdash;for the good of the North and of the
- South, for the good of one and of the other, and of all sections of it. In
- the mean time, <i>if we have patience, if we maintain our equanimity,
- though some may allow themselves to run off in a burst of passion</i>, I
- still have confidence that the Almighty Ruler of the Universe, through the
- instrumentality of this great and intelligent people, can and will bring
- us through this difficulty, as he has heretofore brought us through all
- preceding difficulties of the country. Relying upon this, and again
- thanking you, as I forever shall, in my heart, for this generous reception
- you have given me, I bid you farewell."
- </p>
- <p>
- In response to the Mayor of New York City, who had said, "To you,
- therefore, chosen under the forms of the Constitution, as the head of the
- Confederacy, we look for a restoration of fraternal relations between the
- States,&mdash;only to be accomplished by peaceful and conciliatory means,
- aided by the wisdom of Almighty God," Mr. Lincoln said,&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "In regard to the difficulties that confront us at this time, and of which
- you have seen fit to speak so becomingly and so justly, I can only say
- that I agree with the sentiments expressed."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Trenton:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I shall endeavor to take the ground I deem most just to the North, the
- East, the West, the South, and the whole country. I take it, I hope, in
- good temper,&mdash;certainly with no malice towards any section. <i>I
- shall do all that may be in my power to promote a peaceful settlement of
- all our difficulties. The man does not live who is more devoted to peace
- than I am,&mdash;none who would do more to preserve it. But it maybe
- necessary to put the foot down firmly</i>. And if I do my duty, and do
- right, you will sustain me: will you not? Received, as I am, by the
- members of a legislature, the majority of whom do not agree with me in
- political sentiments, I trust that I may have their assistance in piloting
- the Ship of State through this voyage, surrounded by perils as it is; for,
- if it should suffer shipwreck now, there will be no pilot ever needed for
- another voyage."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Philadelphia:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "It is true, as your worthy mayor has said, that there is anxiety among
- the citizens of the United States at this time. I deem it a happy
- circumstance that this dissatisfied portion of our fellow-citizens do not
- point us to any thing in which they are being injured, or are about to be
- injured; <i>for which reason I have felt all the while justified in
- concluding that the crisis, the panic, the anxiety, of the country at this
- time is artificial.</i> If there be those who differ with me upon this
- subject, they have not pointed out the substantial difficulty that exists.
- I do not mean to say that an artificial panic may not do considerable
- harm: that it has done such I do not deny. The hope that has been
- expressed by your mayor, that I may be able to restore peace, harmony, and
- prosperity to the country, is most worthy of him; and happy indeed will I
- be if I shall be able to verify and fulfil that hope. I promise you, in
- all sincerity, that I bring to the work a sincere heart. Whether I will
- bring a head equal to that heart, will be for future times to determine.
- It were useless for me to speak of details or plans now: I shall speak
- officially next Monday week, if ever. If I should not speak then, it were
- useless for me to do so now."
- </p>
- <p>
- At Philadelphia again:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Now, in my view of the present aspect of affairs, there need be no
- bloodshed or war. <i>There is no necessity for it. I am not in favor of
- such a course: and I may say, in advance, that there will be no blood shed
- unless it be forced upon the Government; and then it will be compelled to
- act in self-defence.</i>"
- </p>
- <p>
- At Harrisburg:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I recur for a moment but to repeat some words uttered at the hotel in
- regard to what has been said about the military support which the General
- Government may expect from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in a proper
- emergency. <i>To guard against any possible mistake, do I recur to this.
- It is not with any pleasure that I contemplate the possibility that a
- necessity may arise in this country for the use of the military arm</i>.
- While I am exceedingly gratified to see the manifestation upon your
- streets of your military force here, and exceedingly gratified at your
- promise here to use that force upon a proper emergency; while I make these
- acknowledgments, I desire to repeat, in order to <i>preclude any possible
- misconstruction, that I do most sincerely hope that we shall have no use
- for them; that it will never become their duty to shed Hood, and most
- especially never to shed fraternal blood</i>. I promise that, so far as I
- have wisdom to direct, if so painful a result shall in any wise be brought
- about, it shall be through no fault of mine."
- </p>
- <p>
- Whilst Mr. Lincoln, in the midst of his suite and attendants, was being
- borne in triumph through the streets of Philadelphia, and a countless
- multitude of people were shouting themselves hoarse, and jostling and
- crushing each other around his carriage-wheels, Mr. Felton, the President
- of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railway, was engaged with a
- private detective discussing the details of an alleged conspiracy to
- murder him at Baltimore. Some months before, Mr. Felton, apprehending
- danger to the bridges along his line, had taken this man into his pay, and
- sent him to Baltimore to spy out and report any plot that might be found
- for their destruction. Taking with him a couple of other men and a woman,
- the detective went about his business with the zeal which necessarily
- marks his peculiar profession. He set up as a stock-broker, under an
- assumed name, opened an office, and became a vehement Secessionist. His
- agents were instructed to act with the duplicity which such men generally
- use, to be rabid on the subject of "Southern rights," to suggest all
- manner of crimes in vindication of them; and if, by these arts,
- corresponding sentiments should be elicited from their victims, the "job"
- might be considered as prospering. Of course they readily found out what
- everybody else knew,&mdash;that Maryland was in a state of great alarm;
- that her people were forming military associations, and that Gov. Hicks
- was doing his utmost to furnish them with arms, on condition that the
- arms, in case of need, should be turned against the Federal Government.
- Whether they detected any plan to burn bridges or not, the chief detective
- does not relate; but it appears that he soon deserted that inquiry, and
- got, or pretended to get, upon a scent that promised a heavier reward.
- Being intensely ambitious to shine in the professional way, and something
- of a politician besides, it struck him that it would be a particularly
- fine thing to discover a dreadful plot to assassinate the President elect;
- and he discovered it accordingly. It was easy to get that far: to furnish
- tangible proofs of an imaginary conspiracy was a more difficult matter.
- But Baltimore was seething with political excitement; numerous strangers
- from the far South crowded its hotels and boarding-houses; great numbers
- of mechanics and laborers out of employment encumbered its streets; and
- everywhere politicians, merchants, mechanics, laborers, and loafers were
- engaged in heated discussions about the anticipated war, and the
- probability of Northern troops being marched through Maryland to slaughter
- and pillage beyond the Potomac. It would seem like an easy thing to
- beguile a few individuals of this angry and excited multitude into the
- expression of some criminal desire; and the opportunity was not wholly
- lost, although the limited success of the detective under such favorable
- circumstances is absolutely wonderful. He put his "shadows" upon several
- persons, whom it suited his pleasure to suspect; and the "shadows" pursued
- their work with the keen zest and the cool treachery of their kind. They
- reported daily to their chief in writing, as he reported in turn to his
- employer. These documents are neither edifying nor useful: they prove
- nothing but the baseness of the vocation which gave them existence. They
- were furnished to Mr. Herndon in full, under the impression that partisan
- feeling had extinguished in him the love of truth, and the obligations of
- candor, as it had in many writers who preceded him on the same
- subject-matter. They have been carefully and thoroughly read, analyzed,
- examined, and Compared, with an earnest and conscientious desire to
- discover the truth, if, perchance, any trace of truth might be in them.
- The process of investigation began with a strong bias in favor of the
- conclusion at which the detective had arrived. For ten years the author
- implicitly believed in the reality of the atrocious plot which these spies
- were supposed to have detected and thwarted; and for ten years he had
- pleased himself with the reflection that he also had done something to
- defeat the bloody purpose of the assassins. It was a conviction which
- could scarcely have been overthrown by evidence less powerful than the
- detective's weak and contradictory account of his own case. In that
- account there is literally nothing to sustain the accusation, and much to
- rebut it. It is perfectly manifest that there was no conspiracy,&mdash;no
- conspiracy of a hundred, of fifty, of twenty, of three; no definite
- purpose in the heart of even one man to murder Mr. Lincoln at Baltimore.
- </p>
- <p>
- The reports are all in the form of personal narratives, and for the most
- relate when the spies went to bed, when they rose, where they ate, what
- saloons and brothels they visited, and what blackguards they met and
- "drinked" with. One of them "shadowed" a loud-mouthed, drinking fellow,
- named Luckett, and another, a poor scapegrace and braggart, named
- Hilliard. These wretches "drinked" and talked a great deal, hung about
- bars, haunted disreputable houses, were constantly half-drunk, and easily
- excited to use big and threatening words by the faithless protestations
- and cunning management of the spies. Thus Hilliard was made to say that he
- thought a man who should act the part of Brutus in these times would
- deserve well of his country; and Luckett was induced to declare that he
- knew a man who would kill Lincoln. At length the great arch-conspirator&mdash;the
- Brutus, the Orsini, of the New World, to whom Luckett and Hilliard, the
- "national volunteers," and all such, were as mere puppets&mdash;condescended
- to reveal himself in the most obliging and confiding manner. He made no
- mystery of his cruel and desperate scheme. He did not guard it as a
- dangerous secret, or choose his confidants with the circumspection which
- political criminals, and especially assassins, have generally thought
- proper to observe. Very many persons knew what he was about, and levied on
- their friends for small sums&mdash;five, ten, and twenty dollars&mdash;to
- further the "captain's" plan. Even Luckett was deep enough in the awful
- plot to raise money for it; and when he took one of the spies to a public
- bar-room, and introduced him to the "captain," the latter sat down and
- talked it all over without the slightest reserve. When was there ever
- before such a loud-mouthed conspirator, such a trustful and innocent
- assassin! His name was Ferrandina, his occupation that of a barber, his
- place of business beneath Barnum's Hotel, where the sign of the
- bloodthirsty villain still invites the unsuspecting public to come in for
- a shave.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Mr. Luckett," so the spy relates, "said that he was not going home this
- evening; and if I would meet him at Barr's saloon, on South Street, he
- would introduce me to Ferrandina.
- </p>
- <p>
- "This was unexpected to me; but I determined to take the chances, and
- agreed to meet Mr. Luckett at the place named at 7, p.m. Mr. Luckett left
- about 2.30, p.m.; and I went to dinner.
- </p>
- <p>
- "I was at the office in the afternoon in hopes that Mr. Felton might call,
- but he did not; and at 6.15, p.m., I went to supper. After supper, I went
- to Barr's saloon, and found Mr. Luckett and several other gentlemen there.
- He asked me to drink, and introduced me to Capt. Ferrandina and Capt.
- Turner. He eulogized me very highly as a neighbor of his, and told
- Ferrandina that I was the gentleman who had given the twenty-five dollars
- he (Luckett) had given to Ferrandina.
- </p>
- <p>
- "The conversation at once got into politics; and Ferrandina, who is a
- fine-looking, intelligent-appearing person, became very excited. He shows
- the Italian in, I think, a very marked degree; and, although excited, yet
- was cooler than what I had believed was the general characteristic of
- Italians. He has lived South for many years, and is thoroughly imbued with
- the idea that the South must rule; that they (Southerners) have been
- outraged in their rights by the election of Lincoln, and freely justified
- resorting to any means to prevent Lincoln from taking his seat; and, as he
- spoke, his eyes fairly glared and glistened, and his whole frame quivered,
- but he was fully conscious of all he was doing. He is a man well
- calculated for controlling and directing the ardent-minded: he is an
- enthusiast, and believes, that, to use his own words, 'murder of any kind
- is justifiable and right to save the rights of the Southern people.' In
- all his views he was ably seconded by Capt. Turner.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Capt. Turner is an American; but although very much of a gentleman, and
- possessing warm Southern feelings, he is not by any means so dangerous a
- man as Ferrandina, as his ability for exciting others is less powerful;
- but that he is a bold and proud man there is no doubt, as also that he is
- entirely under the control of Ferrandina. In fact, it could not be
- otherwise: for even I myself felt the influence of this man's strange
- power; and, wrong though I knew him to be, I felt strangely unable to keep
- my mind balanced against him.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ferrandina said, 'Never, never, shall Lincoln be President. His life
- (Ferrandina's) was of no consequence: he was willing to give it up for
- Lincoln's; he would sell it for that Abolitionist's; and as Orsini had
- given his life for Italy, so was he (Ferrandina) ready to die for his
- country, and the rights of the South; and, said Ferrandina, turning to
- Capt. Turner, 'We shall all die together: we shall show the North that we
- fear them not. Every man, captain,' said he, 'will on that day prove
- himself a hero. The first shot fired, the main traitor (Lincoln) dead, and
- all Maryland will be with us, and the South shall be free; and the North
- must then be ours.'&mdash;'Mr. Hutchins,' said Ferrandina, 'if I alone
- must do it, I shall: Lincoln shall die in this city.'
- </p>
- <p>
- "Whilst we were thus talking, we (Mr. Luckett, Turner, Ferrandina, and
- myself) were alone in one corner of the barroom; and, while talking, two
- strangers had got pretty near us. Mr. Luckett called Ferrandina's
- attention to this, and intimated that they were listening; and we went up
- to the bar, drinked again at my expense, and again retired to another part
- of the room, at Ferrandina's request, to see if the strangers would again
- follow us: whether by accident or design, they again got near us; but of
- course we were not talking of any matter of consequence. Ferrandina said
- he suspected they were spies, and suggested that he had to attend a secret
- meeting, and was apprehensive that the two strangers might follow him;
- and, at Mr. Luckett's request, I remained with him (Luckett) to watch the
- movements of the strangers. I assured Ferrandina, that, if they would
- attempt to follow him, that we would whip them.
- </p>
- <p>
- "Ferrandina and Turner left to attend the meeting; and, anxious as I was
- to follow them myself, I was obliged to remain with Mr. Luckett to watch
- the strangers, which we did for about fifteen minutes, when Mr. Luckett
- said that he should go to a friend's to stay over night, and I left for my
- hotel, arriving there at about 9, p.m., and soon retired."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is in a secret communication between hireling spies and paid informers
- that these ferocious sentiments are attributed to the poor knight of the
- soap-pot. No disinterested person would believe the story upon such
- evidence; and it will appear hereafter, that even the detective felt that
- it was too weak to mention among his strong points at that decisive
- moment, when he revealed all he knew to the President and his friends. It
- is probably a mere fiction. If it had had any foundation in fact, we are
- inclined to believe that the sprightly and eloquent barber would have
- dangled at a rope's end long since. He would hardly have been left to
- shave and plot in peace, while the members of the Legislature, the
- police-marshal, and numerous private gentlemen, were locked up in Federal
- prisons. When Mr. Lincoln was actually slain, four years later, and the
- cupidity of the detectives was excited by enormous rewards, Ferrandina was
- totally unmolested. But even if Ferrandina really said all that is here
- imputed to him, he did no more than many others around him were doing at
- the same time. He drank and talked, and made swelling speeches; but he
- never took, nor seriously thought of taking, the first step toward the
- frightful tragedy he is said to have contemplated.
- </p>
- <p>
- The detectives are cautious not to include in the supposed plot to murder
- any person of eminence, power, or influence. Their game is all of the
- smaller sort, and, as they conceived, easily taken,&mdash;witless
- vagabonds like Hilliard and Luckett, and a barber, whose calling indicates
- his character and associations. They had no fault to find with the
- governor of the State: he was rather a lively trimmer, to be sure, and
- very anxious to turn up at last on the winning side; but it was manifestly
- impossible that one in such exalted station could meditate murder. Yet, if
- they had pushed their inquiries with an honest desire to get at the truth,
- they might have found much stronger evidence against the governor than
- that which they pretend to have found against the barber. In the
- governor's case the evidence is documentary, written, authentic,&mdash;over
- his own hand, clear and conclusive as pen and ink could make it. As early
- as the previous November, Gov. Hicks had written the following letter;
- and, notwithstanding its treasonable and murderous import, the writer
- became conspicuously loyal before spring, and lived to reap splendid
- rewards and high honors under the auspices of the Federal Government, as
- the most patriotic and devoted Union man in Maryland. The person to whom
- the letter was addressed was equally fortunate; and, instead of drawing
- out his comrades in the field to "kill Lincoln and his men," he was sent
- to Congress by power exerted from Washington at a time when the
- administration selected the representatives of Maryland, and performed all
- his duties right loyally and acceptably. Shall one be taken, and another
- left? Shall Hicks go to the Senate, and Webster to Congress, while the
- poor barber is held to the silly words which he is alleged to have
- sputtered out between drinks in a low groggery, under the blandishments
- and encouragements of an eager spy, itching for his reward?
- </p>
- <p>
- State of Maryland, Executive Chamber, Annapolis, Nov. 9, 1860.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hon. E. H. Webster.
- </p>
- <p>
- My dear Sir,&mdash;I have pleasure in acknowledging receipt of your favor
- introducing a very clever gentleman to my acquaintance (though a Demo'). I
- regret to say that we have, at this time, no arms on hand to distribute,
- but assure you at the earliest possible moment your company shall have
- arms: they have complied with all required on their part. We have some
- delay, in consequence of contracts with Georgia and Alabama, ahead of us:
- we expect at an early day an additional supply, and of first received your
- people shall be furnished. Will they be good men to send out to kill
- Lincoln and his men? if not, suppose the arms would be better sent South.
- </p>
- <p>
- How does late election sit with you? 'Tis too bad. Harford, nothing to
- reproach herself for.
- </p>
- <p>
- Your obedient servant,
- </p>
- <p>
- Thos. H. Hicks.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the Presidential party was Hon. Norman B. Judd: he was supposed to
- exercise unbounded influence over the new President; and with him,
- therefore, the detective opened communications. At various places along
- the route, Mr. Judd was given vague hints of the impending danger,
- accompanied by the usual assurances of the skill and activity of the
- patriots who were perilling their lives in a rebel city to save that of
- the Chief Magistrate. When he reached New York, he was met by the woman
- who had originally gone with the other spies to Baltimore. She had urgent
- messages from her chief,&mdash;messages that disturbed Mr. Judd
- exceedingly. The detective was anxious to meet Mr. Judd and the President;
- and a meeting was accordingly arranged to take place at Philadelphia.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln reached Philadelphia on the afternoon of the 21st. The
- detective had arrived in the morning, and improved the interval to impress
- and enlist Mr. Felton. In the evening he got Mr. Judd and Mr. Felton into
- his room at the St. Louis Hotel, and told them all he had learned. He
- dwelt at large on the fierce temper of the Baltimore Secessionists; on the
- loose talk he had heard about "fire-balls or hand-grenades;" on a
- "privateer" said to be moored somewhere in the bay; on the organization
- called National Volunteers; on the fact, that, eaves-dropping at Barnum's
- Hotel, he had overheard Marshal Kane intimate that he would not supply a
- police-force on some undefined occasion, but what the occasion was he did
- not know. He made much of his miserable victim, Hilliard, whom he held up
- as a perfect type of the class from which danger was to be apprehended;
- but, concerning "Captain" Ferrandina and his threats, he said, according
- to his own account, not a single word. He had opened his case, his whole
- case, and stated it as strongly as he could. Mr. Judd was very much
- startled, and was sure that it would be extremely imprudent for Mr.
- Lincoln to pass through Baltimore in open daylight, according to the
- published programme. But he thought the detective ought to see the
- President himself; and, as it was wearing toward nine o'clock, there was
- no time to lose. It was agreed that the part taken by the detective and
- Mr. Felton should be kept secret from every one but the President. Mr.
- Sanford, President of the American Telegraph Company, had also been
- co-operating in the business; and the same stipulation was made with
- regard to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Judd went to his own room at the Continental, and the detective
- followed. The crowd in the hotel was very dense, and it took some time to
- get a message to Mr. Lincoln. But it finally reached him, and he responded
- in person. Mr. Judd introduced the detective; and the latter told his
- story over again, with a single variation: this time he mentioned the name
- of Ferrandina along with Hilliard's, but gave no more prominence to one
- than to the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Judd and the detective wanted Lincoln to leave for Washington that
- night. This he flatly refused to do. He had engagements with the people,
- he said,&mdash;to raise a flag over Independence Hall in the morning, and
- to exhibit himself at Harrisburg in the afternoon; and these engagements
- he would not break in any event. But he would raise the flag, go to
- Harrisburg, "get away quietly" in the evening, and permit himself to be
- carried to Washington in the way they thought best. Even this, however, he
- conceded with great reluctance. He condescended to cross-examine the
- detective on some parts of his narrative, but at no time did he seem in
- the least degree alarmed. He was earnestly requested not to communicate
- the change of plan to any member of his party, except Mr. Judd, nor permit
- even a suspicion of it to cross the mind of another. To this he replied,
- that he would be compelled to tell Mrs. Lincoln; "and he thought it likely
- that she would insist upon W. H. Lamon going with him; but, aside from
- that, no one should know."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the mean time, Mr. Seward had also discovered the conspiracy. He
- despatched his son to Philadelphia to warn the President elect of the
- terrible plot into whose meshes he was about to run. Mr. Lincoln turned
- him over to Judd, and Judd told him they already knew all about it. He
- went away with just enough information to enable his father to anticipate
- the exact moment of Mr. Lincoln's surreptitious arrival in Washington.
- </p>
- <p>
- Early on the morning of the 22d, Mr. Lincoln raised the flag over
- Independence Hall, and departed for Harrisburg. On the way, Mr. Judd "gave
- him a full and precise detail of the arrangements that had been made" the
- previous night. After the conference with the detective, Mr. Sanford, Col.
- Scott, Mr. Felton, railroad and telegraph officials, had been sent for,
- and came to Mr. Judd's room. They occupied nearly the whole of the night
- in perfecting the plan. It was finally understood that about six o'clock
- the next evening Mr. Lincoln should slip away from the Jones Hotel, at
- Harrisburg, in company with a single member of his party. A special car
- and engine would be provided for him on the track outside the dépôt. All
- other trains on the road would be "sidetracked" until this one had passed.
- Mr. Sanford would forward skilled "telegraph-climbers," and see that all
- the wires leading out of Harrisburg were cut at six o'clock, and kept down
- until it was known that Mr. Lincoln had reached Washington in safety. The
- detective would meet Mr. Lincoln at the West Philadelphia dépôt with a
- carriage, and conduct him by a circuitous route to the Philadelphia,
- Wilmington, and Baltimore dépôt. Berths for four would be pre-engaged in
- the sleeping-car attached to the regular midnight train for Baltimore.
- This train Mr. Felton would cause to be detained until the conductor
- should receive a package, containing important "government despatches,"
- addressed to "E. J. Allen, Willard's Hotel, Washington." This package was
- made up of old newspapers, carefully wrapped and sealed, and delivered to
- the detective to be used as soon as Mr. Lincoln was lodged in the car. Mr.
- Lincoln approved of the plan, and signified his readiness to acquiesce.
- Then Mr. Judd, forgetting the secrecy which the spy had so impressively
- enjoined, told Mr. Lincoln that the step he was about to take was one of
- such transcendent importance, that he thought "it should be communicated
- to the other gentlemen of the party." Mr. Lincoln said, "You can do as you
- like about that." Mr. Judd now changed his seat; and Mr. Nicolay, whose
- suspicions seem to have been aroused by this mysterious conference, sat
- down beside him, and said, "Judd, there is something up. What is it, if it
- is proper that I should know?"&mdash;"George," answered Judd, "there is no
- necessity for your knowing it. One man can keep a matter better than two."
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrived at Harrisburg, and the public ceremonies and speech-making over,
- Mr. Lincoln retired to a private parlor in the Jones House; and Mr. Judd
- summoned to meet him Judge Davis, Col. Lamon, Col. Sumner, Major Hunter,
- and Capt. Pope. The three latter were officers of the regular army, and
- had joined the party after it had left Springfield. Judd began the
- conference by stating the alleged fact of the Baltimore conspiracy, how it
- was detected, and how it was proposed to thwart it by a midnight
- expedition to Washington by way of Philadelphia. It was a great surprise
- to most of those assembled. Col. Sumner was the first to break silence.
- "That proceeding," said he, "will be a damned piece of cowardice." Mr.
- Judd considered this a "pointed hit," but replied that "that view of the
- case had already been presented to Mr. Lincoln." Then there was a general
- interchange of opinions, which Sumner interrupted by saying, "I'll get a
- squad of cavalry, sir, and <i>cut</i> our way to Washington, sir!"&mdash;"Probably
- before that day comes," said Mr. Judd, "the inauguration day will have
- passed. It is important that Mr. Lincoln should be in Washington that
- day." Thus far Judge Davis had expressed no opinion, but "had put various
- questions to test the truthfulness of the story." He now turned to Mr.
- Lincoln, and said, "You personally heard the detective's story. You have
- heard this discussion. What is your judgment in the matter?"&mdash;"I have
- listened," answered Mr. Lincoln, "to this discussion with interest. I see
- no reason, no good reason, to change the programme; and I am for carrying
- it out as arranged by Judd." There was no longer any dissent as to the
- plan itself; but one question still remained to be disposed of. Who should
- accompany the President on his perilous ride? Mr. Judd again took the
- lead, declaring that he and Mr. Lincoln had previously determined that but
- one man ought to go, and that Col. Lamon had been selected as the proper
- person. To this Sumner violently demurred. "<i>I</i> have undertaken," he
- exclaimed, "to see Mr. Lincoln to Washington."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln was hastily dining when a close carriage was brought to the
- side-door of the hotel. He was called, hurried to his room, changed his
- coat and hat, and passed rapidly through the hall and out of the door. As
- he was stepping into the carriage, it became manifest that Sumner was
- determined to get in also. "Hurry with him," whispered Judd to Lamon, and
- at the same time, placing his hand on Sumner's shoulder, said aloud, "One
- moment, colonel!" Sumner turned around; and, in that moment, the carriage
- drove rapidly away. "A madder man," says Mr. Judd, "you never saw."
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon got on board the car without discovery or
- mishap. Besides themselves, there was no one in or about the car but Mr.
- Lewis, general superintendent of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad, and
- Mr. Franciscus, superintendent of the division over which they were about
- to pass. As Mr. Lincoln's dress on this occasion has been much discussed,
- it may be as well to state that he wore a soft, light felt hat, drawn down
- over his face when it seemed necessary or convenient, and a shawl thrown
- over his shoulders, and pulled up to assist in disguising his features
- when passing to and from the carriage. This was all there was of the
- "Scotch cap and cloak," so widely celebrated in the political literature
- of the day.
- </p>
- <p>
- At ten o'clock they reached Philadelphia, and were met by the detective,
- and one Mr. Kinney, an under-official of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and
- Baltimore Railroad. Lewis and Franciscus bade Mr. Lincoln adieu. Mr.
- Lincoln, Col. Lamon, and the detective seated themselves in a carriage,
- which stood in waiting, and Mr. Kinney got upon the box with the driver.
- It was a full hour and a half before the Baltimore train was to start; and
- Mr. Kinney found it necessary "to consume the time by driving northward in
- search of some imaginary person."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the way through Philadelphia, Mr. Lincoln told his companions about the
- message he had received from Mr. Seward. This new discovery was infinitely
- more appalling than the other. Mr. Seward had been informed "that about <i>fifteen
- thousand men</i> were organized to prevent his (Lincoln's) passage through
- Baltimore, and that arrangements were made by these parties <i>to blow up
- the railroad track, fire the train.</i>" &amp;c. In view of these
- unpleasant circumstances, Mr. Seward recommended a change of route. Here
- was a plot big enough to swallow up the little one, which we are to regard
- as the peculiar property of Mr. Felton's detective. Hilliard, Ferrandina,
- and Luckett disappear among the "fifteen thousand;" and their maudlin and
- impotent twaddle about the "abolition tyrant" looks very insignificant
- beside the bloody massacre, conflagration, and explosion now foreshadowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the moment for the departure of the Baltimore train drew near, the
- carriage paused in the dark shadows of the dépôt building. It was not
- considered prudent to approach the entrance. The spy passed in first, and
- was followed by Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon. An agent of the former
- directed them to the sleeping-car, which they entered by the rear door.
- Mr. Kinney ran forward, and delivered to the conductor the "important
- package" prepared for the purpose; and in three minutes the train was in
- motion. The tickets for the whole party had been procured beforehand.
- Their berths were ready, but had only been preserved from invasion by the
- statement, that they were retained for a sick man and his attendants. The
- business had been managed very adroitly by the female spy, who had
- accompanied her employer from Baltimore to Philadelphia to assist him in
- this the most delicate and important affair of his life. Mr. Lincoln got
- into his bed immediately; and the curtains were drawn together. When the
- conductor came around, the detective handed him the "sick man's" ticket;
- and the rest of the party lay down also. None of "our party appeared to be
- sleepy," says the detective; "but we all lay quiet, and nothing of
- importance transpired." "Mr. Lincoln is very homely," said the woman in
- her "report," "and so very tall, that he could not lay straight in his
- berth." During the night Mr. Lincoln indulged in a joke or two, in an
- undertone; but, with that exception, the "two sections" occupied by them
- were perfectly silent. The detective said he had men stationed at various
- places along the road to let him know "if all was right;" and he rose and
- went to the platform occasionally to observe their signals, but returned
- each time with a favorable report.
- </p>
- <p>
- At thirty minutes after three, the train reached Baltimore. One of the
- spy's assistants came on board, and informed him "in a whisper that all
- was right." The woman got out of the car. Mr. Lincoln lay close in his
- berth; and in a few moments the car was being slowly drawn through the
- quiet streets of the city toward the Washington dépôt. There again there
- was another pause, but no sound more alarming than the noise of shifting
- cars and engines. The passengers, tucked away on their narrow shelves,
- dozed on as peacefully as if Mr. Lincoln had never been born, until they
- were awakened by the loud strokes of a huge club against a
- night-watchman's box, which stood within the dépôt and close to the track.
- It was an Irishman, trying to arouse a sleepy ticket-agent, comfortably
- ensconced within. For twenty minutes the Irishman pounded the box with
- ever-increasing vigor, and, at each report of his blows, shouted at the
- top of his voice, "Captain! it's four o'clock! it's four o'clock!" The
- Irishman seemed to think that time had ceased to run at four o'clock, and,
- making no allowance for the period consumed by his futile exercises,
- repeated to the last his original statement that it was four o'clock. The
- passengers were intensely amused; and their jokes and laughter at the
- Irishman's expense were not lost upon the occupants of the "two sections"
- in the rear. "Mr. Lincoln," says the detective, appeared "to enjoy it very
- much, and made several witty remarks, showing that he was as full of fun
- as ever."
- </p>
- <p>
- In due time the train sped out of the suburbs of Baltimore; and the
- apprehensions of the President and his friends diminished with each
- welcome revolution of the wheels. At six o'clock the dome of the Capitol
- came in sight; and a moment later they rolled into the long, unsightly
- building, which forms the Washington dépôt. They passed out of the car
- unobserved, and pushed along with the living stream of men and women
- toward the outer door. One man alone in the great crowd seemed to watch
- Mr. Lincoln with special attention. Standing a little on one side, he
- "looked very sharp at him," and, as he passed, seized hold of his hand,
- and said in a loud tone of voice, "Abe, you can't play that on me." The
- detective and Col. Lamon were instantly alarmed. One of them raised his
- fist to strike the stranger; but Mr. Lincoln caught his arm, and said,
- "Don't strike him! don't strike him! It is Washburne. Don't you know him?"
- Mr. Seward had given to Mr. Washburne a hint of the information received
- through his son; and Mr. Washburne knew its value as well as another. For
- the present, the detective admonished him to keep quiet; and they passed
- on together. Taking a hack, they drove towards Willard's Hotel. Mr.
- Lincoln, Mr. Washburne, and the detectives got out in the street, and
- approached the ladies' entrance; while Col. Lamon drove on to the main
- entrance, and sent the proprietor to meet his distinguished guest at the
- side door. A few minutes later Mr. Seward arrived, and was introduced to
- the company by Mr. Washburne. He spoke in very strong terms of the great
- danger which Mr. Lincoln had so narrowly escaped, and most heartily
- applauded the wisdom of the "secret passage." "I informed Gov. Seward of
- the nature of the information I had," says the detective, "and that I had
- no information of any large organization in Baltimore; but the Governor
- reiterated that he had conclusive evidence of this."
- </p>
- <p>
- It soon became apparent that Mr. Lincoln wished to be left alone. He said
- he was "rather tired;" and, upon this intimation, the party separated. The
- detective went to the telegraph-office, and loaded the wires with
- despatches, containing the pleasing intelligence that "Plums" had brought
- "Nuts" through in safety. In the spy's cipher the President elect was
- reduced to the undignified title of "Nuts."
- </p>
- <p>
- That same day Mr. Lincoln's family and suite passed through Baltimore on
- the special train intended for him. They saw no sign of any disposition to
- burn them alive, or to blow them up with gunpowder, but went their way
- unmolested and very happy.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Lincoln soon learned to regret the midnight ride. His friends
- reproached him, his enemies taunted him. He was convinced that he had
- committed a grave mistake in yielding to the solicitations of a
- professional spy and of friends too easily alarmed. He saw that he had
- fled from a danger purely imaginary, and felt the shame and mortification
- natural to a brave man under such circumstances. But he was not disposed
- to take all the responsibility to himself, and frequently upbraided the
- writer for having aided and assisted him to demean himself at the very
- moment in all his life when his behavior should have exhibited the utmost
- dignity and composure.
- </p>
- <p>
- The news of his surreptitious entry into Washington occasioned much and
- varied comment throughout the country; but important events followed it in
- such rapid succession, that its real significance was soon lost sight of.
- Enough that Mr. Lincoln was safely at the capital, and in a few days would
- in all probability assume the power confided to his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- If before leaving Springfield he had become weary of the pressure upon him
- for office, he found no respite on his arrival at the focus of political
- intrigue and corruption. The intervening days before his inauguration were
- principally occupied in arranging the construction of his Cabinet. He was
- pretty well determined on this subject before he reached Washington; but
- in the minds of the public, beyond the generally accepted fact, that Mr.
- Seward was to be the Premier of the new administration, all was
- speculation and conjecture. From the circumstances of the case, he was
- compelled to give patient ear to the representations which were made him
- in favor of or against various persons or parties, and to hold his final
- decisions till the last moment, in order that he might decide with a full
- view of the requirements of public policy and party fealty.
- </p>
- <p>
- The close of this volume is not the place to enter into a detailed history
- of the circumstances which attended the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln's
- administration, nor of the events which signalized the close of Mr.
- Buchanan's. The history of the former cannot be understood without tracing
- its relation to that of the latter, and both demand more impartial
- consideration than either has yet received.
- </p>
- <p>
- The 4th of March, 1861, at last arrived; and at noon on that day the
- administration of James Buchanan was to come to a close, and that of
- Abraham Lincoln was to take its place. Mr. Lincoln's feelings, as the hour
- approached which was to invest him with greater responsibilities than had
- fallen upon any of his predecessors, may readily be imagined by the
- readers of the foregoing pages. If he saw in his elevation another step
- towards the fulfilment of that destiny which at times he believed awaited
- him, the thought served but to tinge with a peculiar, almost poetic
- sadness, the manner in which he addressed himself to the solemn duties of
- the hour.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0015" id="image-0015">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/579.jpg" alt="Norman B. Judd 579 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- The morning opened pleasantly. At an early hour he gave his inaugural
- address its final revision. Extensive preparations had been made to render
- the occasion as impressive as possible. By nine o'clock the procession had
- begun to form, and at eleven o'clock it commenced to move toward Willard's
- Hotel. Mr. Buchanan was still at the Capitol, signing bills till the
- official term of his office expired. At half-past twelve he called for Mr.
- Lincoln; and, after a delay of a few moments, both descended, and entered
- the open barouche in waiting for them. Shortly after, the procession took
- up its line of march for the Capitol.
- </p>
- <p>
- Apprehensions existed, that possibly some attempt might be made to
- assassinate Mr. Lincoln; and accordingly his carriage was carefully
- surrounded by the military and the Committee of Arrangements. By order of
- Gen. Scott, troops were placed at various points about the city, as well
- as on the tops of some of the houses along the route of the procession.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Senate remained in session till twelve o'clock, when Mr. Breckinridge,
- in a few well-chosen words, bade the senators farewell, and then conducted
- his successor, Mr. Hamlin, to the chair. At this moment, members and
- members elect of the House of Representatives, and the Diplomatic Corps,
- entered the chamber. At thirteen minutes to one, the Judges of the Supreme
- Court were announced; and on their entrance, headed by the venerable
- Chief-Justice Taney, all on the floor arose, while they moved slowly to
- the seats assigned them at the right of the Vice-President, bowing to that
- officer as they passed. At fifteen minutes past one, the Marshal-in-Chief
- entered the chamber ushering in the President and President elect. Mr.
- Lincoln looked pale, and wan, and anxious. In a few moments, the Marshal
- led the way to the platform at the eastern portico of the Capitol, where
- preparations had been made for the inauguration ceremony; and he was
- followed by the Judges of the Supreme Court, Sergeant-at-Arms of the
- Senate, the Committee of Arrangements, the President and President elect,
- Vice-President, Secretary of the Senate, Senators, Diplomatic Corps, Heads
- of Departments, and others in the chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- On arriving at the platform, Mr. Lincoln was introduced to the assembly,
- by the Hon. E. D. Baker, United States Senator from Oregon. Stepping
- forward, in a manner deliberate and impressive, he read in a clear,
- penetrating voice, the following
- </p>
- <p>
- INAUGURAL ADDRESS.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fellow-Citizens of the United States:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- In compliance with a custom as old as the Government itself, I appear
- before you to address you briefly, and to take, in your presence, the oath
- prescribed by the Constitution of the United States to be taken by the
- President before he enters on the execution of his office.
- </p>
- <p>
- I do not consider it necessary, at present, for me to discuss those
- matters of administration about which there is no special anxiety or
- excitement. Apprehension seems to exist among the people of the Southern
- States, that, by the accession of a Republican administration, their
- property and their peace and personal security are to be endangered. There
- has never been any reasonable cause for such apprehension. Indeed, the
- most ample evidence to the contrary has all the while existed, and been
- open to their inspection. It is found in nearly all the published speeches
- of him who now addresses you. I do but quote from one of those speeches,
- when I declare, that "I have no purpose, directly or indirectly, to
- interfere with the institution of slavery in the States where it exists."
- I believe I have no lawful right to do so; and I have no inclination to do
- so. Those who nominated and elected me did so with the full knowledge that
- I had made this and many similar declarations, and had never recanted
- them. And, more than this, they placed in the platform, for my acceptance,
- and as a law to themselves and to me, the clear and emphatic resolution
- which I now read:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "Resolved, That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States, and
- especially the right of each State to order and control its own domestic
- institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, is essential to
- that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our
- political fabric depend; and we denounce the lawless invasion by armed
- force of the soil of any State or Territory, no matter under what pretext,
- as among the gravest of crimes."
- </p>
- <p>
- I now reiterate these sentiments; and, in doing so, I only press upon the
- public attention the most conclusive evidence of which the case is
- susceptible, that the property, peace, and security of no section are to
- be in any wise endangered by the now incoming administration.
- </p>
- <p>
- I add, too, that all the protection which, consistently with the
- Constitution and the laws, can be given, will be cheerfully given to all
- the States, when lawfully demanded, for whatever cause, as cheerfully to
- one section as to another.
- </p>
- <p>
- There is much controversy about the delivering up of fugitives from
- service or labor. The clause I now read is as plainly written in the
- Constitution as any other of its provisions:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "No person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof,
- escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation
- therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered
- up on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is scarcely questioned that this provision was intended by those who
- made it for the reclaiming of what we call fugitive slaves; and the
- intention of the lawgiver is the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- All members of Congress swear their support to the whole Constitution,&mdash;to
- this provision as well as any other. To the proposition, then, that slaves
- whose cases come within the terms of this clause "shall be delivered up,"
- their oaths are unanimous. Now, if they would make the effort in good
- temper, could they not, with nearly equal unanimity, frame and pass a law
- by means of which to keep good that unanimous oath?
- </p>
- <p>
- There is some difference of opinion whether this clause should be enforced
- by national or by State authority; but surely that difference is not a
- very material one. If the slave is to be surrendered, it can be of but
- little consequence to him or to others by which authority it is done; and
- should any one in any case be content that this oath shall go unkept on a
- merely unsubstantial controversy as to how it shall be kept?
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, in any law upon this subject, ought not all the safeguards of
- liberty known in civilized and humane jurisprudence to be introduced, so
- that a free man be not, in any case, surrendered as a slave? And might it
- not be well at the same time to provide by law for the enforcement of that
- clause in the Constitution which guarantees that "the citizens of each
- State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens
- in the several States"?
- </p>
- <p>
- I take the official oath to-day with no mental reservations, and with no
- purpose to construe the Constitution or laws by any hypercritical rules;
- and, while I do not choose now to specify particular acts of Congress as
- proper to be enforced, I do suggest, that it will be much safer for all,
- both in official and private stations, to conform to and abide by all
- those acts which stand unrepealed, than to violate any of them, trusting
- to find impunity in having them held to be unconstitutional.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is seventy-two years since the first inauguration of a President under
- our national Constitution. During that period, fifteen different and very
- distinguished citizens have in succession administered the executive
- branch of the government. They have conducted it through many perils, and
- generally with great success. Yet, with all this scope for precedent, I
- now enter upon the same task, for the brief constitutional term of four
- years, under great and peculiar difficulties.
- </p>
- <p>
- A disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore only menaced, is now
- formidably attempted. I hold, that, in the contemplation of universal law
- and of the Constitution, the Union of these States is perpetual.
- Perpetuity is implied, if not expressed, in the fundamental law of all
- national governments. It is safe to assert that no government proper ever
- had a provision in its organic law for its own termination. Continue to
- execute all the express provisions of our national Constitution, and the
- Union will endure forever; it being impossible to destroy it, except by
- some action not provided for in the instrument itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, if the United States be not a government proper, but an association
- of States in the nature of a contract merely, can it, as a contract, be
- peaceably unmade by less than all the parties who made it? One party to a
- contract may violate it,&mdash;break it, so to speak; but does it not
- require all to lawfully rescind it? Descending from these general
- principles, we find the proposition that in legal contemplation the Union
- is perpetual confirmed by the history of the Union itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Union is much older than the Constitution. It was formed, in fact, by
- the Articles of Association in 1774. It was matured and continued in the
- Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was further matured, and the faith
- of all the then thirteen States expressly plighted and engaged that it
- should be perpetual, by the Articles of Confederation, in 1778; and,
- finally, in 1787, one of the declared objects for ordaining and
- establishing the Constitution was to form a more perfect Union. But, if
- the destruction of the Union by one or by a part only of the States be
- lawfully possible, the Union is less than before, the Constitution having
- lost the vital element of perpetuity.
- </p>
- <p>
- It follows from these views that no State, upon its own mere motion, can
- lawfully get out of the Union; that resolves and ordinances to that effect
- are legally void; and that acts of violence within any State or States
- against the authority of the United States, are insurrectionary or
- revolutionary according to circumstances.
- </p>
- <p>
- I therefore consider, that, in view of the Constitution and the laws, the
- Union is unbroken; and, to the extent of my ability, I shall take care, as
- the Constitution itself expressly enjoins upon me, that the laws of the
- Union shall be faithfully executed in all the States. Doing this, which I
- deem to be only a simple duty on my part, I shall perfectly perform it, so
- far as is practicable, unless my rightful masters, the American people,
- shall withhold the requisite power, or in some authoritative manner direct
- the contrary.
- </p>
- <p>
- I trust this will not be regarded as a menace, but only as the declared
- purpose of the Union that it will constitutionally defend and maintain
- itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- In doing this, there need be no bloodshed or violence; and there shall be
- none unless it is forced upon the national authority.
- </p>
- <p>
- The power confided to me <i>will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the
- property and places belonging to the government</i>, and collect the
- duties and imposts; but, beyond what may be necessary for these objects,
- there will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the people
- anywhere.
- </p>
- <p>
- Where hostility to the United States shall be so great and so universal as
- to prevent competent resident citizens from holding the Federal offices,
- there will be no attempt to force obnoxious strangers among the people for
- that object. While the strict legal right may exist of the Government to
- enforce the exercise of these offices, the attempt to do so would be so
- irritating, and so nearly impracticable withal, that I deem it better to
- forego for the time the uses of such offices.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mails, unless repelled, will continue to be furnished in all parts of
- the Union.
- </p>
- <p>
- So far as possible, the people everywhere shall have that sense of perfect
- security which is most favorable to calm thought and reflection.
- </p>
- <p>
- The course here indicated will be followed, unless current events and
- experience shall show a modification or change to be proper; and in every
- case and exigency my best discretion will be exercised according to the
- circumstances actually existing, and with a view and hope of a peaceful
- solution of the national troubles, and the restoration of fraternal
- sympathies and affections.
- </p>
- <p>
- That there are persons, in one section or another, who seek to destroy the
- Union at all events, and are glad of any pretext to do it, I will neither
- affirm nor deny. But, if there be such, I need address no word to them.
- </p>
- <p>
- To those, however, who really love the Union, may I not speak? Before
- entering upon so grave a matter as the destruction of our national fabric,
- with all its benefits, its memories, and its hopes, would it not be well
- to ascertain why we do it? Will you hazard so desperate a step, while any
- portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence? Will you, while
- the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real ones you fly
- from? Will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake? All profess to
- be content in the Union if all constitutional rights can be maintained. Is
- it true, then, that any right, plainly written in the Constitution, has
- been denied? I think not. Happily the human mind is so constituted, that
- no party can reach to the audacity of doing this.
- </p>
- <p>
- Think, if you can, of a single instance in which a plainly written
- provision of the Constitution has ever been denied. If, by the mere force
- of numbers, a majority should deprive a minority of any clearly written
- constitutional right, it might, in a moral point of view, justify
- revolution: it certainly would, if such right were a vital one. But such
- is not our case.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the vital rights of minorities and of individuals are so plainly
- assured to them by affirmations and negations, guaranties and
- prohibitions, in the Constitution, that controversies never arise
- concerning them. But no organic law can ever be framed with a provision
- specifically applicable to every question which may occur in practical
- administration. No foresight can anticipate, nor any document of
- reasonable length contain, express provisions for all possible questions.
- Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by National or by State
- authority? The Constitution does not expressly say. Must Congress protect
- slavery in the Territories? The Constitution does not expressly say. From
- questions of this class spring all our constitutional controversies, and
- we divide upon them into majorities and minorities.
- </p>
- <p>
- If the minority will not acquiesce, the majority must, or the government
- must cease. There is no alternative for continuing the government but
- acquiescence on the one side or the other. If a minority, in such a case,
- will secede rather than acquiesce, they make a precedent which in turn
- will ruin and divide them; for a minority of their own will secede from
- them, whenever a majority refuses to be controlled by such a minority. For
- instance, why not any portion of a new confederacy, a year or two hence,
- arbitrarily secede again, precisely as portions of the present Union now
- claim to secede from it? All who cherish disunion sentiments are now being
- educated to the exact temper of doing this. Is there such perfect identity
- of interests among the States to compose a new Union as to produce harmony
- only, and prevent renewed secession? Plainly, the central idea of
- secession is the essence of anarchy.
- </p>
- <p>
- A majority held in restraint by constitutional check and limitation, and
- always changing easily with deliberate changes of popular opinions and
- sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people. Whoever rejects
- it does, of necessity, fly to anarchy or to despotism. Unanimity is
- impossible: the rule of a minority, as a permanent arrangement, is wholly
- inadmissible; so that, rejecting the majority principle, anarchy or
- despotism in some form is all that is left.
- </p>
- <p>
- I do not forget the position assumed by some, that constitutional
- questions are to be decided by the Supreme Court, nor do I deny that such
- decisions must be binding in any case upon the parties to a suit, as to
- the object of that suit; while they are also entitled to very high respect
- and consideration in all parallel cases by all other departments of the
- government; and, while it is obviously possible that such decision may be
- erroneous in any given case, still, the evil effect following it, being
- limited to that particular case, with the chance that it may be overruled
- and never become a precedent for other cases, can better be borne than
- could the evils of a different practice.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the same time, the candid citizen must confess, that, if the policy of
- the government upon the vital questions affecting the whole people is to
- be irrevocably fixed by the decisions of the Supreme Court the instant
- they are made, as in ordinary litigation between parties in personal
- actions, the people will have ceased to be their own masters, having to
- that extent practically resigned their government into the hands of that
- eminent tribunal.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nor is there in this view any assault upon the court or the judges. It is
- a duty from which they may not shrink, to decide cases properly brought
- before them; and it is no fault of theirs if others seek to turn their
- decisions to political purposes. One section of our country believes
- slavery is right and ought to be extended, while the other believes it is
- wrong and ought not to be extended; and this is the only substantial
- dispute: and the fugitive-slave clause of the Constitution, and the law
- for the suppression of the foreign slave-trade, are each as well enforced,
- perhaps, as any law can ever be in a community where the moral sense of
- the people imperfectly supports the law itself. The great body of the
- people abide by the dry, legal obligation in both cases, and a few break
- over in each. This, I think, cannot be perfectly cured; and it would be
- worse in both cases after the separation of the sections than before. The
- foreign slave-trade, now imperfectly suppressed, would be ultimately
- revived, without restriction, in one section; while fugitive slaves, now
- only partially surrendered, would not be surrendered at all by the other.
- </p>
- <p>
- Physically speaking, we cannot separate: we cannot remove our respective
- sections from each other, nor build an impassable wall between them. A
- husband and wife may be divorced, and go out of the presence and beyond
- the reach of each other; but the different parts of our country cannot do
- this. They cannot but remain face to face; and intercourse, either
- amicable or hostile, must continue between them. Is it possible, then, to
- make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after
- separation than before? Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can
- make laws? Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than
- laws can among friends? Suppose you go to war, you cannot fight always;
- and when, after much loss on both sides, and no gain on either, you cease
- fighting, the identical questions as to terms of intercourse are again
- upon you.
- </p>
- <p>
- This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it.
- Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can
- exercise their constitutional right of amending, or their revolutionary
- right to dismember or overthrow it. I cannot be ignorant of the fact, that
- many worthy and patriotic citizens are desirous of having the national
- Constitution amended. While I make no recommendation of amendment, I fully
- recognize the full authority of the people over the whole subject, to be
- exercised in either of the modes prescribed in the instrument itself; and
- I should, under existing circumstances, favor rather than oppose a fair
- opportunity being afforded the people to act upon it.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will venture to add, that to me the convention mode seems preferable, in
- that it allows amendments to originate with the people themselves, instead
- of only permitting them to take or reject propositions originated by
- others not especially chosen for the purpose, and which might not be
- precisely such as they would wish either to accept or refuse. I understand
- that a proposed amendment to the Constitution (which amendment, however, I
- have not seen) has passed Congress, to the effect that the Federal
- Government shall never interfere with the domestic institutions of States,
- including that of persons held to service. To avoid misconstruction of
- what I have said, I depart from my purpose not to speak of particular
- amendments so far as to say, that, holding such a provision to now be
- implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express
- and irrevocable.
- </p>
- <p>
- The chief magistrate derives all his authority from the people, and they
- have conferred none upon him to fix the terms for the separation of the
- States. The people themselves, also, can do this if they choose; but the
- Executive, as such, has nothing to do with it. His duty is to administer
- the present government as it came to his hands, and to transmit it
- unimpaired by him to his successor. Why should there not be a patient
- confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? Is there any better or
- equal hope in the world? In our present differences, is either party
- without faith of being in the right? If the Almighty Ruler of nations,
- with his eternal truth and justice, be on your side of the North, or on
- yours of the South, that truth and that justice will surely prevail by the
- judgment of this great tribunal,&mdash;the American people. By the frame
- of the government under which we live, this same people have wisely given
- their public servants but little power for mischief, and have with equal
- wisdom provided for the return of that little to their own hands at very
- short intervals. While the people retain their virtue and vigilance, no
- administration, by any extreme wickedness or folly, can very seriously
- injure the Government in the short space of four years.
- </p>
- <p>
- My countrymen, one and all, think calmly and well upon this whole subject.
- Nothing valuable can be lost by taking time.
- </p>
- <p>
- If there be an object to hurry any of you, in hot haste, to a step which
- you would never take deliberately, that object will be frustrated by
- taking time; but no good object can be frustrated by it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such of you as are now dissatisfied still have the old Constitution
- unimpaired, and, on the sensitive point, the laws of your own framing
- under it; while the new administration will have no immediate power, if it
- would, to change either.
- </p>
- <p>
- If it were admitted that you who are dissatisfied hold the right side in
- the dispute, there is still no single reason for precipitate action.
- Intelligence, patriotism, Christianity, and a firm reliance on Him who has
- never yet forsaken this favored land, are still competent to adjust, in
- the best way, all our present difficulties.
- </p>
- <p>
- In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine, is the
- momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you.
- </p>
- <p>
- You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You can
- have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government; while I shall
- have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend" it.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am loah to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be
- enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of
- affection.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and
- patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad
- land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as
- surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.
- </p>
- <p>
- This address, so characteristic of its author, and so full of the best
- qualities of Mr. Lincoln's nature, was well received by the large audience
- which heard it. Having finished, Mr. Lincoln turned to Chief-Justice
- Taney, who, with much apparent agitation and emotion, administered to him
- the following oath:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- "I, Abraham Lincoln, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the
- office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of my
- ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United
- States."
- </p>
- <p>
- The ceremony concluded, Mr. Lincoln, as President of the United States, in
- charge of the Committee of Arrangements, was accompanied by Mr. Buchanan
- back to the Senate- Chamber, and from there to the Executive Mansion. Here
- Mr. Buchanan took leave of him, invoking upon his administration a
- peaceful and happy result; and here for the present we leave him. In
- another volume we shall endeavor to trace his career as the nation's Chief
- Magistrate during the ensuing four years.
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_APPE" id="link2H_APPE">
- <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- APPENDIX.
- </h2>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0016" id="image-0016">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/588.jpg" alt="Facsimile of Autobiography1 588 "
- width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0017" id="image-0017">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/590.jpg" alt="Facsimile of Autobiography2 590 "
- width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- <a name="image-0018" id="image-0018">
- <!-- IMG --></a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
- <img src="images/592.jpg" alt="Facsimile of Autobiography3 592 "
- width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <p>
- THE circumstances under which the original of the accompanying <i>facsimile</i>
- was written are explained in the following letter:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- National Hotel, Washington, D.C., Feb. 19, 1872. Colonel Ward H. Lamon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dear Sir,&mdash;In compliance with your request, I place in your hands a
- copy of a manuscript in my possession written by Abraham Lincoln, giving a
- brief account of his early history, and the commencement of that political
- career which terminated in his election to the Presidency.
- </p>
- <p>
- It may not be inappropriate to say, that some time preceding the writing
- of the enclosed, finding, in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, a laudable
- curiosity in the public mind to know more about the early history of Mr.
- Lincoln, and looking, too, to the possibilities of his being an available
- candidate for the Presidency in 1860, I had on several occasions requested
- of him this information, and that it was not without some hesitation he
- placed in my hands even this very modest account of himself, which he did
- in the month of December, 1859.
- </p>
- <p>
- To this were added, by myself, other facts bearing upon his legislative
- and political history, and the whole forwarded to a friend residing in my
- native county (Chester, Pa.),&mdash;the Hon. Joseph J. Lewis, former
- Commissioner of Internal Revenue,&mdash;who made them the basis of an
- ably-written and somewhat elaborate memoir of the late President, which
- appeared in the Pennsylvania and other papers of the country in January,
- 1860, and which contributed to prepare the way for the subsequent
- nomination at Chicago the following June.
- </p>
- <p>
- Believing this brief and unpretending narrative, written by himself in his
- own peculiar vein,&mdash;and injustice to him I should add, without the
- remotest expectation of its ever appearing in public,&mdash;with the
- attending circumstances, may be of interest to the numerous admirers of
- that historic and truly great man, I place it at your disposal.
- </p>
- <p>
- I am truly yours,
- </p>
- <p>
- Jesse W. Fell.
- </p>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
-
-
-
-
-
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@@ -1,21314 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Life Of Abraham Lincoln
- From His Birth To His Inauguration As President
-
-Author: Ward H. Lamon
-
-Illustrator: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2012 [EBook #40977]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN;
-
-FROM HIS BIRTH TO HIS INAUGURATION AS PRESIDENT.
-
-By
-
-Ward H. Lamon.
-
-With Illustrations.
-
-Boston:
-
-James R. Osgood And Company,
-
-(Late Ticknor & Fields, And Fields, Osgood, & Co.)
-
-1872.
-
-
-[Illustration: Frontispiece]
-
-[Illustration: Titlepage]
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-IN the following pages I have endeavored to give the life of Abraham
-Lincoln, from his birth to his inauguration as President of the United
-States. The reader will judge the character of the performance by the
-work itself: for that reason I shall spare him the perusal of much
-prefatory explanation.
-
-At the time of Mr. Lincoln's death, I determined to write his history,
-as I had in my possession much valuable material for such a purpose. I
-did not then imagine that any person could have better or more extensive
-materials than I possessed. I soon learned, however, that Mr. William H.
-Herndon of Springfield, Ill., was similarly engaged. There could be no
-rivalry between us; for the supreme object of both was to make the real
-history and character of Mr. Lincoln as well known to the public as they
-were to us. He deplored, as I did, the many publications pretending to
-be biographies which came teeming from the press, so long as the public
-interest about Mr. Lincoln excited the hope of gain. Out of the mass
-of works which appeared, of one only--Dr. Holland's--is it possible to
-speak with any degree of respect.
-
-Early in 1869, Mr. Herndon placed at my disposal his remarkable
-collection of materials,--the richest, rarest, and fullest collection
-it was possible to conceive. Along with them came an offer of hearty
-co-operation, of which I have availed myself so extensively, that no art
-of mine would serve to conceal it. Added to my own collections, these
-acquisitions have enabled me to do what could not have been done
-before,--prepare an authentic biography of Mr. Lincoln.
-
-Mr. Herndon had been the partner in business and the intimate personal
-associate of Mr. Lincoln for something like a quarter of a century; and
-Mr. Lincoln had lived familiarly with several members of his family long
-before their individual acquaintance began. New Salem, Springfield, the
-old judicial circuit, the habits and friends of Mr. Lincoln, were as
-well known to Mr. Herndon as to himself. With these advantages, and from
-the numberless facts and hints which had dropped from Mr. Lincoln during
-the confidential intercourse of an ordinary lifetime, Mr. Herndon was
-able to institute a thorough system of inquiry for every noteworthy
-circumstance and every incident of value in Mr. Lincoln's career.
-
-The fruits of Mr. Herndon's labors are garnered in three enormous
-volumes of original manuscripts and a mass of unarranged letters
-and papers. They comprise the recollections of Mr. Lincoln's
-nearest friends; of the surviving members of his family and his
-family-connections; of the men still living who knew him and his parents
-in Kentucky; of his schoolfellows, neighbors, and acquaintances in
-Indiana; of the better part of the whole population of New Salem; of
-his associates and relatives at Springfield; and of lawyers, judges,
-politicians, and statesmen everywhere, who had any thing of interest or
-moment to relate. They were collected at vast expense of time, labor,
-and money, involving the employment of many agents, long journeys,
-tedious examinations, and voluminous correspondence. Upon the value of
-these materials it would be impossible to place an estimate. That I have
-used them conscientiously and justly is the only merit to which I lay
-claim.
-
-As a general thing, my text will be found to support itself; but whether
-the particular authority be mentioned or not, it is proper to remark,
-that each statement of fact is fully sustained by indisputable evidence
-remaining in my possession. My original plan was to verify every
-important statement by one or more appropriate citations; but it was
-early abandoned, not because it involved unwelcome labor, but because
-it encumbered my pages with a great array of obscure names, which the
-reader would probably pass unnoticed.
-
-I dismiss this volume into the world, with no claim for it of literary
-excellence, but with the hope that it will prove what it purports to
-be,--a faithful record of the life of Abraham Lincoln down to the 4th of
-March, 1861.
-
-Ward H. Lamon.
-
-Washington City, May, 1872.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS.
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-Birth.--His father and mother.--History of Thomas Lincoln and his family
-a necessary part of Abraham Lincoln's biography.--Thomas Lincoln's
-ancestors.--Members of the family remaining in Virginia.--Birth of
-Thomas Lincoln.--Removal to Kentucky.--Life in the Wilderness.--Lincolns
-settle in Mercer County.--Thomas Lincoln's father shot by
-Indians.--Widow and family remove to Washington County.--Thomas
-poor.--Wanders into Breckinridge County.--Goes to Hardin County.--Works
-at the carpenter's trade.--Cannot read or write.--Personal
-appearance.--Called "Linckhom," or "Linckhera."--Thomas Lincoln as
-a carpenter.--Marries Nancy Hanks.--Previously courted Sally
-Bush.--Character of Sally Bush.--The person and character of Nancy
-Hanks.--Thomas and Nancy Lincoln go to live in a shed.--Birth of a
-daughter.--They remove to Nolin Creek.--Birth of Abraham.--Removal to
-Knob Creek.--Little Abe initiated into wild sports.--His sadness.--Goes
-to school.--Thomas Lincoln concludes to move.--Did not fly from the
-taint of slavery.--Abraham Lincoln always reticent about the history and
-character of his family.--Record in his Bible... 1
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Thomas Lincoln builds a boat.--Floats down to the Ohio.--Boat
-capsizes.--Lands in Perry County, Indiana.--Selects a location.--Walks
-back to Knob Creek for wife and children.--Makes his way through
-the wilderness.--Settles between the two Pigeon Creeks.--Gentry
-ville.--Selects a site.--Lincoln builds a half-faced camp.--Clears
-ground and raises a small crop.--Dennis Hanks.--Lincoln builds a
-cabin.--State of the country.--Indiana admitted to the Union.--Rise
-of Gentryville.--Character of the people.--Lincoln's patent for his
-land.--His farm, cabin, furniture.--The milk-sickness.--Death of Nancy
-Hanks Lincoln.--Funeral discourse by David Elkin.--Grave.--Tom Lincoln
-marries Sally Bush.--Her goods and chattels.--Her surprise at the
-poverty of the Lincoln cabin.--Clothes and comforts Abe and his
-sister.--Abe leads a new life.--Is sent to school.--Abe's appearance and
-dress.--Learning "manners"--Abe's essays.--Tenderness for animals.--The
-last of school.--Abe excelled the masters.--Studied privately.--Did not
-like to work.--Wrote on wooden shovel and boards.--How Abe studied.--The
-books he read.--The "Revised Statute of Indiana."--Did not read the
-Bible.--No religious opinions.--How he behaved at home.--Touching
-recital by Mrs. Lincoln.--Abe's memory.--Mimicks the preachers.--Makes
-"stump-speeches" in the field.--Cruelly maltreated by his father.--Works
-out cheerfully.--Universal favorite.--The kind of people he lived
-amongst.--Mrs. Crawford's reminiscences.--Society about Gentryville.
---His step-mother.--His sister.--The Johnstons and Hankses.--Abe a
-ferryman and farm-servant.--His work and habits.--Works for Josiah
-Crawford.--Mrs. Crawford's account of him.--Crawford's books.--Becomes
-a wit and a poet.--Abe the tallest and strongest man in the
-settlement.--Hunting in the Pigeon Creek region.--His activity.--Love of
-talking and reading.--Fond of rustic sports.--Furnishes the
-literature.--Would not be slighted.--His satires.--Songs and
-chronicles.--Gentryville as "a centre of business."--Abe and other
-boys loiter about the village.--Very temperate.--"Clerks" for Col.
-Jones.--Abe saves a drunken man's life.--Fond of music.--Marriage of his
-sister Nancy.--Extracts from his copy-book.--His Chronicles.--Fight with
-the Grigs-bys.--Abe "the big buck of the lick."--"Speaking meetings"
-at Gentryville.--Dennis Hanks's account of the way he and Abe became so
-learned.--Abe attends a court.--Abe expects to be President.--Going
-to mill.--Kicked in the head by a horse.--Mr. Wood.--Piece on
-temperance.--On national politics.--Abe tired of home.--Works for
-Mr. Gentry.--Knowledge of astronomy and geography.--Goes to New
-Orleans.--Counterfeit money.--Fight with negroes.--Scar on his face.
---An apocryphal story...........19
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Abe's return from New Orleans.--Sawing planks for a new house.--The
-milk-sickness.--Removal to Illinois.--Settles near Decatur.--Abe leaves
-home.--Subsequent removals and death of Thomas Lincoln.--Abe's relations
-to the family.--Works with John Hanks after leaving home.--Splitting
-rails.--Makes a speech on the improvement of the Sangamon River.--Second
-voyage to New Orleans.--Loading and departure of the boat.--"Sticks" on
-New Salem dam.--Abe's contrivance to get her off.--Model in the Patent
-Office.--Arrival at New Orleans.--Negroes chained.--Abe touched by the
-sight.--Returns on a steamboat.--Wrestles with Daniel Needham.........73
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-The site of New Salem.--The village as it existed.--The
-first store.--Number of inhabitants.--Their
-houses.--Springfield.--Petersburg.--Mr. Lincoln appears a second time
-at New Salem.--Clerks at an election.--Pilots a boat to
-Beardstown.--Country store.--Abe as "first clerk."--"Clary's Grove
-Boys."--Character of Jack Armstrong.--He and Abe become intimate
-friends.--Abe's popularity.--Love of peace.--Habits of study.--Waylaying
-strangers for information.--Pilots the steamer "Talisman" up and down
-the Sangamon.......85
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Offutt's business gone to ruin.--The Black Hawk War.--Black Hawk crosses
-the Mississippi.--Deceived by his allies.--The governor's call for
-troops.--Abe enlists--Elected captain.--A speech.--Organization of the
-army.--Captain Lincoln under arrest.--The march.--Captain Lincoln's
-company declines to form.--Lincoln under arrest.--Stillman's
-defeat.--Wasting rations.--Hunger.--Mutiny.--March to Dixon.--Attempt
-to capture Black Hawk's pirogues.--Lincoln saves the life of
-an Indian.--Mutiny.--Lincoln's novel method of quelling
-it.--Wrestling.--His magnanimity.--Care of his men.--Dispute with a
-regular officer.--Reach Dixon.--Move to Fox River.--A stampede.--Captain
-Lincoln's efficiency as an officer.--Amusements of the camp.--Captain
-Lincoln re-enlists as a private.--Independent spy company.--Progress of
-the war.--Capture of Black Hawk.--Release.--Death.--Grave.--George
-W. Harrison's recollections.--Duties of the spy company.--Company
-disbanded.--Lincoln's horse stolen.--They start home on foot.--Buy
-a canoe.--Feast on a raft.--Sell the boat.--Walk again.--Arrive at
-Petersburg.--A sham battle........98
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-The volunteers from Sangamon return shortly before the State
-election.--Abe a candidate for the Legislature.--Mode of bringing
-forward candidates.--Parties and party names.--State and national
-politics.--Mr. Lincoln's position.--Old way of conducting
-elections.--Mr. Lincoln's first stump-speech.--"A general fight."--Mr.
-Lincoln's part in it.--His dress and appearance.--Speech at Island
-Grove.--His stories.--A third speech.--Agrees with the Whigs in the
-policy of internal improvements.--His own hobby.--Prepares an address to
-the people.--Mr. Lincoln defeated.--Received every vote but three cast
-in his own precinct....121
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Results of the canvass.--An opening in business.--The firm of Lincoln
-& Berry.--How they sold liquor.--What Mr. Douglas said.--The store a
-failure.--Berry's bad habits.--The credit system.--Lincoln's debts.--He
-goes to board at the tavern.--Studies law.--Walks to Springfield for
-books.--Progress in the law.--Does business for his neighbors.--Other
-studies.--Reminiscences of J. Y. Ellis.--Shy of ladies.--His
-apparel.--Fishing, and spouting Shakspeare and Burns.--Mr. Lincoln
-annoyed by company.--Retires to the country.--Bowlin Greene.--Mr.
-Lincoln's attempt to speak a funeral discourse.--John Calhoun.--Lincoln
-studies surveying.--Gets employment.--Lincoln appointed postmaster.--How
-he performed the duties.--Sale of Mr. Lincoln's personal property under
-execution.--Bought by James Short.--Lincoln's visits.--Old Hannah.--Ah.
-Trent.--Mr. Lincoln as a peacemaker.--His great strength.--The
-judicial quality.--Acting second in fights.--A candidate for the
-Legislature.--Elected.--Borrows two hundred dollars from Coleman
-Smoot.--How they got acquainted.--Mr. Lincoln writes a little book on
-infidelity.--It is burnt by Samuel Hill........135
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-James Rutledge.--His family.--Ann Rutledge.--John McNeil.--Is engaged
-to Ann.--His strange story.--The loveliness of Ann's person
-and character.--Mr. Lincoln courts her.--They are engaged to be
-married.--Await the return of McNeil.--Ann dies of a broken
-heart.--Mr. Lincoln goes crazy.--Cared for by Bowlin Greene.--The poem
-"Immortality."--Mr. Lincoln's melancholy broodings.--Interviews with
-Isaac Cogdale after his election to the Presidency.--Mr. Herndon's
-interview with McNamar.--Ann's grave.--The Concord cemetery...159
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Bennett Able and family.--Mary Owens.--Mr. Lincoln falls in love with
-her.--What she thought of him.--A misunderstanding.--Letters from Miss
-Owens.--Mr. Lincoln's letters to her.--Humorous account of the affair in
-a letter from Mr. Lincoln to another lady......172
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Mr. Lincoln takes his seat in the Legislature.--Schemes of internal
-improvement.--Mr. Lincoln a silent member.--Meets Stephen A.
-Douglas.--Log-rolling.--Mr. Lincoln a candidate for re-election.--The
-canvass.--"The Long Nine."--Speech at Mechanicsburg.--Fight.--Reply to
-Dr. Early.--Reply to George Forquer.--Trick on Dick Taylor.--Attempts
-to create a third party.--Mr. Lincoln elected.--Federal and State
-politics.--The Bank of the United States.--Suspension of specie
-payments.--Mr. Lincoln wishes to be the De Witt Clinton of
-Illinois.--The internal-improvement system.--Capital located
-at Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln's conception of the duty of a
-representative.--His part in passing the "system."--Begins
-his antislavery record.--Public sentiment against the
-Abolitionists.--History of antislavery in Illinois.--The
-Covenanters.--Struggle to amend the Constitution.--The "black
-code."--Death of Elijah P. Lovejoy.--Protest against proslavery
-resolutions.--No sympathy with extremists.--Suspension of
-specie payments.--Mr. Lincoln re-elected in 1838.--Candidate for
-Speaker.--Finances.--Utter failure of the internal-improvement
-"system."--Mr. Lincoln re-elected in 1840.--He introduces a bill.--His
-speech.--Financial expedients.--Bitterness of feeling.--Democrats seek
-to hold a quorum.--Mr. Lincoln jumps out of a window.--Speech by Mr.
-Lincoln.--The alien question.--The Democrats undertake to "reform" the
-judiciary.--Mr. Douglas a leader.--Protest of Mr. Lincoln and
-other Whigs.--Reminiscences of a colleague.--Dinner to "The Long
-Nine."--"Abraham Lincoln one of nature's noblemen."..........184
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-Capital removed to Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln settles there to practise
-law.--First case.--Members of the bar.--Mr. Lincoln's partnership with
-John T. Stuart.--Population and condition of Springfield.--Lawyers
-and politicians.--Mr. Lincoln's intense ambition.--Lecture before the
-Springfield Lyceum.--His style.--Political discussions run
-high.--Joshua F. Speed his most intimate friend.--Scene in Speed's
-store.--Debate.--Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn, and Thomas, against Lincoln,
-Logan, Baker, and Browning.--Presidential elector in 1840.--Stumping
-for Harrison.--Scene between Lincoln and Douglas in the Court-House.--A
-failure.--Redeems himself.--Meets Miss Mary Todd.--She takes Mr. Lincoln
-captive.--She refuses Douglas.--Engaged.--Miss Matilda Edwards.--Mr.
-Lincoln undergoes a change of heart.--Mr. Lincoln reveals to Mary the
-state of his mind.--She releases him.--A reconciliation.--Every thing
-prepared for the wedding.--Mr. Lincoln fails to appear.--Insane.--Speed
-takes him to Kentucky.--Lines on "Suicide."--His gloom.--Return
-to Springfield.--Secret meetings with Miss Todd.--Sudden
-marriage.--Correspondence with Mr. Speed on delicate subjects.--Relics
-of a great man and a great agony.--Miss Todd attacks James Shields in
-certain witty and sarcastic letters.--Mr. Lincoln's name "given up"
-as the author.--Challenged by Shields.--A meeting and an
-explanation.--Correspondence.--Candidate for Congressional
-nomination.--Letters to Speed and Morris.--Defeat.. 223
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector in 1844.--Debates with
-Calhoun.--Speaks in Illinois and Indiana.--At Gentryville.--Lincoln,
-Baker, Logan, Hardin, aspirants for Congress.--Supposed
-bargain.--Canvass for Whig nomination in 1846.--Mr. Lincoln
-nominated.--Opposed by Peter Cartwright.--Mr. Lincoln called a
-deist.--Elected.--Takes his seat.--Distinguished members.--Opposed
-to the Mexican War.--The "Spot Resolutions."--Speech of Mr.
-Lincoln.--Murmurs of disapprobation.--Mr. Lincoln for "Old Rough" in
-1848.--Defections at home.--Mr. Lincoln's campaign.--Speech.--Passage
-not generally published.--Letter to his father.--Second session.--The
-"Gott Resolution."--Mr. Lincoln's substitute..............274
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln in his character of country lawyer.--Public feeling at
-the time of his death.--Judge Davis's address at a bar-meeting.--Judge
-Drummond's address.--Mr. Lincoln's partnership with John T.
-Stuart.--With Stephen. T. Logan.--With William H. Herndon.--Mr.
-Lincoln "a case-lawyer."--Slow.--Conscientious.--Henry McHenry's
-case.--Circumstantial evidence.--A startling case.--Mr. Lincoln's
-account of it.--His first case in the Supreme Court.--Could not defend a
-bad case.--Ignorance of technicalities.--The Eighth Circuit.--Happy
-on the circuit.--Style of travelling.--His relations.--Young Johnson
-indicted.--Mr. Lincoln's kindness.--Jack Armstrong's son tried
-for murder.--Mr. Lincoln defends him.--Alleged use of a false
-almanac.--Prisoner discharged.--Old Hannah's account of it.--Mr.
-Lincoln's suit against Illinois Central Railway Company.--McCormick
-Reaping Machine case.--Treatment by Edwin M. Stanton........311
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-Mr. Lincoln not a candidate for re-election.--Judge Logan's defeat.--Mr.
-Lincoln an applicant for Commissioner of the Land Office.--Offered the
-Governorship of Oregon.--Views concerning the Missouri Compromise
-and Compromise of 1850.--Declines to be a candidate for Congress in
-1850.--Death of Thomas Lincoln.--Correspondence between Mr. Lincoln
-and John Johnston.--Eulogy on Henry Clay.--In favor of voluntary
-emancipation and colonization.--Answer to Mr. Douglas's Richmond
-speech.--Passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill.--Mr. Lincoln's views
-concerning slavery.--Opposed to conferring political privileges
-upon negroes.--Aroused by the repeal of the Missouri
-Compromise.--Anti-Nebraska party.--Mr. Lincoln the leader.--Mr. Douglas
-speaks at Chicago.--At Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln replies.--A
-great speech.--Mr. Douglas rejoins.--The Abolitionists.--Mr.
-Herndon.--Determined to make Mr. Lincoln an Abolitionist.--They refuse
-to enter the Know-Nothing lodges.--The Abolitionists desire to force
-Mr. Lincoln to take a stand.--He runs away from Springfield.--He
-is requested to "follow up" Mr. Douglas.--Speech at
-Peoria.--Extract.--Slavery and popular sovereignty.--Mr. Lincoln and
-Mr. Douglas agree not to speak any more.--The election.--Mr. Lincoln
-announced for the Legislature by Wm. Jayne.--Mrs. Lincoln withdraws his
-name.--Jayne restores it.--He is elected.--A candidate for United-States
-Senator.--Resigns his seat.--Is censured.--Anti-Nebraska majority in
-the Legislature.--The balloting.--Danger of Governor Matteson's
-election.--Mr. Lincoln advises his friends to vote for Judge
-Trumbull.--Trumbull elected.--Charges of conspiracy and corrupt
-bargain.--Mr. Lincoln's denial.--Mr. Douglas imputes to Mr. Lincoln
-extreme Abolitionist views.--Mr. Lincoln's answer.............333
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-The struggle in Kansas.--The South begins the struggle.--The North meets
-it.--The Missourians and other proslavery forces.--Andrew H. Reeder
-appointed governor.--Election frauds.--Mr. Lincoln's views on
-Kansas.--Gov. Shannon arrives in the Territory.--The Free State men
-repudiate the Legislature.--Mr. Lincoln's "little speech" to the
-Abolitionists of Illinois.--Mr. Lincoln's party relations.--Mr. Lincoln
-agrees to meet the Abolitionists.--Convention at Bloomington.--Mr.
-Lincoln considered a convert.--His great speech.--Conservative
-resolutions.--Ludicrous failure of a ratification meeting at
-Springfield.--Mr. Lincoln's remarks.--Plot to break up the Know-Nothing
-party.--"National" Republican Convention.--Mr. Lincoln receives
-a hundred and ten votes for Vice-President.--National Democratic
-Convention.--Mr. Lincoln a candidate for elector.--His
-canvass.--Confidential letter.--Imperfect fellowship with the
-Abolitionists.--Mr. Douglas's speech on Kansas in June, 1857.--Mr.
-Lincoln's reply.--Mr. Douglas committed to support of the Lecompton
-Constitution.--The Dred Scott Decision discussed.--Mr. Lincoln
-against negro equality.--Affairs in Kansas.--Election of a new
-Legislature.--Submission of the Lecompton Constitution to
-the people.--Method of voting on it.--Constitution finally
-rejected.--Conflict in Congress.--Mr. Douglas's defection.--Extract from
-a speech by Mr. Lincoln........366
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-Mr. Douglas opposes the Administration.--His course in
-Congress.--Squatter sovereignty in full operation.--Mr. Lincoln's
-definition of popular sovereignty and squatter sovereignty.--Mr.
-Douglas's private conferences with Republicans.--"Judge Trumbull's
-opinion.--Mr. Douglas nominated for senator by a Democratic
-Convention.--Mr. Lincoln's idea of what Douglas might accomplish at
-Charleston.--Mr. Lincoln writing a celebrated speech.--He is nominated
-for senator.--A startling doctrine.--A council of friends.--Same
-doctrine advanced at Bloomington.--The "house-divided" speech.--Mr.
-Lincoln promises to explain.--What Mr. Lincoln thought of Mr.
-Douglas.--What Mr. Douglas thought of Mr. Lincoln.--Popular canvass for
-senator.--Mr. Lincoln determines to "kill Douglas" as a
-Presidential aspirant.--Adroit plan to draw him out on squatter
-sovereignty.--Absurdities of Mr. Douglas.--The election.--Success of Mr.
-Douglas.--Reputation acquired by Mr. Lincoln..................389
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-Mr. Lincoln writes and delivers a lecture.--The Presidency.--Mr.
-Lincoln's "running qualities."--He thinks himself unfit.--Nominated by
-"Illinois Gazette."--Letter to Dr. Canisius.--Letter to Dr. Wallace
-on the protective tariff policy.--Mr. Lincoln in Ohio and Kansas.--A
-private meeting of his friends.--Permitted to use his name for
-the Presidency.--An invitation to speak in New York.--Choosing a
-subject.--Arrives in New York.--His embarrassments.--Speech in Cooper
-Institute.--Comments of the press.--He is charged with mercenary
-conduct.--Letter concerning the charge.--Visits New England.--Style
-and character of his speeches.--An amusing encounter with a clerical
-politician...421
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-Meeting of the Republican State Convention.--Mr. Lincoln present.--John
-Hanks and the rails.--Mr. Lincoln's speech.--Meeting of the Republican
-National Convention at Chicago.--The platform.--Combinations to secure
-Mr. Lincoln's nomination.--The balloting.--Mr. Lincoln nominated.--Mr.
-Lincoln at Springfield waiting the results of the Convention.--How
-he received the news.--Enthusiasm at Springfield.--Official
-notification.--The "Constitutional Union" party.--The Democratic
-Conventions at Charleston and Baltimore.--The election.--The
-principle upon which Mr. Lincoln proposed to make appointments.--Mr.
-Stephens.--Mr. Gilmore.--Mr. Guthrie.--Mr. Seward.--Mr. Chase.--Mr.
-Bates.--The cases of Smith and Cameron.--Mr. Lincoln's visit
-to Chicago.--Mr. Lincoln's visit to his relatives in Coles
-County.--Apprehensions about assassination.--A visit from Hannah
-Armstrong... 444
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-Difficulties and peculiarities of Mr. Lincoln's position.--A general
-review of his character.--His personal appearance and habits.--His house
-and other property.--His domestic relations.--His morbid melancholy
-and superstition.--Illustrated by his literary tastes.--His humor.--His
-temperate habits and abstinence from sensual pleasures.--His
-ambition.--Use of politics for personal advancement.--Love of power
-and place.--Of justice.--Not a demagogue or a trimmer.--His religious
-views.--Attempt of the Rev. Mr. Smith to convert him.--Mr. Bateman's
-story as related by Dr. Holland.--Effect of his belief upon his mind and
-character...........466
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-Departure of the Presidential party from Springfield.--Affecting address
-by Mr. Lincoln to his friends and neighbors.--His opinions concerning
-the approaching civil war.--Discovery of a supposed plot to murder
-him at Baltimore.--Governor Hicks's proposal to "kill Lincoln and his
-men."--The plan formed to defeat the conspiracy.--The midnight ride
-from Harrisburg to Washington.--Arrival in Washington.--Before the
-Inauguration.--Inauguration Day.--Inaugural Address.--Mr. Lincoln's
-Oath.--Mr. Lincoln President of the United States.--Mr. Buchanan bids
-him farewell............505
-
-
-
-
-LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-ABRAHAM LINCOLN was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809. His
-father's name was Thomas Lincoln, and his mother's maiden name was Nancy
-Hanks. At the time of his birth, they are supposed to have been married
-about three years. Although there appears to have been but little
-sympathy or affection between Thomas and Abraham Lincoln, they were
-nevertheless connected by ties and associations which make the previous
-history of Thomas Lincoln and his family a necessary part of any
-reasonably full biography of the great man who immortalized the name by
-wearing it.
-
-Thomas Lincoln's ancestors were among the early settlers of Rockingham
-County in Virginia; but exactly whence they came, or the precise time of
-their settlement there, it is impossible to tell. They were manifestly
-of English descent; but whether emigrants directly from England
-to Virginia, or an offshoot of the historic Lincoln family in
-Massachusetts, or of the highly-respectable Lincoln family in
-Pennsylvania, are questions left entirely to conjecture. We have
-absolutely no evidence by which to determine them, Thomas Lincoln
-himself stoutly denied that his progenitors were either Quakers or
-Puritans; but he furnished nothing except his own word to sustain his
-denial: on the contrary, some of the family (distant relatives of Thomas
-Lincoln) who remain in Virginia believe themselves to have sprung from
-the New-England stock. They found their opinion solely on the fact that
-the Christian names given to the sons of the two families were the same,
-though only in a few cases, and at different times. But this might have
-arisen merely from that common religious sentiment which induces parents
-of a devotional turn to confer scriptural names on their children, or it
-might have been purely accidental. Abrahams, Isaacs, and Jacobs abound
-in many other families who claim no kindred on that account. In England,
-during the ascendency of the Puritans, in times of fanatical religious
-excitement, the children were almost universally baptized by the names
-of the patriarchs and Old-Testament heroes, or by names of their own
-pious invention, signifying what the infant was expected to do and to
-suffer in the cause of the Lord. The progenitors of all the American
-Lincolns were Englishmen, and they may have been Puritans. There is,
-therefore, nothing unreasonable in the supposition that they began the
-practice of conferring such names before the emigration of any of them;
-and the names, becoming matters of family pride and family tradition,
-have continued to be given ever since. But, if the fact that
-Christian names of a particular class prevailed among the Lincolns of
-Massachusetts and the Lincolns of Virginia at the same time is no proof
-of consanguinity, the identity of the surname is entitled to even less
-consideration. It is barely possible that they may have had a common
-ancestor; but, if they had, he must have lived and died so obscurely,
-and so long ago, that no trace of him can be discovered. It would be
-as difficult to prove a blood relationship between all the American
-Lincolns, as it would be to prove a general cousinship among all the
-Smiths or all the Joneses.1
-
- 1 At the end of this volume will be found a very interesting
- account of the family, given by Mr. Lincoln himself. The
- original is in his own handwriting, and is here reproduced
- in fac-simile.
-
-A patronymic so common as Lincoln, derived from a large geographical
-division of the old country, would almost certainly be taken by many who
-had no claim to it by reason of descent from its original possessors.
-
-Dr. Holland, who, of all Mr. Lincoln's biographers, has entered most
-extensively into the genealogy of the family, says that the father of
-Thomas was named Abraham; but he gives no authority for his statement,
-and it is as likely to be wrong as to be right. The Hankses--John and
-Dennis--who passed a great part of their lives in the company of Thomas
-Lincoln, tell us that the name of his father was Mordecai; and so also
-does Col. Chapman, who married Thomas Lincoln's step-daughter. The rest
-of those who ought to know are unable to assign him any name at all.
-Dr. Holland says further, that this Abraham (or Mordecai) had four
-brothers,--Jacob, John, Isaac, and Thomas; that Isaac went to Tennessee,
-where his descendants are now; that Thomas went to Kentucky after his
-brother Abraham; but that Jacob and John "are supposed to have" remained
-in Virginia.1 This is doubtless true, at least so far as it relates to
-Jacob and John; for there are at this day numerous Lincolns residing
-in Rockingham County,--the place from which the Kentucky Lincolns
-emigrated. One of their ancestors, Jacob,--who seems to be the brother
-referred to,--was a lieutenant in the army of the Revolution, and
-present at the siege of Yorktown. His military services were made the
-ground of a claim against the government, and Abraham Lincoln, whilst a
-representative in Congress from Illinois, was applied to by the family
-to assist them in prosecuting it. A correspondence of some length
-ensued, by which the presumed relationship of the parties was fully
-acknowledged on both sides. But, unfortunately, no copy of it is now
-in existence. The one preserved by the Virginians was lost or destroyed
-during the late war. The family, with perfect unanimity, espoused
-the cause of the Confederate States, and suffered many losses in
-consequence, of which these interesting papers may have been one.
-
- 1 The Life of Abraham Lincoln, by J. G. Holland, p. 20.
-
-Abraham (or Mordecai) the father of Thomas Lincoln, was the owner of
-a large and fertile tract of land on the waters of Linnville's Creek,
-about eight miles north of Harrisonburg, the court-house town of
-Rockingham County. It is difficult to ascertain the precise extent of
-this plantation, or the history of the title to it, inasmuch as all the
-records of the county were burnt by Gen. Hunter in 1864. It is clear,
-however, that it had been inherited by Lincoln, the emigrant to
-Kentucky, and that four, if not all, of his children were born upon it.
-At the time Gen. Sheridan received the order "to make the Valley of the
-Shenandoah a barren waste," this land was well improved and in a state
-of high cultivation; but under the operation of that order it was
-ravaged and desolated like the region around it.
-
-Lincoln, the emigrant, had three sons and two daughters. Thomas was the
-third son and the fourth child. He was born in 1778; and in 1780, or a
-little later, his father removed with his entire family to Kentucky.
-
-Kentucky was then the paradise of the borderer's dreams. Fabulous tales
-of its sylvan charms and pastoral beauties had for years been floating
-about, not only along the frontiers of Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North
-Carolina, but farther back in the older settlements. For a while it had
-been known as the "Cane Country," and then as the "Country of
-Kentucky." Many expeditions were undertaken to explore it; two or three
-adventurers, and occasionally only one at a time, passing down the Ohio
-in canoes. But they all stopped short of the Kentucky River. The Indians
-were terrible; and it was known that they would surrender any other
-spot of earth in preference to Kentucky. The canes that were supposed
-to indicate the promised land--those canes of wondrous dimensions,
-that shot up, as thick as they could stand, from a soil of inestimable
-fertility--were forever receding before those who sought them. One party
-after another returned to report, that, after incredible dangers and
-hardships, they had met with no better fortune than that which had
-attended the efforts of their predecessors, and that they had utterly
-failed to find the "canes." At last they were actually found by Simon
-Kenton, who stealthily planted a little patch of corn, to see how the
-stalk that bore the yellow grain would grow beside its "brother" of the
-wilderness. He was one day leaning against the stem of a great tree,
-watching his little assemblage of sprouts, and wondering at the strange
-fruitfulness of the earth which fed them, when he heard a footstep
-behind him. It was the great Daniel Boone's. They united their fortunes
-for the present, but subsequently each of them became the chief of a
-considerable settlement. Kenton's trail had been down the Ohio, Boone's
-from North Carolina; and from both those directions soon came hunters,
-warriors, and settlers to join them. But the Indians had no thought of
-relinquishing their fairest hunting-grounds without a long and desperate
-struggle. The rich carpet of natural grasses which fed innumerable
-herds of buffalo, elk, and deer, all the year round; the grandeur of
-its primeval forests, its pure fountains, and abundant streams,--made it
-even more desirable to them than to the whites. They had long contended
-for the possession of it; and no tribe, or confederacy of tribes, had
-ever been able to hold it to the exclusion of the rest. Here, from time
-immemorial, the northern and southern, the eastern and western Indians
-had met each other in mortal strife, mutually shedding the blood which
-ought to have been husbanded for the more deadly conflict with a common
-foe. The character of this savage warfare had earned for Kentucky the
-appellation of "the dark and bloody ground;" and, now that the whites
-had fairly begun their encroachments upon it, the Indians were resolved
-that the phrase should lose none of its old significance. White settlers
-might therefore count upon fighting for their lives as well as their
-lands.
-
-Boone did not make his final settlement till 1775. The Lincolns came
-about 1780. This was but a year or two after Clark's expedition into
-Illinois; and it was long, long before St. Clair's defeat and Wayne's
-victory. Nearly the whole of the north-west territory was then occupied
-by hostile Indians. Kentucky volunteers had yet before them many a day
-of hot and bloody work on the Ohio, the Muskingum, and the Miami, to say
-nothing of the continual surprises to which they were subjected at home.
-Every man's life was in his hand. From cabin to cabin, from settlement
-to settlement, his trail was dogged by the eager savage. If he went
-to plough, he was liable to be shot down between the handles; if he
-attempted to procure subsistence by hunting, he was hunted himself.
-Unless he abandoned his "clearing" and his stock to almost certain
-devastation, and shut up himself and his family in a narrow "fort," for
-months at a time, he might expect every hour that their roof would be
-given "to the flames, and their flesh to the eagles."
-
-To make matters worse, "the western country," and particularly Kentucky,
-had become the rendezvous of Tories, runaway conscripts, deserters,
-debtors, and criminals. Gen. Butler, who went there as a Commissioner
-from Congress, to treat with certain Indian tribes, kept a private
-journal, in which he entered a very graphic, but a very appalling
-description of the state of affairs in Kentucky. At the principal
-"points," as they were called, were collected hungry speculators,
-gamblers, and mere desperadoes,--these distinctions being the only
-divisions and degrees in society. Among other things, the journal
-contains a statement about land-jobbing and the traffic in town lots,
-at Louisville, beside which the account of the same business in "Martin
-Chuzzlewit" is absolutely tame. That city, now one of the most superb in
-the Union, was then a small collection of cabins and hovels, inhabited
-by a class of people of whom specimens might have been found a few
-months ago at Cheyenne or Promontory Point. Notwithstanding the
-high commissions borne by Gen. Butler and Gen. Parsons, the motley
-inhabitants of Louisville flatly refused even to notice them. They
-would probably have sold them a "corner lot" in a swamp, or a "splendid
-business site" in a mud-hole; but for mere civilities there was no time.
-The whole population were so deeply engaged in drinking, card-playing,
-and selling town lots to each other, that they persistently refused to
-pay any attention to three men who were drowning in the river near by,
-although their dismal cries for help were distinctly heard throughout
-the "city."
-
-On the journey out, the Lincolns are said to have endured many hardships
-and encountered all the usual dangers, including several skirmishes with
-the Indians. They settled in Mercer County, but at what particular spot
-is uncertain. Their house was a rough log-cabin, their farm a little
-clearing in the midst of a vast forest. One morning, not long after
-their settlement, the father took Thomas, his youngest son, and went
-to build a fence, a short distance from the house; while the other
-brothers, Mordecai and Josiah, were sent to another field, not far
-away. They were all intent about their work, when a shot from a party
-of Indians in ambush broke the "listening stillness" cf the woods.
-The father fell dead; Josiah ran to a stockade two or three miles off;
-Mordecai, the eldest boy, made his way to the house, and, looking out
-from the loophole in the loft, saw an Indian in the act of raising
-his little brother from the ground. He took deliberate aim at a silver
-ornament on the breast of the Indian, and brought him down. Thomas
-sprang toward the cabin, and was admitted by his mother, while Mordecai
-renewed his fire at several other Indians that rose from the covert of
-the fence or thicket. It was not long until Josiah returned from the
-stockade with a party of settlers; but the Indians had fled, and none
-were found but the dead one, and another who was wounded and had crept
-into the top of a fallen tree.
-
-When this tragedy was enacted, Mordecai, the hero of it, was a
-well-grown boy. He seems to have hated Indians ever after with a hatred
-which was singular for its intensity, even in those times. Many years
-afterwards, his neighbors believed that he was in the habit of following
-peaceable Indians, as they passed through the settlements, in order to
-get surreptitious shots at them; and it was no secret that he had killed
-more than one in that way.
-
-Immediately after the death of her husband, the widow abandoned the
-scene of her misfortunes, and removed to Washington County, near the
-town of Springfield, where she lived until the youngest of her children
-had grown up. Mor-decai and Josiah remained there until late in life,
-and were always numbered among the best people in the neighborhood.
-Mordecai was the eldest son of his father; and under the law of
-primogeniture, which was still a part of the Virginia code, he inherited
-some estate in lands. One of the daughters wedded a Mr. Krume, and the
-other a Mr. Brumfield.
-
-Thomas seems to have been the only member of the family whose character
-was not entirely respectable. He was idle, thriftless, poor, a hunter,
-and a rover. One year he wandered away off to his uncle, on the
-Holston, near the confines of Tennessee. Another year he wandered into
-Breckinridge County, where his easy good-nature was overcome by a huge
-bully, and he performed the only remarkable achievement of his life, by
-whipping him. In 1806, we find him in Hardin County, trying to learn the
-carpenter's trade. Until then, he could neither read nor write; and
-it was only after his marriage that his ambition led him to seek
-accomplishments of this sort.
-
-Thomas Lincoln was not tall and thin, like Abraham, but comparatively
-short and stout, standing about five feet ten inches in his shoes. His
-hair was dark and coarse, his complexion brown, his face round and
-full, his eyes gray, and his nose large and prominent. He weighed,
-at different times, from one hundred and seventy to one hundred and
-ninety-six. He was built so "tight and compact," that Dennis Hanks
-declares he never could find the points of separation between his ribs,
-though he felt for them often. He was a little stoop-shouldered, and
-walked with a slow, halting step. But he was sinewy and brave, and, his
-habitually peaceable disposition once fairly overborne, was a tremendous
-man in a rough-and-tumble fight. He thrashed the monstrous bully of
-Breckinridge County in three minutes, and came off without a scratch.
-
-His vagrant career had supplied him with an inexhaustible fund of
-anecdotes, which he told cleverly and well. He loved to sit about at
-"stores," or under shade-trees, and "spin yarns,"--a propensity which
-atoned for many sins, and made him extremely popular. In politics,
-he was a Democrat,--a Jackson Democrat. In religion he was nothing at
-times, and a member of various denominations by turns,--a Free-Will
-Baptist in Kentucky, a Presbyterian in Indiana, and a Disciple--vulgarly
-called Campbellite--in Illinois. In this latter communion he seems to
-have died.
-
-It ought, perhaps, to be mentioned, that both in Virginia and Kentucky
-his name was commonly pronounced "Linck-horn," and in Indiana,
-"Linckhern." The usage was so general, that Tom Lincoln came very near
-losing his real name altogether. As he never wrote it at all until after
-his marriage, and wrote it then only mechanically, it was never spelled
-one way or the other, unless by a storekeeper here and there, who had
-a small account against him. Whether it was properly "Lincoln,"
-"Linckhorn," or "Linckhern," was not definitely settled until after
-Abraham began to write, when, as one of the neighbors has it, "he
-remodelled the spelling and corrected the pronunciation."
-
-By the middle of 1806, Lincoln had acquired a very limited knowledge
-of the carpenter's trade, and set up on his own account; but his
-achievements in this line were no better than those of his previous
-life. He was employed occasionally to do rough work, that requires
-neither science nor skill; but nobody alleges that he ever built a
-house, or pretended to do more than a few little odd jobs connected with
-such an undertaking. He soon got tired of the business, as he did of
-every thing else that required application and labor. He was no boss,
-not even an average journeyman, nor a steady hand. When he worked at the
-trade at all, he liked to make common benches, cupboards, and bureaus;
-and some specimens of his work of this kind are still extant in Kentucky
-and Indiana, and bear their own testimony to the quality of their
-workmanship.
-
-Some time in the year 1806 he married Nancy Hanks. It was in the shop of
-her uncle, Joseph Hanks, at Elizabethtown, in Hardin County, that he had
-essayed to learn the trade. We have no record of the courtship, but
-any one can readily imagine the numberless occasions that would bring
-together the niece and the apprentice. It is true that Nancy did not
-live with her uncle; but the Hankses were all very clannish, and she was
-doubtless a welcome and frequent guest at his house. It is admitted by
-all the old residents of the place that they were honestly married, but
-precisely when or how no one can tell. Diligent and thorough searches by
-the most competent persons have failed to discover any trace of the fact
-in the public records of Hardin and the adjoining counties. The license
-and the minister's return in the case of Lincoln and Sarah Johnston, his
-second wife, were easily found in the place where the law required them
-to be; but of Nancy Hanks's marriage there exists no evidence but that
-of mutual acknowledgment and cohabitation. At the time of their union,
-Thomas was twenty-eight years of age, and Nancy about twenty-three.
-
-Lincoln had previously courted a girl named Sally Bush, who lived in the
-neighborhood of Elizabethtown; but his suit was unsuccessful, and
-she became the wife of Johnston, the jailer. Her reason for rejecting
-Lincoln comes down to us in no words of her own; but it is clear enough
-that it was his want of character, and the "bad luck," as the Hankses
-have it, which always attended him. Sally Bush was a modest and pious
-girl, in all things pure and decent. She was very neat in her personal
-appearance, and, because she was particular in the selection of her
-gowns and company, had long been accounted a "proud body," who held
-her head above common folks. Even her own relatives seem to have
-participated in this mean accusation; and the decency of her dress
-and behavior appear to have made her an object of common envy and
-backbiting. But she had a will as well as principles of her own, and she
-lived to make them both serviceable to the neglected and destitute son
-of Nancy Hanks. Thomas Lincoln took another wife, but he always loved
-Sally Bush as much as he was capable of loving anybody; and years
-afterwards, when her husband and his wife were both dead, he returned
-suddenly from the wilds of Indiana, and, representing himself as a
-thriving and prosperous farmer, induced her to marry him. It will be
-seen hereafter what value was to be attached to his representations of
-his own prosperity.
-
-Nancy Hanks, who accepted the honor which Sally Bush refused, was a
-slender, symmetrical woman, of medium stature, a brunette, with dark
-hair, regular features, and soft, sparkling hazel eyes. Tenderly bred
-she might have been beautiful; but hard labor and hard usage bent her
-handsome form, and imparted an unnatural coarseness to her features long
-before the period of her death. Toward the close, her life and her face
-were equally sad; and the latter habitually wore the wo-ful expression
-which afterwards distinguished the countenance of her son in repose.
-
-By her family, her understanding was considered something wonderful.
-John Hanks spoke reverently of her "high and intellectual forehead,"
-which he considered but the proper seat of faculties like hers.
-Compared with the mental poverty of her husband and relatives, her
-accomplishments were certainly very great; for it is related by them
-with pride and delight that she could actually read and write. The
-possession of these arts placed her far above her associates, and
-after a little while even Tom began to meditate upon the importance of
-acquiring them. He set to work accordingly, in real earnest, having a
-competent mistress so near at hand; and with much effort she taught him
-what letters composed his name, and how to put them together in a stiff
-and clumsy fashion. Henceforth he signed no more by making his mark; but
-it is nowhere stated that he ever learned to write any thing else, or to
-read either written or printed letters.
-
-Nancy Hanks was the daughter of Lucy Hanks. Her mother was one of four
-sisters,--Lucy, Betsy, Polly, and Nancy. Betsy married Thomas Sparrow;
-Polly married Jesse Friend, and Nancy, Levi Hall. Lucy became the wife
-of Henry Sparrow, and the mother of eight children. Nancy the younger
-was early sent to live with her uncle and aunt, Thomas and Betsy
-Sparrow. Nancy, another of the four sisters, was the mother of that
-Dennis F. Hanks whose name will be frequently met with in the course of
-this history. He also was brought up, or was permitted to come up, in
-the family of Thomas Sparrow, where Nancy found a shelter.
-
-Little Nancy became so completely identified with Thomas and Betsy
-Sparrow that many supposed her to have been their child. They reared her
-to womanhood, followed her to Indiana, dwelt under the same roof, died
-of the same disease, at nearly the same time, and were buried close
-beside her. They were the only parents she ever knew; and she must
-have called them by names appropriate to that relationship, for several
-persons who saw them die, and carried them to their graves, believe to
-this day that they were, in fact, her father and mother. Dennis Hanks
-persists even now in the assertion that her name was Sparrow; but Dennis
-was pitiably weak on the cross-examination: and we shall have to accept
-the testimony of Mr. Lincoln himself, and some dozens of other persons,
-to the contrary.
-
-All that can be learned of that generation of Hankses to which Nancy's
-mother belonged has now been recorded as fully as is compatible with
-circumstances. They claim that their ancestors came from England to
-Virginia, whence they migrated to Kentucky with the Lincolns, and
-settled near them in Mercer County. The same, precisely, is affirmed
-of the Sparrows. Branches of both families maintained a more or less
-intimate connection with the fortunes of Thomas Lincoln, and the early
-life of Abraham was closely interwoven with theirs.
-
-Lincoln took Nancy to live in a shed on one of the alleys of
-Elizabethtown. It was a very sorry building, and nearly bare of
-furniture. It stands yet, or did stand in 1866, to witness for itself
-the wretched poverty of its early inmates. It is about fourteen feet
-square, has been three times removed, twice used as a slaughter-house,
-and once as a stable. Here a daughter was born on the tenth day of
-February, 1807, who was called Nancy during the life of her mother, and
-after her death Sarah.
-
-But Lincoln soon wearied of Elizabethtown and carpenter-work. He thought
-he could do better as a farmer; and, shortly after the birth of Nancy
-(or Sarah), removed to a piece of land on the south fork of Nolin Creek,
-three miles from Hodgensville, within the present county of La Rue,
-and about thirteen miles from Elizabethtown. What estate he had, or
-attempted to get, in this land, is not clear from the papers at hand.
-It is said he bought it, but was unable to pay for it. It was very poor,
-and the landscape of which it formed a part was extremely desolate. It
-was then nearly destitute of timber, though it is now partially covered
-in spots by a young and stunted growth of post-oak and hickory. On every
-side the eye rested only upon weeds and low bushes, and a kind of grass
-which the present owner of the farm describes as "barren grass." It was,
-on the whole, as bad a piece of ground as there was in the neighborhood,
-and would hardly have sold for a dollar an acre. The general appearance
-of the surrounding country was not much better. A few small but pleasant
-streams--Nolin Creek and its tributaries--wandered through the valleys.
-The land was generally what is called "rolling;" that is, dead levels
-interspersed by little hillocks. Nearly all of it was arable; but,
-except the margins of the watercourses, not much of it was sufficiently
-fertile to repay the labor of tillage. It had no grand, un violated
-forests to allure the hunter, and no great bodies of deep and rich soils
-to tempt the husbandman. Here it was only by incessant labor and thrifty
-habits that an ordinary living could be wrung from the earth.
-
-The family took up their residence in a miserable cabin, which stood on
-a little knoll in the midst of a barren glade.
-
-A few stones tumbled down, and lying about loose, still indicate the
-site of the mean and narrow tenement which sheltered the infancy of
-one of the greatest political chieftains of modern times. Near by, a
-"romantic spring" gushed from beneath a rock, and sent forth a slender
-but silvery stream, meandering through those dull and unsightly plains.
-As it furnished almost the only pleasing feature in the melancholy
-desert through which it flowed, the place was called after it, "Rock
-Spring Farm." In addition to this single natural beauty, Lincoln began
-to think, in a little while, that a couple of trees would look well, and
-might even be useful, if judiciously planted in the vicinity of his bare
-house-yard. This enterprise he actually put into execution; and
-three decayed pear-trees, situated on the "edge" of what was lately a
-rye-field, constitute the only memorials of him or his family to be seen
-about the premises. They were his sole permanent improvement.
-
-In that solitary cabin, on this desolate spot, the illustrious Abraham
-Lincoln was born on the twelfth day of February, 1809.
-
-The Lincolns remained on Nolin Creek until Abraham was four years old.
-They then removed to a place much more picturesque, and of far greater
-fertility. It was situated about six miles from Hodgensville, on
-Knob Creek, a very clear stream, which took its rise in the gorges
-of Muldrews Hill, and fell into the Rolling Fork two miles above the
-present town of New Haven. The Rolling Fork emptied into Salt River, and
-Salt River into the Ohio, twenty-four miles below Louisville. This
-farm was well timbered, and more hilly than the one on Nolin Creek. It
-contained some rich valleys, which promised such excellent yields,
-that Lincoln bestirred himself most vigorously, and actually got into
-cultivation the whole of six acres, lying advantageously up and down
-the branch. This, however, was not all the work he did, for he still
-continued to pother occasionally at his trade; but, no matter what
-he turned his hand to, his gains were equally insignificant. He was
-satisfied with indifferent shelter, and a diet of "corn-bread and milk"
-was all he asked. John Hanks naively observes, that "happiness was
-the end of life with him." The land he now lived upon (two hundred and
-thirty-eight acres) he had pretended to buy from a Mr. Slater. The
-deed mentions a consideration of one hundred and eighteen pounds.
-The purchase must have been a mere speculation, with all the payments
-deferred, for the title remained in Lincoln but a single year. The
-deed was made to him Sept. 2, 1813; and Oct. 27, 1814, he conveyed
-two hundred acres to Charles Milton for one hundred pounds, leaving
-thirty-eight acres of the tract unsold. No public record discloses what
-he did with the remainder. If he retained any interest in it for-the
-time, it was probably permitted to be sold for taxes. The last of his
-voluntary transactions, in regard to this land, took place two years
-before his removal to Indiana; after which, he seems to have continued
-in possession as the tenant of Milton.
-
-In the mean time, Dennis Hanks endeavored to initiate young Abraham, now
-approaching his eighth year, in the mysteries of fishing, and led him
-on numerous tramps up and down the picturesque branch,--the branch whose
-waters were so pure that a white pebble could be seen in a depth of
-ten feet. On Nolin he had hunted ground-hogs with an older boy, who has
-since become the Rev. John Duncan, and betrayed a precocious zest in the
-sport. On Knob Creek, he dabbled in the water, or roved the hills
-and climbed the trees, with a little companion named Gallaher. On one
-occasion, when attempting to "coon" across the stream, by swinging
-over on a sycamore-tree, Abraham lost his hold, and, tumbling into deep
-water, was saved only by the utmost exertions of the other boy. But,
-with all this play, the child was often serious and sad. With the
-earliest dawn of reason, he began to suffer and endure; and it was that
-peculiar moral training which developed both his heart and his intellect
-with such singular and astonishing rapidity. It is not likely that Tom
-Lincoln cared a straw about his education. He had none himself, and is
-said to have admired "muscle" more than mind. Nevertheless, as Abraham's
-sister was going to school for a few days at a time, he was sent
-along, as Dennis Hanks remarks, more to bear her company than with
-any expectation or desire that he would learn much himself. One of the
-masters, Zachariah Riney, taught near the Lincoln cabin. The other,
-Caleb Hazel, kept his school nearly four miles away, on the "Friend"
-farm; and the hapless children were compelled to trudge that long and
-weary distance with spelling-book and "dinner,"--the latter a lunch of
-corn-bread, Tom Lincoln's favorite dish. Hazel could teach reading
-and writing, after a fashion, and a little arithmetic. But his great
-qualification for his office lay in the strength of his arm, and his
-power and readiness to "whip the big boys."
-
-But, as time wore on, the infelicities of Lincoln's life in this
-neighborhood became insupportable. He was gaining neither riches nor
-credit; and, being a wanderer by natural inclination, began to long for
-a change. His decision, however, was hastened by certain troubles which
-culminated in a desperate combat between him and one Abraham Enlow.
-They fought like savages; but Lincoln obtained a signal and permanent
-advantage by biting off the nose of his antagonist, so that he went
-bereft all the days of his life, and published his audacity and its
-punishment wherever he showed his face. But the affray, and the fame
-of it, made Lincoln more anxious than ever to escape from Kentucky. He
-resolved, therefore, to leave these scenes forever, and seek a roof-tree
-beyond the Ohio.
-
-It has pleased some of Mr. Lincoln's biographers to represent this
-removal of his father as a flight from the taint of slavery. Nothing
-could be further from the truth. There were not at the time more than
-fifty slaves in all Hardin County, which then composed a vast area of
-territory. It was practically a free community. Lincoln's more fortunate
-relatives in other parts of the State were slaveholders; and there is
-not the slightest evidence that he ever disclosed any conscientious
-scruples concerning the "institution."
-
-The lives of his father and mother, and the history and character of the
-family before their settlement in Indiana, were topics upon which Mr.
-Lincoln never spoke but with great reluctance and significant reserve.
-
-In his family Bible he kept a register of births, marriages, and deaths,
-every entry being carefully made in his own handwriting. It contains the
-date of his sister's birth and his own; of the marriage and death of his
-sister; of the death of his mother; and of the birth and death of
-Thomas Lincoln. The rest of the record is almost wholly devoted to the
-Johnstons and their numerous descendants and connections. It has not a
-word about the Hankses or the Sparrows. It shows the marriage of Sally
-Bush, first with Daniel Johnston, and then with Thomas Lincoln; but it
-is entirely silent as to the marriage of his own mother. It does not
-even give the date of her birth, but barely recognizes her existence
-and demise, to make the vacancy which was speedily filled by Sarah
-Johnston.1
-
- 1 The leaf of the Bible which contains these entries is in
- the possession of Col. Chapman.
-
-An artist was painting his portrait, and asked him for a sketch of his
-early life. He gave him this brief memorandum: "I was born Feb. 12,1809,
-in the then Hardin County, Kentucky, at a point within the now county of
-La Rue, a mile or a mile and a half from where Hodgens Mill now is. My
-parents being dead, and my own memory not serving, I know of no means of
-identifying the precise locality. It was on Nolin Creek."
-
-To the compiler of the "Dictionary of Congress" he gave the following:
-"Born Feb. 12, 1809, in Hardin County, Kentucky. Education defective.
-Profession, a lawyer. Have been a captain of volunteers in the
-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."
-
-To a campaign biographer who applied for particulars of his early
-history, he replied that they could be of no interest; that they were
-but
-
- "The short and simple annals of the poor."
-
-"The chief difficulty I had to encounter," writes this latter gentleman,
-"was to induce him to communicate the homely facts and incidents of his
-early life. He seemed to be painfully impressed with the extreme poverty
-of his early surroundings, the utter absence of all romantic and heroic
-elements; and I know he thought poorly of the idea of attempting a
-biographical sketch for campaign purposes.... Mr. Lincoln communicated
-some facts to me about his ancestry, which he did not wish published,
-and which I have never spoken of or alluded to before. I do not think,
-however, that Dennis Hanks, if he knows any thing about these matters,
-would be very likely to say any thing about them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THOMAS LINCOLN was something of a waterman. In the frequent changes of
-occupation, which had hitherto made his life so barren of good results,
-he could not resist the temptation to the career of a flat-boatman. He
-had accordingly made one, or perhaps two trips to New Orleans, in the
-company and employment of Isaac Bush, who was probably a near relative
-of Sally Bush. It was therefore very natural, that when, in the fall of
-1816, he finally determined to emigrate, he should attempt to transport
-his goods by water. He built himself a boat, which seems to have been
-none of the best, and launched it on the Rolling Fork, at the mouth of
-Knob Creek, a half-mile from his cabin. Some of his personal property,
-including carpenter's tools, he put on board, and the rest he traded for
-four hundred gallons of whiskey. With this crazy boat and this singular
-cargo, he put out into the stream alone, and floating with the current
-down the Rolling Fork, and then down Salt River, reached the Ohio
-without any mishap. Here his craft proved somewhat rickety when
-contending with the difficulties of the larger stream, or perhaps there
-was a lack of force in the management of her, or perhaps the single
-navigator had consoled himself during the lonely voyage by too frequent
-applications to a portion of his cargo: at all events, the boat
-capsized, and the lading went to the bottom. He fished up a few of the
-tools "and most of the whiskey," and, righting the little boat, again
-floated down to a landing at Thompson's Ferry, two and a half miles west
-of Troy, in Perry County, Indiana. Here he sold his treacherous boat,
-and, leaving his remaining property in the care of a settler named
-Posey, trudged off on foot to select "a location" in the wilderness. He
-did not go far, but found a place that he thought would suit him only
-sixteen miles distant from the river. He then turned about, and walked
-all the way back to Knob Creek, in Kentucky, where he took a fresh
-start with his wife and her children. Of the latter there were only
-two,--Nancy (or Sarah), nine years of age, and Abraham, seven. Mrs.
-Lincoln had given birth to another son some years before, but he had
-died when only three days old. After leaving Kentucky, she had no more
-children.
-
-This time Lincoln loaded what little he had left upon two horses, and
-"packed through to Posey's." Besides clothing and bedding, they carried
-such cooking utensils as would be needed by the way, and would be
-indispensable when they reached their destination. The stock was not
-large. It consisted of "one oven and lid, one skillet and lid, and some
-tin-ware." They camped out during the nights, and of course cooked their
-own food. Lincoln's skill as a hunter must now have stood him in good
-stead.
-
-Where he got the horses used upon this occasion, it is impossible to
-say; but they were likely borrowed from his brother-in-law, Krume, of
-Breckinridge County, who owned such stock, and subsequently moved Sarah
-Johnston's goods to Indiana, after her marriage with Lincoln.
-
-When they got to Posey's, Lincoln hired a wagon, and, loading on it the
-whiskey and other things he had stored there, went on toward the place
-which has since become famous as the "Lincoln Farm." He was now making
-his way through an almost untrodden wilderness. There was no road,
-and for a part of the distance not even a foot-trail. He was slightly
-assisted by a path of a few miles in length, which had been "blazed out"
-by an earlier settler named Hoskins. But he was obliged to suffer long
-delays, and cut out a passage for the wagon with his axe. At length,
-after many detentions and difficulties he reached the point where he
-intended to make his future home. It was situated between the forks
-of Big Pigeon and Little Pigeon Creeks, a mile and a half east of
-Gentryville, a village which grew up afterwards, and now numbers about
-three hundred inhabitants. The whole country was covered with a dense
-forest of oaks, beeches, walnuts, sugar-maples, and nearly all the
-varieties of trees that flourish in North America. The woods were
-usually open, and devoid of underbrush; the trees were of the largest
-growth, and beneath the deep shades they afforded was spread out a rich
-greensward. The natural grazing was very good, and hogs found abundant
-sustenance in the prodigious quantity of mast. There was occasionally
-a little glade or prairie set down in the midst of this vast expanse
-of forest. One of these, not far from the Lincoln place, was a famous
-resort for the deer, and the hunters knew it well for its numerous
-"licks." Upon this prairie the militia "musters" were had at a later
-day, and from it the south fork of the Pigeon came finally to be known
-as the "Prairie Fork."
-
-Lincoln laid off his curtilage on a gentle hillock having a slope on
-every side. The spot was very beautiful, and the soil was excellent. The
-selection was wise in every respect but one. There was no water near,
-except what was collected in holes in the ground after a rain; but it
-was very foul, and had to be strained before using. At a later period we
-find Abraham and his step-sister carrying water from a spring situated a
-mile away. Dennis Hanks asserts that Tom Lincoln "riddled his land like
-a honeycomb," in search of good water, and was at last sorely tempted to
-employ a Yankee, who came around with a divining-rod, and declared that
-for the small consideration of five dollars in cash, he would make his
-rod point to a cool, flowing spring beneath the surface.
-
-Here Lincoln built "a half-faced camp,"--a cabin enclosed on three sides
-and open on the fourth. It was built, not of logs, but of poles, and was
-therefore denominated a "camp," to distinguish it from a "cabin." It was
-about fourteen feet square, and had no floor. It was no larger than the
-first house he lived in at Elizabethtown, and on the whole not as good
-a shelter. But Lincoln was now under the influence of a transient access
-of ambition, and the camp was merely preliminary to something better.
-He lived in it, however, for a whole year, before he attained to the
-dignity of a residence in a cabin. "In the mean time he cleaned some
-land, and raised a small crop of corn and vegetables."
-
-In the fall of 1817, Thomas and Betsy Sparrow came out from Kentucky,
-and took up their abode in the old camp which the Lincolns had just
-deserted for the cabin. Betsy was the aunt who had raised Nancy Hanks.
-She had done the same in part for our friend Dennis Hanks, who was the
-offspring of another sister, and she now brought him with her. Dennis
-thus became the constant companion of young Abraham; and all the other
-members of that family, as originally settled in Indiana, being dead,
-Dennis remains a most important witness as to this period of Mr.
-Lincoln's life.
-
-Lincoln's second house was a "rough, rough log" one: the timbers were
-not hewed; and until after the arrival of Sally Bush, in 1819, it had
-neither floor, door, nor window. It stood about forty yards from what
-Dennis Hanks calls that "darned little half-faced camp," which was now
-the dwelling of the Sparrows. It was "right in the bush,"--in the heart
-of a virgin wilderness. There were only seven or eight older settlers in
-the neighborhood of the two Pigeon Creeks. Lincoln had had some previous
-acquaintance with one of them,--a Mr. Thomas Carter; and it is highly
-probable that nothing but this trivial circumstance induced him to
-settle here.1
-
- 1 The principal authorities for this part of our narrative
- are necessarily Dennis and John Hanks; but their statements
- have been carefully collated with those of other persons,
- both in Kentucky and Indiana.
-
-The nearest town was Troy, situated on the Ohio, about half a mile
-from the mouth of Anderson Creek. Gentryville had as yet no existence.
-Travelling was on horseback or on foot, and the only resort of commerce
-was to the pack-horse or the canoe. But a prodigious immigration was
-now sweeping into this inviting country. Harrison's victories over
-the Indians had opened it up to the peaceful settler; and Indiana
-was admitted into the Union in 1816, with a population of sixty-five
-thousand. The county in which Thomas Lincoln settled was Perry, with
-the county-seat at Troy; but he soon found himself in the new county of
-Spencer, with the court-house at Rockport, twenty miles south of him,
-and the thriving village of Gentryville within a mile and a half of his
-door.
-
-A post-office was established at Gentryville in 1824 or 1825. Dennis
-Hanks helped to hew the logs used to build the first storeroom. The
-following letter from Mr. David Turnham, now of Dale, Spencer County,
-presents some interesting and perfectly authentic information regarding
-the village and the settlements around it in those early times:--
-
-"Yours of the 5th inst. is at hand. As you wish me to answer several
-questions, I will give you a few items of the early settlement of
-Indiana.
-
-"When my father came here in the spring of 1819, he settled in Spencer
-County, within one mile of Thomas Lincoln, then a widower. The chance
-for schooling was poor; but, such as it was, Abraham and myself attended
-the same schools.
-
-"We first had to go seven miles to mill; and then it was a hand-mill
-that would grind from ten to fifteen bushels of corn in a day. There was
-but little wheat grown at that time; and, when we did have wheat, we had
-to grind it on the mill described, and use it without bolting, as there
-were no bolts in the country. In the course of two or three years, a
-man by the name of Huffman built a mill on Anderson River, about twelve
-miles distant. Abe and I had to do the milling on horseback, frequently
-going twice to get one grist. Then they began building horse-mills of a
-little better quality than the hand-mills.
-
-"The country was very rough, especially in the low lands, so thick with
-bush that a man could scarcely get through on foot. These places were
-called Roughs. The country abounded in game, such as bears, deer,
-turkeys, and the smaller game.
-
-"About the time Huffman built his mill, there was a road laid out from
-Corydon to Evansville, running by Mr. Lincoln's farm, and through what
-is now Gentryville. Corydon was then the State capital.
-
-"About the year 1823, there was another road laid out from Rockport to
-Bloomington, crossing the aforesaid at right angles, where Gentryville
-now stands. James Gentry entered the land; and in about a year Gideon
-Romine brought goods there, and shortly after succeeded in getting a
-post-office, by the name of Gentryville Post-office. Then followed the
-laying out of lots, and the selling of them, and a few were improved.
-But for some cause the lots all fell back to the original owner. The
-lots were sold in 1824 or 1825. Romine kept goods there a short time,
-and sold out to Gentry, but the place kept on increasing slowly. William
-Jones came in with a store, that made it improve a little faster, but
-Gentry bought him out. Jones bought a tract of land one-half mile from
-Gentryville, moved to it, went into business there, and drew nearly all
-the custom. Gentry saw that it was ruining his town: he compromised with
-Jones, and got him back to Gentryville; and about the year 1847 or 1848
-there was another survey of lots, which remains.
-
-"This is as good a history of the rise of Gentryville as I can give,
-after consulting several of the old settlers.
-
-"At that time there were a great many deer-licks; and Abe and myself
-would go to those licks sometimes, and watch of nights to kill deer,
-though Abe was not so fond of a gun as I was. There were ten or twelve
-of these licks in a small prairie on the creek, lying between Mr.
-Lincoln's and Mr. Wood's (the man you call Moore). This gave it the name
-of Prairie Fork of Pigeon Creek.
-
-"The people in the first settling of this country were very sociable,
-kind, and accommodating; but there was more drunkenness and stealing
-on a small scale, more immorality, less religion, less well-placed
-confidence."
-
-The steps taken by Lincoln to complete his title to the land upon which
-he settled are thus recited by the Commissioner of the General Land
-Office:--
-
-"In reply to the letter of Mr. W. H. Herndon, who is writing the
-biography of the late President, dated June 19, 1865, herewith returned,
-I have the honor to state, pursuant to the Secretary's reference, that
-on the 15th of October, 1817, Mr. Thomas Lincoln, then of Perry County,
-Indiana, entered under the old credit system,--
-
-"1. The South-West Quarter of Section 82, in Township 4, South of Range
-5 West, lying in Spencer County, Indiana.
-
-"2. Afterwards the said Thomas Lincoln relinquished to the United States
-the East half of said South-West Quarter; and the amount paid thereon
-was passed to his credit to complete payment of the West half of said
-South-West Quarter of Section 32, in Township 4, South of Range 5 West;
-and accordingly a patent was issued to said Thomas Lincoln for the
-latter tract. The patent was dated June 6, 1827, and was signed by John
-Quincy Adams, then President of the United States, and countersigned by
-George Graham, then Commissioner of the General Land Office." 1
-
- 1 The patent was issued to Thomas Lincoln alias Linckhern
- the other half he never paid, and finally lost the whole of
- the land.
-
-It will be observed, that, although Lincoln squatted upon the land in
-the fall of 1816, he did not enter it until October of the next year;
-and that the patent was not issued to him until June, 1827, but a little
-more than a year before he left it altogether. Beginning by entering a
-full quarter section, he was afterwards content with eighty acres, and
-took eleven years to make the necessary payments upon that. It is very
-probable that the money which finally secured the patent was furnished
-by Gentry or Aaron Grigsby, and the title passed out of Lincoln in the
-course of the transaction. Dennis Hanks says, "He settled on a piece of
-government land,--eighty acres. This land he afterwards bought under
-the Two-Dollar Act; was to pay for it in instalments; one-half he paid."
-
-For two years Lincoln continued to live along in the old way. He did not
-like to farm, and he never got much of his land under cultivation. His
-principal crop was corn; and this, with the game which a rifleman so
-expert would easily take from the woods around him, supplied his table.
-It does not appear that he employed any of his mechanical skill in
-completing and furnishing his own cabin. It has already been stated that
-the latter had no window, door, or floor. But the furniture--if it may
-be called furniture--was even worse than the house. Three-legged stools
-served for chairs. A bedstead was made of poles stuck in the cracks of
-the logs in one corner of the cabin, while the other end rested in the
-crotch of a forked stick sunk in the earthen floor. On these were laid
-some boards, and on the boards a "shake-down" of leaves covered with
-skins and old petticoats. The table was a hewed puncheon, supported by
-four legs. They had a few pewter and tin dishes to eat from, but the
-most minute inventory of their effects makes no mention of knives or
-forks. Their cooking utensils were a Dutch oven and a skillet. Abraham
-slept in the loft, to which he ascended by means of pins driven into
-holes in the wall.
-
-In the summer of 1818, the Pigeon-Creek settlements were visited by a
-fearful disease, called, in common parlance, "the milk-sickness." It
-swept off the cattle which gave the milk, as well as the human beings
-who drank it. It seems to have prevailed in the neighborhood from 1818
-to 1829; for it is given as one of the reasons for Thomas Lincoln's
-removal to Illinois at the latter date. But in the year first mentioned
-its ravages were especially awful. Its most immediate effects were
-severe retchings and vomitings; and, while the deaths from it were
-not necessarily sudden, the proportion of those who finally died
-was uncommonly large.1 Among the number who were attacked by it, and
-lingered on for some time in the midst of great sufferings, were Thomas
-and Betsy Sparrow and Mrs. Nancy Lincoln.
-
- 1 The peculiar disease which carried off so many of
- Abraham's family, and induced the removal of the remainder
- to Illinois, deserves more than a passing allusion. The
- following, regarding its nature and treatment, is from the
- pen of an eminent physician of Danville, Illinois:--
-
- Ward H. Lamon, Esq.
-
- Dear Sir,--Your favor of the 17th inst. has been received.
- You request me to present you with my theory in relation to
- the origin of the disease called "milk-sickness," and also a
- "general statement of the best treatment of the disease,"
- and the proportion of fatal cases.
-
- I have quite a number of cases of the so-called disease in
- Danville, Ill., and its vicinity; but perhaps you are not
- aware, that, between the great majority of the medical
- faculty in this region of country and myself, there is quite
- a discrepancy of opinion. They believe in the existence of
- the disease in Vermilion County; while, on the contrary, I
- am firmly of opinion, that, instead of genuine milk-
- sickness, it is only a modified form of malarial fever with
- which we here have to contend. Though sceptical of its
- existence in this part of the country, we have too much
- evidence from different intelligent sources to doubt, for a
- moment, that, in many parts of the West and South-west,
- there is a distinct malady, witnessed more than fifty years
- ago, and different from every other heretofore recognized in
- any system of Nosology.
-
- In the opinion of medical men, as well as in that of the
- people in general, where milk-sickness prevails, cattle,
- sheep, and horses contract the disease by feeding on wild
- pasture-lands; and, when those pastures have been enclosed
- and cultivated, the cause entirely disappears. This has also
- been the observation of the farmers and physicians of
- Vermilion County, Illinois. From this it might be inferred
- that the disease had a vegetable origin. But it appears that
- it prevails as early in the season as March and April in
- some localities; and I am informed that, in an early day,
- say thirty-five or forty years ago, it showed itself in the
- winter-time in this county. This seems to argue that it may
- be produced by water holding some mineral substance in
- solution. Even in this case, however, some vegetable
- producing the disease may have been gathered and preserved
- with the hay on which the cattle were fed at the time; for
- in that early day the farmers were in the habit of cutting
- wild grass for their stock. On the whole, I am inclined to
- attribute the cause to a vegetable origin.
-
- The symptoms of what is called milk-sickness in this county--
- and they are similar to those described by authors who have
- written on the disease in other sections of the Western
- country--are a whitish coat on the tongue, burning
- sensation of the stomach severe vomiting, obstinate
- constipation of the bowels, coolness of the extremities,
- great restlessness and jactitation, pulse rather small,
- somewhat more frequent than natural, and slightly corded. In
- the course of the disease, the coat on the tongue becomes
- brownish and dark, the countenance dejected, and the
- prostration of the patient is great. A fatal termination may
- take place in sixty hours, or life may be prolonged for a
- period of fourteen days. These are the symptoms of the acute
- form of the disease. Sometimes it runs into the chronic
- form, or it may assume that form from the commencement; and,
- after months or years, the patient may finally die, or
- recover only a partial degree of health.
-
- The treatment which I have found most successful is pills
- composed of calomel and opium, given at intervals of two,
- three, or four hours, so as to bring the patient pretty
- strongly under the influence of opium by the time the second
- or third dose had been administered; some effervescing
- mixture, pro re nata; injections; castor oil, when the
- stomach will retain it; blisters to the stomach; brandy or
- good whiskey freely administered throughout the disease; and
- quinine after the bowels have been moved.
-
- Under the above treatment, modified according to the
- circumstances, I would not expect to lose more than one case
- in eight or ten, as the disease manifests itself in this
- county....
-
- As ever, Theo. Lemon.
-
-It was now found expedient to remove the Sparrows from the wretched
-"half-faced camp," through which the cold autumn winds could sweep
-almost unobstructed, to the cabin of the Lincolns, which in truth was
-then very little better. Many in the neighborhood had already died, and
-Thomas Lincoln had made all their coffins out of "green lumber cut
-with a whip-saw." In the mean time the Sparrows and Nancy were growing
-alarmingly worse. There was no physician in the county,--not even
-a pretender to the science of medicine; and the nearest regular
-practitioner was located at Yellow Banks, Ky., over thirty miles
-distant. It is not probable that they ever secured his services. They
-would have been too costly, and none of the persons who witnessed and
-describe these scenes speak of his having been there. At length, in the
-first days of October, the Sparrows died; and Thomas Lincoln sawed up
-his green lumber, and made rough boxes to enclose the mortal remains of
-his wife's two best and oldest friends. A day or two after, on the 5th
-of October, 1818, Nancy Hanks Lincoln rested from her troubles. Thomas
-Lincoln took to his green wood again, and made a box for Nancy. There
-were about twenty persons at her funeral. They took her to the summit
-of a deeply-wooded knoll, about half a mile south-east of the cabin, and
-laid her beside the Sparrows. If there were any burial ceremonies,
-they were of the briefest. But it happened that a few months later an
-itinerant preacher, named David Elkin, whom the Lincolns had known in
-Kentucky, wandered into the settlement; and he either volunteered or was
-employed to preach a sermon, which should commemorate the many virtues
-and pass in silence the few frailties of the poor woman who slept in
-the forest. Many years later the bodies of Levi Hall and his wife, Nancy
-Hanks, were deposited in the same earth with that of Mrs. Lincoln. The
-graves of two or three children belonging to a neighbor's family are
-also near theirs. They are all crumbled in, sunken, and covered with
-wild vines in deep and tangled mats. The great trees were originally cut
-away to make a small cleared space for this primitive graveyard; but the
-young dogwoods have sprung up unopposed in great luxuriance, and in many
-instances the names of pilgrims to the burial-place of the great Abraham
-Lincoln's mother are carved in their bark. With this exception, the spot
-is wholly unmarked. Her grave never had a stone, nor even a board, at
-its head or its foot; and the neighbors still dispute as to which one of
-those unsightly hollows contains the ashes of Nancy Lincoln.
-
-Thirteen months after the burial of Nancy Hanks, and nine or ten months
-after the solemnities conducted by Elkin, Thomas Lincoln appeared at
-Elizabethtown, Ky., in search of another wife. Sally Bush had married
-Johnston, the jailer, in the spring of the same year in which Lincoln
-had married Nancy Hanks. She had then rejected him for a better match,
-but was now a widow. In 1814 many persons in and about Elizabethtown had
-died of a disease which the people called the "cold plague," and among
-them the jailer. Both parties being free again, Lincoln came back, very
-unexpectedly to Mrs. Johnston, and opened his suit in an exceedingly
-abrupt manner. "Well, Miss Johnston," said he, "I have no wife, and you
-have no husband. I came a purpose to marry you: I knowed you from a gal,
-and you knowed me from a boy. I have no time to lose; and, if you are
-willin', let it be done straight off." To this she replied, "Tommy, I
-know you well, and have no objection to marrying you; but I cannot do
-it straight off, as I owe some debts that must first be paid." "The next
-morning," says Hon. Samuel Haycraft, the clerk of the courts and the
-gentleman who reports this quaint courtship, "I issued his license, and
-they were married _straight_ off on that day, and left, and I never saw
-her or Tom Lincoln since." From the death of her husband to that day,
-she had been living, "an honest, poor widow," "in a round log-cabin,"
-which stood in an "alley" just below Mr. Haycraft's house. Dennis Hanks
-says that it was only "on the earnest solicitation of her friends" that
-Mrs. Johnston consented to marry Lincoln. They all liked Lincoln, and it
-was with a member of her family that he had made several voyages to New
-Orleans. Mr. Helm, who at that time was doing business in his uncle's
-store at Elizabethtown, remarks that "life among the Hankses, the
-Lincolns, and the Enlows was a long ways below life among the Bushes."
-Sally was the best and the proudest of the Bushes; but, nevertheless,
-she appears to have maintained some intercourse with the Lincolns as
-long as they remained in Kentucky. She had a particular kindness for
-little Abe, and had him with her on several occasions at Helm's store,
-where, strange to say, he sat on a nail-keg, and ate a lump of sugar,
-"just like any other boy."
-
-Mrs. Johnston has been denominated a "poor widow;" but she possessed
-goods, which, in the eyes of Tom Lincoln, were of almost unparalleled
-magnificence. Among other things, she had a bureau that cost forty
-dollars; and he informed her, on their arrival in Indiana, that, in his
-deliberate opinion, it was little less than sinful to be the owner of
-such a thing. He demanded that she should turn it into cash, which
-she positively refused to do. She had quite a lot of other articles,
-however, which he thought well enough in their way, and some of which
-were sadly needed in his miserable cabin in the wilds of Indiana. Dennis
-Hanks speaks with great rapture of the "large supply of household goods"
-which she brought out with her. There was "one fine bureau, one table,
-one set of chairs, one large clothes-chest, cooking utensils, knives,
-forks, bedding, and other articles." It was a glorious day for little
-Abe and Sarah and Dennis when this wondrous collection of rich furniture
-arrived in the Pigeon Creek settlement. But all this wealth required
-extraordinary means of transportation; and Lincoln had recourse to
-his brother-in-law, Ralph Krume, who lived just over the line, in
-Breckinridge County. Krume came with a four-horse team, and moved Mrs.
-Johnston, now Mrs. Lincoln, with her family and effects, to the home of
-her new husband in Indiana. When she got there, Mrs. Lincoln was much
-"surprised" at the contrast between the glowing representations which
-her husband had made to her before leaving Kentucky and the real poverty
-and meanness of the place. She had evidently been given to understand
-that the bridegroom had reformed his old Kentucky ways, and was now an
-industrious and prosperous farmer. She was scarcely able to restrain
-the expression of her astonishment and discontent; but, though sadly
-overreached in a bad bargain, her lofty pride and her high sense of
-Christian duty saved her from hopeless and useless repinings.
-
-On the contrary, she set about mending what was amiss with all her
-strength and energy. Her own goods furnished the cabin with tolerable
-decency. She made Lincoln put down a floor, and hang windows and doors.
-It was in the depth of winter; and the children, as they nestled in the
-warm beds she provided them, enjoying the strange luxury of security
-from the cold winds of December, must have thanked her from the bottoms
-of their newly-comforted hearts. She had brought a son and two daughters
-of her own,--John, Sarah, and Matilda; but Abe and his sister Nancy
-(whose name was speedily changed to Sarah), the ragged and hapless
-little strangers to her blood, were given an equal place in her
-affections. They were half naked, and she clad them from the stores of
-clothing she had laid up for her own. They were dirty, and she washed
-them; they had been ill-used, and she treated them with motherly
-tenderness. In her own modest language, she "made them look a little
-more human." "In fact," says Dennis Hanks, "in a few weeks all had
-changed; and where every thing was wanting, now all was snug and
-comfortable. She was a woman of great energy of remarkable good sense,
-very industrious and saving, and also very neat and tidy in her person
-and manners, and knew exactly how to manage children. She took an
-especial liking to young Abe. Her love for him was warmly returned, and
-continued to the day of his death. But few children loved their parents
-as he loved his step-mother. She soon dressed him up in entire new
-clothes, _and from that time on he appeared to lead a new life_. He was
-encouraged by her to study, and any wish on his part was gratified when
-it could be done. The two sets of children got along finely together, as
-if they had all been the children of the same parents. Mrs. Lincoln soon
-discovered that young Abe was a boy of uncommon natural talents, and
-that, if rightly trained, a bright future was before him, and she did
-all in her power to develop those talents." When, in after years, Mr.
-Lincoln spoke of his "saintly mother," and of his "angel of a mother,"
-he referred to this noble woman,1 who first made him feel "like a human
-being,"--whose goodness first touched his childish heart, and taught him
-that blows and taunts and degradation were not to be his only portion in
-the world.2
-
- 1 The author has many times heard him make the application.
- While he seldom, if ever, spoke of his own mother, he loved
- to dwell on the beautiful character of Sally Bush.
-
- 2 The following description of her personal appearance is
- from the pen of her granddaughter, the daughter of Dennis
- Hanks:--
-
- "When I landed in Indiana," says Mrs. Lincoln, "Abe was
- about nine years old, and the country was wild and
- desolate. It is certain enough that her presence took away
- much that was desolate in his lot. She clothed him decently,
- and had him sent to school as soon as there was a school to
- send him to. But, notwithstanding her determination to do
- the best for him, his advantages in this respect were very
- limited. He had already had a few days', or perhaps a few
- weeks' experience, under the discipline of Riney and Hazel,
- in Kentucky; and, as he was naturally quick in the
- acquisition of any sort of knowledge, it is likely that by
- this time he could read and write a little. He was now to
- have the benefit of a few months more of public instruction;
- but the poverty of the family, and the necessity for his
- being made to work at home in the shop and on the farm, or
- abroad as a hired boy, made his attendance at school, for
- any great length of time, a thing impossible. Accordingly,
- all his school-days added together would not make a single
- year in the aggregate.
-
- "His wife, my grandmother, is a very tall woman; straight as
- an Indian, fair complexion, and was, when I first remember
- her, very handsome, sprightly, talkative, and proud; wore
- her hair curled till gray; is kind-hearted and very
- charitable, and also very industrious."--Mrs. H. A, Chapman.
-
-Abraham began his irregular attendance at the nearest school very soon
-after he fell under the care of the second Mrs. Lincoln. It was probably
-in the winter of 1819, she having come out in the December of that year.
-It has been seen that she was as much impressed by his mental precocity
-as by the good qualities of his heart.
-
-Hazel Dorsey was his first master.1 He presided in a small house near
-the Little Pigeon Creek meeting-house, a mile and a half from the
-Lincoln cabin. It was built of unhewn logs, and had "holes for windows,"
-in which "greased paper" served for glass. The roof was just high enough
-for a man to stand erect. Here he was taught reading, writing, and
-ciphering. They spelled in classes, and "trapped" up and down. These
-juvenile contests were very exciting to the participants; and it is said
-by the survivors, that Abe was even then the equal, if not the superior,
-of any scholar in his class.
-
- 1 The account of the schools is taken from the Grigsbys,
- Turnham, and others, who attended them along with Abe, as
- well as from the members of his own family.
-
-The next teacher was Andrew Crawford. Mrs. Gentry says he began
-pedagogue in the neighborhood in the winter of 1822-3, whilst most of
-his other scholars are unable to fix an exact date. He "kept" in the
-same little schoolhouse which had been the scene of Dorsey's labors, and
-the windows were still adorned with the greased leaves of old copybooks
-that had come down from Dorsey's time. Abe was now in his fifteenth
-year, and began to exhibit symptoms of gallantry toward the weaker sex,
-as we shall presently discover. He was growing at a tremendous rate, and
-two years later attained his full height of six feet four inches. He was
-long, wiry, and strong; while his big feet and hands, and the length
-of his legs and arms, were out of all proportion to his small trunk and
-head. His complexion was very swarthy, and Mrs. Gentry says that his
-skin was shrivelled and yellow even then. He wore low shoes, buckskin
-breeches, linsey-woolsey shirt, and a cap made of the skin of an opossum
-or a coon. The breeches clung close to his thighs and legs, but failed
-by a large space to meet the tops of his shoes. Twelve inches remained
-uncovered, and exposed that much of "shinbone, sharp, blue, and
-narrow."1 "He would always come to school thus, good-humoredly and
-laughing," says his old friend, Nat Grigsby. "He was always in good
-health, never was sick, had an excellent constitution, and took care of
-it."
-
- 1 "They had no woollen clothing in the family until about
- the year 1824."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-Crawford taught "manners." This was a feature of backwoods education to
-which Dorsey had not aspired, and Crawford had doubtless introduced
-it as a refinement which would put to shame the humbler efforts of his
-predecessor. One of the scholars was required to retire, and re-enter as
-a polite gentleman is supposed to enter a drawing-room. He was received
-at the door by another scholar, and conducted from bench to bench, until
-he had been introduced to all the "young ladies and gentlemen" in the
-room. Abe went through the ordeal countless times. If he took a serious
-view of the business, it must have put him to exquisite torture; for he
-was conscious that he was not a perfect type of manly beauty, with his
-long legs and blue shins, his small head, his great ears, and shrivelled
-skin. If, however, it struck him as at all funny, it must have filled
-him with unspeakable mirth, and given rise to many antic tricks and sly
-jokes, as he was gravely led about, shamefaced and gawky, under the very
-eye of the precise Crawford, to be introduced to the boys and girls of
-his most ancient acquaintance.
-
-But, though Crawford inculcated manners, he by no means neglected
-spelling. Abe was a good speller, and liked to use his knowledge,
-not only to secure honors for himself, but to help his less fortunate
-schoolmates out of their troubles, and he was exceedingly ingenious
-in the selection of expedients for conveying prohibited hints. One day
-Crawford gave out the difficult word _defied_. A large class was on the
-floor, but they all provokingly failed to spell it. D-e-f-i-d-e, said
-one; d-e-f-y-d-e, said another; d-e-f-y-d,--d-e-f-y-e-d, cried another
-and another. But it was all wrong: it was shameful, that, among all
-these big boys and girls, nobody could spell "_defied_;" Crawford's
-wrath gathered in clouds over his terrible brow. He made the helpless
-culprits shake with fear. He declared he would keep the whole class in
-all day and all night, if "_defied_" was not spelled. There was among
-them a Miss Roby, a girl fifteen years of age, whom we must suppose to
-have been pretty, for Abe was evidently half in love with her. "I saw
-Lincoln at the window," says she: "he had his finger in his _eye_, and
-a smile on his face; I instantly took the hint, that I must change the
-letter _y_ into an _i_. Hence I spelled the word,--the class let out. I
-felt grateful to Lincoln for this simple thing."
-
-Nat Grigsby tells us, with unnecessary particularity, that "essays and
-poetry were not taught in this school." "Abe took it (them) up on
-his own account." He first wrote short sentences against "cruelty to
-animals," and at last came forward with a regular "composition" on the
-subject. He was very much annoyed and pained by the conduct of the boys,
-who were in the habit of catching terrapins, and putting coals of fire
-on their backs. "He would chide us," says Nat, "tell us it was wrong,
-and would write against it."
-
-The third and last school to which Abe went was taught by a Mr. Swaney,
-in 1826. To get there, he had to travel four and a half miles; and this
-going back and forth so great a distance occupied entirely too much
-of his time. His attendance was therefore only at odd times, and was
-speedily broken off altogether. The schoolhouse was much like the other
-one near the Pigeon Creek meeting-house, except that it had two chimneys
-instead of one. The course of instruction was precisely the same as
-under Dorsey and Crawford, save that Swaney, like Dorsey, omitted the
-great department of "manners." "Here," says John Hoskins, the son of the
-settler who had "blazed out" the trail for Tom Lincoln, "we would choose
-up, and spell as in old times every Friday night." Hoskins himself tore
-down "the old schoolhouse" long since, and built a stable with the logs.
-He is now half sorry for his haste, and reverently presented Mr. Herndon
-a piece of the wood as a precious memento of his old friend Abe. An
-oak-tree, blackened and killed by the smoke that issued from the two
-chimneys, spreads its naked arms over the spot where the schoolhouse
-stood. Among its roots is a fine, large spring, over whose limpid waters
-Abe often bent to drink, and laughed at the reflection of his own homely
-face.
-
-Abe never went to school again in Indiana or elsewhere. Mr. Turnham
-tells us, that he had excelled all his masters, and it was "no use"
-for him to attempt to learn any thing from them. But he continued
-his studies at home, or wherever he was hired out to work, with a
-perseverance which showed that he could scarcely live without some
-species of mental excitement. He was by no means fond of the hard manual
-labor to which his own necessities and those of his family
-compelled him. Many of his acquaintances state this fact with strong
-emphasis,--among them Dennis Hanks and Mrs. Lincoln. His neighbor, John
-Romine, declares that Abe was "awful lazy. He worked for me; was always
-reading and thinking; used to get mad at him. He worked for me in 1829,
-pulling fodder. I say Abe was awful lazy: he would laugh and talk and
-crack jokes and tell stories all the time; didn't love work, but did
-dearly love his pay. He worked for me frequently, a few days only at a
-time.... Lincoln said to me one day, that his father taught him to work,
-but never learned him to love it."
-
- 1 Whenever Mrs. Sarah Lincoln speaks, we follow her
- implicitly. Regarding Abe's habits and conduct at home, her
- statement is a very full one. It is, however, confirmed and
- supplemented by all the other members of the family who were
- alive in 1866.
-
-Abe loved to lie under a shade-tree, or up in the loft of the cabin, and
-read, cipher, and scribble. At night he sat by the chimney "jamb," and
-ciphered, by the light of the fire, on the wooden fire-shovel. When
-the shovel was fairly covered, he would shave it off with Tom Lincoln's
-drawing-knife, and begin again. In the daytime he used boards for
-the same purpose, out of doors, and went through the shaving process
-everlastingly. His step-mother1 repeats often, that "he read every book
-he could lay his hand on." She says, "Abe read diligently.... He read
-every book he could lay his hands on; and, when he came across a passage
-that struck him, he would write it down on boards if he had no paper,
-and keep it there until he did get paper. Then he would re-write it,
-look at it, repeat it. He had a copy-book, a kind of scrapbook, in which
-he put down all things, and thus preserved them."
-
-John Hanks came out from Kentucky when Abe was fourteen years of age,
-and lived four years with the Lincolns. We cannot describe some of Abe's
-habits better than John has described them for us: "When Lincoln--Abe
-and I--returned to the house from work, he would go to the cupboard,
-snatch a piece of corn-bread, take down a book, sit down on a chair,
-cock his legs up high as his head, and read. He and I worked barefooted,
-grubbed it, ploughed, mowed, and cradled together; ploughed corn,
-gathered it, and shucked corn. Abraham read constantly when he had an
-opportunity."
-
-Among the books upon which Abe "laid his hands" were "AEsop's Fables,"
-"Robinson Crusoe," Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," a "History of the
-United States," and Weems's "Life of Washington." All these he read
-many times, and transferred extracts from them to the boards and the
-scrapbook. He had procured the scrap-book because most of his literature
-was borrowed, and he thought it profitable to take copious notes from
-the books before he returned them. David Turnham had bought a volume of
-"The Revised Statutes of Indiana;" but, as he was "acting constable" at
-the time, he could not lend it to Abe. But Abe was not to be baffled in
-his purpose of going through and through every book in the neighborhood;
-and so, says Mr. Turnham, "he used to come to my house and sit and read
-it." 1 Dennis Hanks would fain have us believe that he himself was
-the purchaser of this book, and that he had stood as a sort of first
-preceptor to Abe in the science of law. "I had like to forgot," writes
-Dennis, with his usual modesty, "How did Abe get his knowledge of law?
-This is the fact about it. I bought the 'Statute of Indiana,' and from
-that he learned the principles of law, and also myself. Every man should
-become acquainted of the principles of law." The Bible, according to
-Mrs. Lincoln, was not one of his studies: "he sought more congenial
-books." At that time he neither talked nor read upon religious subjects.
-If he had any opinions about them, he kept them to himself.
-
- 1 He also read at Turnham's house Scott's Lessons and
- Sindbad the Sailor.
-
-Abraham borrowed Weems's "Life of Washington" from his neighbor, old
-Josiah Crawford,--not Andrew Crawford, the school-teacher, as some of
-his biographers have it. The "Life" was read with great avidity in the
-intervals of work, and, when not in use, was carefully deposited on a
-shelf, made of a clapboard laid on two pins. But just behind the shelf
-there was a great crack between the logs of the wall; and one night,
-while Abe was dreaming in the loft, a storm came up, and the rain,
-blown through the opening, soaked his precious book from cover to cover.
-Crawford was a sour and churlish fellow at best, and flatly refused to
-take the damaged book back again. He said, that, if Abe had no money to
-pay for it, he could work it out. Of course, there was no alternative;
-and Abe was obliged to discharge the debt by "pulling fodder" three
-days, at twenty-five cents a day. Crawford afterwards paid dearly for
-his churlishness.
-
-[Illustration: Mrs. Sarah Lincoln, Mother of the President. 061]
-
-At home, with his step-mother and the children, he was the most
-agreeable fellow in the world. "He was always ready to do every thing
-for everybody." When he was not doing some special act of kindness, he
-told stories or "cracked jokes." "He was as full of his yarns in Indiana
-as ever he was in Illinois." Dennis Hanks was a clever hand at the same
-business, and so was old Tom Lincoln. Among them they must have made
-things very lively, during the long winter evenings, for John Johnston
-and the good old lady and the girls.
-
-Mrs. Lincoln was never able to speak of Abe's conduct to her without
-tears. In her interview with Mr. Herndon, when the sands of her life had
-nearly run out, she spoke with deep emotion of her own son, but said
-she thought that Abe was kinder, better, truer, than the other. Even the
-mother's instinct was lost as she looked back over those long years of
-poverty and privation in the Indiana cabin, when Abe's grateful love
-softened the rigors of her lot, and his great heart and giant frame were
-always at her command. "Abe was a poor boy," said she; "and I can say
-what scarcely one woman--a mother--can say in a thousand. Abe never gave
-me a cross word or look, and never refused, in fact or appearance, to
-do any thing I requested him. I never gave him a cross word in all
-my life.... His mind and mine--what little I had--seemed to run
-together.... He was here after he was elected President." (At this point
-the aged speaker turned away to weep, and then, wiping her eyes with her
-apron, went on with the story). "He was dutiful to me always. I think
-he loved me truly. I had a son, John, who was raised with Abe. Both were
-good boys; but I must say, both now being dead, that Abe was the best
-boy I ever saw, or expect to see. I wish I had died when my husband
-died. I did not want Abe to run for President; did not want him elected;
-was afraid somehow,--felt in my heart; and when he came down to see me,
-after he was elected President, I still felt that something told me that
-something would befall Abe, and that I should see him no more."
-
-Is there any thing in the language we speak more touching than that
-simple plaint of the woman whom we must regard as Abraham Lincoln's
-mother? The apprehension in her "heart" was well grounded. She "saw him
-no more." When Mr. Herndon rose to depart, her eyes again filled with
-tears; and, wringing his hands as if loath to part with one who talked
-so much of her beloved Abe, she said, "Good-by, my good son's friend.
-Farewell."
-
-Abe had a very retentive memory. He frequently amused his young
-companions by repeating to them long passages from the books he had been
-reading. On Monday mornings he would mount a stump, and deliver, with a
-wonderful approach to exactness, the sermon he had heard the day before.
-His taste for public speaking appeared to be natural and irresistible.
-His step-sister, Matilda Johnston, says he was an indefatigable
-"preacher." "When father and mother would go to church, Abe would take
-down the Bible, read a verse, give out a hymn, and we would sing. Abe
-was about fifteen years of age. He preached, and we would do the crying.
-Sometimes he would join in the chorus of tears. One day my brother, John
-Johnston, caught a land terrapin, brought it to the place where Abe was
-preaching, threw it against the tree, and crushed the shell. It suffered
-much,--quivered all over. Abe then preached against cruelty to animals,
-contending that an ant's life was as sweet to it as ours to us."
-
-But this practice of "preaching" and political speaking, into which Abe
-had fallen, at length became a great nuisance to old, Tom. It distracted
-everybody, and sadly interfered with the work. If Abe had confined his
-discourses to Sunday preaching, while the old folks were away, it would
-not have been so objectionable. But he knew his power, liked to please
-everybody, and would be sure to set up as an orator wherever he found
-the greatest number of people together. When it was announced that Abe
-had taken the "stump" in the harvest-field, there was an end of work.
-The hands flocked around him, and listened to his curious speeches with
-infinite delight. "The sight of such a thing amused all," says Mrs.
-Lincoln; though she admits that her husband was compelled to break it
-up with the strong hand; and poor Abe was many times dragged from the
-platform, and hustled off to his work in no gentle manner.1
-
- 1 We are told by Col. Chapman that Abe's father habitually
- treated him with great barbarity. Dennis Hanks insists that
- he loved him sincerely, but admits that he now and then
- knocked him from the fence for merely answering traveller's
- questions about the roads.
-
-Abe worked occasionally with Tom Lincoln in the shop; but he did it
-reluctantly, and never intended to learn even so much of the trade as
-Lincoln was able to teach him. The rough work turned out at that shop
-was far beneath his ambition, and he had made up his mind to lead a life
-as wholly unlike his father's as he could possibly make it. He therefore
-refused to be a carpenter. But he could not afford to be idle; and, as
-soon as he was able to earn wages, he was hired out among the neighbors.
-He worked for many of them a few months at a time, and seemed perfectly
-willing to transfer his services wherever they were wanted, so that his
-father had no excuse for persecuting him with entreaties about learning
-to make tables and cupboards.
-
-Abe was now becoming a man, and was, in fact, already taller than any
-man in the neighborhood. He was a universal favorite, and his wit and
-humor made him heartily welcome at every cabin between the two Pigeon
-Creeks. Any family was glad when "Abe Linkern" was hired to work with
-them; for he did his work well, and made them all merry while he was
-about it. The women were especially pleased, for Abe was not above doing
-any kind of "chores" for them. He was always ready to make a fire, carry
-water, or nurse a baby. But what manner of people were these amongst
-whom he passed the most critical part of his life? We must know them if
-we desire to know him.
-
-There lived in the neighborhood of Gentryville a Mrs. Elizabeth
-Crawford, wife to the now celebrated Josiah with the sour temper and the
-blue nose. Abe was very fond of her, and inclined to "let himself
-out" in her company. She fortunately possessed a rare memory, and Mr.
-Herndon's rich collection of manuscripts was made richer still by her
-contributions. We have from her a great mass of valuable, and sometimes
-extremely amusing, information. Among it is the following graphic,
-although rude, account of the Pigeon Creek people in general:--
-
-"You wish me to tell you how the people used to go to meeting,--how far
-they went. At that time we thought it nothing to go eight or ten miles.
-The old ladies did not stop for the want of a shawl, or cloak, or
-riding-dress, or two horses, in the winter-time; but they would put on
-their husbands' old overcoats, and wrap up their little ones, and take
-one or two of them up on their beasts, and their husbands would walk,
-and they would go to church, and stay in the neighborhood until the next
-day, and then go home. The old men would start out of their fields from
-their work, or out of the woods from hunting, with their guns on their
-shoulders, and go to church. Some of them dressed in deer-skin pants and
-moccasins, hunting-shirts with a rope or leather strap around them. They
-would come in laughing, shake hands all around, sit down and talk about
-their game they had killed, or some other work they had done, and smoke
-their pipes together with the old ladies. If in warm weather, they would
-kindle up a little fire out in the meeting-house yard, to light
-their pipes. If in winter-time, they would hold church in some of the
-neighbors' houses. At such times they were always treated with the
-utmost of kindness: a bottle of whiskey, a pitcher of water, sugar and
-glass, were set out, or a basket of apples, or turnips, or some pies and
-cakes. Apples were scarce them times. Sometimes potatoes were used as a
-treat. (I must tell you that the first treat I ever received in old Mr.
-Linkern's house, that was our President's father's house, was a plate
-of potatoes, washed and pared very nicely, and handed round. It was
-something new to me, for I never had seen a raw potato eaten before. I
-looked to see how they made use of them. They took off a potato, and ate
-them like apples.) Thus they spent the time till time for preaching to
-commence, then they would all take their seats: the preacher would take
-his stand, draw his coat, open his shirt-collar, commence service by
-singing and prayer; take his text and preach till the sweat would roll
-off in great drops. Shaking hands and singing then ended the service.
-The people seemed to enjoy religion more in them days than they do now.
-They were glad to see each other, and enjoyed themselves better than
-they do now."
-
-Society about Gentryville was little different from that of any other
-backwoods settlement of the same day. The houses were scattered far
-apart; but the inhabitants would travel long distances to a log-rolling,
-a house-raising, a wedding, or any thing else that might be turned into
-a fast and furious frolic. On such occasions the young women carried
-their shoes in their hands, and only put them on when about to join the
-company. The ladies drank whiskey-toddy, while the men took it straight;
-and both sexes danced the live-long night, barefooted, on puncheon
-floors.
-
-The fair sex wore "cornfield bonnets, scoop-shaped, flaring in front,
-and long though narrow behind." Shoes were the mode when entering
-the ball-room; but it was not at all fashionable to scuff them out by
-walking or dancing in them. "Four yards of linsey-woolsey, a yard in
-width, made a dress for any woman." The waist was short, and terminated
-just under the arms, whilst the skirt was long and narrow. "Crimps and
-puckering frills" it had none. The coats of the men were home-made;
-the materials, jeans or linsey-woolsey. The waists were short, like the
-frocks of the women, and the long "claw-hammer" tail was split up to the
-waist. This, however, was company dress, and the hunting-shirt did duty
-for every day. The breeches were of buck-skin or jeans; the cap was of
-coon-skin; and the shoes of leather tanned at home. If no member of the
-family could make shoes, the leather was taken to some one who could,
-and the customer paid the maker a fair price in some other sort of
-labor.
-
-The state of agriculture was what it always is where there is no market,
-either to sell or buy; where the implements are few and primitive, and
-where there are no regular mechanics. The Pigeon Creek farmer "tickled"
-two acres of ground in a day with his old shovel-plough, and got but
-half a crop. He cut one acre with his sickle, while the modern machine
-lays down in neat rows ten. With his flail and horse tramping, he
-threshed out fifteen bushels of wheat; while the machine of to-day,
-with a few more hands, would turn out three hundred and fifty. He
-"fanned" and "cleaned with a sheet." When he wanted flour, he took
-his team and went to a "horse-mill," where he spent a whole day in
-converting fifteen bushels of grain.1
-
- 1 "Size of the fields from ten, twelve, sixteen, twenty.
- Raised corn mostly; some wheat,--enough for a cake on
- Sunday morning. Hogs and venison hams were legal tender, and
- coon-skins also. We raised sheep and cattle, but they did
- not fetch much. Cows and calves were only worth six dollars;
- corn, ten cents; wheat, twenty-five cents at that time."--
- Dennis Hanks.
-
-The minds of these people were filled with superstitions, which most
-persons imagine to be, at least, as antiquated as witch-burning. They
-firmly believed in witches and all kind of witch-doings. They sent for
-wizards to cure sick cattle. They shot the image of the witch with a
-silver ball, to break the spell she was supposed to have laid on a human
-being. If a dog ran directly across a man's path whilst he was hunting,
-it was terrible "luck," unless he instantly hooked his two little
-fingers together, and pulled with all his might, until the dog was out
-of sight. There were wizards who took charmed twigs in their hands, and
-made them point to springs of water and all kinds of treasure beneath
-the earth's surface. There were "faith doctors," who cured diseases by
-performing mysterious ceremonies and muttering cabalistic words. If a
-bird alighted in a window, one of the family would speedily die. If
-a horse breathed on a child, the child would have the whooping-cough.
-Every thing must be done at certain "times and seasons," else it would
-be attended with "bad luck." They must cut trees for rails in the early
-part of the day, and in "the light of the moon." They must make fence in
-"the light of the moon;" otherwise, the fence would sink. Potatoes and
-other roots were to be planted in the "dark of the moon," but trees,
-and plants which bore their fruits above ground, must be "put out in the
-light of the moon." The moon exerted a fearful influence, either kindly
-or malignant, as the good old rules were observed or not. It was even
-required to make soap "in the light of the moon," and, moreover, it must
-be stirred only one way, and by one person. Nothing of importance was to
-be begun on Friday. All enterprises inaugurated on that day went fatally
-amiss. A horse-colt could be begotten only "in the dark of the moon,"
-and animals treated otherwise than "according to the signs in the
-almanac" were nearly sure to die.
-
-Such were the people among whom Abe grew to manhood. With their sons and
-daughters he went to school. Upon their farms he earned his daily bread
-by daily toil. From their conversation he formed his earliest opinions
-of men and things, the world over. Many of their peculiarities became
-his; and many of their thoughts and feelings concerning a multitude of
-subjects were assimilated with his own, and helped to create that unique
-character, which, in the eyes of a great host of the American people,
-was only less curious and amusing than it was noble and august.
-
-His most intimate companions were of course, for a long time, the
-members of his own family. The reader already knows something of Thomas
-Lincoln, and that pre-eminently good woman, Sally Bush. The latter, we
-know, washed, clothed, loved, and encouraged Abe in well-doing, from
-the moment he fell in her way. How much he owed to her goodness and
-affection, he was himself never able to estimate. That it was a great
-debt, fondly acknowledged and cheerfully repaid as far as in him lay,
-there can be no doubt. His own sister, the child of Nancy Hanks, was
-warmly attached to him. Her face somewhat resembled his. In repose it
-had the gravity which they both, perhaps, inherited from their mother;
-but it was capable of being lighted almost into beauty by one of Abe's
-ridiculous stories or rapturous sallies of humor. She was a modest,
-plain, industrious girl, and is kindly remembered by all who knew her.
-She was married to Aaron Grigsby at eighteen, and a year after died in
-child-bed. Like Abe, she occasionally worked out at the houses of the
-neighbors, and at one time was employed in Mrs. Crawford's kitchen,
-while her brother was a laborer on the same farm. She lies buried, not
-with her mother, but in the yard of the old Pigeon Creek meeting-house.
-It is especially pleasing to read the encomiums lavished upon her memory
-by the Grigsbys; for between the Grigsbys on one side, and Abe and his
-step-brother on the other, there once subsisted a fierce feud.
-
-[Illustration: Dennis Hanks 070]
-
-As we have already learned from Dennis Hanks, the two families--the
-Johnstons and the Lincolns--"got along finely together." The
-affectionate relations between Abe and his two step-sisters were the
-subject of common remark throughout the neighborhood. One of them
-married Dennis Hanks, and the other Levi Hall, or, as he is better
-known, Squire Hall,--a cousin of Abe. Both these women (the latter now
-Mrs. Moore) furnished Mr. Herndon very valuable memoirs of Abe's life
-whilst he dwelt under the same roof with them; and they have given
-an account of him which shows that the ties between them were of the
-strongest and tenderest kind. But what is most remarkable in their
-statements is, that they never opened their lips without telling how
-worthy of everybody's love their mother was, and how Abe revered her
-as much as they did. They were interesting girls, and became exemplary
-women.
-
-John D. Johnston, the only son of Mrs. Lincoln, was not the best boy,
-and did not grow to be the best man, in all the Pigeon Creek region. He
-had no positive vice, except idleness, and no special virtue but good
-temper. He was not a fortunate man; never made money; was always needy,
-and always clamoring for the aid of his friends. Mr. Lincoln, all
-through John's life, had much trouble to keep him on his legs, and
-succeeded indifferently in all his attempts. In a subsequent chapter
-a letter will be given from him, which indirectly portrays his
-step-brother's character much better than it can be done here. But, as
-youths, the intimacy between them was very close; and in another place
-it will appear that Abe undertook his second voyage to New Orleans only
-on condition that John would go along.
-
-But the most constant of his companions was his jolly cousin, Dennis
-Hanks. Of all the contributors to Mr. Herndon's store of information,
-good, bad, and indifferent, concerning this period of Mr. Lincoln's
-life, Dennis is the most amusing, insinuating, and prolific. He would
-have it distinctly understood that the well of his memory is the only
-proper source whence any thing like truth may be drawn.1 He has covered
-countless sheets of paper devoted to indiscriminate laudations of Abe
-and all his kindred. But in all this he does not neglect to say a word
-for himself.
-
- 1 The following random selections from his writings leave us
- no room to doubt Dennis's opinion of his own value:--
-
- "William, let in, don't keep any thing back, for I am in for
- the whole hog sure; for I know nobody can do any for you
- much, for all they know is from me at last. Every thing you
- see is from my notes,--this you can tell yourself.
-
- "I have in my possession a little book, the private life of
- A. Lincoln, comprising a full life of his early years, and a
- succinct record of his career as statesman and President, by
- O. J. Victor, author of Lives of Garibaldi, Winfield Scott,
- John Paul Jones, &c., New York, Beadle and Company,
- publishers, No. 118 Williams Street. Now, sir, I find a
- great many things pertaining to Abe Lincoln's life that is
- not true. If you would like to have the book, I will mail it
- to you. I will say this much to you: if you don't have my
- name very frequently in your book, it won't go at all; for I
- have been East for two months, have seen a great many
- persons in that time, stating to them that there would be a
- book, 'The Life of A. Lincoln,' published, giving a full
- account of the family, from England to this country. Now,
- William, if there be any thing you want to know, let me
- know: I will give you all the information I can.
-
- "I have seen a letter that you wrote to my daughter, Harriet
- Chapman, of inquiry about some things. I thought you were
- informed all about them. I don't know what she has stated to
- you about your questions; but you had better consult me
- about them.
-
- "Billy, it seems to me, from the letters that you write to
- me asking questions, that you ask the same questions over
- several times. How is this? Do you forget, or are you like
- the lawyer, trying to make me cross my path, or not? Now, I
- will. Look below for the answer."
-
-At one place, "his cousin, Dennis Hanks," is said to have taught Abe
-to read and write. At another, he is represented as the benevolent
-purchaser of the volumes from which Abe (and Dennis too) derived a
-wonderfully clear and accurate conception of the science of law. In all
-studies their minds advanced _pari passu_. Whenever any differences are
-noted (and they are few and slight), Dennis is a step ahead, benignantly
-extending a helping hand to the lagging pupil behind. But Dennis's heart
-is big and kind: he defames no one; he is merely a harmless romancer. In
-the gallery of family portraits painted by Dennis, every face looks down
-upon us with the serenity of innocence and virtue. There is no spot on
-the fame of any one of them. No family could have a more vigorous or
-chivalrous defender than he, or one who repelled with greater scorn any
-rumor to their discredit. That Enlow story! Dennis almost scorned to
-confute it; but, when he did get at it, he settled it by a magnificent
-exercise of inventive genius. He knew "this Abe Enlow" well, he said,
-and he had been dead precisely fifty-five years. But, whenever the truth
-can be told without damage to the character of a Lincoln or a Hanks,
-Dennis will tell it candidly enough, provided there is no temptation
-to magnify himself. His testimony, however, has been sparingly used
-throughout these pages; and no statement has been taken from him unless
-it was more or less directly corroborated by some one else. The
-better part of his evidence Mr. Herndon took the precaution of reading
-carefully to John Hanks, who pronounced it substantially true; and that
-circumstance gives it undeniable value.
-
-When Thomas and Betsy Sparrow died in the fall of 1818, Dennis was taken
-from the "little half-faced camp," and became one of the Lincoln family.
-Until Thomas Lincoln's second marriage, Dennis, Abe, and Sarah were all
-three poor, ragged, and miserable together. After that, Dennis got along
-better, as well as the rest. He was a lively, volatile, sympathetic
-fellow, and Abe liked him well from the beginning. They fished, hunted,
-and worked in company; loafed at the grocery, where Dennis got drunk,
-and Abe told stories; talked politics with Col. Jones; "swapped jokes"
-with Baldwin the blacksmith; and faithfully attended the sittings of the
-nearest justice of the peace, where both had opportunities to correct
-and annotate the law they thought they had learned from the "Statute of
-Indiana." Dennis was kind, genial, lazy, brimming over with humor,
-and full of amusing anecdotes. He revelled in song, from the vulgarest
-ballad to the loftiest hymn of devotion; from "The turbaned Turk, that
-scorns the world," to the holiest lines of Doctor Watts. These qualities
-marked him wherever he went; and in excessive good-nature, and in the
-ease with which he passed from the extreme of rigor to the extreme of
-laxity, he was distinguished above the others of his name.
-
-There was one Hanks, however, who was not like Dennis, or any other
-Hanks we know any thing about: this was "old John," as he is familiarly
-called in Illinois,--a sober, honest, truthful man, with none of the wit
-and none of the questionable accomplishments of Dennis. He was the son
-of Joseph, the carpenter with whom Tom Lincoln learned the trade. He
-went to Indiana to live with the Lincolns when Abe was fourteen years
-of age, and remained there four years. He then returned to Kentucky, and
-subsequently went to Illinois, where he was speedily joined by the old
-friends he had left in Indiana. When Abe separated from the family, and
-went in search of individual fortune, it was in company with "old John."
-Together they split the rails that did so much to make Abe President;
-and "old John" set the ball in motion by carrying a part of them into
-the Decatur Convention on his own broad shoulders. John had no education
-whatever, except that of the muscles and the heart. He could neither
-read nor write; but his character was pure and respectable, and Lincoln
-esteemed him as a man, and loved him as a friend and relative.
-
-About six years after the death of the first Mrs. Lincoln, Levi Hall and
-his wife and family came to Indiana, and settled near the Lincolns. Mrs.
-Hall was Nancy Hanks, the mother of our friend Dennis, and the aunt of
-Nancy Hanks, the mother of Abraham Lincoln. She had numerous children
-by her husband. One of them, Levi, as already mentioned, married one of
-Abe's step-sisters, while Dennis, his half-brother, married the
-other one. The father and mother of the Halls speedily died of the
-milk-sickness, but Levi was for many years a constant companion of Abe
-and Dennis.
-
-In 1825 Abraham was employed by James Taylor, who lived at the mouth of
-Anderson's Creek. He was paid six dollars a month, and remained for nine
-months. His principal business was the management of a ferry-boat which
-Mr. Taylor had plying across the Ohio, as well as Anderson's Creek. But,
-in addition to this, he was required to do all sorts of farm-work, and
-even to perform some menial services about the house. He was hostler,
-ploughman, ferryman, out of doors, and man-of-all-work within doors.
-He ground corn with a hand-mill, or "grated" it when too young to be
-ground; rose early, built fires, put on the water in the kitchen,
-"fixed around generally," and had things prepared for cooking before the
-mistress of the house was stirring. He slept up stairs with young
-Green Taylor, who says that he usually read "till near midnight,"
-notwithstanding the necessity for being out of his bed before day. Green
-was somewhat disposed to ill-use the poor hired boy, and once struck him
-with an ear of hard corn, and cut a deep gash over his eye. He makes no
-comment upon this generous act, except that "Abe got mad," but did not
-thrash him.
-
-Abe was a hand much in demand in "hog-killing time." He butchered not
-only for Mr. Taylor, but for John Woods, John Duthan, Stephen McDaniels,
-and others. At this he earned thirty-one cents a day, as it was
-considered "rough work."
-
-For a long time there was only one person in the neighborhood for whom
-Abe felt a decided dislike; and that was Josiah Crawford, who had made
-him "pull fodder," to pay for the Weems's "Washington." On that score
-he was "hurt" and "mad," and often declared "he would have revenge." But
-being a poor boy,--a circumstance of which Crawford had already taken
-shameful advantage to extort three days' labor,--he was glad to get
-work any place, and frequently "hired to his old adversary." Abe's first
-business in his employ was daubing his cabin, which was built of logs,
-unhewed, and with the bark on. In the loft of this house, thus finished
-by his own hands, he slept for many weeks at a time. He spent his
-evenings as he did at home,--writing on wooden shovels or boards with "a
-coal, or keel, from the branch." This family was rich in the possession
-of several books, which Abe read through time and again, according to
-his usual custom. One of them was the "Kentucky Preceptor," from which
-Mrs. Crawford insists that he "learned his school orations, speeches,
-and pieces to write." She tells us also that "Abe was a sensitive lad,
-never coming where he was not wanted;" that he always lifted his hat,
-and bowed, when he made his appearance; and that "he was tender and
-kind," like his sister, who was at the same time her maid-of-all-work.
-His pay was twenty-five cents a day; "and, when he missed time, he would
-not charge for it." This latter remark of good Mrs. Crawford reveals the
-fact that her husband was in the habit of docking Abe on his miserable
-wages whenever he happened to lose a few minutes from steady work.
-
-The time came, however, when Abe got his "revenge" for all this
-petty brutality. Crawford was as ugly as he was surly. His nose was a
-monstrosity,--long and crooked, with a huge, misshapen "stub" at the
-end, surmounted by a host of pimples, and the whole as "blue" as the
-usual state of Mr. Crawford's spirits. Upon this member Abe levelled his
-attack in rhyme, song, and "chronicle;" and, though he could not reduce
-the nose, he gave it a fame as wide as to the Wabash and the Ohio. It is
-not improbable that he learned the art of making the doggerel rhymes
-in which he celebrated Crawford's nose from the study of Crawford's own
-"Kentucky Preceptor." At all events, his sallies upon this single topic
-achieved him great reputation as a "poet" and a wit, and caused Crawford
-intolerable anguish.
-
-It is likely that Abe was reconciled to his situation in this family by
-the presence of his sister, and the opportunity it gave him of being in
-the company of Mrs. Crawford, for whom he had a genuine attachment; for
-she was nothing that her husband was, and every thing that he was not.
-According to her account, he split rails, ploughed, threshed, and did
-whatever else he was ordered to do; but she distinctly affirms that "Abe
-was no hand to pitch into his work like killing snakes." He went about
-it "calmly," and generally took the opportunity to throw "Crawford"
-down two or three times "before they went to the field." It is fair to
-presume, that, when Abe managed to inveigle his disagreeable employer
-into a tussle, he hoisted him high and threw him hard, for he felt
-that he had no reason to be careful of his bones. After meals Abe "hung
-about," lingered long to gossip and joke with the women; and these
-pleasant, stolen conferences were generally broken up with the
-exclamation, "Well, this won't buy the child a coat!" and the
-long-legged hired boy would stride away to join his master.
-
-In the mean time Abe had become, not only the longest, but the
-strongest, man in the settlement. Some of his feats almost surpass
-belief, and those who beheld them with their own eyes stood literally
-amazed. Richardson, a neighbor, declares that he could carry a load to
-which the strength of "three ordinary men" would scarcely be equal. He
-saw him quietly pick up and walk away with "a chicken-house, made of
-poles pinned together, and covered, that weighed at least six hundred,
-if not much more." At another time the Richardsons were building a
-corn-crib: Abe was there; and, seeing three or four men preparing
-"sticks" upon which to carry some huge posts, he relieved them of all
-further trouble by shouldering the posts, single-handed, and walking
-away with them to the place where they were wanted. "He could strike
-with a mall," says old Mr. Wood, "a heavier blow than any man.... He
-could sink an axe deeper into wood than any man I ever saw."
-
-For hunting purposes, the Pigeon Creek region was one of the most
-inviting on earth. The uplands were all covered with an original growth
-of majestic forest trees,1 whilst on the hillsides, and wherever an
-opening in the woods permitted the access of sunlight, there were beds
-of fragrant and beautiful wild-flowers, presenting, in contrast with the
-dense green around them, the most brilliant and agreeable effects. Here
-the game had vast and secluded ranges, which, until very recently, had
-heard the report of no white man's gun. In Abe's time, the squirrels,
-rabbits, partridges, and other varieties of smaller game, were so
-abundant as to be a nuisance. They devastated grain-fields and gardens;
-and while they were seldom shot for the table, the settlers frequently
-devised the most cunning means of destroying them in great quantities,
-in order to save the growing crops. Wild turkeys and deer were the
-principal reliance for food; but besides these were the bears, the
-wild-cats, and the panthers.1 The scream of the latter, the most
-ferocious and bloodthirsty of the cat kind, hastened Abe's homeward
-steps on many a dark night, as he came late from Dave Turnham's, "Uncle"
-Wood's, or the Gentryville grocery. That terrific cry appeals not only
-to the natural fear of the monster's teeth and claws, but, heard in the
-solitude of night and the forest, it awakens a feeling of superstitious
-horror, that chills the heart of the bravest.
-
- "Now about the timber: it was black walnut and black oak,
- hickory and jack oak, elm and white oak, undergrowth,
- logwood in abundance, grape-vines and shoe-make bushes, and
- milk-sick plenty. All my relations died of that disease on
- Little Pigeon Creek, Spencer County."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-Everybody about Abe made hunting a part of his business.2 Tom Lincoln
-and Dennis Hanks doubtless regaled him continually with wonderful
-stories of their luck and prowess; but he was no hunter himself, and
-did not care to learn. It is true, that, when a mere child, he made a
-fortunate shot at a flock of wild turkeys, through a crack in the wall
-of the "half-faced cabin;"3 and that, when grown up, he went for coons
-occasionally with Richardson, or watched deer-licks with Turnham; but
-a true and hearty sportsman he never was. As practised on this wild
-border, it was a solitary, unsociable way of spending time, which did
-not suit his nature; and, besides, it required more exertion than he was
-willing to make without due compensation. It could not be said that Abe
-was indolent; for he was alert, brisk, active, about every thing that
-he made up his mind to do. His step was very quick; and, when he had
-a sufficient object in view, he strode out on his long, muscular legs,
-swinging his bony arms as he moved along, with an energy that put miles
-behind him before a lazy fellow like Dennis Hanks or John Johnston could
-make up his mind to start. But, when he felt that he had time to spare,
-he preferred to give it to reading or to "talk;" and, of the two, he
-would take the latter, provided he could find a person who had something
-new or racy to say. He liked excessively to hear his own voice, when it
-was promoting fun and good fellowship; but he was also a most rare and
-attentive listener. Hunting was entirely too "still" an occupation for
-him.
-
- 1 "No Indians there when I first went to Indiana: I say, no,
- none. I say this: bear, deer, turkey, and coon, wild-cats,
- and other things, and frogs."--Dennis Hanks.
-
- 2 "You say, What were some of the customs? I suppose you
- mean take us all together. One thing I can tell you about:
- we had to work very hard cleaning ground for to keep body
- and soul together; and every spare time we had we picked up
- our rifle, and brought in a fine deer or turkey; and in the
- winter-time we went a coon-hunting, for coon-skins were at
- that time considered legal tender, and deer-skins' and hams.
- I tell you, Billy, I enjoyed myself better then than I ever
- have since."--Dennis Hanks.
-
- 3 "No doubt about the A. Lincoln's killing the turkey. He
- done it with his father's rifle, made by William Lutes, of
- Bullitt County, Kentucky. I have killed a hundred deer with
- her myself; turkeys too numerous to mention."--Dennis
- Hanks.
-
-All manner of rustic sports were in vogue among the Pigeon Creek boys.
-Abe was especially formidable as a wrestler; and, from about 1828
-onward, there was no man, far or near, that would give him a match.
-"Cat," "throwing the mall," "hopping and half-hammon" (whatsoever that
-may mean), and "four-corner bull-pen" were likewise athletic games in
-high honor.1
-
- 1 "You ask, What sort of plays? What we called them at that
- time were 'bull-pen,' 'corner and cat,' 'hopping and half-
- hammon;' playing at night 'old Sister Feby.' This I know,
- for I took a hand myself; and, wrestling, we could throw
- down anybody."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-All sorts of frolics and all kinds of popular gatherings, whether for
-work or amusement, possessed irresistible attractions for Abe. He
-loved to see and be seen, to make sport and to enjoy it. It was a most
-important part of his education that he got at the corn-shuckings, the
-log-rollings, the shooting-matches, and the gay and jolly weddings
-of those early border times. He was the only man or boy within a wide
-compass who had learning enough to furnish the literature for such
-occasions; and those who failed to employ his talents to grace or
-commemorate the festivities they set on foot were sure to be stung by
-some coarse but humorous lampoon from his pen. In the social way, he
-would not suffer himself to be slighted with impunity; and, if there
-were any who did not enjoy his wit, they might content themselves
-with being the subjects of it. Unless he received some very pointed
-intimation that his presence was not wanted, he was among the first
-and earliest at all the neighborhood routs; and when his tall, singular
-figure was seen towering amongst the hunting-shirts, it was considered
-due notice that the fun was about to commence. "Abe Linkhern," as he
-was generally called, made things lively wherever he went: and, if
-Crawford's blue nose happened to have been carried to the assembly,
-it quickly subsided, on his arrival, into some obscure corner; for the
-implacable "Linkhern" was apt to make it the subject of a jest that
-would set the company in a roar. But when a party was made up, and Abe
-left out, as sometimes happened through the influence of Crawford, he
-sulked, fumed, "got mad," nursed his anger into rage, and then broke out
-in songs or "chronicles," which were frequently very bitter, sometimes
-passably humorous, and invariably vulgar.
-
-At an early age he began to attend the "preachings" roundabout, but
-principally at the Pigeon Creek church, with a view to catching whatever
-might be ludicrous in the preacher's air or matter, and making it the
-subject of mimicry as soon as he could collect an audience of idle boys
-and men to hear him. A pious stranger, passing that way on a Sunday
-morning, was invited to preach for the Pigeon Creek congregation; but
-he banged the boards of the old pulpit, and bellowed and groaned so
-wonderfully, that Abe could hardly contain his mirth. This memorable
-sermon was a great favorite with him; and he frequently reproduced it
-with nasal tones, rolling eyes, and all manner of droll aggravations, to
-the great delight of Nat Grigsby and the wild fellows whom Nat was able
-to assemble. None that heard him, not even Nat himself (who was any
-thing but dull), was ever able to show wherein Abe's absurd version
-really departed from the original.
-
-The importance of Gentryville, as a "centre of business," soon began to
-possess the imaginations of the dwellers between the two Pigeon Creeks.
-Why might it not be a great place of trade? Mr. Gentry was a most
-generous patron; it was advantageously situated where two roads crossed;
-it already had a blacksmith's shop, a grocery, and a store. Jones, it is
-true, had once moved away in a sulk, but Mr. Gentry's fine diplomacy had
-quickly brought him back, with all his goods and talents unreservedly
-devoted to the "improvement of the town;" and now, since there was
-literally nothing left to cloud the prospects of the "point," brisk
-times were expected in the near future.
-
-Dennis Hanks, John Johnston, Abe, and the other boys in the
-neighborhood, loitered much about the store, the grocery, and the
-blacksmith's shop, at Gentryville. Dennis ingenuously remarks,
-"Sometimes we spent a little time at grog, pushing weights, wrestling,
-telling stories." The time that Abe "spent at grog" was, in truth, a
-"little time." He never liked ardent spirits at any period of his life;
-but "he did take his dram as others did."1 He was a natural politician,
-intensely ambitious, and anxious to be popular. For this reason, and
-this alone, he drank with his friends, although very temperately. If he
-could have avoided it without giving offence, he would gladly have done
-so. But he coveted the applause of his pot companions, and, because he
-could not get it otherwise, made a faint pretence of enjoying his liquor
-as they did. The "people" drank, and Abe was always for doing whatever
-the "people" did. All his life he held that whatsoever was popular--the
-habit or the sentiment of the masses--could not be essentially wrong.
-But, although a whiskey-jug was kept in every ordinarily respectable
-household, Abe never tasted it at home. His step-mother thought he
-carried his temperance to extremes.
-
- 1 The fact is proved by his most intimate acquaintances,
- both at Gentryville and New Salem.
-
-Jones, the great Jones, without whom it was generally agreed that
-Gentryville must have gone into eclipse, but with whom, and
-through whom, it was somehow to become a sort of metropolitan
-cross-roads,--Jones was Abe's friend and mentor from the moment of their
-acquaintance. Abe is even said to have "clerked for him;" that is, he
-packed and unpacked boxes, ranged goods on the shelves, drew the liquids
-in the cellar, or exhibited the stone and earthen ware to purchasers;
-but in his service he was never promoted to keeping accounts, or even to
-selling the finer goods across the counter.1 But Mr. Jones was very
-fond of his "clerk,"--enjoyed his company, appreciated his humor, and
-predicted something great for him. As he did not doubt that Abe would
-one day be a man of considerable influence, he took pains to give him
-correct views of the nature of American institutions. An ardent Jackson
-man himself, he imparted to Abe the true faith, as delivered by that
-great democratic apostle; and the traces of this teaching were
-never wholly effaced from Mr. Lincoln's mind. Whilst he remained at
-Gentryville, his politics accorded with Mr. Jones's; and, even after he
-had turned Whig in Illinois, John Hanks tells us that he wanted to
-whip a man for traducing Jackson. He was an eager reader of newspapers
-whenever he could get them, and Mr. Jones carefully put into his hands
-the kind he thought a raw youth should have. But Abe's appetite was not
-to be satisfied by what Mr. Jones supplied; and he frequently borrowed
-others from "Uncle Wood," who lived about a mile from the Lincoln cabin,
-and for whom he sometimes worked.
-
- 1 "Lincoln drove a team, cut up pork, and sold goods for
- Jones. Jones told me that Lincoln read all his books, and I
- remember History of United States as one. Jones often said
- to me, that Lincoln would make a great man one of these
- days,--had said so long before, and to other people,--said
- so as far back as 1828-9.'"--Dougherty.
-
-What manner of man kept the Gentryville grocery, we are not informed.
-Abe was often at his place, however, and would stay so long at nights,
-"telling stories" and "cracking jokes," that Dennis Hanks, who was
-ambitious in the same line, and probably jealous of Abe's overshadowing
-success, "got mad at him," and "cussed him." When Dennis found himself
-thrown in the shade, he immediately became virtuous, and wished to
-retire early.
-
-John Baldwin, the blacksmith, was one of Abe's special friends from
-his boyhood onward. Baldwin was a story-teller and a joker of rare
-accomplishments; and Abe, when a very little fellow, would slip off
-to his shop and sit and listen to him by the hour. As he grew up, the
-practice continued as of old, except that Abe soon began to exchange
-anecdotes with his clever friend at the anvil. Dennis Hanks says Baldwin
-was his "_particular_ friend," and that "Abe spent a great deal of his
-leisure time with him." Statesmen, plenipotentiaries, famous commanders,
-have many times made the White House at Washington ring with their
-laughter over the quaint tales of John Baldwin, the blacksmith,
-delivered second-hand by his inimitable friend Lincoln.
-
-Abe and Dave Turnham had one day been threshing wheat,--probably for
-Turnham's father,--and concluded to spend the evening at Gentryville.
-They lingered there until late in the night, when, wending their way
-along the road toward Lincoln's cabin, they espied something resembling
-a man lying dead or insensible by the side of a mud-puddle. They
-rolled the sleeper over, and found in him an old and quite respectable
-acquaintance, hopelessly drunk. All efforts failed to rouse him to any
-exertion on his own behalf. Abe's companions were disposed to let him
-lie in the bed he had made for himself; but, as the night was cold and
-dreary, he must have frozen to death had this inhuman proposition
-been equally agreeable to everybody present. To Abe it seemed utterly
-monstrous; and, seeing he was to have no help, he bent his mighty frame,
-and, taking the big man in his long arms, carried him a great distance
-to Dennis Hanks's cabin. There he built a fire, warmed, rubbed, and
-nursed him through the entire night,--his companions of the road having
-left him alone in his merciful task. The man often told John Hanks,
-that it was mighty "clever in Abe to tote him to a warm fire that cold
-night," and was very sure that Abe's strength and benevolence had saved
-his life.
-
-Abe was fond of music, but was himself wholly unable to produce three
-harmonious notes together. He made various vain attempts to sing a
-few lines of "Poor old Ned," but they were all equally ludicrous and
-ineffectual. "Religious songs did not appear to suit him at all," says
-Dennis Hanks; but of profane ballads and amorous ditties he knew the
-words of a vast number. When Dennis got happy at the grocery, or passed
-the bounds of propriety at a frolic, he was in the habit of raising a
-charming carol in praise of the joys which enter into the Mussulman's
-estate on earth,--of which he has vouchsafed us only three lines,--
-
- "The turbaned Turk that scorns the world,
- And struts about with his whiskers curled,
- For no other man but himself to see."
-
-It was a prime favorite of Abe's; and Dennis sang it with such
-appropriate zest and feeling, that Abe never forgot a single word of it
-while he lived.
-
-Another was,--
-
- "Hail Columbia, happy land!
- If you ain't drunk, I'll be damned,"--
-
-a song which Dennis thinks should be warbled only in the "fields;" and
-tells us that they knew and enjoyed "all such [songs] as this." Dave
-Turnham was also a musical genius, and had a "piece" beginning,--
-
- "There was a Romish lady Brought up in popery,"
-
-which Abe thought one of the best he ever heard, and insisted upon
-Dave's singing it for the delectation of old Tom Lincoln, who relished
-it quite as much as Abe did.1
-
- 1 "I recollect some more:--
-
- 'Come, thou Fount of every blessing,
- Tune my heart to sing thy praise.'
-
- 'When I can read my title clear
- To mansions in the skies!'
-
- 'How tedious and tasteless the hours.'
-
- 'Oh! to grace how great a debtor!'
-
- Other little songs I won't say any thing about: they would
- not look well in print; but I could give them."--Dennis
- Hanks.
-
-Mrs. Crawford says, that Abe did not attempt to sing much about the
-house: he was probably afraid to indulge in such offensive gayeties in
-the very habitation of the morose Crawford. According to Dennis Hanks,
-his melody was not of the sort that hath power to charm the savage; and
-he was naturally timid about trying it upon Crawford. But, when he was
-freed from those chilling restraints, he put forth his best endeavors
-to render "one [song] that was called 'William Riley,' and one that was
-called 'John Anderson's Lamentations,' and one that was made about
-Gen. Jackson and John Adams, at the time they were nominated for the
-presidency."
-
-The Jackson song indicated clearly enough Abe's steadiness in the
-political views inculcated by Jones. Mrs. Crawford could recollect but a
-single stanza of it:--
-
- "Let auld acquaintance be forgot,
- And never brought to mind,
- And Jackson be our President,
- And Adams left behind."
-
-In the text of "John Anderson's Lamentations,"--a most distressful lyric
-to begin with,--Abe was popularly supposed to have interpolated some
-lines of his own, which conclusively attested his genius for poetic
-composition. At all events, he sang it as follows:--
-
- "O sinners! poor sinners, take warning by me:
- The fruits of transgression behold now, and see;
- My soul is tormented, my body confined,
- My friends and dear children left weeping behind.
-
- "Much intoxication my ruin has been,
- And my dear companion hath barbarously slain:
- In yonder cold graveyard the body doth lie;
- Whilst I am condemned, and shortly must die.
-
- "Remember John Anderson's death, and reform
- Before death overtakes you, and vengeance comes on.
- My grief's overwhelming; in God I must trust:
- I am justly condemned; my sentence is just.
-
- "I am waiting the summons in eternity to be hurled;
- Whilst my poor little orphans are cast on the world.
- I hope my kind neighbors their guardeens will be,
- And Heaven, kind Heaven, protect them and me."
-
-In 1826 Abe's sister Nancy (or Sarah) was married to Aaron Grigsby; and
-the festivities of the occasion were made memorable by a song entitled,
-"Adam and Eve's Wedding Song," which many believed Abe had himself
-composed. The conceits embodied in the doggerel were old before Abe was
-born; but there is some intrinsic as well as extraneous evidence to
-show that the doggerel itself was his. It was sung by the whole Lincoln
-family, before Nancy's marriage and since, but by nobody else in the
-neighborhood.
-
- ADAM AND EVE'S WEDDING SONG.
-
- When Adam was created, he dwelt in Eden's shade,
- As Moses has recorded, and soon an Eve was made.
- Ten thousand times ten thousand
- Of creatures swarmed around
- Before a bride was formed,
- And yet no mate was found.
-
- The Lord then was not willing
- The man should be alone,
- But caused a sleep upon him,
- And took from him a bone,
-
- And closed the flesh in that place of;
- And then he took the same,
- And of it made a woman,
- And brought her to the man.
-
- Then Adam he rejoiced
- To see his loving bride,
- A part of his own body,
- The product of his side.
-
- This woman was not taken
- From Adam's feet, we see;
- So he must not abuse her,
- The meaning seems to be.
-
- This woman was not taken
- From Adam's head, we know;
- To show she must not rule him,
- 'Tis evidently so.
-
- This woman she was taken
- From under Adam's arm;
- So she must be protected
- From injuries and harm.
-
-"It was considered at that time," says Mr. Richardson, "that Abe was the
-best penman in the neighborhood. One day, while he was on a visit at
-my mother's, I asked him to write some copies for me. He very willingly
-consented. He wrote several of them, but one of them I have never
-forgotten, although a boy at the time. It was this:--
-
- 'Good boys who to their books apply
- Will all be great men by and by.'"
-
-Here are two original lines from Abe's own copy-book, probably the first
-he ever had, and which must not be confounded with the famous scrap-book
-in which his step-mother, lost in admiration of its contents, declares
-he "entered all things:"--
-
- "Abraham Lincoln, his hand and pen:
- He will be good, but God knows when."
-
-Again,--
-
- "Abraham Lincoln is my name,
- And with my pen I write the same:
- I will be a good boy, but God knows when."
-
-The same book contains the following, written at a later day, and with
-nothing to indicate that any part of it was borrowed:--
-
- "Time! what an empty vapor'tis!
- And days how swift they are!
- Swift as an Indian arrow,
- Fly on like a shooting-star.
- The present moment just is here,
- Then slides away in haste,
- That we can never say they're ours,
- But only say they are past."
-
-Abe wrote many "satires" and "chronicles," which are only remembered in
-fragments by a few old persons in the neighborhood. Even if we had them
-in full, they were most of them too indecent for publication. Such,
-at least, was the character of "a piece" which is said to have been
-"exceedingly humorous and witty," touching a church trial, wherein
-Brother Harper and Sister Gordon were the parties seeking judgment. It
-was very coarse, but it served admirably to raise a laugh in the grocery
-at the expense of the church.
-
-His chronicles were many, and on a great variety of subjects. They
-were written, as his early admirers love to tell us, "in the scriptural
-style;" but those we have betray a very limited acquaintance with the
-model. In these "chapters" was celebrated every event of importance
-that took place in the neighborhood: weddings, fights, Crawford's nose,
-Sister Gordon's innocence, Brother Harper's wit, were all served up,
-fresh and gross, for the amusement of the groundlings.
-
-Charles and Reuben Grigsby were married about the same time, and, being
-brothers, returned to their father's house with their brides upon the
-same day. The infare, the feast, the dance, the ostentatious retirement
-of the brides and grooms, were conducted in the old-fashioned way of all
-new countries in the United States, but a way which was bad enough to
-shock Squire Western himself. On this occasion Abe was not invited,
-and was very "mad" in consequence. This indignation found vent in a
-highly-spiced piece of descriptive writing, entitled "The Chronicles of
-Reuben," which are still in existence.
-
-But even "The Chronicles," venomous and highly successful as they were,
-were totally insufficient to sate Abe's desire for vengeance on the
-Grigsbys. They were important people about Gentryville, and the social
-slight they had given him stung him bitterly. He therefore began on
-"Billy" in rhyme, after disposing of Charles and Reuben "in scriptural
-style." Mrs. Crawford attempted to repeat these verses to Mr. Herndon;
-but the good old lady had not proceeded far, when she blushed very red,
-and, saying that they were hardly decent, proposed to tell them to her
-daughter, who would tell them to her husband, who would write them down
-and send them to Mr. Herndon. They are probably much curtailed by Mrs.
-Crawford's modesty, but still it is impossible to transcribe them. We
-give what we can to show how the first steps of Abe's fame as a great
-writer were won. It must be admitted that the literary taste of the
-community in which these rhymes were popular could not have been very
-high.
-
- "I will tell you about Joel and Mary:
- it is neither a joke or a story, for
- Reuben and Charles has married two girls,
- but Billy has married a boy."
-
- "The girls he had tried on every side,
- But none could he get to agree:
- All was in vain; he went home again,
- And, since that, he is married to Natty.
-
- "So Billy and Natty agreed very well,
- And mamma's well pleased at the match:
- The egg it is laid, but Natty's afraid
- The shell is so soft it never will hatch;
- But Betsey she said, 'You cursed bald head,
- My suitor you never can be;
- Besides'"----
-
-Abe dropped "The Chronicles" at a point on the road where he was sure
-one of the Grigsbys would find them. The stratagem succeeded, and
-that delicate "satire" produced the desired effect. The Grigsbys were
-infuriated,--wild with a rage which would be satisfied only when Abe's
-face should be pounded into a jelly, and a couple of his ribs cracked by
-some member of the injured family. Honor, according to the Pigeon Creek
-code, demanded that somebody should be "licked" in expiation of an
-outrage so grievous,--if not Abe, then some friend of Abe's, whom he
-would depute to stand the brunt in his stead. "Billy," the eldest of the
-brothers, was selected to challenge him. Abe accepted generally; that
-is, agreed that there should be a fight about the matter in question.
-It was accordingly so ordered: the ground was selected a mile and a
-half from Gentryville, a ring was marked out, and the bullies for twenty
-miles around attended. The friends of both parties were present in
-force, and excitement ran high. When the time arrived for the champions
-to step into the ring, Abe displayed his chivalry in a manner that must
-have struck the bystanders with admiration. He announced, that whereas
-Billy was confessedly his inferior in size, shape, and talents, unable
-to hit with pen or fist with any thing like his power, therefore he
-would forego the advantage which the challenge gave him, and "turn over"
-his stepbrother, John Johnston, to do battle in his behalf. If this near
-relative should be sacrificed, he would abide the issue: he was
-merely anxious to see a fair and honorable fight. This proposition was
-considered highly meritorious, and the battle commenced on those general
-terms. John started out with fine pluck and spirit; but in a little
-while Billy got in some clever hits, and Abe began to exhibit symptoms
-of great uneasiness. Another pass or two, and John flagged quite
-decidedly, and it became evident that Abe was anxiously casting about
-for some pretext to break the ring. At length, when John was fairly
-down, and Billy on top, and all the spectators cheering, swearing,
-and pressing up to the very edge of the ring, Abe cried out that "Bill
-Boland showed foul play," and, bursting out of the crowd, seized Grigsby
-by the heels, and flung him off. Having righted John, and cleared the
-battle-ground of all opponents, "he swung a whiskey-bottle over his
-head, and swore that he was the big buck of the lick." It seems that
-nobody of the Grigsby faction, not one in that large assembly of
-bullies, cared to encounter the sweep of Abe's tremendously long and
-muscular arms; and so he remained master of the "lick." He was not
-content, however, with a naked triumph, but vaunted himself in the most
-offensive manner. He singled out the victorious but cheated Billy, and,
-making sundry hostile demonstrations, declared that he could whip him
-then and there. Billy meekly said "he did not doubt that," but that,
-if Abe would make things even between them by fighting with pistols, he
-would not be slow to grant him a meeting. But Abe replied that he was
-not going "to fool away his life on a single shot;" and so Billy was
-fain to put up with the poor satisfaction he had already received.
-
-At Gentryville "they had exhibitions or speaking meetings." Some of
-the questions they spoke on were, The Bee and the Ant, Water and Fire:
-another was, Which had the most right to complain, the Negro or the
-Indian? Another, "Which was the strongest, Wind or Water?"1 The views
-which Abe then entertained on the Indian and the negro question would
-be intensely interesting now. But just fancy him discoursing on wind and
-water! What treasures of natural science, what sallies of humor, he
-must have wasted upon that audience of bumpkins! A little farther on, we
-shall see that Abe made pretensions to an acquaintance with the laws of
-nature which was considered marvellous in that day and generation.
-
- 1 "Lincoln did write what is called 'The Book of
- Chronicles,'--a satire on the Grigs-bys and Josiah
- Crawford,--not the schoolmaster, but the man who loaned
- Lincoln 'The Life of Washington.' The satire was good,
- sharp, cutting: it hurt us then, but it is all over now.
- There is no family in the land who, after this, loved
- Lincoln so well, and who now look upon him as so great a
- man. We all voted for him,--all that could,--children and
- grandchildren, first, last, and always."--Nat Grigsby.
-
-Dennis Hanks insists that Abe and he became learned men and expert
-disputants, not by a course of judicious reading, but by attending
-"speech-makings, gatherings," &c.
-
-"How did Lincoln and yourself learn so much in Indiana under such
-disadvantages?" said Mr. Herndon to Dennis, on one of his two oral
-examinations. The question was artfully put; for it touched the jaunty
-Dennis on the side of his vanity, and elicited a characteristic reply.
-"We learned," said he, "by sight, scent, and hearing. We heard all that
-was said, and talked over and over the questions heard; wore them
-slick, greasy, and threadbare. Went to political and other speeches and
-gatherings, as you do now: we would hear all sides and opinions, talk
-them over, discuss them, agreeing or disagreeing. Abe, as I said before,
-was originally a Democrat after the order of Jackson, so was his father,
-so we all were.... He preached, made speeches, read for us, explained
-to us, &c.... Abe was a cheerful boy, a witty boy, was humorous always;
-sometimes would get sad, not very often.... Lincoln would frequently
-make political and other speeches to the boys: he was calm, logical, and
-clear always. He attended trials, went to court always, read the Revised
-Statute of Indiana, dated 1824, heard law speeches, and listened to law
-trials, &c. Lincoln was lazy, a very lazy man. He was always reading,
-scribbling, writing, ciphering, writing poetry, and the like.... In
-Gentryville, about one mile west of Thomas Lincoln's farm, Lincoln would
-go and tell his jokes and stories, &c., and was so odd, original, and
-humorous and witty, that all the people in town would gather around him.
-He would keep them there till midnight. I would get tired, want to go
-home, cuss Abe most heartily. Abe was a good talker, a good reader, and
-was a kind of newsboy."
-
-Boonville was the court-house town of Warrick County, and was situated
-about fifteen miles from Gentryville. Thither Abe walked whenever he had
-time to be present at the sittings of the court, where he could learn
-something of public business, amuse himself profitably, and withal pick
-up items of news and gossip, which made him an interesting personage
-when he returned home. During one of these visits he watched, with
-profound attention, the progress of a murder trial, in which a Mr.
-John Breckenridge was counsel for the defence. At the conclusion of the
-latter's speech, Abe, who had listened, literally entranced, accosted
-the man of eloquence, and ventured to compliment him on the success of
-his effort. "Breckenridge looked at the shabby boy" in amazement, and
-passed on his way. But many years afterwards, in 1862, when Abe was
-President, and Breckenridge a resident of Texas, probably needing
-executive clemency, they met a second time; when Abe said, "It was the
-best speech that I up to that time had ever heard. If I could, as I then
-thought, make as good a speech as that, my soul would be satisfied."
-
-It is a curious fact, that through all Abe's childhood and boyhood, when
-he seemed to have as little prospect of the Presidency as any boy that
-ever was born, he was in the habit of saying, and perhaps sincerely
-believing, that that great prize would one day be his. When Mrs.
-Crawford reproved him for "fooling," and bedevilling the girls in her
-kitchen, and asked him "what he supposed would ever become of him," he
-answered that "he was going to be President of the United States."1
-
- 1 He frequently made use of similar expressions to several
- others.
-
-Abe usually did the milling for the family, and had the neighbor
-boy, Dave Turnham, for his companion. At first they had to go a long
-distance, at least twelve or thirteen miles, to Hoffman's, on Anderson's
-Creek; but after a while a Mr. Gordon (the husband of Sister Gordon,
-about whom the "witty piece" was written) built a horse-mill within a
-few miles of the Lincolns. Here Abe had come one day with a grist, and
-Dave probably with him. He had duly hitched his "old mare," and started
-her with great impatience; when, just as he was sounding another
-"cluck," to stir up her imperturbable and lazy spirit, she let out with
-her heels, and laid Abe sprawling and insensible on the ground. He was
-taken up in that condition, and did not recover for many minutes; but
-the first use made of returning sense was to finish the interrupted
-"cluck." He and Mr. Herndon had many learned discussions in their quiet
-little office, at Springfield, respecting this remarkable phenomenon,
-involving so nice a question in "psychology."
-
-Mr. William Wood, already referred to as "Uncle Wood," was a genuine
-friend and even a patron of Abe's. He lived only about a mile and a half
-from the Lincolns, and frequently had both old Tom and Abe to work for
-him,--the one as a rough carpenter, and the other as a common laborer.
-He says that Abe was in the habit of carrying "his pieces" to him for
-criticism and encouragement. Mr. Wood took at least two newspapers,--one
-of them devoted to politics, and one of them to temperance. Abe borrowed
-them both, and, reading them faithfully over and over again, was
-inspired with an ardent desire to write something on the subjects of
-which they treated. He accordingly composed an article on temperance,
-which Mr. Wood thought "excelled, for sound sense, any thing that the
-paper contained." It was forwarded, through the agency of a Baptist
-preacher, to an editor in Ohio, by whom it was published, to the
-infinite gratification of Mr. Wood and his _protege_. Abe then tried his
-hand on "national politics," saying that "the American Government was
-the best form of government for an intelligent people; that it ought to
-be kept sound, and preserved forever; that general education should be
-fostered and carried all over the country; that the Constitution should
-be saved, the Union perpetuated, and the laws revered, respected, and
-enforced." This article was consigned, like the other, to Mr. Wood, to
-be ushered by him before the public. A lawyer named Pritchard chanced
-to pass that way, and, being favored with a perusal of Abe's "piece,"
-pithily and enthusiastically declared, "The world can't beat it." "He
-begged for it," and it was published in some obscure paper; this new
-success causing the author a most extraordinary access of pride and
-happiness.
-
-But in 1828 Abe had become very tired of his home. He was now nineteen
-years of age, and becoming daily more restive under the restraints of
-servitude which bound him. He was anxious to try the world for himself,
-and make his way according to his own notions. "Abe came to my house one
-day," says Mr. Wood, "and stood round about, timid and shy. I knew
-he wanted _something_, and said to him, 'Abe, what's your case?'
-He replied, 'Uncle, I want you to go to the river, and give me some
-recommendation to some boat.' I remarked, 'Abe, your age is against you:
-you are not twenty yet.' 'I know that, but I want a start,' said Abe. I
-concluded not to go for the boy's good." Poor Abe! old Tom still had a
-claim upon him, which even Uncle Wood would not help him to evade. He
-must wait a few weary months more before he would be of age, and
-could say he was his own man, and go his own way. Old Tom was a hard
-taskmaster to him, and, no doubt, consumed the greater part, if not all,
-of his wages.
-
-In the beginning of March, 1828, Abe went to work for old Mr. Gentry,
-the proprietor of Gentryville. Early in the next month, the old
-gentleman furnished his son Allen with a boat, and a cargo of bacon and
-other produce, with which he was to go on a trading expedition to New
-Orleans, unless the stock was sooner exhausted. Abe, having been found
-faithful and efficient, was employed to accompany the young man as a
-"bow-hand," to work the "front oars." He was paid eight dollars per
-month, and ate and slept on board. Returning, Gentry paid his passage on
-the deck of a steamboat.
-
-While this boat was loading at Gentry's Landing, near Rockport, on the
-Ohio, Abe saw a great deal of the pretty Miss Roby, whom he had saved
-from the wrath of Crawford the schoolmaster, when she failed to spell
-"defied." She says, "Abe was then a long, thin, leggy, gawky boy, dried
-up and shrivelled." This young lady subsequently became the wife of
-Allen Gentry, Abe's companion in the projected voyage. She probably
-felt a deep interest in the enterprise in hand, for the very boat itself
-seems to have had attractions for her. "One evening," says she, "Abe and
-I were sitting on the banks of the Ohio, or rather on the boat spoken
-of: I said to Abe that the sun was going down. He said to me, 'That's
-not so: it don't really go down; it seems so. The earth turns from west
-to east, and the revolution of the earth carries us under as it were:
-we do the sinking as you call it. The sun, as to us, is comparatively
-still; the sun's sinking is only an appearance.' I replied, 'Abe, what
-a fool you are!' I know now that I was the fool, not Lincoln. I am now
-thoroughly satisfied that Abe knew the general laws of astronomy and the
-movements of the heavenly bodies. He was better read then than the world
-knows, or is likely to know exactly. No man could talk to me that
-night as he did, unless he had known something of geography as well as
-astronomy. He often and often commented or talked to me about what he
-had read,--seemed to read it out of the book as he went along,--did
-so to others. He was the learned boy among us unlearned folks. He took
-great pains to explain; could do it so simply. He was diffident then
-too." 1
-
-The trip of Gentry and Lincoln was a very profitable one, and Mr.
-Gentry, senior, was highly gratified by the result. Abe displayed his
-genius for mercantile affairs by handsomely putting off on the innocent
-folks along the river some counterfeit money which a shrewd fellow had
-imposed upon Allen. Allen thought his father would be angry with him
-for suffering himself to be cheated; but Abe consoled him with the
-reflection that the "old man" wouldn't care how much bad money they took
-in the course of business if they only brought the proper amount of good
-money home.2
-
- 1 "When he appeared in company, the boys would gather and
- cluster around him to hear him talk.... Mr. Lincoln was
- figurative in his speeches, talks, and conversations. He
- argued much from analogy, and explained things hard for us
- to understand by stories, maxims, tales, and figures. He
- would almost always point his lesson or idea by some story
- that was plain and near us, that we might instantly see the
- force and bearing of what he said."--Nat Grigsby.
-
- 2 "Gentry (Allen) was a great personal friend of Mr.
- Lincoln. He was a Democrat, but voted for Lincoln,
- sacrificing his party politics to his friendship. He says
- that on that trip they sold some of their produce at a
- certain landing, and by accident or fraud the bill was paid
- in counterfeit money. Gentry was grieving about it; but
- Lincoln said, 'Never mind, Allen: it will accidentally slip
- out of our fingers before we get to New Orleans, and then
- old Jim can't quarrel at us.' Sure enough, it all went off
- like hot cakes. I was told this in Indiana by many people
- about Rockport."--Herndon. It must be remembered that
- counterfeit money was the principal currency along the river
- at this period.
-
-At Madame Bushane's plantation, six miles below Baton Rouge, they had
-an adventure, which reads strangely enough in the life of the great
-emancipator. The boat was tied up to the shore, in the dead hours of the
-night, and Abe and Allen were fast asleep in the "cabin," in the stern,
-when they were startled by footsteps on board. They knew instantly that
-it was a gang of negroes come to rob, and perhaps to murder them. Allen,
-thinking to frighten the intruders, cried out, "Bring the guns, Lincoln;
-shoot them!" Abe came without a gun, but he fell among the negroes
-with a huge bludgeon, and belabored them most cruelly. Not content with
-beating them off the boat, he and Gentry followed them far back into the
-country, and then, running back to their craft, hastily cut loose and
-made rapid time down the river, fearing lest they should return in
-greater numbers to take revenge. The victory was complete; but, in
-winning it, Abe received a scar which he carried with him to his grave.
-
-"When he was eighteen years old, he conceived the project of building a
-little boat, and taking the produce of the Lincoln farm down the river
-to market. He had learned the use of tools, and possessed considerable
-mechanical talent, as will appear in some other acts of his life. Of the
-voyage and its results, we have no knowledge; but an incident occurred
-before starting which he related in later life to his Secretary of
-State, Mr. Seward, that made a very marked and pleasant impression upon
-his memory. As he stood at the landing, a steamer approached, coming
-down the river. At the same time two passengers came to the river's bank
-who wished to be taken out to the packet with their luggage. Looking
-among the boats at the landing, they singled out Abraham's, and asked
-him to scull them to the steamer. This he did; and, after seeing them
-and their trunks on board, he had the pleasure of receiving upon the
-bottom of his boat, before he shoved off, a silver half-dollar from each
-of his passengers. 'I could scarcely believe my eyes,' said Mr. Lincoln,
-in telling the story. 'You may think it was a very little thing,'
-continued he, 'but it was a most important incident in my life. I could
-scarcely believe that I, a poor boy, had earned a dollar in less than a
-day. The world seemed wider and fairer to me. I was a more hopeful
-and confident being from that time.'"1 If Mr. Lincoln ever made the
-statement for which Mr. Seward is given as authority, he drew upon his
-imagination for the facts. He may have sculled passengers to a steamer
-when he was ferryman for Taylor, but he never made a trip like the one
-described; never built a boat until he went to Illinois; nor did he
-ever sell produce on his father's account, for the good reason that his
-father had none to sell.
-
- 1 Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 33.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-ABE and Gentry returned from New Orleans some time in June, 1828, having
-been gone not quite three months. How much longer he remained in the
-service of Gentry, or whether he remained at all, we are unable to say;
-but he soon took up his old habits, and began to work around among his
-neighbors, or for his father, precisely as he had done before he got his
-partial glimpse of the great world down the river.
-
-In the fall of 1829, Mr. Wood saw him cutting down a large tree in the
-woods, and whip-sawing it into planks. Abe said the lumber was for a new
-house his father was about to build; but Tom Lincoln changed his
-mind before the house was half done, and Abe sold his plank to Josiah
-Crawford, "the book man," who worked them into the south-east room of
-his house, where relic-seekers have since cut pieces from them to make
-canes.
-
-In truth, the continued prevalence of that dreadful disease, the
-milk-sickness, with which Nancy Hanks and the Sparrows and the Halls had
-all died, was more than a sufficient reason for a new removal, now in
-contemplation by Thomas Lincoln. Every member of his family, from
-the first settlement in Indiana, except perhaps Abe and himself,
-had suffered with it. The cattle, which, it is true, were of little
-pecuniary value, and raised with great ease and little cost, were swept
-away by it in great numbers throughout the whole neighborhood. It was
-an awful scourge, and common prudence suggested flight. It is wonderful
-that it took a constitutional mover thirteen years to make up his mind
-to escape from it.1
-
- 1 "What made Thomas Lincoln leave? The reason is this: we
- were perplexed by a disease called milk-sick. I myself being
- the oldest, I was determined to leave, and hunt a country
- where the milk-sick was not. I married his eldest daughter.
- I sold out, and they concluded to go with me. Billy, I was
- tolerably popular at that time, for I had some money. My
- wife's mother could not think of parting with her, and we
- ripped up stakes, and started to Illinois, and landed at
- Decatur. This is the reason for leaving Indiana. I am to
- blame for it, if any. As for getting more land, this was not
- the case, for we could have entered ten thousand acres of
- the best land. When we left, it was on account of the milk.
- Billy, I had four good milch cows, too, with it in one week,
- and eleven young calves. This was enough to run me. Besides,
- liked to have lossed my own life with it. This reason was
- enough (ain't it?) for leaving."--Dennis Hanks.
-
-In the spring of 1830, before the winter had fairly broken up, he and
-Abe, and Dennis Hanks and Levi Hall, with their respective families,
-thirteen in all, took the road for Illinois. Dennis and Levi, as already
-stated, were married to the daughters of Mrs. Lincoln. Hall had one son,
-and Dennis a considerable family of sons and daughters. Sarah (or Nancy)
-Lincoln, who had married Aaron Grigsby, was now dead.
-
-John Hanks had gone to the new country from Kentucky in the fall of
-1828, and settled near Decatur, whence he wrote Thomas Lincoln all
-about it, and advised him to come there. Dennis, whether because of the
-persuasions of John, or some observations made in a flying trip on his
-own account, was very full of the move, and would hear to no delay.
-Lincoln sold his farm to Gentry, senior, if, indeed, he had not done so
-before, and his corn and hogs to Dave Turnham. The corn brought only
-ten cents a bushel, and, according to the pricelist furnished by Dennis
-Hanks, the stock must have gone at figures equally mean.
-
-Lincoln took with him to Illinois "some stock-cattle, one horse,
-one bureau, one table, one clothes-chest, one set of chairs, cooking
-utensils, clothing," &c. The goods of the three families--Hanks, Hall,
-and Lincoln--were loaded on a wagon belonging to Lincoln. This wagon was
-"ironed," a noticeable fact in those primitive days, and "was positively
-the first one that he (Lincoln) ever owned." It was drawn by four yoke
-of oxen,--two of them Lincoln's, and two of them Hanks's.
-
-We have no particulars of the journey, except that Abe held the "gad,"
-and drove the team; that the mud was very deep, that the spring freshets
-were abroad, and that in crossing the swollen and tumultuous Kaskaskia,
-the wagon and oxen were nearly swept away. On the first day of March,
-1830, after fifteen days' tedious and heavy travel, they arrived at John
-Hanks's house, four miles north-west of Decatur. Lincoln settled (if
-any thing he did may be called settling) at a point ten miles west of
-Decatur. Here John Hanks had cut some logs in 1829, which he now gave
-to Lincoln to build a house with. With the aid of John, Dennis, Abe,
-and Hall, a house was erected on a small bluff, on the north bank of the
-north fork of the Sangamon. Abe and John took the four yoke of oxen and
-"broke up" fifteen acres of land, and then split rails enough to fence
-it in.
-
-Abe was now over twenty-one. There was no "Uncle Wood to tell him that
-his age was against him:" he had done something more than his duty by
-his father; and, as that worthy was now again placed in a situation
-where he might do well if he chose, Abe came to the conclusion that it
-was time for him to begin life on his own account. It must have cost him
-some pain to leave his good step-mother; but, beyond that, all the old
-ties were probably broken without a single regret. From the moment
-he was a free man, foot-loose, able to go where, and to do what, he
-pleased, his success in those things which lay nearest his heart--that
-is, public and social preferment--was astonishing to himself, as well as
-to others.
-
-It is with great pleasure that we dismiss Tom Lincoln, with his family
-and fortunes, from further consideration in these pages. After Abraham
-left him, he moved at least three times in search of a "healthy"
-location, and finally got himself fixed near Goose Nest Prairie, in
-Coles County, where he died of a disease of the kidneys, in 1851, at the
-ripe old age of seventy-three. The little farm (forty acres) upon which
-his days were ended, he had, with his usual improvidence, mortgaged
-to the School Commissioners for two hundred dollars,--its full value.
-Induced by love for his step-mother, Abraham had paid the debt, and
-taken a deed for the land, "with a reservation of a life-estate therein,
-to them, or the survivor of them." At the same time (1841), he gave a
-helping hand to John Johnston, binding himself to convey the land to
-him, or his heirs, after the death of "Thomas Lincoln and his wife,"
-upon payment of the two hundred dollars, which was really advanced to
-save John's mother from utter penury. No matter how much the land
-might appreciate in value, John was to have it upon these terms, and no
-interest was to be paid by him, "except after the death of the survivor,
-as aforesaid." This, to be sure, was a great bargain for John, but he
-made haste to assign his bond to another person for "fifty dollars paid
-in hand."
-
-As soon as Abraham got a little up in the world, he began to send his
-step-mother money, and continued to do so until his own death; but it
-is said to have "done her no good," for it only served to tempt certain
-persons about her, and with whom she shared it, to continue in a life
-of idleness. At the close of the Black Hawk War, Mr. Lincoln went to see
-them for a few days, and afterwards, when a lawyer, making the circuits
-with the courts, he visited them whenever the necessities of his
-practice brought him to their neighborhood. He did his best to serve
-Mrs. Lincoln and her son John, but took little notice of his father,
-although he wrote him an exhortation to believe in God when he thought
-he was on his death-bed.
-
-But in regard to the relations between the family and Abe, after the
-latter began to achieve fame and power, nobody can tell the truth more
-clearly, or tell it in a more interesting and suggestive style, than our
-friend Dennis, with whom we are now about to part forever. It will be
-seen, that, when information reached the "Goose Nest Prairie" that Abe
-was actually chosen President of the United States, a general itching
-for public employment broke out among the Hankses, and that an equally
-general disappointment was the result. Doubtless all of them had
-expectations somewhat like Sancho Panza's, when he went to take the
-government of his island, and John Hanks, at least, would not have been
-disappointed but for the little disability which Dennis mentions in the
-following extract:--
-
-"Did Abraham Lincoln treat John D. Johnston well?" "I will say this much
-about it. I think Abe done more for John than he deserved. John thought
-that Abe did not do enough for the old people. They became enemies a
-while on this ground. I don't want to tell all the things that I know:
-it would not look well in history. I say this: Abe treated John well."
-
-"What kind of a man was Johnston?"--"I say this much: A kinder-hearted
-man never was in Coles County, Illinois, nor an honester man. I don't
-say this because he was my brother-in-law: I say it, knowing it. John
-did not love to work any the best. I flogged him for not working."
-
-"Did Thomas Lincoln treat Abe cruelly?"--"He loved him. I never could
-tell whether Abe loved his father very well or not. I don't think he
-did, for Abe was one of those forward boys. I have seen his father
-knock him down off the fence when a stranger would, ask the way to a
-neighbor's house. Abe always would have the first word. The old man
-loved his children."
-
-"Did any of the Johnston family ask for office?"--"No! Thomas Johnston
-went to Abe: he got this permit to take daguerrotypes in the army; this
-is all, for they are all dead except John's boys. They did not ask for
-any."
-
-"Did you or John Hanks ask Lincoln for any office?"--"I say this: that
-John Hanks, of Decatur, did solicit him for an Indian Agency; and John
-told me that Abe as good as told him he should have one. But John could
-not read or write. I think this was the reason that Abe did not give
-John the place.
-
-"As for myself, I did not ask Abe right out for an office, only this: I
-would like to have the post-office in Charleston; this was my wife that
-asked him. He told her that much was understood,--as much as to say that
-I would get it. I did not care much about it."
-
-"Do you think Lincoln cared much for his relations?"--"I will say this
-much: when he was with us, he seemed to think a great deal of us; but I
-thought sometimes it was hypocritical, but I am not sure."
-
-Abe left the Lincoln family late in March, or early in April. He did not
-go far away, but took jobs wherever he could get them, showing that he
-had separated himself from the family, not merely to rove, but to
-labor, and be an independent man. He made no engagement of a permanent
-character during this summer: his work was all done "by the job." If he
-ever split rails for Kirkpatrick, over whom he was subsequently elected
-captain of a volunteer company about to enter the Black Hawk War, it
-must have been at this time; but the story of his work for Kirkpatrick,
-like that of his making "a crap of corn" for Mr. Brown, is probably
-apocryphal.1 All this while he clung close to John Hanks, and either
-worked where he did, or not far away. In the winter following, he was
-employed by a Major Warrick to make rails, and walked daily three miles
-to his work, and three miles back again.
-
- 1 See Holland's Life of Lincoln, p. 40.
-
-"After Abe got to Decatur," says John Hanks, "or rather to Macon (my
-country), a man by the name of Posey came into our neighborhood, and
-made a speech: it was a bad one, and I said Abe could beat it. I
-turned down a box, or keg, and Abe made his speech. The other man was
-a candidate. Abe wasn't. Abe beat him to death, his subject being the
-navigation of the Sangamon River. The man, after the speech was through,
-took Abe aside, and asked him where he had learned so much, and how he
-did so well. Abe replied, stating his manner and method of reading, and
-what he had read. The man encouraged Lincoln to persevere."
-
-In February, 1831, a Mr. Denton Offutt wanted to engage John Hanks
-to take a flatboat to New Orleans. John was not well disposed to the
-business; but Offutt came to the house, and would take no denial; made
-much of John's fame as a river-man, and at length persuaded him to
-present the matter to Abe and John Johnston. He did so. The three
-friends discussed the question with great earnestness: it was no slight
-affair to them, for they were all young and poor. At length they agreed
-to Offutt's proposition, and that agreement was the turning-point in
-Abe's career. They were each to receive fifty cents a day, and the round
-sum of sixty dollars divided amongst them for making the trip. These
-were wages such as Abe had never received before, and might have tempted
-him to a much more difficult enterprise. When he went with Gentry, the
-pay was only eight dollars a month, and no such company and assistance
-as he was to have now. But Offutt was lavish with his money, and
-generous bargains like this ruined him a little while after.
-
-In March, Hanks, Johnston, and Lincoln went down the Sangamon in a canoe
-to Jamestown (then Judy's Ferry), five miles east of Springfield. Thence
-they walked to Springfield, and found Mr. Offutt comforting himself at
-"Elliott's tavern in Old Town." He had contracted to have a boat ready
-at the mouth of Spring Creek, but, not looking after it himself, was, of
-course, "disappointed." There was only one way out of the trouble: the
-three hands must build a boat. They went to the mouth of Spring Creek,
-five miles north of Springfield, and there consumed two weeks cutting
-the timber from "Congress land." In the mean time, Abe walked back to
-Judy's Ferry, by way of Springfield, and brought down the canoe which
-they had left at the former place. The timber was hewed and scored, and
-then "rafted down to Saugamon-town." At the mouth of Spring Creek
-they had been compelled to walk a full mile for their meals; but at
-Sangamon-town they built a shanty, and boarded themselves. "Abe was
-elected cook," and performed the duties of the office much to the
-satisfaction of the party. The lumber was sawed at Kirkpatrick's mill, a
-mile and a half from the shanty. Laboring under many disadvantages like
-this, they managed to complete and launch the boat in about four weeks
-from the time of beginning.
-
-Offutt was with the party at this point. He "was a Whig, and so was Abe;
-but he (Abe) could not hear Jackson wrongfully abused, especially where
-a lie and malice did the abuse." Out of this difference arose some
-disputes, which served to enliven the camp, as well as to arouse Abe's
-ire, and keep him in practice in the way of debate.
-
-In those days Abe, as usual, is described as being "funny, jokey,
-full of yarns, stories, and rigs;" as being "long, tall, and green,"
-"frequently quoting poetry," and "reciting proselike orations." They
-had their own amusements. Abe extracted a good deal of fun out of the
-cooking; took his "dram" when asked to, and played "seven up" at night,
-at which he made "a good game."
-
-A juggler gave an exhibition at Sangamontown, in the upper room of Jacob
-Carman's house. Abe went to it, dressed in a suit of rough blue jeans.
-He had on shoes, but the trousers did not reach them by about twelve
-inches; and the naked shin, which had excited John Romine's laughter
-years ago in Indiana, was still exposed. Between the roundabout and
-the waist of the trousers, there was another wide space uncovered;
-and, considering these defects, Mr. Lincoln's attire was thought to be
-somewhat inelegant, even in those times. His hat, however, was a great
-improvement on coon-skins and opossum. It was woollen, broad-brimmed,
-and low-crowned. In this hat the "showman cooked eggs." Whilst Abe was
-handing it up to him, after the man had long solicited a similar favor
-from the rest of the audience, he remarked, "Mister, the reason I didn't
-give you my hat before was out of respect to your eggs, not care for my
-hat."
-
-Loaded with barrel-pork, hogs, and corn, the boat set out from
-Sangamontown as soon as finished. Mr. Offutt was on board to act as
-his own merchant, intending to pick up additions to his cargo along the
-banks of the two Illinois rivers down which he was about to pass. On the
-19th of April they arrived at New Salem, a little village destined to
-be the scene of the seven eventful years of Mr. Lincoln's life, which
-immediately followed the conclusion of the present trip. Just below New
-Salem the boat "stuck," for one night and the better part of a day on
-Rutledge's mill-dam,--one end of it hanging over the dam, and the other
-sunk deep in the water behind. Here was a case for Abe's ingenuity, and
-he exercised it with effect. Quantities of water were being taken in at
-the stern, the lading was sliding backwards, and every thing indicated
-that the rude craft was in momentary danger of breaking in two, or
-sinking outright. But Abe suggested some unheard-of expedient for
-keeping it in place while the cargo was shifted to a borrowed boat, and
-then, boring a hole in that part of the bottom extending over the dam,
-he "rigged up" an equally strange piece of machinery for tilting and
-holding it while the water ran out. All New Salem was assembled on
-shore, watching the progress of this singular experiment,--and with one
-voice affirm that Abe saved the boat; although nobody is able to tell
-us precisely how.1 The adventure turned Abe's thoughts to the class of
-difficulties, one of which he had just surmounted; and the result of his
-reflections was "an improved method for lifting vessels over shoals."2
-Offutt declared that when he got back from New Orleans, he would build a
-steamboat for the navigation of the Sangamon, and make Abe the captain;
-he would build it with runners for ice, and rollers for shoals and dams,
-for with "Abe in command, by thunder, she'd have to go."
-
- 1 Many persons at New Salem describe in full Abe's conduct
- on this occasion.
-
- 2 "Occupying an ordinary and commonplace position in one of
- the show-cases in the targe hall of the Patent Office, is
- one little model which, in ages to come, will be prized as
- at once one of the most curious and one of the most sacred
- relics in that vast museum of unique and priceless things.
- This is a plain and simple model of a steamboat, roughly
- fashioned in wood, by the hand of Abraham Lincoln. It bears
- date in 1849, when the inventor was known simply as a
- successful lawyer and rising politician of Central Illinois.
- Neither his practice nor his politics took up so much of his
- time as to prevent him from giving much attention to
- contrivances which he hoped might be of benefit to the
- world, and of profit to himself.
-
- "The design of this invention is suggestive of one phase of
- Abraham Lincoln's early life, when he went up and down the
- Mississippi as a flat-boatman, and became familiar with some
- of the dangers and inconveniences attending the navigation
- of the Western rivers. It is an attempt to make it an easy
- matter to transport vessels over shoals and snags, and
- sawyers. The main idea is that of an apparatus resembling a
- noiseless bellows, placed on each side of the hull of the
- craft, just below the water-line, and worked by an odd but
- not complicated system of ropes, valves, and pulleys. When
- the keel of the vessel grates against the sand or
- obstruction, these bellows are to be filled with air; and,
- thus buoyed up, the ship is expected to float lightly and
- gayly over the shoal, which would otherwise have proved a
- serious interruption to her voyage.
-
- "The model, which is about eighteen or twenty inches long,
- and has the air of having been whittled with a knife out of
- a shingle and a cigar-box, is built without any elaboration
- or ornament, or any extra apparatus beyond that necessary to
- show the operation of buoying the steamer over the
- obstructions. Herein it differs from very many of the models
- which share with it the shelter of the immense halls of the
- Patent Office, and which are fashioned with wonderful nicety
- and exquisite finish, as if much of the labor and thought
- and affection of a lifetime had been devoted to their
- construction. This is a model of a different kind; carved as
- one might imagine a retired rail-splitter would whittle,
- strongly, but not smoothly, and evidently made with a view
- solely to convey, by the simplest possible means, to the
- minds of the patent authorities, an idea of the purpose and
- plan of the simple invention. The label on the steamer's
- deck informs us that the patent was obtained; but we do not
- learn that the navigation of the Western rivers was
- revolutionized by this quaint conception. The modest little
- model has reposed here sixteen years; and, since it found
- its resting-place here on the shelf, the shrewd inventor has
- found it his task to guide the Ship of State over shoals
- more perilous, and obstructions more obstinate, than any
- prophet dreamed of when Abraham Lincoln wrote his bold
- autograph on the prow of this miniature steamer."--
- Correspondent Boston Advertiser.
-
-Over the dam, and in the deep pool beyond, they reloaded, and floated
-down to Blue Bank, a mile above the mouth of Salt Creek, where Offutt
-bought some more hogs. But the hogs were wild, and refused to be driven.
-Abe again came to the rescue; and, by his advice, their eyes were sewed
-up with a needle and thread, so that, if the animals fought any more,
-they should do it in the dark. Abe held their heads, and John Hanks
-their tails, while Offutt did the surgery. They were then thrown into a
-cart, whence Abe took them, one by one, in his great arms, and deposited
-them on board.
-
-[Illustration: Mr. Lincoln as a Flatboatman 108]
-
-From this point they sped very rapidly down the Sangamon and the
-Illinois. Having constructed curious-looking sails of plank, "and
-sometimes cloth," they were a "sight to see," as they "rushed through
-Beardstown," where "the people came out and laughed at them." They swept
-by Alton and Cairo, and other considerable places, without tying up, but
-stopped at Memphis, Vicksburg, and Natchez.
-
-In due time they arrived at New Orleans. "There it was," says John
-Hanks, "we saw negroes chained, maltreated, whipped, and scourged.
-Lincoln saw it; his heart bled, said nothing much, was silent from
-feeling, was sad, looked bad, felt bad, was thoughtful and abstracted.
-I can say, knowing it, that it was on this trip that he formed his
-opinions of slavery. It run its iron in him then and there,--May, 1831.
-I have heard him say so often and often."
-
-Some time in June the party took passage on a steamboat going up the
-river, and remained together until they reached St. Louis, where Offutt
-left them, and Abe, Hanks, and Johnston started on foot for the interior
-of Illinois. At Edwardsville, twenty-five miles out, Hanks took the road
-to Springfield, and Abe and Johnston took that to Coles County, where
-Tom Lincoln had moved since Abraham's departure from home.
-
-Abe never worked again in company with his friend and relative, good
-old John Hanks. Here their paths separated: Abe's began to ascend the
-heights, while John's continued along the common level. They were in the
-Black Hawk War during the same campaign, but not in the same division.
-But they corresponded, and, from 1833, met at least once a year, until
-Abe was elected President. Then Abe, delighting to honor those of his
-relatives who were worthy of it, invited John to go with him to see
-his step-mother. John also went to the inauguration at Washington, and
-tells, with pardonable pride, how he "was in his [Abe's] rooms several
-times." He then retired to his old home in Macon County, until the
-assassination and the great funeral, when he came to Springfield to look
-in the blackened face of his old friend, and witness the last ceremonies
-of his splendid burial.
-
-Scarcely had Abe reached Coles County, and begun to think what next to
-turn his hand to, when he received a visit from a famous wrestler, one
-Daniel Needham, who regarded him as a growing rival, and had a fancy
-to try him a fall or two. He considered himself "the best man" in the
-country, and the report of Abe's achievements filled his big breast with
-envious pains. His greeting was friendly and hearty, but his challenge
-was rough and peremptory. Abe valued his popularity among "the boys"
-too highly to decline it, and met him by public appointment in the
-"greenwood," at Wabash Point, where he threw him twice with so much ease
-that Needham's pride was more hurt than his body. "Lincoln," said he,
-"you have thrown me twice, but you can't whip me."--"Needham," replied
-Abe, "are you satisfied that I can throw you? If you are not, and must
-be convinced through a threshing, I will do that, too, for your sake."
-Needham had hoped that the youngster would shrink from the extremity
-of a fight with the acknowledged "bully of the patch;" but finding him
-willing, and at the same time magnanimously inclined to whip him solely
-for his _own good_, he concluded that a bloody nose and a black
-eye would be the reverse of soothing to his feelings, and therefore
-surrendered the field with such grace as he could command.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-ON the west bank of the Sangamon River, twenty miles north-west of
-Springfield, a traveller on his way to Havana will ascend a bluff one
-hundred feet higher than the low-water mark of the stream. On the summit
-he Will find a solitary log-hut. The back-bone of the ridge is about two
-hundred and fifty feet broad where it overlooks the river; but it widens
-gradually as it extends westerly toward the remains of an old forest,
-until it terminates in a broad expanse of meadow. On either side of this
-hill, and skirting its feet north and south, run streams of water in
-very deep channels, and tumble into the Sangamon almost within hearing.
-The hill, or more properly the bluff, rises from the river in an almost
-perpendicular ascent. "There is an old mill at the foot of the bluff,
-driven by water-power. The river washes the base of the bluff for about
-four hundred yards, the hill breaking off almost abruptly at the north.
-The river along this line runs about due north: it strikes the bluff
-coming around a sudden bend from the south-east, the river being checked
-and turned by the rocky hill. The mill-dam running across the Sangamon
-River just at the mill checks the rapidity of the water. It was here,
-and on this dam, that Mr. Lincoln's flatboat 'stuck on the 19th of
-April, 1831.' The dam is about eight feet high, and two hundred and
-twenty feet long, and, as the old Sangamon rolls her turbid waters over
-the dam, plunging them into the whirl and eddy beneath, the roar and
-hiss of waters, like the low, continuous, distant thunder, can be
-distinctly heard through the whole village, day and night, week-day and
-Sunday, spring and fall, or other high-water time. The river, at the
-base of the bluff, is about two hundred and fifty feet wide, the mill
-using up thirty feet, leaving the dam only about two hundred and twenty
-feet long."
-
-In every direction but the West, the country is broken into hills or
-bluffs, like the one we are attempting to describe, which are washed by
-the river, and the several streams that empty into it in the immediate
-vicinity. Looking across the river from bluff to bluff, the distance is
-about a thousand yards; while here and there, on both banks, are patches
-of rich alluvial bottom-lands, eight or nine hundred yards in width,
-enclosed on one side by the hills, and on the other by the river.
-The uplands of the eastern bank are covered with original forests of
-immemorial age; and, viewed from "Salem Hill," the eye ranges over a
-vast expanse of green foliage, the monotony of which is relieved by the
-alternating swells and depressions of the landscape.
-
-On the ridge of that hill, where the solitary cabin now stands, there
-was a few years ago a pleasant village. How it vanished like a mist of
-the morning, to what distant places its inhabitants dispersed, and what
-became of the dwellings they left behind, shall be questions for the
-local antiquarian. We have no concern with any part of the history,
-except that part which began in the summer of 1831 and ended in
-1837,--the period during which it had the honor of sheltering a man
-whose enduring fame contrasts strangely with the evanescence of the
-village itself.
-
-[Illustration: Map of New Salem 115]
-
-In 1829 James Rutledge and John Cameron built the mill on the Sangamon,
-and laid off the town on the hill. The place was then called Cameron's
-Mill; but in process of time, as cabins, stores, and groceries were
-added, it was dignified by the name of New Salem. "I claim," says one of
-the gentlemen who established the first store, "to be the explorer and
-discoverer of New Salem as a business point. Mr. Hill (now dead) and
-myself purchased some goods at Cincinnati, and shipped them to St.
-Louis, whence I set out on a voyage of discovery on the prairies of
-Illinois.... I, however, soon came across a noted character who lives in
-this vicinity, by the name of Thomas Wadkins, who set forth the beauties
-and other advantages of Cameron's Mill, as it was then called. I
-accordingly came home with him, visited the locality, contracted for
-the erection of a magnificent storehouse for the sum of fifteen dollars;
-and, after passing a night in the prairie, reached St. Louis in safety.
-Others soon followed."
-
-In 1836 New Salem contained about twenty houses, inhabited by nearly
-a hundred people; but in 1831 there could not have been more than
-two-thirds or three-fourths that number. Many of the houses cost not
-more than ten dollars, and none of them more than one hundred dollars.
-
-When the news flew through the country that the mill-dam was broken, the
-people assembled from far and near, and made a grand frolic of mending
-it. In like manner, when a new settler arrived, and the word passed
-around that he wanted to put up a house, everybody came in to the
-"raising;" and, after behaving like the best of good Samaritans to the
-new neighbor, they drank whiskey, ran foot-races, wrestled, fought, and
-went home.
-
-"I first knew this hill, or bluff," says Mr. Herndon, in his remarkable
-lecture on Ann Rutledge, "as early as 1829. I have seen it in
-spring-time and winter, in summer-time and fall. I have seen it in
-daylight and night-time; have seen it when the sward was green, living,
-and vital; and I have seen it wrapped in snow, frost, and sleet. I have
-closely studied it for more than five long years....
-
-"As I sat on the verge of the town, in presence of its ruins, I called
-to mind the street running east and west through the village, the river
-eastward; Green's Rocky Branch, with its hills, southward; Clary's
-Grove, westerly about three miles; Petersburg northward, and Springfield
-south-east; and now I cannot exclude from my memory or imagination the
-forms, faces, voices, and features of those I once knew so well. In my
-imagination the village perched on the hill is astir with the hum of
-busy men, and the sharp, quick buzz of women; and from the country come
-men and women on foot or on horseback, to see and be seen, to hear and
-to be heard, to barter and exchange what they have with the merchant and
-the laborer. There are Jack Armstrong and William Green, Kelso and
-Jason Duncan, Alley and Carman, Hill and McNamar, Herndon and Rutledge,
-Warburton and Sincho, Bale and Ellis, Abraham and Ann. Oh, what a
-history!"
-
-In those days, which in the progressive West would be called ancient
-days, New Salem was in Sangamon County, with Springfield as the
-county-seat. Springfield itself was still a mere village, having a
-population of one thousand, or perhaps eleven hundred. The capital of
-the State was yet at Vandalia, and waited for the parliamentary tact of
-Abraham Lincoln and the "long nine" to bring it to Springfield. The
-same influence, which, after long struggles, succeeded in removing the
-capital, caused the new County of Menard to be erected out of Sangamon
-in 1839, of which Petersburg was made the county-seat, and within which
-is included the barren site of New Salem.
-
-In July or August, 1831, Mr. Lincoln made his second appearance at New
-Salem. He was again in company with Denton Offutt, who had collected
-some goods at Beardstown, and now proposed to bring them to this place.
-Mr. Lincoln undoubtedly came there in the service of Offutt, but whilst
-the goods were being transported from Beardstown he seemed to be idling
-about without any special object in view. Many persons who saw him then
-for the first time speak of him as "doing nothing." He has given some
-encouragement to this idea himself by the manner in which he habitually
-spoke of his advent there,--describing himself as coming down the river
-after the winter of the deep snow, like a piece of "floating driftwood"
-borne along by the freshet, and accidentally lodged at New Salem.
-
-On the day of the election, in the month of August, as Minter Graham,
-the school-teacher, tells us, Abe was seen loitering about the
-polling-place. It must have been but a few days after his arrival in the
-town, for nobody knew that he could write. They were "short of a clerk"
-at the polls; and, after casting about in vain for some one competent to
-fill the office, it occurred to one of the judges that perhaps the tall
-stranger possessed the needful qualifications. He thereupon accosted
-him, and asked if he could write. He replied, "Yes, a little."--"Will
-you act as clerk of the election today?" said the judge. "I will try,"
-returned Abe, "and do the best I can, if you so request." He did try
-accordingly, and, in the language of the schoolmaster, "performed the
-duties with great facility, much fairness and honesty and impartiality.
-This was the first public official act of his life. I clerked with him,"
-says Mr. Graham, swelling with his theme, "on the same day and at the
-same polls. The election-books are now in the city of Springfield, Ill.,
-where they can be seen and inspected any day."
-
-Whilst Abe was "doing nothing," or, in other words, waiting for Offutt's
-goods, one Dr. Nelson, a resident of New Salem, built a flatboat, and,
-placing his family and effects upon it, started for Texas. But as the
-Sangamon was a turbulent and treacherous stream at best, and its banks
-were now full to overflowing, Nelson needed a pilot, at least as far as
-Beardstown.
-
-His choice fell upon Abe, who took him to the mouth of the doubtful
-river in safety, although Abe often declared that he occasionally ran
-out into the prairie at least three miles from the channel. Arriving at
-Beardstown, Nelson pushed on down the Illinois, and Abe walked back to
-New Salem.
-
-The second storekeeper at New Salem was a Mr. George Warburton; but,
-"the country not having improved his morals in the estimation of his
-friends," George thought it advisable to transfer his storeroom and the
-remnant of his stock to Offutt. In the mean time, Offutt's long-expected
-goods were received from Beardstown. Abe unpacked them, ranged them on
-the shelves, rolled the barrels and kegs into their places, and,
-being provided with a brand-new book, pen, and ink, found himself duly
-installed as "first clerk" of the principal mercantile house in
-New Salem. A country store is an indescribable collection of
-miscellanies,--groceries, drygoods, hardware, earthenware, and
-stoneware, cups and saucers, plates and dishes, coffee and tea, sugar
-and molasses, boots and shoes, whiskey and lead, butter and eggs,
-tobacco and gunpowder, with an endless list of things unimaginable
-except by a housewife or a "merchant." Such was the store to the charge
-of which Abe was now promoted,--promoted from the rank of a common
-laborer to be a sort of brevet clerk.
-
-But Offutt's ideas of commerce were very comprehensive; and, as "his
-business was already considerably scattered about the country," he
-thought he would scatter a little more. He therefore rented the mill
-at the foot of the hill, from Cameron and Rutledge, and set Abe to
-overlooking that as well as the store. This increase of business,
-however, required another clerk, and in a few days Abe was given a
-companion in the person of W. G. Green. They slept together on the same
-cot in the store; and as Mr. Green observes, by way of indicating the
-great intimacy that subsisted between them, "when one turned over, the
-other had to do so likewise." To complete his domestic arrangements, Abe
-followed the example of Mr. Offutt, and took boarding at John Cameron's,
-one of the owners of the mill.
-
-Mr. Offutt is variously, though not differently, described as a "wild,
-harum-scarum, reckless fellow;" a "gusty, windy, brain-rattling man;"
-a "noisy, unsteady, fussy, rattlebrained man, wild and improvident."
-If anybody can imagine the character indicated by these terms, he can
-imagine Mr. Offutt,--Abe's employer, friend, and patron. Since the trip
-on the flatboat, his admiration for Abe had grown to be boundless. He
-now declared that "Abe knew more than any man in the United States;"
-that "he would some day be President of the United States," and that he
-could, at that present moment, outrun, whip, or throw down any man in
-Sangamon County. These loud boasts were not wasted on the desert air:
-they were bad seed sown in a rank soil, and speedily raised up a crop
-of sharp thorns for both Abe and Offutt. At New Salem, honors such as
-Offutt accorded to Abe were to be won before they were worn.
-
-Bill Clary made light of Offutt's opinion respecting Abe's prowess;
-and one day, when the dispute between them had been running high in the
-store, it ended by a bet of ten dollars on the part of Clary that
-Jack Armstrong was "a better man." Now, "Jack was a powerful twister,"
-"square built, and strong as an ox." He had, besides, a great backing;
-for he was the chief of the "Clary's Grove boys," and the Clary's Grove
-boys were the terror of the countryside. Although there never was under
-the sun a more generous parcel of ruffians than those over whom
-Jack held sway, a stranger's introduction was likely to be the most
-unpleasant part of his acquaintance with them. In fact, one of the
-objects of their association was to "initiate or naturalize new-comers,"
-as they termed the amiable proceedings which they took by way of
-welcoming any one ambitious of admittance to the society of New Salem.
-They first bantered the gentleman to run a foot-race, jump, pitch the
-mall, or wrestle; and, if none of these propositions seemed agreeable
-to him, they would request to know what he would do in case another
-gentleman should pull his nose, or squirt tobacco-juice in his face. If
-he did not seem entirely decided in his views as to what should properly
-be done in such a contingency, perhaps he would be nailed in a hogshead,
-and rolled down New-Salem hill; perhaps his ideas would be brightened by
-a brief ducking in the Sangamon; or perhaps he would be scoffed, kicked,
-and cuffed by a great number of persons in concert, until he reached the
-confines of the village, and then turned adrift as being unfit company
-for the people of that settlement. If, however, the stranger consented
-to engage in a tussle with one of his persecutors, it was usually
-arranged that there should be "foul play," with nameless impositions
-and insults, which would inevitably change the affair into a fight; and
-then, if the subject of all these practices proved indeed to be a man
-of mettle, he would be promptly received into "good society," and in all
-probability would never have better friends on earth than the roystering
-fellows who had contrived his torments.
-
-Thus far Abe had managed to escape "initiation" at the hands of Jack
-and his associates. They were disposed to like him, and to take him on
-faith, or at least to require no further evidence of his manhood than
-that which rumor had already brought them. Offutt, with his busy tongue,
-had spread wide the report of his wondrous doings on the river; and,
-better still, all New Salem, including many of the "Clary's Grove boys,"
-had witnessed his extraordinary feats of strength and ingenuity
-at Rutledge's mill-dam. It was clear that no particular person was
-"spoiling" for a collision with him; and an exception to the rule might
-have been made in his favor, but for the offensive zeal and confidence
-of his employer.
-
-The example of Offutt and Clary was followed by all the "boys;" and
-money, knives, whiskey, and all manner of things, were staked on the
-result of the wrestle. The little community was excited throughout, and
-Jack's partisans were present in great numbers; while Offutt and Bill
-Green were about the only persons upon whom Abe could rely if the
-contest should take the usual turn, and end in a fight. For these, and
-many other reasons, he longed to be safely and honorably out of the
-scrape; but Offutt's folly had made it impossible for him to evade the
-conflict without incurring the imputation, and suffering the penalties,
-of cowardice. He said, "I never tussle and scuffle, and I will not: I
-don't like this wooling and pulling." But these scruples only served
-to aggravate his case; and he was at last forced to take hold of Jack,
-which he did with a will and power that amazed the fellows who had at
-last baited him to the point of indignation. They took "side holds," and
-stood struggling, each with tremendous but equal strength, for several
-minutes, without any perceptible advantage to either. New trips
-or unexpected twists were of no avail between two such experienced
-wrestlers as these. Presently Abe profited by his height and the length
-of his arms to lift Jack clear off the ground, and, swinging him about,
-thought to land him on his back; but this feat was as futile as the
-rest, and left Jack standing as square and as firm as ever. "Now, Jack,"
-said Abe, "let's quit: you can't throw me, and I can't throw you." But
-Jack's partisans, regarding this overture as a signal of the enemy's
-distress, and being covetous of jack-knives, whiskey, and "smooth
-quarters," cheered him on to greater exertions. Rendered desperate by
-these expectations of his friends, and now enraged at meeting more than
-his match, Jack resolved on "a foul," and, breaking holds, he essayed
-the unfair and disreputable expedient of "legging." But at this Abe's
-prudence deserted him, and righteous wrath rose to the ascendent. The
-astonished spectators saw him take their great bully by the throat, and,
-holding him out at arm's-length, shake him like a child. Then a score
-or two of the boys cried "Fight!" Bill Clary claimed the stakes, and
-Offutt, in the fright and confusion, was about to yield them; but
-"Lincoln said they had not won the money, and they should not have it;
-and, although he was opposed to fighting, if nothing else would do
-them, he would fight Armstrong, Clary, or any of the set." Just at this
-juncture James Rutledge, the original proprietor of New Salem, and a
-man of some authority, "rushed into the crowd," and exerted himself to
-maintain the peace. He succeeded; but for a few moments a general fight
-was impending, and Abe was seen with his back against Offutt's store
-"undismayed" and "resolute," although surrounded by enemies.1
-
- 1 Of the fight and what followed, we have the particulars
- from many persons who were witnesses.
-
-Jack Armstrong was no bad fellow, after all. A sort of Western John
-Browdie, stout and rough, but great-hearted, honest, and true: his big
-hand, his cabin, his table, and his purse were all at the disposal of
-a friend in need. He possessed a rude sense of justice, and felt an
-incredible respect for a man who would stand single-handed, stanch, and
-defiant, in the midst of persecutors and foes. He had never disliked
-Abe, and had, in fact, looked for very clever things from him, even
-before his title to respectability had been made so incontestably clear;
-but his exhibition of pluck and muscle on this occasion excited Jack to
-a degree of admiration far beyond his power to conceal it. Abe's hand
-was hardly removed from his throat, when he was ready to grasp it in
-friendship, and swear brotherhood and peace between them. He declared
-him, on the spot, "the best fellow that ever broke into their
-settlement;" and henceforth the empire was divided, and Jack and Abe
-reigned like two friendly Caesars over the roughs and bullies of New
-Salem. If there were ever any dissensions between them, it was because
-Jack, in the abundance of his animal spirits, was sometimes inclined
-to be an oppressor, whilst Abe was ever merciful and kind; because Jack
-would occasionally incite the "boys" to handle a stranger, a witless
-braggart, or a poor drunkard with a harshness that shocked the just and
-humane temper of his friend, who was always found on the side of the
-weak and the unfortunate. On the whole, however, the harmony that
-subsisted between them was wonderful. Wherever Lincoln worked, Jack "did
-his loafing;" and, when Lincoln was out of work, he spent days and weeks
-together at Jack's cabin, where Jack's jolly wife, "old Hannah," stuffed
-him with bread and honey, laughed at his ugliness, and loved him for his
-goodness.
-
-Abe rapidly grew in favor with the people in and around New Salem, until
-nearly everybody thought quite as much of him as Mr. Offutt did. He was
-decidedly the most popular man that ever lived there. He could do more
-to quell a riot, compromise a feud; and keep peace among the neighbors
-generally, than any one else; and these were of the class of duties
-which it appears to have been the most agreeable for him to perform. One
-day a strange man came into the settlement, and was straightway beset
-by the same fellows who had meditated a drubbing for Abe himself. Jack
-Armstrong, of course, "had a difficulty with him;" "called him a liar,
-coward," and various other names not proper for print; but the man,
-finding himself taken at a disadvantage, "backed up to a woodpile," got
-a stick, and "struck Jack a blow that brought him to the ground." Being
-"as strong as two men, Jack wanted to whip the man badly," but Abe
-interfered, and, managing to have himself made "arbitrator," compromised
-the difficulty by a practical application of the golden rule. "Well,
-Jack," said he, "what did you say to the man?" Whereupon Jack repeated
-his words. "Well, Jack," replied Abe, "if you were a stranger in a
-strange place, as this man is, and you were called a d--d liar, &c.,
-what would you do?"--"Whip him, by God!"--"Then this man has done no
-more to you than you would have done to him."--"Well, Abe," said the
-honest bruiser, "it's all right," and, taking his opponent by the hand,
-forgave him heartily, and "treated." Jack always treated his victim when
-he thought he had been too hard upon him.
-
-Abe's duties in Offutt's store were not of a character to monopolize
-the whole of his time,1 and he soon began to think that here was a fine
-opportunity to remedy some of the defects in his education.
-
- 1 "During the time he was working for Offutt, and hands
- being scarce, Lincoln turned In and cut down trees, and
- split enough rails for Offutt to make a pen sufficiently
- large to contain a thousand hogs. The pen was built under
- New Salem hill, close to the mill.... I know where those
- rails are now; are sound to-day."--Minter Graham
-
-He could read, write, and cipher as well as most men; but as his
-popularity was growing daily, and his ambition keeping pace, he feared
-that he might shortly be called to act in some public capacity which
-would require him to speak his own language with some regard to the
-rules of the grammar,--of which, according to his own confession,
-he knew nothing at all. He carried his troubles to the schoolmaster,
-saying, "I have a notion to study English grammar."--"If you expect to
-go before the public in any capacity," replied Mr. Graham, "I think it
-the best thing you can do."--"If I had a grammar," replied Abe, "I would
-commence now." There was no grammar to be had about New Salem; but the
-schoolmaster, having kept the run of that species of property, gladdened
-Abe's heart by telling him that he knew where there was one. Abe rose
-from the breakfast at which he was sitting, and learning that the book
-was at Vaner's, only six miles distant, set off after it as hard as
-he could tramp. It seemed to Mr. Graham a very little while until he
-returned and announced, with great pleasure, that he had it. "He then
-turned his immediate and most undivided attention" to the study of it.
-Sometimes, when business was not particularly brisk, he would lie under
-a shade-tree in front of the store, and pore over the book; at other
-times a customer would find him stretched on the counter intently
-engaged in the same way. But the store was a bad place for study; and he
-was often seen quietly slipping out of the village, as if he wished to
-avoid observation, when, if successful in getting off alone, he would
-spend hours in the woods, "mastering a book," or in a state of profound
-abstraction. He kept up his old habit of sitting up late at night; but,
-as lights were as necessary to his purpose as they were expensive, the
-village cooper permitted him to sit in his shop, where he burnt the
-shavings, and kept a blazing fire to read by, when every one else was in
-bed. The Greens lent him books; the schoolmaster gave him instructions
-in the store, on the road, or in the meadows: every visitor to New Salem
-who made the least pretension to scholarship was waylaid by Abe, and
-required to explain something which he could not understand. The result
-of it all was, that the village and the surrounding country wondered at
-his growth in knowledge, and he soon became as famous for the goodness
-of his understanding as for the muscular power of his body, and the
-unfailing humor of his talk.
-
-Early in the spring of 1832, some enterprising gentlemen at Springfield
-determined to try whether the Sangamon was a navigable stream or not. It
-was a momentous question to the dwellers along the banks; and, when the
-steamboat "Talisman" was chartered to make the experiment, the popular
-excitement was intense, and her passage up and down was witnessed by
-great concourses of people on either bank. It was thought that Abe's
-experience on this particular river would render his assistance
-very valuable; and, in company with some others, he was sent down to
-Beardstown, to meet the "Talisman," and pilot her up. With Abe at the
-helm, she ran with comparative ease and safety as far as the New-Salem
-dam, a part of which they were compelled to tear away in order to let
-the steamer through. Thence she went on as high as Bogue's mill; but,
-having reached that point, the rapidly-falling water admonished her
-captain and pilots, that, unless they wished her to be left there for
-the season, they must promptly turn her prow down stream. For some time,
-on the return trip, she made not more than three or four miles a day,
-"on account of the high wind from the prairie." "I was sent for, being
-an old boatman," says J. R. Herndon, "and I met her some twelve or
-thirteen miles above New Salem.... We got to Salem the second day after
-I went on board. When we struck the dam, she hung. We then backed off,
-and threw the anchor over the dam, and tore away a part of the dam, and,
-raising steam, ran her over the first trial. As soon as she was over,
-the company that chartered her was done with her. I think the captain
-gave Mr. Lincoln forty dollars to run her down to Beardstown. I am sure
-I got forty dollars to continue on her until we landed at Beardstown. We
-that went down with her walked back to New Salem."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-IN the spring of 1832, Mr. Offutt's business had gone to ruin: the store
-was sold out, the mill was handed over to its owners, Mr. Offutt himself
-departed for parts unknown, and his "head clerk" was again out of work.
-Just about that time a governor's proclamation arrived, calling for
-volunteers to meet the famous chief Black Hawk and his warriors, who
-were preparing for a grand, and, in all likelihood, a bloody foray, into
-their old hunting-grounds in the Rock-river country.
-
-[Illustration: Black Hawk, Indian Chief 128]
-
-Black Hawk was a large Indian, of powerful frame and commanding
-presence. He was a soldier and a statesman. The history of his diplomacy
-with the tribes he sought to confederate shows that he expected to
-realize on a smaller scale the splendid plans of Pontiac and Tecumseh.
-In his own tongue he was eloquent, and dreamed dreams which, amongst the
-Indians, passed for prophecy. The prophet is an indispensable personage
-in any comprehensive scheme of Indian politics, and no chief has ever
-effected a combination of formidable strength without his aid. In the
-person of Black Hawk, the chief and the prophet were one. His power in
-both capacities was bent toward a single end,--the great purpose of his
-life,--the recovery of his birthplace and the ancient home of his people
-from the possession of the stranger.
-
-Black Hawk was born on the Rock River in Wisconsin, in the year 1767.
-His grandfather lived near Montreal, whence his father Pyesa had
-emigrated, but not until he had become thoroughly British in his views
-and feelings. All his life long he made annual journeys to the councils
-of the tribes at Malden, where the gifts and persuasions of British
-agents confirmed him in his inclination to the British interests. When
-Pyesa was gathered to his fathers, his son took his place as the chief
-of the Sacs, hated the Americans, loved the friendly English, and went
-yearly to Malden, precisely as he thought Pyesa would have had him do.
-But Black Hawk's mind was infinitely superior to Pyesa's: his sentiments
-were loftier, his heart more susceptible; he had the gift of the seer,
-the power of the orator, with the high courage and the profound policy
-of a born warrior and a natural ruler. He "had brooded over the early
-history of his tribe; and to his views, as he looked down the vista of
-years, the former times seemed so much better than the present, that the
-vision wrought upon his susceptible imagination, which pictured it to be
-the Indian golden age. He had some remembrance of a treaty made by Gen.
-Harrison in 1804, to which his people had given their assent; and his
-feelings were with difficulty controlled, when he was required to leave
-the Rock-river Valley, in compliance with a treaty made with Gen. Scott.
-That valley, however, he peacefully abandoned with his tribe, on being
-notified, and went to the west of the Mississippi; but he had spent
-his youth in that locality, and the more he thought of it, the more
-determined he was to return thither. He readily enlisted the sympathies
-of the Indians, who are ever prone to ponder on their real or imaginary
-wrongs; and it may be readily conjectured that what Indian counsel could
-not accomplish, Indian prophecy would."1 He had moved when summoned to
-move, because he was then unprepared to fight; but he utterly denied
-that the chiefs who seemed to have ceded the lands long years before had
-any right to cede them, or that the tribe had ever willingly given up
-the country to the stranger and the aggressor. It was a fraud upon the
-simple Indians: the old treaty was a great lie, and the signatures
-it purported to have, made with marks and primitive devices, were not
-attached in good faith, and were not the names of honest Sacs. No: he
-would go over the river, he would have his own; the voice of the Great
-Spirit was in the air wherever he went; it was in his lodge through all
-the night-time, and it said "Go;" and Black Hawk must needs rise up and
-tell the people what the voice said.
-
- 1 Schoolcraft's History of the Indian Tribes.
-
-It was by such arguments as these that Black Hawk easily persuaded the
-Sacs. But hostilities by the Sacs alone would be a hopeless adventure.
-He must find allies. He looked first to their kindred, the Foxes, who
-had precisely the same cause of war with the Sacs, and after them to the
-Winnebagoes, Sioux, Kickapoos, and many others. That Black Hawk was
-a wise and valiant leader, all the Indians conceded; and his proposals
-were heard by some of the tribes with eagerness, and by all of them with
-respect. At one time his confederacy embraced nine tribes,--the most
-formidable in the North-west, if we exclude the Sioux and the Chippewas,
-who were themselves inclined to accede. Early in 1831, the first chief
-of the Chippewas exhibited a miniature tomahawk, red with vermilion,
-which, having been accepted from Black Hawk, signified an alliance
-between them; and away up at Leech. Lake, an obscure but numerous band
-showed some whites a few British medals painted in imitation of blood,
-which meant that they were to follow the war-paths of Black Hawk.
-
-In 1831 Black Hawk had crossed the river in small force, but had retired
-before the advance of Gen. Gaines, commanding the United States post at
-Rock Island. He then promised to remain on the other side, and to keep
-quiet for the future. But early in the spring of 1832 he re-appeared
-with greater numbers, pushed straight into the Rock-river Valley, and
-said he had "come to plant corn." He was now sixty-seven years of age:
-he thought his great plots were all ripe, and his allies fast and true.
-They would fight a few bloody battles, and then he would sit down in his
-old age and see the corn grow where he had seen it in his youth. But the
-old chief reckoned too much upon Indian fidelity: he committed the fatal
-error of trusting to their patriotism instead of their interests. Gen.
-Atkinson, now in command at Rock Island, set the troops in motion: the
-governor issued his call for volunteers; and, as the Indians by this
-time had committed some frightful barbarities, the blood of the settlers
-was boiling, and the regiments were almost instantly filled with the
-best possible material. So soon as these facts became known, the allies
-of Black Hawk, both the secret and the open, fell away from him, and
-left him, with the Sacs and the Foxes, to meet his fate.
-
-In the mean time Lincoln had enlisted in a company from Sangamon. He had
-not been out in the campaign of the previous year, but told his friend
-Row Herndon, that, if he had not been down the river with Offutt,
-he would certainly have been with the boys in the field. But,
-notwithstanding his want of military experience, his popularity was
-so great, that he had been elected captain of a militia company on the
-occasion of a muster at Clary's Grove the fall before. He was absent at
-the time, but thankfully accepted and served. Very much to his surprise,
-his friends put him up for the captaincy of this company about to enter
-active service. They did not organize at home, however, but marched
-first to Beardstown, and then to Rushville in Schuyler County, where the
-election took place. Bill Kirkpatrick was a candidate against Lincoln,
-but made a very sorry showing. It has been said that Lincoln once worked
-for Kirkpatrick as a common laborer, and suffered some indignities
-at his hands; but the story as a whole is supported by no credible
-testimony. It is certain, however, that the planks for the boat built by
-Abe and his friends at the mouth of Spring Creek were sawed at the mill
-of a Mr. Kirkpatrick. It was then, likely enough, that Abe fell in the
-way of this man, and learned to dislike him. At all events, when he had
-distanced Kirkpatrick, and was chosen his captain by the suffrages of
-men who had been intimate with Kirkpatrick long before they had ever
-heard of Abe, he spoke of him spitefully, and referred in no gentle
-terms to some old dispute. "Damn him," said he to Green, "I've beat him:
-he used me badly in our settlement for my toil."
-
-Capt. Lincoln now made a very modest speech to his comrades, reciting
-the exceeding gratification their partiality afforded him, how
-undeserved he thought it, and how wholly unexpected it was. In
-conclusion, "he promised very plainly that he would do the best he could
-to prove himself worthy of that confidence."
-
-The troops rendezvoused at Beardstown and Rushville were formed into
-four regiments and a spy battalion. Capt. Lincoln's company was attached
-to the regiment of Col. Samuel Thompson. The whole force was placed
-under the command of Gen. Whiteside, who was accompanied throughout the
-campaign by the governor in person.
-
-On the 27th of April, the army marched toward the mouth of Rock River,
-by way of Oquaka on the Mississippi. The route was one of difficulty and
-danger, a great part of it lying through a country largely occupied
-by the enemy. The men were raw, and restive under discipline. In the
-beginning they had no more respect for the "rules and regulations" than
-for Solomon's Proverbs, or the Westminster Confession. Capt. Lincoln's
-company is said to have been a particularly "hard set of men," who
-recognized no power but his. They were fighting men, and but for his
-personal authority would have kept the camp in a perpetual uproar.
-
-At the crossing of Henderson River,--a stream about fifty yards wide,
-and eight or ten feet deep, with very precipitous banks,--they were
-compelled to make a bridge or causeway with timbers cut by the troops,
-and a filling-in of bushes, earth, or any other available material. This
-was the work of a day and night. Upon its completion, the horses and
-oxen were taken from the wagons, and the latter taken over by hand. But,
-when the horses came to cross, many of them were killed in sliding down
-the steep banks. "While in camp here," says a private in Capt. Lincoln's
-company, "a general order was issued prohibiting the discharge of
-fire-arms within fifty steps of the camp. Capt. Lincoln disobeyed the
-order by firing his pistol within ten steps of the camp, and for this
-violation of orders was put under arrest for that day, and his sword
-taken from him; but the next day his sword was restored, and nothing
-more was done in the matter."
-
-From Henderson River the troops marched to Yellow Banks, on the
-Mississippi. "While at this place," Mr. Ben F. Irwin says, "a
-considerable body of Indians of the Cherokee tribe came across the river
-from the Iowa side, with the white flag hoisted. These were the
-first Indians we saw. They were very friendly, and gave us a general
-war-dance. We, in return, gave them a Sucker ho-down. All enjoyed the
-sport, and it is safe to say no man enjoyed it more than Capt. Lincoln."
-
-From Yellow Banks, a rapid and exhaustive march of a few days brought
-the volunteers to the mouth of Rock River, where "it was agreed between
-Gen. Whiteside and Gen. Atkinson of the regulars, that the volunteers
-should march up Rock River, about fifty miles, to the Prophet's Town,
-and there encamp, to feed and rest their horses, and await the arrival
-of the regular troops, in keel-boats, with provisions. Judge William
-Thomas, who again acted as quartermaster to the volunteers, made an
-estimate of the amount of provisions required until the boats could
-arrive, which was supplied; and then Gen. Whiteside took up his line
-of march." 1 But Capt. Lincoln's company did not march on the present
-occasion with the alacrity which distinguished their comrades of other
-corps. The orderly sergeant attempted to "form company," but the company
-declined to be formed; the men, oblivious of wars and rumors of wars,
-mocked at the word of command, and remained between their blankets in
-a state of serene repose. For an explanation of these signs of passive
-mutiny, we must resort again to the manuscript of the private who gave
-the story of Capt. Lincoln's first arrest. "About the--of April, we
-reached the mouth of Rock River. About three or four nights afterwards,
-a man named Rial P. Green, commonly called 'Pot Green,' belonging to
-a Green-county company, came to oar company, and waked up the men, and
-proposed to them, that, if they would furnish him with a tomahawk and
-four buckets, he would get into the officers' liquors, and supply the
-men with wines and brandies. The desired articles were furnished him;
-and, with the assistance of one of our company, he procured the liquors.
-All this was entirely unknown to Capt. Lincoln. In the morning. Capt.
-Lincoln ordered his orderly to form company for parade; but when the
-orderly called the men to 'parade,' they called 'parade,' too, but
-couldn't fall into line. The most of the men were unmistakably drunk.
-The rest of the forces marched off, and left Capt. Lincoln's company
-behind. The company didn't make a start until about ten o'clock, and
-then, after marching about two miles, the drunken ones lay down and
-slept their drunk off. They overtook the forces that night. Capt.
-Lincoln was again put under arrest, and was obliged to carry a wooden
-sword for two days, and this although Capt. Lincoln was entirely
-blameless in the matter."
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois, chap. iv.
-
-When Gen. Whiteside reached Prophetstown, where he was to rest until
-the arrival of the regulars and the supplies, he disregarded the plan of
-operations concerted between him and Atkinson, and, burning the village
-to the ground, pushed on towards Dixon's Ferry, forty miles farther up
-the river. Nearing that place, he left his baggage-wagons behind: the
-men threw away their allotments of provisions, or left them with the
-wagons; and in that condition a forced march was made to Dixon. There
-Whiteside found two battalions of mounted men under Majors Stillman and
-Bailey, who clamored to be thrown forward, where they might get up an
-independent but glorious "brush" with the enemy on comparatively private
-account. The general had it not in his heart to deny these adventurous
-spirits, and they were promptly advanced to feel and disclose the Indian
-force supposed to be near at hand. Stillman accordingly moved up the
-bank of "Old Man's Creek" (since called "Stillman's Run"), to a point
-about twenty miles from Dixon, where, just before nightfall, he went
-into camp, or was about to do so, when several Indians were seen
-hovering along some raised ground nearly a mile distant. Straightway
-Stillman's gallant fellows remounted, one by one, or two and two, and,
-without officers or orders, galloped away in pursuit. The Indians first
-shook a red flag, and then dashed off at the top of their speed. Three
-of them were overtaken and killed: but the rest performed with perfect
-skill the errand upon which they were sent; they led Stillman's command
-into an ambuscade, where lay Black Hawk himself with seven hundred of
-his warriors. The pursuers recoiled, and rode for their lives: Black
-Hawk bore down upon Stillman's camp; the fugitives, streaming back with
-fearful cries respecting the numbers and ferocity of the enemy, spread
-consternation through the entire force. Stillman gave a hasty order
-to fall back; and the men fell back much faster and farther than he
-intended, for they never faced about, or so much as stopped, until they
-reached Whiteside's camp at Dixon. The first of them reached Dixon about
-twelve o'clock; and others came straggling in all night long and part of
-the next day, each party announcing themselves as the sole survivors
-of that stricken field, escaped solely by the exercise of miraculous
-valor.1
-
- 1 "It is said that a big, tall Kentuckian, with a very loud
- voice, who was a colonel of the militia, but a private with
- Stillman, upon his arrival in camp, gave to Gen. Whiteside
- and the wondering multitude the following glowing and
- bombastic account of the battle. 'Sirs,' said he, 'our
- detachment was encamped amongst some scattering timber on
- the north side of Old Man's Creek, with the prairie from the
- north gently sloping down to our encampment. It was just
- after twilight, in the gloaming of the evening, when we
- discovered Black Hawk's army coming down upon us in solid
- column: they displayed in the form of a crescent upon the
- brow of the prairie, and such accuracy and precision of
- military movements were never witnessed by man; they were
- equal to the best troops of Wellington in Spain. I have said
- that the Indians came down in solid column, and displayed in
- the form of a crescent; and, what was most wonderful, there
- were large squares of cavalry resting upon the points of the
- curve, which squares were supported again by other columns
- fifteen deep, extending back through the woods, and over a
- swamp three-quarters of a mile, which again rested upon the
- main body of Black Hawk's army bivouacked upon the banks of
- the Kishwakee. It was a terrible and a glorious sight to see
- the tawny warriors as they rode along our flanks attempting
- to outflank us with the glittering moonbeams glistening from
- their polished blades and burnished spears. It was a sight
- well calculated to strike consternation into the stoutest
- and boldest heart; and accordingly our men soon began to
- break in small squads for tall timber. In a very little time
- the rout became general. The Indians were on our flanks, and
- threatened the destruction of the entire detachment. About
- this time Major Stillman, Col. Stephenson, Major Perkins,
- Capt. Adams, Mr. Hackelton, and myself, with some others,
- threw ourselves into the rear to rally the fugitives and
- protect the retreat. But in A short time all my companions
- fell, bravely fighting hand to hand with the savage enemy,
- and I alone was left upon the field of battle. About this
- time I discovered not far to the left, a corps of horsemen
- which seemed to be in tolerable order. I immediately
- deployed to the left, when, leaning down and placing my body
- in a recumbent posture upon the mane of my horse, so as to
- bring the heads of the horsemen between my eye and the
- horizon, I discovered by the light of the moon that they
- were gentlemen who did not wear hats, by which token I knew
- they were no friends of mine. I therefore made a retrograde
- movement, and recovered my former position, where I remained
- some time, meditating what further I could do in the service
- of my country, when a random ball came whistling by my ear,
- and plainly whispered to me, "Stranger, you have no further
- business here." Upon hearing this, I followed the example of
- my companions in arms, and broke for tall timber, and the
- way I run was not a little, and quit.'
-
- "This colonel was a lawyer just returning from the circuit,
- with a slight wardrobe and 'Chitty's Pleadings' packed in
- his saddle-bags, all of which were captured by the Indians.
- He afterwards related, with much vexation, that Black Hawk
- had decked himself out in his finery, appearing in the woods
- amongst his savage companions dressed in one of the
- colonel's ruffled shirts drawn over his deer-skin leggings,
- with a volume of 'Chitty's Pleadings' under each arm."--
- Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-The affair is known to history as "Stillman's Defeat." "Old John Hanks"
-was in it, and speaks of it with shame and indignation, attributing the
-disaster to "drunken men, cowardice, and folly," though in this case
-we should be slow to adopt his opinion. Of folly, there was, no doubt,
-enough, both on the part of Whiteside and Stillman; but of drunkenness
-no public account makes any mention, and individual cowardice is never
-to be imputed to American troops. These men were as brave as any that
-ever wore a uniform, and some of them performed good service afterwards;
-but when they went into this action, they were "raw militia,"--a mere
-mob; and no mob can stand against discipline, even though it be but the
-discipline of the savage.
-
-The next day Whiteside moved with all possible celerity to the field
-of Stillman's disaster, and, finding no enemy, was forced to content
-himself with the melancholy duty of burying the mutilated and unsightly
-remains of the dead. All of them were scalped; some had their heads cut
-off, others had their throats cut, and others still were mangled and
-dishonored in ways too shocking to be told.
-
-The army was now suffering for want of provisions. The folly of the
-commander in casting off his baggage-train for the forced march on
-Dixon, the extravagance and improvidence of the men with their scanty
-rations, had exhausted the resources of the quartermasters, and, "except
-in the messes of the most careful and experienced," the camp was nearly
-destitute of food. "The majority had been living on parched corn and
-coffee for two or three days;" but, on the morning of the last march
-from Dixon, Quartermaster Thomas had succeeded in getting a little fresh
-beef from the only white inhabitant of that country, and this the men
-were glad to eat without bread. "I can truly say I was often hungry,"
-said Capt. Lincoln, reviewing the events of this campaign. He was,
-doubtless, as destitute and wretched as the rest, but he was patient,
-quiet, and resolute. Hunger brought with it a discontented and mutinous
-spirit. The men complained bitterly of all they had been made to endure,
-and clamored loudly for a general discharge. But Capt. Lincoln kept
-the "even tenor of his way;" and, when his regiment was disbanded,
-immediately enlisted as a private soldier in another company.
-
-From the battle-field Whiteside returned to his old camp at Dixon, but
-determined, before doing so, to make one more attempt to retrieve his
-ill-fortune. Black Hawk's pirogues were supposed to be lying a few miles
-distant, in a bend of the Rock River; and the capture of these would
-serve as some relief to the dreary series of errors and miscarriages
-which had hitherto marked the campaign. But Black Hawk had just been
-teaching him strategy in the most effective mode, and the present
-movement was undertaken with an excess of caution almost as ludicrous as
-Stillman's bravado. "To provide as well as might be against danger, one
-man was started at a time in the direction of the point. When he would
-get a certain distance, keeping in sight, a second would start, and so
-on, until a string of men extending five miles from the main army was
-made, each to look out for Indians, and give the sign to right, left, or
-front, by hanging a hat on a bayonet,--erect for the front, and right or
-left, as the case might be. To raise men to go ahead was with difficulty
-done, and some tried hard to drop back; but we got through safe, and
-found the place deserted, leaving plenty of Indian signs,--a dead dog
-and several scalps taken in Stillman's defeat, as we supposed them
-to have been taken." After this, the last of Gen. Whiteside's futile
-attempts, he returned to the battle-field, and thence to Dixon, where
-he was joined by Atkinson with the regulars and the long-coveted and
-much-needed supplies.
-
-One day, during these many marches and countermarches, an old Indian
-found his way into the camp, weary, hungry, and helpless. He professed
-to be a friend of the whites; and, although it was an exceedingly
-perilous experiment for one of his color, he ventured to throw himself
-upon the mercy of the soldiers. But the men first murmured, and then
-broke out into fierce cries for his blood. "We have come out to fight
-the Indians," said they, "and by God we intend to do it!" The poor
-Indian, now, in the extremity of his distress and peril, did what he
-ought to have done before: he threw down before his assailants a soiled
-and crumpled paper, which he implored them to read before his life was
-taken. It was a letter of character and safe-conduct from Gen. Cass,
-pronouncing him a faithful man, who had done good service in the cause
-for which this army was enlisted. But it was too late: the men refused
-to read it, or thought it a forgery, and were rushing with fury upon
-the defenceless old savage, when Capt. Lincoln bounded between them
-and their appointed victim. "Men," said he, and his voice for a moment
-stilled the agitation around him, "_this must not be done: he must not
-be shot and killed by us._"--"But," said some of them, "the Indian is a
-damned spy." Lincoln knew that his own life was now in only less danger
-than that of the poor creature that crouched behind him. During the
-whole of this scene Capt. Lincoln seemed to "rise to an unusual height"
-of stature. The towering form, the passion and resolution in his face,
-the physical power and terrible will exhibited in every motion of his
-body, every gesture of his arm, produced an effect upon the furious mob
-as unexpected perhaps to him as to any one else. They paused, listened,
-fell back, and then sullenly obeyed what seemed to be the voice of
-reason, as well as authority. But there were still some murmurs of
-disappointed rage, and half-suppressed exclamations, which looked
-towards vengeance of some kind. At length one of the men, a little
-bolder than the rest, but evidently feeling that he spoke for the whole,
-cried out, "This is cowardly on your part, Lincoln!" Whereupon the tall
-captain's figure stretched a few inches higher again. He looked down
-upon these varlets who would have murdered a defenceless old Indian, and
-now quailed before his single hand, with lofty contempt. The oldest of
-his acquaintances, even Bill Green, who saw him grapple Jack Armstrong
-and defy the bullies at his back, never saw him so much "aroused"
-before. "If any man thinks I am a coward, let him test it," said he.
-"Lincoln," responded a new voice, "you are larger and heavier than we
-are."--"This you can guard against: choose your weapons," returned the
-rigid captain. Whatever may be said of Mr. Lincoln's choice of means for
-the preservation of military discipline, it was certainly very effectual
-in this case. There was no more disaffection in his camp, and the word
-"coward" was never coupled with his name again. Mr. Lincoln understood
-his men better than those who would be disposed to criticise his
-conduct. He has often declared himself, that his life and character were
-both at stake, and would probably have been lost, had he not at that
-supremely critical moment forgotten the officer and asserted the man. To
-have ordered the offenders under arrest would have created a formidable
-mutiny; to have tried and punished them would have been impossible. They
-could scarcely be called soldiers: they were merely armed citizens, with
-a nominal military organization. They were but recently enlisted, and
-their term of service was just about to expire. Had he preferred charges
-against them, and offered to submit their differences to a court of any
-sort, it would have been regarded as an act of personal pusillanimity,
-and his efficiency would have been gone forever.
-
-Lincoln was believed to be the strongest man in his regiment, and no
-doubt was. He was certainly the best wrestler in it, and after they left
-Beardstown nobody ever disputed the fact. He is said to have "done the
-wrestling for the company;" and one man insists that he _always_ had a
-handkerchief tied around his person, in readiness for the sport. For a
-while it was firmly believed that no man in the _army_ could throw him
-down. His company confidently pitted him "against the field," and were
-willing to bet all they had on the result. At length, one Mr. Thompson
-came forward and accepted the challenge. He was, in fact, the most
-famous wrestler in the Western country. It is not certain that the
-report of his achievements had ever reached the ears of Mr. Lincoln or
-his friends; but at any rate they eagerly made a match with him as a
-champion not unworthy of their own. Thompson's power and skill, however,
-were as well known to certain persons in the army as Mr. Lincoln's were
-to others. Each side was absolutely certain of the victory, and bet
-according to their faith. Lincoln's company and their sympathizers
-put up all their portable property, and some perhaps not their own,
-including "knives, blankets, tomahawks," and all the most necessary
-articles of a soldier's outfit.
-
-When the men first met, Lincoln was convinced that he could throw
-Thompson; but, after tussling with him a brief space in presence of the
-anxious assemblage, he turned to his friends and said, "This is the most
-powerful man I ever had hold of. He will throw me, and you will lose
-your all, unless I act on the defensive." He managed, nevertheless, "to
-hold him off for some time;" but at last Thompson got the "crotch hoist"
-on him, and, although Lincoln attempted with all his wonderful strength
-to break the hold by "sliding" away, a few moments decided his fate: he
-was fairly thrown. As it required two out of three falls to decide the
-bets, Thompson and he immediately came together again, and with very
-nearly the same result. Lincoln fell under, but the other man fell too.
-There was just enough of uncertainty about it to furnish a pretext for
-a hot dispute and a general fight. Accordingly, Lincoln's men instantly
-began the proper preliminaries to a fracas. "We were taken by surprise,"
-says Mr. Green, "and, being unwilling to give up our property and lose
-our bets, got up an excuse as to the result. We declared the fall a kind
-of dog-fall; did so apparently angrily." The fight was coming on apace,
-and bade fair to be a big and bloody one, when Lincoln rose up and said,
-"Boys, the man actually threw me once fair, broadly so; and the second
-time, this very fall, he threw me fairly, though not so apparently so."
-He would countenance no disturbance, and his unexpected and somewhat
-astonishing magnanimity ended all attempts to raise one.
-
-Mr. Lincoln's good friend, Mr. Green, the principal, though not the
-sole authority for the present account of his adventure in behalf of the
-Indian and his wrestle with Thompson, mentions one important incident
-which is found in no other manuscript, and which gives us a glimpse of
-Mr. Lincoln in a scene of another sort. "One other word in reference to
-Mr. Lincoln's care for the health, welfare, and justice to his men. Some
-officers of the United States had claimed that the regular army had a
-preference in the rations and pay. Mr. Lincoln was ordered to do some
-act which he deemed unauthorized. He, however, obeyed, but went to the
-officer and said to him, 'Sir, you forget that we are not under the
-rules and regulations of the War Department at Washington; are only
-volunteers under the orders and regulations of Illinois. Keep in
-your own sphere, and there will be no difficulty; but resistance will
-hereafter be made to your unjust orders: and, further, my men must be
-equal in all particulars, in rations, arms, camps, &c., to the regular
-army. The man saw that Mr. Lincoln was right, and determined to have
-justice done. Always after this we were treated equally well, and just
-as the regular army was, in every particular. This brave, just, and
-humane act in behalf of the volunteers at once attached officers and
-rank to him, as with hooks of steel."
-
-When the army reached Dixon, the almost universal discontent of the men
-had grown so manifest and so ominous, that it could no longer be safely
-disregarded. They longed "for the flesh-pots of Egypt," and fiercely
-demanded their discharge. Although their time had not expired, it was
-determined to march them by way of Paw-Paw Grove to Ottawa, and there
-concede what the governor feared he had no power to withhold.
-
-"While on our march from Dixon to Fox River," says Mr. Irwin, "one night
-while in camp, which was formed in a square enclosing about forty acres,
-our horses, outside grazing, got scared about nine o'clock; and a grand
-stampede took place. They ran right through our lines in spite of us,
-and ran over many of us. No man knows what noise a thousand horses
-make running, unless he had been there: it beats a young earthquake,
-especially among scared men, and certain they were scared then. We
-expected the Indians to be on us that night. Fire was thrown, drums
-beat, fifes played, which added additional fright to the horses. We saw
-no real enemy that night, but a line of battle was formed. There were
-no eyes for sleep that night: we stood to our posts in line; and what
-frightened the horses is yet unknown."
-
-"During this short Indian campaign," continues the same gentleman, "we
-had some hard times,--often hungry; but we had a great deal of sport,
-especially of nights,---foot-racing, some horse-racing, jumping, telling
-anecdotes, in which Lincoln beat all, keeping up a constant laughter
-and good-humor all the time; among the soldiers some card-playing, and
-wrestling, in which Lincoln took a prominent part. I think it safe
-to say he was never thrown in a wrestle. [Mr. Irwin, it seems, still
-regards the Thompson affair as "a dog-fall."] While in the army, he kept
-a handkerchief tied around him near all the time for wrestling purposes,
-and loved the sport as well as any one could. He was seldom ever beat
-jumping. During the campaign, Lincoln himself was always ready for
-an emergency. He endured hardships like a good soldier: he never
-complained, nor did he fear danger. When fighting was expected, or
-danger apprehended, Lincoln was the first to say, 'Let's go.' He had
-the confidence of every man of his company, and they strictly obeyed his
-orders at a word. His company was all young men, and full of sport.
-
-"One night in Warren County, a white hog--a young sow--came into our
-lines, which showed more good sense, to my mind, than any hog I ever
-saw. This hog swam creeks and rivers, and went with us clear through
-to, I think, the mouth of Fox River; and there the boys killed it, or it
-would doubtless have come home with us. If it got behind in daylight as
-we were marching, which it did sometimes, it would follow on the
-track, and come to us at night. It was naturally the cleverest,
-friendly-disposed hog any man ever saw, and its untimely death was by
-many of us greatly deplored, for we all liked the hog for its friendly
-disposition and good manners; for it never molested any thing, and kept
-in its proper place."
-
-On the 28th of May the volunteers were discharged. The governor had
-already called for two thousand more men to take their places; but, in
-the mean time, he made the most strenuous efforts to organize a small
-force out of the recently discharged, to protect the frontiers until the
-new levies were ready for service. He succeeded in raising one regiment
-and a spy company. Many officers of distinction, among them Gen.
-Whiteside himself, enlisted as private soldiers, and served in that
-capacity to the end of the war. Capt. Lincoln became Private Lincoln of
-the "Independent Spy Company," Capt. Early commanding; and, although
-he was never in an engagement, he saw some hard service in scouting and
-trailing, as well as in carrying messages and reports.
-
-About the middle of June the new troops were ready for the field, and
-soon after moved up to Rock River. Meanwhile the Indians had overrun the
-country. "They had scattered their war-parties all over the North from
-Chicago to Galena, and from the Illinois River into the Territory of
-Wisconsin; they occupied every grove, waylaid every road, hung around
-every settlement, and attacked every party of white men that attempted
-to penetrate the country." There had been some desultory fighting at
-various points. Capt. Snyder, in whose company Gen. Whiteside was
-a private, had met the Indians at Burr Oak. Grove, and had a sharp
-engagement; Mr. St. Vrain, an Indian agent, with a small party of
-assistants, had been treacherously murdered near Fort Armstrong; several
-men had been killed at the lead mines, and the Wisconsin volunteers
-under Dodge had signally punished the Indians that killed them; Galena
-had been threatened and Fort Apple, twelve miles from Galena, had
-sustained a bloody siege of fifteen hours; Capt. Stephenson of Galena
-had performed an act which "equalled any thing in modern warfare in
-daring and desperate courage," by driving a party of Indians larger
-than his own detachment into a dense thicket, and there charging them
-repeatedly until he was compelled to retire, wounded himself, and
-leaving three of his men dead on the ground.
-
-Thenceforward the tide was fairly turned against Black Hawk. Twenty-four
-hundred men, under experienced officers, were now in the field against
-him; and, although he succeeded in eluding his pursuers for a brief
-time, every retreat was equivalent to a reverse in battle, and all his
-manoeuvres were retreats. In the latter part of July he was finally
-overtaken by the volunteers under Henry, along the bluffs of the
-Wisconsin River, and defeated in a decisive battle. His ruin was
-complete: he abandoned all hope of conquest, and pressed in disorderly
-and disastrous retreat toward the Mississippi, in vain expectation of
-placing that barrier between him and his enemy.
-
-On the fourth day, after crossing the Wisconsin, Gen. Atkinson's advance
-reached the high grounds near the Mississippi. Henry and his brigade,
-having won the previous victory, were placed at the rear in the order
-of march, with the ungenerous purpose of preventing them from winning
-another. But Black Hawk here resorted to a stratagem which very nearly
-saved the remnant of his people, and in the end completely foiled the
-intentions of Atkinson regarding Henry and his men. The old chief,
-with the high heart which even such a succession of reverses could not
-subdue, took twenty warriors and deliberately posted himself, determined
-to hold the army in check or lead it away on a false trail, while his
-main body was being transferred to the other bank of the river. He
-accordingly made his attack in a place where he was favored by trees,
-logs, and tall grass, which prevented the discovery of his numbers.
-Finding his advance engaged, Atkinson formed a line of battle, and
-ordered a charge; but Black Hawk conducted his retreat with such
-consummate skill that Atkinson believed he was just at the heels of the
-whole Indian army, and under this impression continued the pursuit far
-up the river.
-
-When Henry came up to the spot where the fight had taken place, he
-readily detected the trick by various evidences about the ground.
-Finding the main trail in the immediate vicinity, he boldly fell upon it
-without orders, and followed it until he came up with the Indians in
-a swamp on the margin of the river, where he easily surprised and
-scattered them. Atkinson, hearing the firing in the swamp, turned back,
-and arrived just in time to assist in the completion of the massacre. A
-few of the Indians had already crossed the river: a few had taken refuge
-on a little willow island in the middle of the stream. The island was
-charged,--the men wading to it in water up to their arm-pits,--the
-Indians were dislodged and killed on the spot, or shot in the water
-while attempting to swim to the western shore. Fifty prisoners only were
-taken, and the greater part of these were squaws and children. This
-was the battle of the Bad Axe,--a terrific slaughter, considering the
-numbers engaged, and the final ruin of Black Hawk's fortunes.
-
-Black Hawk and his twenty warriors, among whom was his own son, made
-the best of their way to the Dalles on the Wisconsin, where they seem to
-have awaited passively whatever fate their enemies should contrive for
-them. There were some Sioux and Winnebagoes in Atkinson's camp,--men who
-secretly pretended to sympathize with Black Hawk, and, while acting
-as guides to the army, had really led it astray on many painful and
-perilous marches. It is certain that Black Hawk had counted on the
-assistance of those tribes; but after the fight on the Wisconsin, even
-those who had consented to act as his emissaries about the person of
-the hostile commander not only deserted him, but volunteered to hunt him
-down. They now offered to find him, take him, and bring him in, provided
-that base and cowardly service should be suitably acknowledged. They
-were duly employed. Black Hawk became their prisoner, and was presented
-by them to the Indian agent with two or three shameless and disgusting
-speeches from his captors. He and his son were carried to Washington
-City, and then through the principal cities of the country, after which
-President Jackson released him from captivity, and sent him back to his
-own people. He lived to be eighty years old, honored and beloved by his
-tribe, and after his death was buried on an eminence overlooking
-the Mississippi, with such rites as are accorded only to the most
-distinguished of native captains,--sitting upright in war dress and
-paint, covered by a conspicuous mound of earth.
-
-We have given a rapid and perhaps an unsatisfactory sketch of the
-comparatively great events which brought the Black Hawk War to a close.
-So much at least was necessary, that the reader might understand the
-several situations in which Mr. Lincoln found himself during the short
-term of his second enlistment. We fortunately possess a narrative of his
-individual experience, covering the whole of that period, from the pen
-of George W. Harrison, his friend, companion, and messmate. It is given
-in full; for there is no part of it that would not be injured by the
-touch of another hand. It is an extremely interesting story, founded
-upon accurate personal knowledge, and told in a perspicuous and graphic
-style, admirably suited to the subject.
-
-"The new company thus formed was called the 'Independent Spy Company;'
-not being under the control of any regiment or brigade, but receiving
-orders directly from the commander-in-chief, and always, when with the
-army, camping within the lines, and having many other privileges, such
-as never having camp-duties to perform, drawing rations as much and as
-often as we pleased, &c, Dr. Early (deceased) of Springfield was elected
-captain. Five members constituted a tent, or 'messed' together. Qur mess
-consisted of Mr. Lincoln, Johnston (a half-brother of his), Fanchier,
-Wyatt, and myself. The 'Independent Spy Company' was used chiefly to
-carry messages, to send an express, to spy the enemy, and to ascertain
-facts. I suppose the nearest we were to doing battle was at Gratiot's
-Grove, near Galena. The spy company of Posey's brigade was many miles
-in advance of the brigade, when it stopped in the grove at noon for
-refreshments. Some of the men had turned loose their horses, and others
-still had theirs in hand, when five or six Sac and Fox Indians came near
-them. Many of the white men broke after them, some on horseback, some on
-foot, in great disorder and confusion, thinking to have much sport with
-their prisoners immediately. The Indians thus decoyed them about two
-miles from the little cabins in the grove, keeping just out of danger,
-when suddenly up sprang from the tall prairie grass two hundred and
-fifty painted warriors, with long spears in hand, and tomahawks and
-butcher-knives in their belts of deer-skin and buffalo, and raised such
-a yell that our friends supposed them to be more numerous than Black
-Hawk's whole clan, and, instantly filled with consternation, commenced
-to retreat. But the savages soon began to spear them, making it
-necessary to halt in the flight, and give them a fire, at which
-time they killed two Indians, one of them being a young chief gayly
-apparelled. Again, in the utmost horror, such as savage yells alone can
-produce, they fled for the little fort in the grove. Having arrived,
-they found the balance of their company, terrified by the screams of
-the whites and the yells of the savages, closely shut up in the double
-cabin, into which _they_ quickly plunged, and found the much-needed
-respite. The Indians then prowled around the grove, shooting nearly
-all the company's horses, and stealing the balance of them. There, from
-cracks between the logs of the cabin, three Indians were shot and
-killed in the act of reaching for the reins of bridles on horses.
-They endeavored to conceal their bodies by trees in an old field which
-surrounded the fort; but, reaching with sticks for bridles, they exposed
-their heads and necks, and all of them were shot with two balls each
-through the neck. These three, and the two killed where our men wheeled
-and fired, make five Indians known to be killed; and on their retreat
-from the prairie to the grove, five white men were cut into small
-pieces. The field of this action is the greatest battle-ground we saw.
-The dead still lay unburied until after we arrived at sunrise the next
-day. The forted men, fifty strong, had not ventured to go out until they
-saw us, when they rejoiced greatly that friends and not dreaded enemies
-had come. They looked like men just out of cholera,--having passed
-through the cramping stage. The only part we could then act was to seek
-the lost men, and with hatchets and hands to bury them. We buried the
-white men, and trailed the dead young chief where he had been drawn on
-the grass a half-mile, and concealed in the thicket. Those who trailed
-this once noble warrior, and found him, were Lincoln, I think, Wyatt,
-and myself. By order of Gen. Atkinson, our company started on this
-expedition one evening, travelled all night, and reached Gratiot's at
-sunrise. A few hours after, Gen. Posey came up to the fort with his
-brigade of nearly a thousand men, when he positively refused to pursue
-the Indians,--being strongly solicited by Capt. Early, Lincoln, and
-others,--squads of Indians still showing themselves in a menacing manner
-one and a half miles distant.
-
-"Our company was disbanded at Whitewater, Wis., a short time before the
-massacre at Bad Axe by Gen. Henry; and most of our men started for home
-on the following morning; but it so happened that the night previous
-to starting on this long trip, Lincoln's horse and mine were stolen,
-probably by soldiers of our own army, and we were thus compelled to
-start outside the cavalcade; but I laughed at our fate, and he joked at
-it, and we all started off merrily. But the generous men of our company
-walked and rode by turns with us; and we fared about equal with the
-rest. But for this generosity, our legs would have had to do the better
-work; for in that day, this then dreary route furnished no horses to buy
-or to steal; and, whether on horse or afoot, we always had company, for
-many of the horses' backs were too sore for riding.
-
-"Thus we came to Peoria: here we bought a canoe, in which we two paddled
-our way to Pekin. The other members of our company, separating in
-various directions, stimulated by the proximity of home, could never
-have consented to travel at our usual tardy mode. At Pekin, Lincoln made
-an oar with which to row our little boat, while I went through the town
-in order to buy provisions for the trip. One of us pulled away at the
-one oar, while the other sat astern to steer, or prevent circling. The
-river being very low was without current, so that we had to pull hard
-to make half the speed of legs on land,--in fact, we let her float all
-night, and on the next morning always found the objects still visible
-that were beside us the previous evening. The water was remarkably
-clear, for this river of plants, and the fish appeared to be sporting
-with us as we moved over or near them.
-
-"On the next day after we left Pekin, we overhauled a raft of saw-logs,
-with two men afloat on it to urge it on with poles and to guide it in
-the channel. We immediately pulled up to them and went on the raft,
-where we were made welcome by various demonstrations, especially by
-that of an invitation to a feast on fish, corn-bread, eggs, butter,
-and coffee, just prepared for our benefit. Of these good things we
-ate almost immoderately, for it was the only warm meal we had made for
-several days. While preparing it, and after dinner, Lincoln entertained
-them, and they entertained us for a couple of hours very amusingly.
-
-"This slow mode of travel was, at the time, a new mode, and the novelty
-made it for a short time agreeable. We descended the Illinois to
-Havana, where we sold our boat, and again set out the old way, over the
-sand-ridges for Petersburg. As we drew near home, the impulse became
-stronger, and urged us on amazingly. The long strides of Lincoln, often
-slipping back in the loose sand six inches every step, were just right
-for me; and he was greatly diverted when he noticed me behind him
-stepping along in his tracks to keep from slipping.
-
-"About three days after leaving the army at Whitewater, we saw a battle
-in full operation about two miles in advance of us. Lincoln was riding
-a young horse, the property of L. D. Matheny. I was riding a sprightly
-animal belonging to John T. Stuart. At the time we came in sight of the
-scene, our two voluntary footmen were about three-fourths of a mile in
-advance of us, and we about half a mile behind most of our company, and
-three or four on foot still behind us, leading some sore-backed horses.
-But the owners of our horses came running back, and, meeting us all in
-full speed, rightfully ordered us to dismount. We obeyed: they mounted,
-and all pressed on toward the conflict,--they on horseback, we on foot.
-In a few moments of hard walking and terribly close observation, Lincoln
-said to me, 'George, this can't be a very dangerous battle.' Reply:
-'Much shooting, nothing falls.' It was at once decided to be a sham for
-the purpose of training cavalry, instead of Indians having attacked a
-few white soldiers, and a few of our own men, on their way home, for the
-purpose of killing them."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE volunteers from Sangamon returned to their homes shortly before the
-State election, at which, among other officers, assembly-men were to be
-chosen. Lincoln's popularity had been greatly enhanced by his service
-in the war, and some of his friends urged him with warm solicitations
-to become a candidate at the coming election. He prudently resisted, and
-declined to consent, alleging in excuse his limited acquaintance in the
-county at large, until Mr. James Rutledge, the founder of New Salem,
-added the weight of his advice to the nearly unanimous desire of the
-neighborhood. It is quite likely that his recent military career was
-thought to furnish high promise of usefulness in civil affairs; but Mr.
-Rutledge was sure that he saw another proof of his great abilities in a
-speech which Abe was induced to make, just about this time, before the
-New-Salem Literary Society. The following is an account of this speech
-by R. B. Rutledge, the son of James:--
-
-"About the year 1832 or 1833, Mr. Lincoln made his first effort
-at public speaking. A debating club, of which James Rutledge was
-president, was organized, and held regular meetings. As he arose to
-speak, his tall form towered above the little assembly. Both hands were
-thrust down deep in the pockets of his pantaloons. A perceptible smile
-at once lit up the faces of the audience, for all anticipated the
-relation of some humorous story. But he opened up the discussion in
-splendid style, to the infinite astonishment of his friends. As he
-warmed with his subject, his hands would forsake his pockets and would
-enforce his ideas by awkward gestures, but would very soon seek their
-easy resting-places. He pursued the question with reason and argument so
-pithy and forcible that all were amazed. The president at his fireside,
-after the meeting, remarked to his wife, that there was more in Abe's
-head than wit and fun; that he was already a fine speaker; that all he
-lacked was culture to enable him to reach the high destiny which he knew
-was in store for him. From that time Mr. Rutledge took a deeper interest
-in him.
-
-"Soon after Mr. Rutledge urged him to announce himself as a candidate
-for the Legislature. This he at first declined to do, averring that it
-was impossible to be elected. It was suggested that a canvass of the
-county would bring him prominently before the people, and in time would
-do him good. He reluctantly yielded to the solicitations of his friends,
-and made a partial canvass."
-
-In those days political animosities were fierce enough; but, owing to
-the absence of nominating conventions, party lines were not, as yet,
-very distinctly drawn in Illinois. Candidates announced themselves; but,
-usually, it was done after full consultation with influential friends,
-or persons of considerable power in the neighborhood of the candidate's
-residence. We have already seen the process by which Mr. Lincoln was
-induced to come forward. There were often secret combinations among a
-number of candidates, securing a mutual support; but in the present case
-there is no trace of such an understanding.
-
-This (1832) was the year of Gen. Jackson's election. The Democrats
-stigmatized their opponents as "Federalists," while the latter were
-steadily struggling to shuffle off the odious name. For the present they
-called themselves Democratic Republicans; and it was not until 1833 or
-1834, that they formally took to themselves the designation of Whig. The
-Democrats were known better as Jackson men than as Democrats, and were
-inexpressibly proud of either name. Four or five years afterward their
-enemies invented for their benefit the meaningless and hideous word
-"Locofoco."
-
-Since 1826 every general election in the State had resulted in a
-Democratic victory. The young men were mostly Democrats; and the most
-promising talents in the State were devoted to the cause, which seemed
-destined to achieve success wherever there was a contest. In a new
-country largely peopled by adventurers from older States, there were
-necessarily found great numbers who would attach themselves to the
-winning side merely because it was the winning side.
-
-It is unnecessary to restate here the prevailing questions in national
-politics,--Jackson's stupendous struggle with the bank, "hard money,"
-"no monopoly," internal improvements, the tariff, and nullification, or
-the personal and political relations of the chieftains,--Jackson, Clay,
-and Calhoun. Mr. Lincoln will shortly disclose in one of his speeches
-from the stump which of those questions were of special interest to the
-people of Illinois, and consequently which of them principally occupied
-his own attention.
-
-The Democrats were divided into "whole-hog men" and "nominal Jackson
-men;" the former being thoroughly devoted to the fortunes and principles
-of their leader, while the latter were willing to trim a little for the
-sake of popular support. It is probable that Mr. Lincoln might be fairly
-classed as a "nominal Jackson man," although the precise character of
-some of the views he then held, or is supposed to have held, on
-national questions, is involved in considerable doubt. He had not wholly
-forgotten Jones, or Jones's teachings. He still remembered his high
-disputes with Offutt in the shanty at Spring Creek, when he effectually
-defended Jackson against the "abuse" of his employer. He was not Whig,
-but "Whiggish," as Dennis Hanks expresses it. It is not likely that a
-man who deferred so habitually to the popular sentiment around him would
-have selected the occasion of his settlement in a new place to go over
-bodily to a hopeless political minority. At all events, we have at least
-three undisputed facts, which make it plain that he then occupied an
-intermediate position between the extremes of all parties. First, he
-received the votes of all parties at New Salem; second, he was the next
-year appointed postmaster by Gen. Jackson; and, third, the Democrats ran
-him for the legislature two years afterwards; and he was elected by a
-larger majority than any other candidate.
-
-"Our old way of conducting elections," says Gov. Ford, "required each
-aspirant to announce himself as a candidate. The most prudent, however,
-always consulted a little caucus of select, influential friends. The
-candidates then travelled around the county, or State, in proper
-person, making speeches, conversing with the people, soliciting votes,
-whispering slanders against their opponents, and defending themselves
-against the attacks of their adversaries; but it was not always best
-to defend against such attacks. A candidate in a fair way to be elected
-should never deny any charge made against him; for, if he does, his
-adversaries will prove all that they have said, and much more. As a
-candidate did not offer himself as the champion of any party, he usually
-agreed with all opinions, and promised every thing demanded by the
-people, and most usually promised, either directly or indirectly, his
-support to all the other candidates at the same election. One of the
-arts was to raise a quarrel with unpopular men who were odious to the
-people, and then try to be elected upon the unpopularity of others, as
-well as upon his own popularity. These modes of electioneering were not
-true of all the candidates, nor perhaps of half of them, very many of
-them being gentlemen of first-class integrity."
-
-That portion of the people whose influence lay in their fighting
-qualities, and who were prone to carry a huge knife in the belt of
-the hunting-shirt, were sometimes called the "butcher-knife boys," and
-sometimes "the half-horse and half-alligator men." This class, according
-to Gov. Ford, "made a kind of balance-of-power party." Their favorite
-was sure of success; and nearly all political contests were decided by
-"butcher-knife influence." "In all elections and in all enactments of
-the Legislature, great pains were taken by all candidates, and all
-men in office, to make their course and measures acceptable" to these
-knights of steel and muscle.
-
-At a later date they enjoyed a succession of titles, such as "barefoot
-boys," "the flat-footed boys," and "the big-pawed boys."
-
-In those times, Gov. Ford avers that he has seen all the rum-shops and
-groceries of the principal places of a county chartered by candidates,
-and kept open for the gratuitous accommodation of the free and
-independent electors for several weeks before the vote. Every Saturday
-afternoon the people flocked to the county-seat, to see the candidates,
-to hear speeches, to discuss prospects, to get drunk and fight.
-
-"Toward evening they would mount their ponies, go reeling from side
-to side, galloping through town, and throwing up their caps and hats,
-screeching like so many infernal spirits broke loose from their nether
-prison; and thus they separated for their homes." These observations
-occur in Ford's account of the campaign of 1830, which resulted in the
-choice of Gov. Reynolds,--two years before Mr. Lincoln first became a
-candidate,--and lead us to suppose that the body of electors before whom
-that gentleman presented himself were none too cultivated or refined.
-
-Mr. Lincoln's first appearance on the stump, in the course of the
-canvass, was at Pappsville, about eleven miles west of Springfield, upon
-the occasion of a public sale by the firm of Poog & Knap. The sale
-over, speech-making was about to begin, when Mr. Lincoln observed strong
-symptoms of inattention in his audience, who had taken that particular
-moment to engage in what Mr. James A. Herndon pronounces "a general
-fight." Lincoln saw that one of his friends was suffering more than he
-liked in the _melee_; and, stepping into the crowd, he shouldered them
-sternly away from his man, until he met a fellow who refused to
-fall back: him he seized by the nape of the neck and the seat of
-his breeches, and tossed him "ten or twelve feet easily." After this
-episode,--as characteristic of him as of the times,--he mounted the
-platform, and delivered, with awkward modesty, the following speech:--
-
-"Gentlemen and Fellow-Citizens, I presume you all know who I am. I am
-humble Abraham Lincoln. I have been solicited by many friends to become
-a candidate for the Legislature. My politics are short and sweet, like
-the old woman's dance. I am in favor of a national bank. I am in favor
-of the internal-improvement system and a high protective tariff. These
-are my sentiments and political principles. If elected, I shall be
-thankful; if not, it will be all the same."
-
-In these few sentences Mr. Lincoln adopted the leading principles of the
-Whig party,--Clay's "American System" in full. In his view, as we
-shall see by another paper from him when again a candidate in 1834, the
-internal-improvement system required the distribution of the proceeds
-of the sales of the public lands amongst the States. He says nothing of
-South Carolina, of nullification, of disunion; and on these subjects it
-is quite probable his views were like Mr. Webster's, and his sympathies
-with Jackson. The opinions announced in this speech, on all the subjects
-touched by the speaker, were as emphatically Whig as they could be
-made in words; yet as far as they related to internal improvements, and
-indirectly favored the increase of bank issues, they were such as most
-of the "nominal Jackson men" in Illinois professed to hold, and such as
-they united with the Whigs to enforce, then and afterwards, in the State
-Legislature. The "whole-hog men" would have none of them, and therein
-lay the distinction. Although the Democratic party continued to have a
-numerical majority for many years in the Legislature, the nominal men
-and the Whigs coalesced to control legislation in accordance with Whig
-doctrines. Even with such a record made and making by them, the "nominal
-men" persisted in calling themselves Democrats, while Jackson was
-vetoing the Maysville Road Bill, grappling with the National Bank, and
-exposing the oppressive character of the Tariff Act then in force, which
-imposed the highest scale of duties since the first enactment for
-"protection" in 1816. It was their practice to run men like themselves
-for the State offices where the chances of a plain-spoken Whig were
-hopeless; and, by means of the "nominal" character of the candidate,
-secure enough Democratic votes, united with the Whigs, to elect him. In
-the very next canvass Mr. Lincoln himself was taken up by such a
-combination and triumphantly elected. Such things were made feasible by
-the prevalent mode of making nominations without the salutary
-intervention of regular party conventions and committees. We repeat that
-Mr. Lincoln's position was midway between the extremes in local
-politics.
-
-His friend, Mr. A. Y. Ellis, who was with him during a part of this
-campaign, says, "He wore a mixed jeans coat, claw-hammer style, short in
-the sleeves, and bobtail,--in fact, it was so short in the tail he could
-not sit on it,--flax and tow linen pantaloons, and a straw hat. I
-think he wore a vest, but do not remember how it looked. He then wore
-pot-metal boots.
-
-"I accompanied him on one of his electioneering trips to Island Grove;
-and he made a speech which pleased his party friends very well indeed,
-though some of the Jackson men tried to make sport of it. He told
-several anecdotes in his speech, and applied them, as I thought, very
-well. He also told the boys several stories which drew them after him. I
-remember them; but modesty and my veneration for his memory forbid me to
-relate them."
-
-Mr. J. R. Herndon, his friend and landlord, heard him make several
-speeches about this time, and gives us the following extract from one,
-which seems to have made a special impression upon the minds of his
-auditors: "Fellow-citizens, I have been told that some of my opponents
-have said that it was a disgrace to the county of Sangamon to have such
-a looking man as I am stuck up for the Legislature. Now, I thought this
-was a free country: that is the reason I address you today. Had I have
-known to the contrary, I should not have consented to run; but I will
-say one thing, let the shoe pinch where it may: when I have been a
-candidate before you some five or six times, and have been beaten every
-time, I will consider it a disgrace, and will be sure never to try it
-again; but I am bound to beat that man if I am beat myself."
-
-These were not the only speeches he made in furtherance of his present
-claims, but they are all of which we have any intelligible account.
-There was one subject upon which he felt himself peculiarly competent to
-speak,--the practical application of the "internal-improvement system"
-to the river which flowed by the doors of the constituency he addressed.
-He firmly believed in the right of the Legislature of the State or the
-Congress of the United States to appropriate the public money to local
-improvements for the sole advantage of limited districts; and that he
-believed it good policy to exercise the right, his subsequent conduct
-in the Legislature, and an elaborate speech in Congress, are sufficient
-proof. In this doctrine he had the almost unanimous support of the
-people of Illinois. Almost every man in the State was a speculator in
-town lots or lands. Even the farmers had taken up or held the very lands
-they tilled with a view to a speculation in the near future. Long after
-the Democratic party in the South and East, leaving Mr. Calhoun in
-a state of isolation, had begun to inculcate different views of
-constitutional power and duty, it was a dangerous thing for a politician
-in Illinois to intimate his agreement with them. Mr. Lincoln knew well
-that the policy of local improvement at the general expense was at that
-moment decidedly the most popular platform he could mount; but he felt
-that this was not enough for his individual purposes, since it was no
-invention of his, and belonged to nearly everybody else as much as to
-him. He therefore prudently ingrafted upon it a hobby of his own: "The
-Improvement of the Sangamon River,"--a plan to straighten it by means of
-cuts, to clear out its obstructions, and make it a commercial highway
-at the cost of the State. That the idea was nearly, if not quite
-impracticable, the trip of "The Talisman" under Mr. Lincoln's piloting,
-and the fact that the river remained unimproved during all the years
-of the "internal-improvement" mania, would seem to be pretty clear
-evidence. But the theme was agreeable to the popular ear, and had been
-dear to Lincoln from the moment he laid his eyes on the Sangamon. It was
-the great topic of his speech against Posey and Ewing in Macon County,
-when, under the auspices of John Hanks, he "beat" those professional
-politicians so completely that they applauded him themselves. His
-experience in navigating the river was not calculated to make him forget
-it, and it had occupied his thoughts more or less from that day forward.
-Now that it might be turned to good use, where he was personally
-interested, he set about preparing a written address on it, and on
-some other questions of local interest, upon which he bestowed infinite
-pains. The "grammatical errors" in the first draft were corrected by Mr.
-McNamar, the pioneer of New Salem as a business point, and the gentleman
-who was destined to be Mr. Lincoln's rival in the most important
-love-affair of his life. He may have consulted the schoolmaster
-also; but, if he had done so, it is hardly to be surmised that the
-schoolmaster would have left so important a fact out of his written
-reminiscences. It is more probable that Mr. Lincoln confined his
-applications for assistance on this most important matter to the quarter
-where he could get light on politics as well as grammar. However that
-may have been, the following is the finished paper:--
-
-To the People of Sangamon County.
-
-Fellow-Citizens,--Having become a candidate for the honorable office of
-one of your Representatives in the next General Assembly of this State,
-in accordance with an established custom and the principles of true
-republicanism, it becomes my duty to make known to you, the people, whom
-I propose to represent, my sentiments with regard to local affairs.
-
-Time and experience have verified to a demonstration the public utility
-of internal improvements. That the poorest and most thinly-populated
-countries would be greatly benefited by the opening of good roads, and
-in the clearing of navigable streams within their limits, is what no
-person will deny. Yet it is folly to undertake works of this or any
-other kind, without first knowing that we are able to finish them,--as
-half-finished work generally proves to be labor lost. There cannot justly
-be any objection to having railroads and canals, any more than to other
-good things, provided they cost nothing. The only objection is to paying
-for them; and the objection arises from the want of ability to pay.
-
-With respect to the County of Sangamon, some more easy means of
-communication than it now possesses, for the purpose of facilitating
-the task of exporting the surplus products of its fertile soil, and
-importing necessary articles from abroad, are indispensably necessary.
-A meeting has been held of the citizens of Jacksonville and the
-adjacent country, for the purpose of deliberating and inquiring into the
-expediency of constructing a railroad from some eligible point on the
-Illinois River, through the town of Jacksonville, in Morgan County, to
-the town of Springfield, in Sangamon County. This is, indeed, a very
-desirable object. No other improvement that reason will justify us in
-hoping for can equal in utility the railroad. It is a never-failing
-source of communication between places of business remotely situated
-from each other. Upon the railroad the regular progress of commercial
-intercourse is not interrupted by either high or low water, or freezing
-weather, which are the principal difficulties that render our future
-hopes of water communication precarious and uncertain.
-
-Yet however desirable an object the construction of a railroad through
-our country may be; however high our imaginations may be heated at
-thoughts of it,--there is always a heart-appalling shock accompanying
-the account of its cost, which forces us to shrink from our pleasing
-anticipations. The probable cost of this contemplated railroad is
-estimated at $290,000; the bare statement of which, in my opinion, is
-sufficient to justify the belief that the improvement of the Sangamon
-River is an object much better suited to our infant resources.
-
-Respecting this view, I think I may say, without the fear of being
-contradicted, that its navigation may be rendered completely practicable
-as high as the mouth of the South Fork, or probably higher, to vessels
-of from twenty-five to thirty tons' burden, for at least one-half of all
-common years, and to vessels of much greater burden a part of the time.
-From my peculiar circumstances, it is probable, that for the last twelve
-months I have given as particular attention to the stage of the water in
-this river as any other person in the country. In the month of March,
-1831, in company with others, I commenced the building of a flatboat on
-the Sangamon, and finished and took her out in the course of the spring.
-Since that time I have been concerned in the mill at New Salem. These
-circumstances are sufficient evidence that I have not been very
-inattentive to the stages of the water. The time at which we crossed the
-mill-dam being in the last days of April, the water was lower than it
-had been since the breaking of winter in February, or than it was for
-several weeks after. The principal difficulties we encountered in
-descending the river were from the drifted timber, which obstructions
-all know are not difficult to be removed. Knowing almost precisely the
-height of water at that time, I believe I am safe in saying that it has
-as often been higher as lower since.
-
-From this view of the subject, it appears that my calculations with
-regard to the navigation of the Sangamon cannot but be founded in
-reason; but, whatever may be its natural advantages, certain it is, that
-it never can be practically useful to any great extent, without being
-greatly improved by art. The drifted timber, as I have before mentioned,
-is the most formidable barrier to this object. Of all parts of this
-river, none will require so much labor in proportion to make it
-navigable, as the last thirty or thirty-five miles; and going with the
-meanderings of the channel, when we are this distance above its mouth
-we are only between twelve and eighteen miles above Beardstown, in
-something near a straight direction; and this route is upon such low
-ground as to retain water in many places during the season, and in all
-parts such as to draw two-thirds or three-fourths of the river-water at
-all high stages.
-
-This route is on prairie land the whole distance; so that it appears
-to me, by removing the turf a sufficient width, and damming up the old
-channel, the whole river in a short time would wash its way through,
-thereby curtailing the distance, and increasing the velocity of the
-current, very considerably: while there would be no timber on the banks
-to obstruct its navigation in future; and, being nearly straight,
-the timber which might float in at the head would be apt to go clear
-through. There are also many places above this where the river, in its
-zigzag course, forms such complete peninsulas, as to be easier to cut
-at the necks than to remove the obstructions from the bends, which, if
-done, would also lessen the distance.
-
-What the cost of this work would be, I am unable to say. It is probable,
-however, that it would not be greater than is common to streams of the
-same length. Finally, I believe the improvement of the Sangamon River
-to be vastly important and highly desirable to the people of the county;
-and, if elected, any measure in the Legislature having this for its
-object, which may appear judicious, will meet my approbation and shall
-receive my support.
-
-It appears that the practice of drawing money at exorbitant rates of
-interest has already been opened as a field for discussion; so I suppose
-I may enter upon it without claiming the honor, or risking the danger,
-which may await its first explorer. It seems as though we are never
-to have an end to this baneful and corroding system, acting almost as
-prejudicial to the general interests of the community as a direct tax of
-several thousand dollars annually laid on each county, for the benefit
-of a few individuals only, unless there be a law made fixing the limits
-of usury. A law for this purpose, I am of opinion, may be made, without
-materially injuring any class of people. In cases of extreme necessity,
-there could always be means found to cheat the law; while in all other
-cases it would have its intended effect. I would favor the passage of
-a law on this subject which might not be very easily evaded. Let it be
-such that the labor and difficulty of evading it could only be justified
-in cases of greatest necessity.1
-
- 1 Until the year 1833 there had been no legal limit to the
- rate of interest to be fixed by contract. But usury had been
- carried to such an unprecedented degree of extortion and
- oppression as to cause the Legislature to enact severe usury
- laws, by which all interest above twelve per cent was
- condemned. It had been no uncommon thing before this to
- charge one hundred and one hundred and fifty per cent, and
- sometimes two and three hundred per cent. But the common
- rate of interest, by contract, had been about fifty per
- cent.--Ford's History, page 233.
-
-Upon the subject of education, not presuming to dictate any plan
-or system respecting it, I can only say that I view it as the most
-important subject which we as a people can be engaged in. That every
-man may receive at least a moderate education, and thereby be enabled to
-read the histories of his own and other countries, by which he may duly
-appreciate the value of our free institutions, appears to be an object
-of vital importance, even on this account alone, to say nothing of the
-advantages and satisfaction to be derived from all being able to read
-the Scriptures and other works, both of a religious and moral nature,
-for themselves.
-
-For my part, I desire to see the time when education--and, by its means,
-morality, sobriety, enterprise, and industry--shall become much more
-general than at present, and should be gratified to have it in my power
-to contribute something to the advancement of any measure which might
-have a tendency to accelerate the happy period.
-
-With regard to existing laws, some alterations are thought to be
-necessary. Many respectable men have suggested that our estray laws--the
-law respecting the issuing of executions, the road-law, and some
-others--are deficient in their present form, and require alterations.
-But, considering the great probability that the framers of those laws
-were wiser than myself, I should prefer not meddling with them, unless
-they were first attacked by others; in which case I should feel it both
-a privilege and a duty to take that stand, which, in my view, might tend
-most to the advancement of justice.
-
-But, fellow-citizens, I shall conclude. Considering the great degree of
-modesty which should always attend youth, it is probable I have already
-been more presuming than becomes me. However, upon the subjects of
-which I have treated, I have spoken as I have thought. I may be wrong in
-regard to any or all of them; but, holding it a sound maxim, that it is
-better only sometimes to be right than at all times wrong, so soon as I
-discover my opinions to be erroneous, I shall be ready to renounce them.
-
-Every man is said to have his peculiar ambition. Whether it be true or
-not, I can say, for one, that I have no other so great as that of being
-truly esteemed of my fellow-men, by rendering myself worthy of their
-esteem. How far I shall succeed in gratifying this ambition is yet to be
-developed. I am young, and unknown to many of you. I was born, and have
-ever remained, in the most humble walks of life. I have no wealthy or
-popular relations or friends to recommend. My case is thrown exclusively
-upon the independent voters of the county; and, if elected, they will
-have conferred a favor upon me, for which I shall be unremitting in my
-labors to compensate. But, if the good people in their wisdom shall
-see fit to keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with
-disappointments to be very much chagrined.
-
-Your Friend and Fellow-Citizen,
-
-A. LINCOLN.
-
-New Salem, March 9, 1832.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was defeated at the election, having four hundred and
-seventy votes less than the candidate who had the highest number.
-But his disappointment was softened by the action of his immediate
-neighbors, who gave him an almost unanimous support. With three solitary
-exceptions, he received the whole vote of his precinct,--two hundred and
-seventy-seven,--being one more than the whole number cast for both the
-candidates for Congress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE results of the canvass for the Legislature were precisely such as
-had been predicted, both by Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Rutledge: he had been
-defeated, as he expected himself; and it had done "him much good," in
-the politician's sense, as promised by Mr. Rutledge. He was now somewhat
-acquainted with the people outside of the New Salem district, and
-generally marked as a young man of good parts and popular manners. The
-vote given him at home demonstrated his local strength, and made his
-favor a thing of value to the politicians of all parties.
-
-Soon after his return from the army, he had taken quarters at the house
-of J. R. Herndon, who loved him then, and always, with as much sincerity
-as one man can love another. Mr. Herndon's family likewise "became
-much attached to him." He "nearly always had one" of Herndon's children
-"around with him." Mr. Herndon says of him further, that he was "at home
-wherever he went;" making himself wonderfully agreeable to the people he
-lived with, or whom he happened to be visiting. Among other things, "he
-was very kind to the widow and orphan, and chopped their wood."
-
-Lincoln, as we have seen already, was not enamored of the life of a
-common laborer,--mere hewing and drawing. He preferred to clerk, to go
-to war, to enter politics,--any thing but that dreary round of daily
-toil and poor pay. But he was now, as he would say, "in a fix:" clerks
-were not wanted every day in New Salem and he began to cast about for
-some independent business of his own, by which he could earn enough to
-pay board and buy books. In every community where he had lived, "the
-merchant" had been the principal man. He felt that, in view of his
-apprenticeship under those great masters, Jones and Offutt, he was fully
-competent to "run a store," and was impatient to find an opening in that
-line.
-
-Unfortunately for him, the circumstances of the business men of New
-Salem were just then peculiarly favorable to his views. At least three
-of them were as anxious to sell out as Lincoln was to buy.
-
-Lincoln, as already stated, was at this time living with "Row" Herndon.
-Row and his brother "Jim" had taken "a store down to New Salem early in
-that year." But Jim "didn't like the place," and sold out his interests
-to an idle, convivial fellow, named Berry. Six weeks later Row Herndon
-grew tired of his new partner, and sold his interest to Lincoln. The
-store was a mixed one,--dry goods and groceries.
-
-About the same time Mr. Radford, who kept one of the New Salem
-groceries, fell into disfavor with the "Clary's Grove Boys," who
-generously determined that he should keep a grocery no longer. They
-accordingly selected a convenient night for breaking in his windows,
-and, in their own elegant phrase, "gutting his establishment." Convinced
-that these neighborly fellows were inclined to honor him with further
-attentions, and that his bones might share the fate of his windows,
-Radford determined to sell out with the earliest dawn of the coming day.
-The next day he was standing disconsolate in the midst of his wreck,
-when Bill Green rode up. Green thought he saw a speculation in Radford's
-distress, and offered him four hundred dollars for the whole concern.
-Radford eagerly closed with him; and in a few minutes Green owned
-the grocery, and Radford was ready for the road to a more congenial
-settlement. It is said that Green employed Lincoln to make an inventory
-of the stock. At all events, Lincoln was satisfied that Green's bargain
-was a very good one, and proposed that he and Berry should take it off
-his hands at a premium of two hundred and fifty dollars. Radford had
-Green's note for four hundred dollars; but he now surrendered, it and
-took Lincoln & Berry's for the same amount, indorsed by Green; while
-Lincoln & Berry gave Green a note for two hundred and fifty dollars, the
-latter's profit in the trade.
-
-Mr. Rutledge "also owned a small grocery in the village;" and this was
-speedily absorbed by the enterprising firm of Lincoln & Berry, who now
-had the field to themselves, being sole proprietors "of the only store
-of the kind in New Salem."
-
-Whether Mr. Lincoln sold liquor by the dram over the counter of this
-shop remains, and will forever remain, an undetermined question. Many
-of his friends aver that he did, and as many more aver that he did not.
-When Douglas, with that courtesy for which he distinguished himself in
-the debates with Lincoln, revived the story, Lincoln replied, that,
-even if it were true, there was but little difference between them;
-for, while he figured on one side of the counter, Douglas figured on
-the other. It is certain liquors were a part of the stock of all the
-purchases of Lincoln & Berry. Of course they sold them by the quantity,
-and probably by the drink. Some of it they _gave_ away, for no man could
-keep store without setting out the customary dram to the patrons of the
-place.1
-
- 1 Here is the evidence of James Davis, a Democrat, "aged
- sixty," who is willing to "give the Devil his due:"--
-
- "Came to Clary's Grove in 1829; knew Lincoln well; knew Jim
- and Row Herndon: they sold out to Berry,--one of them did;
- afterwards the other sold out to Lincoln. The store was a
- mixed one,--dry goods, a few groceries, such as sugar,
- salt, &c., and whiskey solely kept for their customers, or
- to sell by the gallon, quart, or pint,--not otherwise. The
- Herndons probably had the Blankenship goods. Radford had a
- grocery-store,--salt, pepper, and suchlike things, with
- whiskey. It is said Green bought this out, and instantly
- sold to Berry & Lincoln. Lincoln & Berry broke. Berry
- subsequently kept a doggery, a whiskey saloon, as I do now,
- or did. Am a Democrat; never agreed in politics with Abe. He
- was an honest man. Give the Devil his due; he never sold
- whiskey by the dram in New Salem! I was in town every week
- for years; knew, I think, all about it. I always drank my
- dram, and drank at Berry's often; ought to know. Lincoln got
- involved, I think, in the first operation. Salem Hill was a
- barren."
-
-The difficulty of gathering authentic evidence on this subject is
-well illustrated in the following extract from Mr. George Spears of
-Petersburg:--
-
-"I took my horse this morning, and went over to New Salem, among the
-P----s and A----s, and made all the inquiries I could, but could learn
-nothing. The old ladies would begin to count up what had happened in New
-Salem when such a one of their children was born, and such a one had
-a bastard; but it all amounted to nothing. I could arrive at no dates,
-only when those children were born. Old Mrs. Potter affirms that Lincoln
-did sell liquors in a grocery. I can't tell whether he did or not."
-
-All that winter (1832-3) Lincoln struggled along with a bad partner,
-and a business which began wrong, and grew worse every day. Berry had no
-qualities which atoned for his evil habits.. He preferred to consume
-the liquors on hand rather than to sell them, and exerted himself so
-successfully, that in a few months he had ruined the credit of the firm,
-squandered its assets, and destroyed his own health. The "store" was a
-dead failure; and the partners were weighed down with a parcel of debts,
-against which Lincoln could scarcely have borne up, even with a better
-man to help him. At last they sold out to two brothers named Trent. The
-Trents continued the business for a few months, when they broke up and
-ran away. Then Berry, encouraged by the example of the Trents, "cleared
-out" also, and, dying soon after, left poor Lincoln the melancholy task
-of settling up the affairs of their ill-starred partnership.
-
-In all the preceding transactions, the absence of any cash consideration
-is the one thing very striking. It is a fair illustration of the
-speculative spirit pervading the whole people. Green bought from Radford
-on credit; Lincoln & Berry bought from Green on credit; they bought from
-the Herndons on credit; they bought from Rutledge on credit; and they
-sold to the Trents on credit. Those that did not die or run away had a
-sad time enough in managing the debts resulting from their connection
-with this unlucky grocery. Radford assigned Lincoln & Berry's note to
-a Mr. Van Bergen, who got judgment on it, and swept away all Lincoln's
-little personal property, including his surveying instruments,--his very
-means of livelihood, as we shall see at another place. The Herndons
-owed E. C. Blankenship for the goods they sold, and assigned Lincoln &
-Berry's note in payment. Mr. Lincoln struggled to pay, by slow degrees,
-this harassing debt to Blankenship, through many long and weary years.
-It was not until his return from Congress, in 1849, that he got the last
-dollar of it discharged. He paid Green _his_ note of two hundred and
-fifty dollars, in small instalments, beginning in 1839, and ending in
-1840. The history of his debt to Rutledge is not so well known. It was
-probably insignificant as compared with the others; and Mr. Rutledge
-proved a generous creditor, as he had always been a kind and considerate
-friend.
-
-Certain that he had no abilities for trade, Mr. Lincoln took the best
-resolution he could have formed under the circumstances. He sat down to
-his books just where he was, believing that knowledge would be power,
-and power profit. He had no reason to shun his creditors, for these were
-the men of all others who most applauded the honesty of his conduct
-at the period of his greatest pecuniary misfortune. He talked to them
-constantly of the "old debt," "the national debt," as he sometimes
-called it,--promised to pay when he could, and they devoutly relied upon
-every word he said.
-
-Row Herndon moved to the country, and Lincoln was compelled to change
-his boarding-place. He now began to live at a tavern for the first time
-in his life. It was kept by various persons during his stay,--first, it
-seems, by Mr. Rutledge, then by Henry Onstatt, and last by Nelson Alley.
-It was a small log-house, covered with clapboards, and contained four
-rooms.
-
-Lincoln began to read law while he lived with Herndon. Some of his
-acquaintances insist that he began even earlier than this, and assert,
-by way of proof, that he was known to borrow a well-worn copy of
-Blackstone from A. T. Bogue, a pork-dealer at Beardstown. At all events,
-he now went to work in earnest, and studied law as faithfully as if he
-had never dreamed of any other business in life. As a matter of course,
-his slender purse was unequal to the purchase of the needful books: but
-this circumstance gave him little trouble; for, although he was short of
-funds, he was long in the legs, and had nothing to do but to walk off to
-Springfield, where his friend, John T. Stuart, cheerfully supplied
-his wants. Mr. Stuart's partner, H. C. Dummer, says, "He was an
-uncouth-looking lad, did not say much, but what he did say he said
-straight and sharp."
-
-"He used to read law," says Henry McHenry, "in 1832 or 1833, barefooted,
-seated in the shade of a tree, and would grind around with the shade,
-just opposite Berry's grocery-store, a few feet south of the door."
-He occasionally varied the attitude by lying flat on his back, and
-"_putting his feet up the tree_"--a situation which might have been
-unfavorable to mental application in the case of a man with shorter
-extremities.
-
-"The first time I ever saw Abe with a law-book in his hand," says Squire
-Godbey, "he was sitting astride of Jake Bales's woodpile in New Salem.
-Says I, 'Abe, what are you studying?'--'Law,' says Abe. 'Great God
-Almighty!' responded I." It was too much for Godbey: he could not
-suppress the blasphemy at seeing such a figure acquiring science in such
-an odd situation.
-
-Minter Graham asserts that Abe did a little "of what we call sitting up
-to the fine gals of Illinois;" but, according to other authorities, he
-always had his book with him "when in company," and would read and
-talk alternately. He carried it along in his walks to the woods and the
-river; read it in daylight under the shade-tree by the grocery, and at
-night by any friendly light he could find,--most frequently the one he
-kindled himself in the shop of his old benefactor, the cooper.
-
-Abe's progress in the law was as surprising as the intensity of his
-application to study. He never lost a moment that might be improved. It
-is even said that he read and recited to himself on the road and by the
-wayside as he came down from Springfield with the books he had borrowed
-from Stuart. The first time he went up he had "mastered" forty pages of
-Blackstone before he got back. It was not long until, with his
-restless desire to be doing something practical, he began to turn his
-acquisitions to account in forwarding the business of his neighbors. He
-wrote deeds, contracts, notes, and other legal papers, for them, "using
-a small dictionary and an old form-book;" "petifogged" incessantly
-before the justice of the peace, and probably assisted that functionary
-in the administration of justice as much as he benefited his own
-clients. This species of country "student's" practice was entered upon
-very early, and kept up until long after he was quite a distinguished
-man in the Legislature. But in all this he was only trying himself:
-as he was not admitted to the bar until 1837, he did not regard it
-as legitimate practice, and never charged a penny for his services.
-Although this fact is mentioned by a great number of persons, and the
-generosity of his conduct much enlarged upon, it is seriously to be
-regretted that no one has furnished us with a circumstantial account of
-any of his numerous cases before the magistrate.
-
-But Mr. Lincoln did not confine himself entirely to the law. He was not
-yet quite through with Kirkham nor the schoolmaster. The "valuable copy"
-of the grammar "he delighted to peruse" is still in the possession of R.
-B. Rutledge, with the thumb-marks of the President all over it. "He also
-studied natural philosophy, chemistry, astronomy, &c. He had no regular
-teacher, but perhaps received more assistance from Minter Graham than
-from any other person."
-
-He read with avidity all the newspapers that came to New Salem,--chiefly
-"The Sangamon Journal," "The Missouri Republican," and "The Louisville
-Journal." 1 The latter was his favorite: its wit and anecdotes were
-after his own heart; and he was a regular subscriber for it through
-several years when he could ill afford a luxury so costly.
-
- 1 According to Mr. McNamar, Lincoln took "The Sangamon
- Journal" and "The Louisville Journal" from 1832 to 1837; and
- Hill and Bale took "The Missouri Republican" and "The
- Cincinnati Gazette." "The Missouri Republican" was first
- issued as a daily in September, 1836. Its size was then
- twenty-five by thirty-six inches.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was never a profound historical student: if he happened
-to need historical facts for the purposes of a political or legal
-discussion, he read them on the spur of the occasion. For this reason
-his opinions of current affairs all through his life were based
-more upon individual observation and reflection than upon scientific
-deductions from the experience of the world. Yet at this time, when he
-probably felt more keenly than ever after the want of a little learning
-to embellish the letters and speeches he was ambitious to compose, he is
-said to have read Rollin's "Ancient History," Gibbon's "Rise and Fall of
-the Roman Empire," and similar works, with great diligence and care. The
-books were borrowed from William Green, Bowlin Greene, and other parties
-in and about New Salem.
-
-But he greatly preferred literature of another sort, such as Mrs. Lee
-Hentz's novels; some of which he found among the effects of Mr. Ellis,
-at the time his companion and occasional bedfellow. "He was very fond,"
-Mr. Ellis declares, "of short stories, one and two columns long,--like
-'Cousin Sally Dillard,' 'Becky Wilson's Courtship,' The Down-easter and
-the Bull,' 'How a bashful man became a married man, with five little
-bashful boys, and how he and his red-headed wife became Millerites, and
-before they were to ascend agreed to make a clean breast of it to
-each other;' and how, when the old lady was through, the Down-easter
-earnestly wished that Gabriel might blow his horn without delay." One
-New Salemite insists that Mr. Lincoln told this latter story "with
-embezzlements" (embellishments), and therefore he is firmly convinced
-that Mr. Lincoln "had a hand" in originating it. The catalogue of
-literature in which he particularly delighted at New Salem is completed
-by the statement of Mr. Rutledge, that he took great pleasure in "Jack
-Downing's Letters."
-
-Mr. Lincoln still relished a popular song with a broad "point" or a
-palpable moral in it as much as he had ever enjoyed the vocal efforts of
-Dennis Hanks and his rollicking compeers of the Gentryville grocery. He
-even continued his own unhappy attempts, although with as little success
-as before, and quite as much to the amusement of his friends. To the
-choice collection of miscellaneous ballads acquired in Indiana, he
-now added several new favorites, like "Old Sukey Blue Skin," and some
-selections from the "Missouri Harmony," with variations by himself. He
-was also singularly fond of an Irish song, "which tells how St. Patrick
-came to be born on the 17th day of March."
-
-"You ask me," says Mr. Ellis, "if I remember the first time I saw Mr.
-Lincoln. Yes, I do.... I was out collecting back tax for Gen. James D.
-Henry. I went from the tavern down to Jacob Bales's old mill, and then
-I first saw Mr. Lincoln. He was sitting on a saw-log talking to Jack and
-Rial Armstrong and a man by the name of Hohammer. I shook hands with
-the Armstrongs and Hohammer, and was conversing with them a few minutes,
-when we were joined by my old friend and former townsman, George
-Warburton, pretty tight as usual; and he soon asked me to tell him the
-old story about Ben Johnson and Mrs. Dale's blue dye, &c., which I did.
-And then Jack Armstrong said, 'Lincoln, tell Ellis the story about Gov.
-J. Sichner, his city-bred son, and his nigger Bob;' which he did,
-with several others, by Jack's calling for them. I found out then that
-Lincoln was a cousin to Charley Hanks of Island Grove. I told him I knew
-three of the boys,--Joe, Charley, and John,--and his uncle, old Billy
-Hanks, who lived up on the North Fork of the Sangamon River, afterwards
-near Decatur."1
-
- 1 "I myself knew old Billy Hanks, his mother's brother, and
- he was a very sensible old man. He was father to Mrs.
- Dillon, on Spring Creek; and Charley, Billy, jr., and John
- were his sons: they were all low-flung,--could neither read
- nor write. Some of them used to live in Island Grove,
- Sangamon County.... I remember the time that Lincoln and E.
- D. Baker ran in convention, to decide who should run for
- Congress in old Sangamon; that some of Baker's friends
- accused Mr. Lincoln of belonging to a proud and an
- aristocratic family,--meaning the Edwardses and Todds, I
- suppose; and, when it came to Mr. Lincoln's ears, he laughed
- heartily, and remarked, 'Well, that sounds strange to me: I
- do not remember of but one that ever came to see me, and
- while he was in town he was accused of stealing a jew's-
- harp.' Josh Speed remembers his saying this. I think you
- ought to remember it. Beverly Powell and myself lived with
- Bell and Speed, and I think he said so in their store. After
- that a Miss Hanks came to spend the winter with Mrs.
- Lincoln."--A. Y. Ellis.
-
-This interview took place shortly after the Black Hawk War; but it was
-not until the next year (1833), the period at which we have now arrived,
-that Lincoln and Ellis became "intimate." At that time Ellis went there
-to keep a store, and boarded "at the same log-tavern" where Lincoln was.
-Lincoln, being "engaged in no particular business," merely endeavoring
-to make a lawyer, a surveyor, and a politician of himself, gave a great
-deal of his time to Ellis and Ellis's business. "He also used to assist
-me in the store," says this new friend, "on busy days, but he always
-disliked to wait on the ladies: he preferred trading with the men and
-boys, as he used to say. I also remember that he used to sleep in the
-store, on the counter, when they had too much company at the tavern.
-
-"I well remember how he was dressed: he wore flax and tow linen
-pantaloons,--I thought about five inches too short in the legs,--and
-frequently he had but one suspender, no vest or coat. He wore a calico
-shirt, such as he had in the Black Hawk War; coarse brogans, tan color;
-blue yarn socks, and straw hat, old style, and without a band.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was in those days a very shy man of ladies. On one
-occasion, while we boarded at this tavern, there came a family,
-containing an old lady and her son and three stylish daughters, from the
-State of Virginia, and stopped there for two or three weeks; and, during
-their stay, I do not remember of Mr. Lincoln ever eating at the same
-table when they did. I then thought it was on account of his awkward
-appearance and his wearing apparel."
-
-There lived at New Salem at this time, and for some years afterward,
-a festive gentleman named Kelso, a school-teacher, a merchant, or a
-vagabond, according to the run of his somewhat variable "luck." When
-other people got drunk at New Salem, it was the usual custom to tussle
-and fight, and tramp each other's toes, and pull each other's noses;
-but, when Kelso got drunk, he astonished the rustic community with
-copious quotations from Robert Burns and William Shakspeare,--authors
-little known to fame among the literary men of New Salem. Besides
-Shakspeare and Burns, Mr. Kelso was likewise very fond of fishing, and
-could catch his game "when no other man could get a bite." Mr. Lincoln
-hated fishing with all his heart. But it is the testimony of the
-country-side, from Petersburg to Island Grove, that Kelso "drew Lincoln
-after him by his talk;" that they became exceedingly intimate; that they
-loitered away whole days together, along the banks of the quiet streams;
-that Lincoln learned to love inordinately our "divine William" and
-"Scotia's Bard," whom his friend mouthed in his cups, or expounded more
-soberly in the intervals of fixing bait and dropping line. Finally he
-and Kelso boarded at the same place; and with another "merchant," named
-Sincho, of tastes congenial and wits as keen as Kelso's, they were
-"always found together, battling and arguing." Bill Green ventures the
-opinion, that Lincoln's incessant reading of Shakspeare and Burns had
-much to do in giving to his mind the "sceptical" tendency so
-fully developed by the labors of his pen in 1834-5, and in social
-conversations during many years of his residence at Springfield.
-
-Like Offutt, Kelso disappeared suddenly from New Salem, and apparently
-from the recollection of men. Each with a peculiar talent of his own,
-kind-hearted, eccentric creatures, no man's enemy and everybody's prey,
-they strolled out into the great world, and left this little village
-to perish behind them. Of Kelso a few faint traces have been found in
-Missouri; but if he ever had a lodging more permanent than the wayside
-tavern, a haystack, or a hedge, no man was able to tell where it was.
-Of Offutt not a word was ever heard: the most searching and cunning
-inquiries have failed to discover any spot where he lingered for a
-single hour; and but for the humble boy, to whom he was once a gentle
-master, no human being that knew him then would bestow a thought upon
-his name. In short, to use the expressive language of Mr. Lincoln
-himself, he literally "petered out."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was often annoyed by "company." His quarters at the tavern
-afforded him little privacy, and the shade of the tree in front of the
-grocery was scarcely a sufficiently secluded situation for the purposes
-of an ardent student. There were too many people to wonder and laugh at
-a man studying law with "his feet up a tree;" too many to worry him for
-the stories and jokes which it was supposed he could furnish on demand.
-For these reasons it became necessary that he should "retire to the
-country occasionally to rest and study." Sometimes he went to James
-Short's on the Sand Ridge; sometimes to Minter Graham's; sometimes to
-Bowlin Greenes; sometimes to Jack Armstrong's, and as often, perhaps,
-to Able's or Row Herndon's. All of these men served him faithfully and
-signally at one time and another, and to all of them he was sincerely
-attached. When Bowlin Greene died, in 1842, Mr. Lincoln, then in the
-enjoyment of great local reputation, undertook to deliver a funeral
-oration over the remains of his beloved friend; but, when he rose to
-speak, his voice was choked with deep emotion: he stood a few moments,
-while his lips quivered in the effort to form the words of fervent
-praise he sought to utter, and the tears ran down his yellow and
-shrivelled cheeks. Some of those who came to hear him, and saw his tall
-form thus sway in silence over the body of Bowlin Greene, say he looked
-so helpless, so utterly bereft and pitiable, that every heart in the
-audience was hushed at the spectacle. After repeated efforts, he found
-it impossible to speak, and strode away, openly and bitterly sobbing,
-to the widow's carriage, in which he was driven from the scene. Mr.
-Herndon's papers disclose less than we should like to know concerning
-this excellent man: they give us only this burial scene, with the fact
-that Bowlin Greene had loaned Mr. Lincoln books from their earliest
-acquaintance, and on one occasion had taken him to his home, and cared
-for him with the solicitude of a devoted friend through several weeks of
-great suffering and peril. The circumstances of the attempted eulogy are
-mentioned here to show the relations which subsisted between Mr. Lincoln
-and some of the benefactors we have enumerated.
-
-But all this time Mr. Lincoln had a living to make, a running board-bill
-to pay, and nothing to pay it with. He was, it is true, in the hands of
-excellent friends, so far as the greater part of his indebtedness was
-concerned; but he was industrious by nature, and wanted to be working,
-and paying as he went. He would not have forfeited the good opinion
-of those confiding neighbors for a lifetime of ease and luxury. It was
-therefore a most happy thing for him, and he felt it to be so, when
-he attracted the attention of John Calhoun, the surveyor of Sangamon
-County.
-
-Calhoun was the type of a perfect gentleman,--brave, courteous, able,
-and cultivated. He was a Democrat then, and a Democrat when he died. All
-the world knows how he was president of the Lecompton Convention; how
-he administered the trust in accordance with his well-known convictions;
-and how, after a life of devotion to Douglas, he was adroitly betrayed
-by that facile politician, and left to die in the midst of obloquy and
-disaster. At the time we speak of, he was one of the most popular men
-in the State of Illinois, and was one of the foremost chieftains of the
-political party which invariably carried the county and the district in
-which Mr. Lincoln lived. He knew Lincoln, and admired him. He was well
-assured that Lincoln knew nothing of surveying; but he was equally
-certain that he could soon acquire it. The speculative fever was at
-its height; he was overrun with business: the country was alive with
-strangers seeking land; and every citizen was buying and selling with a
-view to a great fortune in the "flush times" coming. He wanted a deputy
-with common sense and common honesty: he chose Lincoln, because nobody
-else possessed these qualities in a more eminent degree. He hunted him
-up; gave him a book; told him to study it, and said, that, as soon as he
-was ready, he should have as much work as he could do.
-
-Lincoln took the book, and "retired to the country;" that is, he went
-out to Minter Graham's for about six weeks, in which time, by the aid of
-that good master, he became an expert surveyor, and was duly appointed
-Calhoun's deputy. Of course he made some money, merely his pay for work;
-but it is a remarkable fact, that, with his vast knowledge of the lands
-in Sangamon and adjacent counties, he never made a single speculation
-on his own account. It was not long until he acquired a considerable
-private business. The accuracy of his surveys were seldom, if ever,
-questioned. Disputes regarding "corners" and "lines" were frequently
-submitted to his arbitration; and the decision was invariably accepted
-as final. It often happened that his business kept him away from New
-Salem, and his other studies, for weeks at a time; but all this while he
-was gathering friends against the day of election.
-
-In after years--from 1844 onward--it was his good or bad fortune
-frequently to meet Calhoun on the stump; but he never forgot his
-benefaction to him, and always regarded him as the ablest and best man
-with whom he ever had crossed steel. To the day of Calhoun's death
-they were warmly attached to each other. In the times when it was
-most fashionable and profitable to denounce Calhoun and the Le-compton
-Constitution, when even Douglas turned to revile his old friend and
-coadjutor, Mr. Lincoln was never known to breathe a word of censure on
-his personal character.
-
-On the 7th of May, 1833, Mr. Lincoln was appointed postmaster at
-New Salem. His political opinions were not extreme; and the Jackson
-administration could find no man who was at the same time more orthodox
-and equally competent to perform the duties of the office. He was not
-able to rent a room, for the business is said to have been carried on in
-his hat; but, from the evidence before us, we imagine that he kept the
-office in Mr. Hill's store, Mr. Hill's partner, McNamar, having been
-absent since 1832. He held the place until late in 1836, when New Salem
-partially disappeared, and the office was removed to Petersburg. For
-a little while before his own appointment, he is said to have acted as
-"deputy-postmaster" under Mr. Hill.
-
-The mail arrived duly once a week; and the labors of distributing and
-delivering it were by no means great. But Mr. Lincoln was determined
-that the dignity of the place should not suffer while he was the
-incumbent. He therefore made up for the lack of real business by
-deciphering the letters of the uneducated portion of the community, and
-by reading the newspapers aloud to the assembled inhabitants in front of
-Hill's store.
-
-But his easy good-nature was sometimes imposed upon by inconsiderate
-acquaintances; and Mr. Hill relates one of the devices by which
-he sought to stop the abuse. "One Elmore Johnson, an ignorant but
-ostentatious, proud man, used to go to Lincoln's post-office every
-day,--sometimes three or four times a day, if in town,--and inquire,
-'Any thing for me?' This bored Lincoln, yet it amused him. Lincoln fixed
-a plan,--wrote a letter to Johnson as coming from a negress in Kentucky,
-saying many good things about opossum, dances, corn-shuckings, &c.;
-'John's! come and see me; and old master won't kick you out of the
-kitchen any more!' Elmore took it out; opened it; couldn't read a word;
-pretended to read it; went away; got some friends to read it: they read
-it correctly; he thought the reader was fooling him, and went to others
-with the same result. At last he said he would get _Lincoln_ to read it,
-and presented it to Lincoln. It was almost too much for Lincoln, but he
-read it. The man never asked afterwards, 'Any thing here for me?"
-
-It was in the latter part of 1834 that Mr. Lincoln's personal property
-was sold under the hammer, and by due process of law, to meet the
-judgment obtained by Van Bergen on the note assigned to him by Radford.
-Every thing he had was taken; but it was the surveyor's instruments
-which it hurt him most to part with, for by their use he was making a
-tolerable living, and building up a respectable business. This time,
-however, rescue came from an unexpected quarter.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln first came to New Salem, he employed a woman to make
-him a pair of pantaloons, which, probably from the scarcity of material,
-were cut entirely too short, as his garments usually were. Soon
-afterwards the woman's brother came to town, and she pointed Abe out to
-him as he walked along the street. The brother's name was James Short.
-"Without the necessity of a formal introduction," says Short, "we fell
-in together, and struck up a conversation, the purport of which I
-have now forgotten. He made a favorable impression upon me by his
-conversation on first acquaintance through his intelligence and
-sprightliness, which impression was deepened from time to time, as I
-became better acquainted with him." This was a lucky "impression" for
-Abe. Short was a fast friend, and in the day of trouble a sure and able
-one. At the time the judgment was obtained, Short lived on the Sand
-Ridge, four miles from New Salem; and Lincoln was in the habit of
-walking out there almost daily. Short was then unconscious of the main
-reason of Mr. Lincoln's remarkable devotion to him: there was a lady in
-the house whom Lincoln secretly but earnestly loved, and of whom there
-is much to be said at another place. If the host had known every thing,
-however, poor Abe would have been equally welcome; for he made himself a
-strangely agreeable guest here, as he did everywhere else. In busy times
-he pulled off his roundabout, and helped Short in the field with more
-energy than any hired man would have displayed. "He was," said Short,
-"the best hand at husking corn on the stalk I ever saw. I used to
-consider myself very good; but he would gather two loads to my one."
-
-These visits increased Short's disposition to serve him; and it touched
-him sorely when he heard Lincoln moaning about the catastrophe that
-hung over him in the form of Van Bergen's judgment. "An execution
-was issued," says he, "and levied on Lincoln's horse, saddle, bridle,
-compass, chain, and other surveyor's instruments. He was then very much
-discouraged, and said he would let the whole thing go by the board. He
-was at my house very much,--half the time. I did all I could to put him
-in better spirits. I went on the delivery-bond with him; and when the
-sale came off, which Mr. Lincoln did not attend, I bid in the above
-property at a hundred and twenty dollars, and immediately gave it up
-again to him. Mr. Lincoln afterwards repaid me when he had moved to
-Springfield. Greene also turned in on this judgment his horse, saddle,
-and bridle at a hundred and twenty-five dollars; and Lincoln afterwards
-repaid him."
-
-But, after all, Mr. Lincoln had no friend more intimate than Jack
-Armstrong, and none that valued him more highly. Until he finally
-left New Salem for Springfield, he "rusticated" occasionally at Jack's
-hospitable cabin, situated "four miles in the country," as the polished
-metropolitans of New Salem would say. Jack's wife, Hannah, before
-alluded to, liked Abe, and enjoyed his visits not less than Jack did.
-"Abe would come out to our house," she says, "drink milk, eat mush,
-corn-bread, and butter, bring the children candy, and rock the cradle
-while I got him something to eat.... I foxed his pants; made his
-shirts... He has gone with us to father's; he would tell stories, joke
-people, girls and boys, at parties. He would nurse babies,--do any thing
-to accommodate anybody.... I had no books about my house; loaned him
-none. We didn't think about books and papers. We worked; had to live.
-Lincoln has staid at our house two or three weeks at a time."
-
-If Jack had "to work to live," as his wife has it, he was likewise
-constrained to fight and wrestle and tumble about with his unhappy
-fellow-citizens, in order to enjoy the life he earned by labor. He
-frequently came "to town," where his sportive inclinations ran riot,
-except as they were checked and regulated by the amicable interposition
-of Abe,--the prince of his affections, and the only man who was
-competent to restrain him.
-
-"The children at school had made a wide sliding walk," from the top
-of Salem Hill to the river-bank, down which they rode on sleds and
-boards,--a distance of two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards.
-Now, it was one of the suggestions of Jack's passion for innocent
-diversion to nail up in hogsheads such of the population as incurred
-his displeasure, and send them adrift along this frightful descent. Sol.
-Spears and one Scanlon were treated to an adventure of this kind; but
-the hogshead in which the two were caged "leaped over an embankment,
-and came near killing Scanlon." After that the sport was considered less
-amusing, and was very much discouraged by that portion of the community
-who feared, that, in the absence of more convenient victims, "the boys"
-might light on them. Under these circumstances, Jack, for once in his
-life, thought it best to abandon coercion, and negotiate for subjects.
-He selected an elderly person of bibulous proclivities, and tempted him
-with a great temptation. "Old man Jordan _agreed_ to be rolled down the
-hill for a gallon of whiskey;" but Lincoln, fully impressed with the
-brutality of the pastime, and the danger to the old sot, "stopped it."
-Whether he did it by persuasion or force, we know not, but probably by a
-judicious employment of both.
-
-"I remember once," says Mr. Ellis, "of seeing Mr. Lincoln out of temper,
-and laughing at the same time. It was at New Salem. The boys were
-having a jollification after an election. They had a large fire made of
-shavings and hemp-stalks; and some of the boys made a bet with a fellow
-that I shall call 'Ike,' that he couldn't run his little bob-tail pony
-through the fire. Ike took them up, and trotted his pony back about one
-hundred yards, to give him a good start, as he said. The boys all formed
-a line on either side, to make way for Ike and his pony. Presently
-here he come, full tilt, with his hat off; and, just as he reached the
-blazing fire, Ike raised in his saddle for the jump straight ahead; but
-pony was not of the same opinion, so he flew the track, and pitched
-poor Ike into the devouring element. Mr. Lincoln saw it, and ran to his
-assistance, saying, 'You have carried this thing far enough.' I could
-see he was mad, though he could not help laughing himself. The poor
-fellow was considerably scorched about the head and face. Jack Armstrong
-took him to the doctor, who shaved his head to fix him up, and put salve
-on the burn. I think Mr. Lincoln was a little mad at Armstrong, and Jack
-himself was very sorry for it. Jack gave Ike next morning a dram, his
-breakfast, and a seal-skin cap, and sent him home."
-
-"One cold winter day, Lincoln saw a poor fellow named "Ab Trent" hard at
-work chopping up "a house," which Mr. Hill had employed him to convert
-into firewood. Ab was barefooted, and shivered pitifully while he
-worked. Lincoln watched him a few moments, and asked him what he was to
-get for the job. Ab answered, 'One dollar;' and, pointing to his naked
-and suffering feet, said that he wished to buy a pair of shoes. Lincoln
-seized the axe, and, ordering the boy to comfort himself at the nearest
-fire, chopped up 'the house' so fast that Ab and the owner were both
-amazed when they saw it done." According to Mr. Rutledge, "Ab remembered
-this act with the liveliest gratitude. Once he, being a cast-iron
-Democrat, determined to vote against his party and for Mr. Lincoln;
-but the friends, as he afterwards said with tears in his eyes, made
-him drunk, and he had voted against Abe. Thus he did not even have an
-opportunity to return the noble conduct of Mr. Lincoln by this small
-measure of thanks."
-
-We have given some instances of Mr. Lincoln's unfailing disposition to
-succor the weak and the unfortunate. He never seems to have hesitated on
-account of actual or fancied danger to himself, but boldly espoused the
-side of the oppressed against the oppressor, whoever and whatever the
-latter might be. In a fisticuff or a rough-and-tumble fight, he was one
-of the most formidable men of the region in which he lived. It took a
-big bully, and a persevering one, to force him into a collision; but,
-being in, his enemy found good reason to beware of him. He was cool,
-calculating, but swift in action, and terribly strong. Nevertheless, he
-never promoted a quarrel, and would be at infinite trouble any time to
-compose one. An unnecessary broil gave him pain; and whenever there was
-the slightest hope of successful mediation, whether by soft speech or by
-the strong hand, he was instant and fearless for peace. His good-nature,
-his humor, his fertility in expedients, and his alliance, offensive
-and defensive, with Jack Armstrong, made him almost irresistible in
-his benevolent efforts to keep the ordinary ruffian of New Salem within
-decent bounds. If he was talking to Squire Godbey or Row Herndon (each
-of them give incidents of the kind), and he heard the sounds or saw
-the signs which betoken a row in the street, he would jump up, saying,
-"Let's go and stop it." He would push through the "ring" which was
-generally formed around the combatants, and, after separating the
-latter, would demand a truce and "a talk;" and so soon as he got them
-to talking, the victory was his. If it happened to be rough Jack himself
-who was at the bottom of the disturbance, he usually became very much
-ashamed of his conduct, and offered to "treat," or do any thing else
-that would atone for his brutality.
-
-Lincoln has often been seen in the old mill on the river-bank to lift
-a box of stones weighing from a thousand to twelve hundred pounds.
-Of course it was not done by a straight lift of the hands: he "was
-harnessed to the box with ropes and straps." It was even said he could
-easily raise a barrel of whiskey to his mouth when standing upright, and
-take a drink out of the bung-hole; but of course one cannot believe it.
-Frequent exhibitions of such strength doubtless had much to do with his
-unbounded influence over the rougher class of men.
-
-He possessed the judicial quality of mind in a degree so eminent, and it
-was so universally recognized, that he never could attend a horse-race
-without being importuned to act as a judge, or witness a bet without
-assuming the responsibility of a stakeholder. "In the spring or
-summer of 1832," says Henry McHenry, "I had a horse-race with George
-Warbur-ton. I got Lincoln, who was at the race, to be a judge of the
-race, much against his will and after hard persuasion. Lincoln decided
-correctly; and the other judge said, 'Lincoln is the fairest man I ever
-bad to deal with: if Lincoln is in this county when I die, I want him
-to be my administrator, for he is the only man I ever met with that was
-wholly and unselfishly honest.'" His ineffable purity in determining the
-result of a scrub-race had actually set his colleague to thinking of his
-latter end.
-
-But Lincoln endured another annoyance much worse than this. He was
-so generally esteemed, and so highly admired, that, when any of his
-neighbors had a fight in prospect, one of the parties was sure to insist
-upon his acting as his second. Lincoln was opposed to fights, but there
-were some fights that had to be fought; and these were "set," a day
-fixed, and the neighborhood notified. In these cases there was no room
-for the offices of a mediator; and when the affair was pre-ordained,
-"and must come off," Mr. Lincoln had no excuse for denying the request
-of a friend.
-
-"Two neighbors, Harry Clark and Ben Wilcox," says Mr. Rutledge, "had had
-a lawsuit. The defeated declared, that, although he was beaten in the
-suit, he could whip his opponent. This was a formal challenge, and was
-at once carried to the ears of the victor (Wilcox), and as promptly
-accepted. The time, place, and seconds were chosen with due regularity;
-Mr. Lincoln being Clark's, and John Brewer, Wilcox's second. The parties
-met, stripped themselves all but their breeches, went in, and Mr.
-Lincoln's principal was beautifully whipped. These combats were
-conducted with as much ceremony and punctiliousness as ever graced
-the duelling-ground. After the conflict, the seconds conducted their
-respective principals to the river, washed off the blood, and assisted
-them to dress. During this performance, the second of the party opposed
-to Mr. Lincoln remarked, 'Well, Abe, my man has whipped yours, and I
-can whip you.' Now, this challenge came from a man who was very small in
-size. Mr. Lincoln agreed to fight, provided he would chalk out his size
-on Mr. Lincoln's person, and every blow struck outside of that mark
-should be counted foul. After this sally, there was the best possible
-humor, and all parties were as orderly as if they had been engaged in
-the most harmless amusement."
-
-In 1834 Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature, and this time
-was elected by a larger majority than any other man on the ticket. By
-this time the party with which he acted in the future was "discriminated
-as Whig;" and he did not hesitate to call himself a Whig, although he
-sought and received the votes of a great many Democrats. Just before the
-time had arrived for candidates to announce themselves, he went to John
-T. Stuart, and told him "the Democrats wanted to run him." He made the
-same statement to Ninian W. Edwards. Edwards and Stuart were both his
-personal and political friends, and they both advised him to let
-the Democrats have their way. Major Stuart's advice was certainly
-disinterested; for, in pursuance of it, two of the Whig candidates,
-Lincoln and Dawson, made a bargain with the Democrats which very
-nearly proved fatal to Stuart himself. He was at that time the favorite
-candidate of the Whigs for the Legislature; but the conduct of Lincoln
-and Dawson so demoralized the party, that his vote was seriously
-diminished. Up to this time Sangamon had been stanchly Democratic;
-but even in this election of 1834 we perceive slight evidences of that
-party's decay, and so early as 1836 the county became thoroughly Whig.
-
-We shall give no details of this campaign, since we should only be
-repeating what is written of the campaign of 1832. But we cannot
-withhold one extract from the reminiscences of Mr. Row Herndon:--
-
-"He (Lincoln) came to my house, near Island Grove, during harvest. There
-were some thirty men in the field. He got his dinner, and went out in
-the field where the men were at work. I gave him an introduction, and
-the boys said that they could not vote for a man unless he could make a
-hand. 'Well, boys,' said he, 'if that is all, I am sure of your votes.'
-He took hold of the cradle, and led the way all the round with perfect
-ease. The boys were satisfied, and I don't think he lost a vote in the
-crowd.
-
-"The next day was speaking at Berlin. He went from my house with Dr.
-Barnett, the man that had asked me who this man Lincoln was. I told him
-that he was a candidate for the Legislature. He laughed and said, 'Can't
-the party raise no better material than that?' I said, 'Go to-morrow,
-and hear all before you pronounce judgment.' When he came back, I
-said, 'Doctor, what say you now?' 'Why, sir,' said he, 'he is a perfect
-take-in: he knows more than all of them put together.'"
-
-Lincoln got 1,376 votes, Dawson 1,370, Carpenter 1,170, Stuart 1,164.
-Lincoln was at last duly elected a Representative by a very flattering
-majority, and began to look about for the pecuniary means necessary to
-maintain his new dignity. In this extremity he had recourse to an old
-friend named Coleman Smoot.
-
-One day in 1832, while he was clerking for Offutt, a stranger came into
-the store, and soon disclosed the fact that his name was Smoot. Abe was
-behind the counter at the moment; but, hearing the name, he sprang over
-and introduced himself. Abe had often heard of Smoot, and Smoot had
-often heard of Abe. They had been as anxious to meet as ever two
-celebrities were; but hitherto they had never been able to manage it.
-"Smoot," said Lincoln, after a steady survey of his person, "I am very
-much disappointed in you: I expected to see an old Probst of a fellow."
-(Probst, it appears, was the most hideous specimen of humanity in all
-that country.) "Yes," replied Smoot; "and I am equally disappointed,
-for I expected to see a good-looking man when I saw you." A few neat
-compliments like the foregoing laid the foundation of a lasting intimacy
-between the two men, and in his present distress Lincoln knew no one who
-would be more likely than Smoot to respond favorably to an application
-for money.
-
-"After he was elected to the Legislature," says Mr. Smoot, "he came to
-my house one day in company with Hugh Armstrong. Says he, 'Smoot, did
-you vote for me?' I told him I did. 'Well,' says he, 'you must loan me
-money to buy suitable clothing, for I want to make a decent appearance
-in the Legislature.' I then loaned him two hundred dollars, which he
-returned to me according to promise."
-
-The interval between the election and his departure for the seat of
-government was employed by Mr. Lincoln partly in reading, partly in
-writing.
-
-The community in which he lived was pre-eminently a community of
-free-thinkers in matters of religion; and it was then no secret, nor has
-it been a secret since, that Mr. Lincoln agreed with the majority of his
-associates in denying to the Bible the authority of divine revelation.
-It was his honest belief,--a belief which it was no reproach to hold
-at New Salem, Anno Domini 1834, and one which he never thought of
-concealing. It was no distinction, either good or bad, no honor, and no
-shame. But he had made himself thoroughly familiar with the writings
-of Paine and Volney,--"The Ruins" by one and "The Age of Reason" by
-the other. His mind was full of the subject, and he felt an itching to
-write. He did write, and the result was a "little book." It was probably
-merely an extended essay; but it is ambitiously spoken of as "a book" by
-himself and by the persons who were made acquainted with its contents.
-In this work he intended to demonstrate,--
-
-<b>"First, that the Bible was not God's revelation; and,
-
-"Secondly, that Jesus was not the Son of God."</b>
-
-These were his leading propositions, and surely they were comprehensive
-enough; but the reader will be better able to guess at the arguments
-by which they were sustained, when he has examined some of the evidence
-recorded in Chapter XIX.
-
-No leaf of this little volume has survived. Mr. Lincoln carried it
-in manuscript to the store of Mr. Samuel Hill, where it was read and
-discussed. Hill was himself an unbeliever, but his son considered
-this book "infamous." It is more than probable that Hill, being a warm
-personal friend of Lincoln, feared that the publication of the essay
-would some day interfere with the political advancement of his favorite.
-At all events, he snatched it out of his hand, and thrust it into the
-fire, from which not a shred escaped. The sequel will show that even Mr.
-Hill's provident forethought was not altogether equal to the prevention
-of the injury he dreaded.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE reader is already familiar with the name of James Rutledge, the
-founder of New Salem, and the owner in part of the famous mill on the
-Sangamon. He was born in South Carolina, and was of the illustrious
-Rutledge family of that State. From South Carolina he emigrated to
-Kentucky, and thence to Illinois. In 1828 he settled at New Salem, built
-the mill and laid out the village in conjunction with Mr. Cameron,
-a retired minister of the Cumberland Presbyterians. Mr. Rutledge's
-character seems to have been pure and high; for wherever his name occurs
-in the voluminous records before us,--in the long talks and the numerous
-epistles of his neighbors,--it is almost invariably coupled with some
-expression of genuine esteem and respect.
-
-At one time, and along with his other business,--which appears to have
-been quite extensive and various,--Mr. Rutledge kept the tavern, the
-small house with four rooms on the main street of New Salem, just
-opposite Lincoln's grocery. There Mr. Lincoln came to board late in
-1832, or early in 1833. The family consisted of the father, mother,
-and nine children,--three of them born in Kentucky and six in Illinois;
-three grown up, and the rest quite young. Ann, the principal subject of
-this chapter, was the third child. She was born on the 7th of January,
-1813, and was about nineteen years of age when Mr. Lincoln came to live
-in the house.
-
-When Ann was a little maiden just turned of seventeen, and still
-attending the school of that redoubtable pedagogue Min-ter Graham, there
-came to New Salem a young gentleman of singular enterprise, tact, and
-capacity for business. He is identical with the man whom we have already
-quoted as "the pioneer of New Salem as a business point," and who built
-the first storehouse there at the extravagant cost of fifteen dollars.
-He took boarding with Mr. Rutledge's friend and partner, James Cameron,
-and gave out his name as John McNeil. He came to New Salem with no other
-capital than good sense and an active and plucky spirit; but somehow
-fortune smiled indiscriminately on all his endeavors, and very soon--as
-early as the latter part of 1832--he found himself a well-to-do and
-prosperous man, owning a snug farm seven miles north of New Salem, and
-a half-interest in the largest store of the place. This latter property
-his partner, Samuel Hill, bought from him at a good round sum; for
-McNeil now announced his intention of being absent for a brief period,
-and his purpose was such that he might need all his available capital.
-
-In the mean time the partners, Hill and McNeil, had both fallen in love
-with Ann Rutledge, and both courted her with devoted assiduity. But the
-contest had long since been decided in favor of McNeil, and Ann loved
-him with all her susceptible and sensitive heart. When the time drew
-near for McNeil to depart, he confided to Ann a strange story,--and, in
-the eyes of a person less fond, a very startling story. His name was
-not John McNeil at all, but John McNamar. His family was a highly
-respectable one in the State of New York; but a few years before his
-father had failed in business, and there was great distress at home. He
-(John) then conceived the romantic plan of running away, and, at some
-undefined place in the far West, making a sudden fortune with which to
-retrieve the family disaster. He fled accordingly, changed his name to
-avoid the pursuit of his father, found his way to New Salem, and--she
-knew the rest. He was now able to perform that great act of filial piety
-which he set out to accomplish, would return at once to the relief of
-his parents, and, in all human probability, bring them back with him to
-his new home in Illinois. At all events, she might look for his return
-as speedily as the journey could be made with ordinary diligence; and
-thenceforward there should be no more partings between him and his fair
-Ann. She believed this tale, because she loved the man that told it;
-and she would have believed it all the same if it had been ten times as
-incredible. A wise man would have rejected it with scorn, but the girl's
-instinct was a better guide; and McNamar proved to be all that he said
-he was, although poor Ann never saw the proof which others got of it.
-
-McNamar rode away "on old Charley," an antiquated steed that had seen
-hard usage in the Black Hawk War. Charley was slow, stumbled dreadfully,
-and caused his rider much annoyance and some hard swearing. On this
-provoking animal McNamar jogged through the long journey from New Salem
-to New York, and arrived there after many delays, only to find that his
-broken and dispirited father was fast sinking into the grave. After
-all his efforts, he was too late: the father could never enjoy the
-prosperity which the long-absent and long-silent son had brought him.
-McNamar wrote to Ann that there was sickness in the family, and he could
-not return at the time appointed. Then there were other and still other
-postponements; "circumstances over which he had no control" prevented
-his departure from time to time, until years had rolled away, and Ann's
-heart had grown sick with hope deferred. She never quite gave him up,
-but continued to expect him until death terminated her melancholy watch.
-His inexplicable delay, however, the infrequency of his letters, and
-their unsatisfactory character,--these and something else had broken her
-attachment, and toward the last she waited for him only to ask a release
-from her engagement, and to say that she preferred another and a more
-urgent suitor. But without his knowledge and formal renunciation of his
-claim upon her, she did not like to marry; and, in obedience to this
-refinement of honor, she postponed her union with the more pressing
-lover until Aug. 25, 1835, when, as many persons believe, she died of a
-broken heart.
-
-Lincoln's friend Short was in some way related to the Rutledges, and
-for a while Lincoln visited Ann two or three times a week at his house.
-According to him, "Miss Rutledge was a good-looking, smart, lively girl,
-a good housekeeper, with a moderate education, and without any of the
-so-called accomplishments." L. M. Greene, who knew her well, talks about
-her as "a beautiful and very amiable young woman;" and "Nult" Greene is
-even more enthusiastic. "This young lady," in the language of the latter
-gentleman, "was a woman of exquisite beauty; but her intellect was
-quick, sharp, deep, and philosophic, as well as brilliant. She had
-as gentle and kind a heart as an angel, full of love, kindliness, and
-sympathy. She was beloved by everybody, and everybody respected and
-loved her, so sweet and angelic was she. Her character was more than
-good: it was positively noted throughout the county. She was a woman
-worthy of Lincoln's love." McNamar, her unfortunate lover, says, "Miss
-Ann was a gentle, amiable maiden, without any of the airs of your city
-belles, but winsome and comely withal; a blonde in complexion, with
-golden hair, cherry-red lips, and a bonny blue eye." Even the women
-of the neighborhood united with the men to praise the name of this
-beautiful but unhappy girl. Mrs. Hardin Bale "knew her well. She had
-auburn hair, blue eyes, fair complexion; was a slim, pretty, kind,
-tender, good-hearted woman; in height about five feet three inches, and
-weighed about a hundred and twenty pounds. She was beloved by all who
-knew her. McNamar, Hill, and Lincoln all courted her near the same time.
-She died as it were of grief. Miss Rutledge was beautiful." Such was
-Ann Rutledge, the girl in whose grave Mr. Lincoln said, "My heart lies
-buried." When Mr. Lincoln first saw Ann, she was probably the most
-refined woman with whom he had then ever spoken,--a modest, delicate
-creature, fascinating by reason of the mere contrast with the rude
-people by whom they were both surrounded. She had a secret, too, and a
-sorrow,--the unexplained and painful absence of McNamar,--which no doubt
-made her all the more interesting to him whose spirit was often even
-more melancholy than her own. It would be hard to trace the growth of
-such an attachment at a time and place so distant; but that it actually
-grew, and became an intense and mutual passion, the evidence before us
-is painfully abundant.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was always welcome at the little tavern, at Short's on
-the Sand Ridge, or at the farm, half a mile from Short's, where the
-Rutledges finally abode. Ann's father was his devoted friend, and the
-mother he called affectionately "Aunt Polly." It is probable that the
-family looked upon McNamar's delay with more suspicion than Ann did
-herself. At all events, all her adult relatives encouraged the suit
-which Lincoln early began to press; and as time, absence, and apparent
-neglect, gradually told against McNamar, she listened to him with
-augmenting interest, until, in 1835, we find them formally and solemnly
-betrothed. Ann now waited only for the return of McNamar to marry
-Lincoln. David Rutledge urged her to marry immediately, without regard
-to any thing but her own happiness; but she said she could not consent
-to it until McNamar came back and released her from her pledge. At
-length, however, as McNamar's re-appearance became more and more
-hopeless, she took a different view of it, and then thought she would
-become Abe's wife as soon as he found the means of a decent livelihood.
-"Ann told me once," says James M. in a letter to R. B. Rutledge, in
-coming from camp-meeting on Rock Creek, "that engagements made too far
-ahead sometimes failed; that one _had_ failed (meaning her engagement
-with McNamar), and gave me to understand, that, as soon as certain
-studies were completed, she and Lincoln would be married."
-
-In the summer of 1835 Ann showed unmistakable symptoms of failing
-health, attributable, as most of the neighborhood believed, to the
-distressing attitude she felt bound to maintain between her two lovers.
-On the 25th of August, in that year, she died of what the doctors chose
-to call "brain-fever." In a letter to Mr. Herndon, her brother
-says, "You suggest that the probable cause of Ann's sickness was her
-conflicts, emotions, &c. As to this I cannot say. I, however, have my
-own private convictions. The character of her sickness was brain-fever."
-A few days before her death Lincoln was summoned to her bedside. What
-happened in that solemn conference was known only to him and the dying
-girl. But when he left her, and stopped at the house of John Jones, on
-his way home, Jones saw signs of the most terrible distress in his
-face and his conduct. When Ann actually died, and was buried, his grief
-became frantic: he lost all self-control, even the consciousness of
-identity, and every friend he had in New Salem pronounced him insane,
-mad, crazy. "He was watched with especial vigilance," as William Green
-tells us, "during storms, fogs, damp, gloomy weather, for fear of an
-accident." "At such times he raved piteously, declaring, among other wild
-expressions of his woe, 'I can never be reconciled to have the snow,
-rains, and storms to beat upon her grave!'"
-
-About three-quarters of a mile below New Salem, at the foot of the main
-bluff, and in a hollow between two lateral bluffs, stood the house of
-Bowlin Greene, built of logs and weather-boarded. Thither the friends
-of Lincoln, who apprehended a total abdication of reason, determined
-to transport him, partly for the benefit of a mere change of scene, and
-partly to keep him within constant reach of his near and noble
-friend, Bowlin Greene. During this period of his darkened and wavering
-intellect, when "accidents" were momentarily expected, it was discovered
-that Bowlin Greene possessed a power to persuade and guide him
-proportioned to the affection that had subsisted between them in former
-and better times. Bowlin Greene came for him, but Lincoln was cunning
-and obstinate: it required the most artful practices of a general
-conspiracy of all his friends to "disarm his suspicions," and induce
-him to go and stay with his most anxious and devoted friend. But at last
-they succeeded; and Lincoln remained down under the bluff for two or
-three weeks, the object of undisguised solicitude and of the strictest
-surveillance. At the end of that time his mind seemed to be restored,
-and it was thought safe to let him go back to his old haunts,--to the
-study of law, to the writing of legal papers for his neighbors, to
-pettifogging before the justice of the peace, and perhaps to a little
-surveying. But Mr. Lincoln was never precisely the same man again. At
-the time of his release he was thin, haggard, and careworn,--like one
-risen from the verge of the grave. He had always been subject to fits
-of great mental depression, but after this they were more frequent and
-alarming. It was then that he began to repeat, with a feeling which
-seemed to inspire every listener with awe, and to carry him to the fresh
-grave of Ann at every one of his solemn periods, the lines entitled,
-"Immortality; or, Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?"
-None heard him but knew that he selected these curiously empty, yet
-wonderfully sad, impressive lines, to celebrate a grief which lay
-with continual heaviness on his heart, but to which he could not with
-becoming delicacy directly allude. He muttered them as he rambled
-through the woods, or walked by the roaring Sangamon. He was heard to
-murmur them to himself as he slipped into the village at nightfall,
-after a long walk of six miles, and an evening visit to the Concord
-graveyard; and he would suddenly break out with them in little social
-assemblies after noticeable periods of silent gloom. They came unbidden
-to his lips, while the air of affliction in face and gesture, the moving
-tones and touching modulations of his voice, made it evident that every
-syllable of the recitation was meant to commemorate the mournful fate of
-Ann. The poem is now his: the name of the obscure author is forgotten,
-and his work is imperishably associated with the memory of a great man,
-and interwoven with the history of his greatest Sorrow. Mr. Lincoln's
-adoption of it has saved it from merited oblivion, and translated it
-from the "poet's corner" of the country newspaper to a place in the
-story of his own life,--a story that will continue to be written, or
-written about, as long as our language exists.
-
-Many years afterwards, when Mr. Lincoln, the best lawyer of his section,
-with one exception, travelled the circuit with the court and a crowd
-of his jolly brethren, he always rose early, be fore any one else was
-stirring, and, raking together a few glowing coals on the hearth, he
-would sit looking into them, musing and talking with himself, for hours
-together. One morning, in the year of his nomination, his companions
-found him in this attitude, when "Mr. Lincoln repeated aloud, and at
-length, the poem 'Immortality,'" indicating his preference for the two
-last stanzas, but insisting that the entire composition "sounded to him
-as much like true poetry as any thing that he had ever heard."
-
-In Carpenter's "Anecdotes and Reminiscences of President Lincoln,"
-occurs the following passage:--?
-
-"The evening of March 22, 1864, was a most interesting one to me. I was
-with the President alone in his office for several hours. Busy with pen
-and papers when I went in, he presently threw them aside, and commenced
-talking to me of Shakspeare, of whom he was very fond. Little 'Tad,' his
-son, coming in, he sent him to the library for a copy of the plays,
-and then read to me several of his favorite passages. Relapsing into a
-sadder strain, he laid the book aside, and, leaning back in his chair,
-said,--
-
-"'There is a poem which has been a great favorite with me for years,
-which was first shown to me when a young man by a friend, and which I
-afterwards saw and cut from a newspaper, and learned by heart. I would,'
-he continued, 'give a great deal to know who wrote it; but I have never
-been able to ascertain.'
-
-"Then, half closing his eyes, he repeated the verses to me:--
-
- "'Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
- Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud,
- A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,
- He passeth from life to his rest in the grave.
-
- The leaves of the oak and the willow shall fade,
- Be scattered around, and together be laid;
- And the young and the old, and the low and the high,
- Shall moulder to dust, and together shall lie.
-
- The infant a mother attended and loved;
- The mother that infant's affection who proved;
- The husband that mother and infant who blest,--
- Each, all, are away to their dwellings of rest.
-
- [The maid on whose cheek, on whose brow, in whose eye,
- Shone beauty and pleasure, her triumphs are by;
- And the memory of those who loved her and praised,
- Are alike from the minds of the living erased.]
-
- The hand of the king that the sceptre hath borne,
- The brow of the priest that the mitre hath worn,
- The eye of the sage, and the heart of the brave,
- Are hidden and lost in the depths of the grave.
-
- The peasant whose lot was to sow and to reap,
- The herdsman who climbed with his goats up the steep,
- The beggar who wandered in search of his bread,
- Have faded away like the grass that we tread.
-
- [The saint who enjoyed the communion of Heaven,
- The sinner who dared to remain unforgiven,
- The wise and the foolish, the guilty and just,
- Have quietly mingled their bones in the dust.]
-
- So the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed,
- That withers away to let others succeed;
- So the multitude comes, even those we behold,
- To repeat every tale that has often been told.
-
- For we are the same our fathers have been;
- We see the same sights our fathers have seen;
- We drink the same stream, we view the same sun,
- And run the same course our fathers have run.
-
- The thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think;
- From the death we are shrinking our fathers would shrink;
- To the life we are clinging they also would cling;
- But it speeds from us all like a bird on the wing.
-
- They loved, but the story we cannot unfold;
- They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold;
- They grieved, but no wail from their slumber will come;
- They joyed, but the tongue of their gladness is dumb.
-
- They died, ay, they died: we things that are now,
- That walk on the turf that lies over their brow,
- And make in their dwellings a transient abode,
- Meet the things that they met on their pilgrimage road.
-
- Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain,
- Are mingled together in sunshine and rain;
- And the smile and the tear, the song and the dirge,
- Still follow each other like surge upon surge.
-
- 'Tis the wink of an eye,'tis the draught of a breath,
- From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
- From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,--
- Oh! why should the spirit of mortal be proud?'"
-
-It was only a year or two after the death of Ann Rutledge that Mr.
-Lincoln told Robert L. Wilson, a distinguished colleague in the
-Legislature, parts of whose letter will be printed in another place,
-that, although "he appeared to enjoy life rapturously," it was a
-mistake; that, "when alone, he was so overcome by mental depression,
-that he never dared to carry a pocket-knife." And during all Mr.
-Wilson's extended acquaintance with him he never did own a knife,
-notwithstanding he was inordinately fond of whittling.
-
-Mr. Herndon says, "He never addressed another woman, in my opinion,
-'Yours affectionately,' and generally and characteristically abstained
-from the use of the word '_love._' That word cannot be found more than
-a half-dozen times, if that often, in all his letters and speeches since
-that time. I have seen some of his letters to other ladies, but he never
-says 'love.' He never ended his letters with 'Yours affectionately,'
-but signed his name, 'Your friend, A. Lincoln.'" After Mr. Lincoln's
-election to the Presidency, he one day met an old friend, Isaac Cogdale,
-who had known him intimately in the better days of the Rutledges at New
-Salem. "Ike," said he, "call at my office at the State House about
-an hour by sundown. The company will then all be gone." Cogdale went
-according to request; "and sure enough," as he expressed it, "the
-company dropped off one by one, including Lincoln's clerk."
-
-"'I want to inquire about old times and old acquaintances,' began Mr.
-Lincoln. 'When we lived in Salem, there were the Greenes, Potters,
-Armstrongs, and Rutledges. These folks have got scattered all over the
-world,--some are dead. Where are the Rutledges, Greenes, &c.?'
-
-"After we had spoken over old times," continues Cogdale,--"persons,
-circumstances,--in which he showed a wonderful memory, I then dared to
-ask him this question:--
-
-"'May I now, in turn, ask you one question, Lincoln?'
-
-"'Assuredly. I will answer your question, if a fair one, with all my
-heart.'
-
-"'Well, Abe, is it true that you fell in love and courted Ann Rutledge?'
-
-"'It is true,--true: indeed I did. I have loved the name of Rutledge to
-this day. I have kept my mind on their movements ever since, and love
-them dearly.'
-
-"'Abe, is it true,'" still urged Cogdale, "that you ran a little wild
-about the matter?'
-
-"'I did really. I ran off the track. It was my first. I loved the woman
-dearly. She was a handsome girl; would have made a good, loving wife;
-was natural and quite intellectual, though not highly educated. I did
-honestly and truly love the girl, and think often, often, of her now.'"
-
-A few weeks after the burial of Ann, McNamar returned to New Salem.
-He saw Lincoln at the post-office, and was struck with the deplorable
-change in his appearance. A short time afterwards Lincoln wrote him
-a deed, which he still has, and prizes highly, in memory of his great
-friend and rival. His father was at last dead; but he brought back with
-him his mother and her family. In December of the same year his mother
-died, and was buried in the same graveyard with Ann. During his absence,
-Col. Rutledge had occupied his farm, and there Ann died; but "the
-Rutledge farm" proper adjoined this one to the south. "Some of Mr.
-Lincoln's corners, as a surveyor, are still visible on lines traced by
-him on both farms."
-
-On Sunday, the fourteenth day of October, 1866, William H. Herndon
-knocked at the door of John McNamar, at his residence, but a few feet
-distant from the spot where Ann Rutledge breathed her last. After some
-preliminaries not necessary to be related, Mr. Herndon says, "I asked
-him the question:--
-
-"'Did you know Miss Rutledge? If so, where did she die?'
-
-"He sat by his open window, looking westerly; and, pulling me closer to
-himself, looked through the window and said, 'There, by that,'--choking
-up with emotion, pointing his long forefinger, nervous and trembling,
-to the spot,--'there, by that currant-bush, she died. The old house in
-which she and her father died is gone.'
-
-"After further conversation, leaving the sadness to momentarily pass
-away, I asked this additional question:--
-
-"'Where was she buried?'
-
-"'In Concord burying-ground, one mile south-east of this place.'"
-
-Mr. Herndon sought the grave. "S. C. Berry," says he, "James Short (the
-gentleman who purchased in Mr. Lincoln's compass and chain in 1834,
-under an execution against Lincoln, or Lincoln & Berry, and gratuitously
-gave them back to Mr. Lincoln), James Miles, and myself were together.
-
-"I asked Mr. Berry if he knew where Miss Rutledge was buried,--the place
-and exact surroundings. He replied, 'I do. The grave of Miss Rutledge
-lies just north of her brother's, David Rutledge, a young lawyer of
-great promise, who died in 1842, in his twenty-seventh year.'
-
-"The cemetery contains but an acre of ground, in a beautiful and
-secluded situation. A thin skirt of timber lies on the east, commencing
-at the fence of the cemetery. The ribbon of timber, some fifty yards
-wide, hides the sun's early rise. At nine o'clock the sun pours all
-his rays into the cemetery. An extensive prairie lies west, the forest
-north, a field on the east, and timber and prairie on the south. In this
-lonely ground lie the Berrys, the Rutledges, the Clarys, the Armstrongs,
-and the Joneses, old and respected citizens,--pioneers of an early day.
-I write, or rather did write, the original draught of this description
-in the immediate presence of the ashes of Miss Ann Rutledge, the
-beautiful and tender dead. The village of the dead is a sad, solemn
-place. Its very presence imposes truth on the mind of the living writer.
-Ann Rutledge lies buried north of lier brother, and rests sweetly on
-his left arm, angels to guard her. The cemetery is fast filling with
-the hazel and the dead."
-
-A lecture delivered by William H. Herndon at Springfield, in 1866,
-contained the main outline, without the minuter details, of the
-story here related. It was spoken, printed, and circulated without
-contradiction from any quarter. It was sent to the Rutledges, McNeeleys,
-Greenes, Short, and many other of the old residents of New Salem and
-Petersburg, with particular requests that they should correct any
-error they might find in it. It was pronounced by them all truthful
-and accurate; but their replies, together with a mass of additional
-evidence, have been carefully collated with the lecture, and the result
-is the present chapter. The story of Ann Rutledge, Lincoln, and McNamar,
-as told here, is as well proved as the fact of Mr. Lincoln's election to
-the Presidency.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-FOLLOWING strictly the chronological order hitherto observed in the
-course of this narrative, we should be compelled to break off the story
-of Mr. Lincoln's love-affairs at New Salem, and enter upon his public
-career in the Legislature and before the people. But, while by that
-means we should preserve continuity in one respect, we should lose it in
-another; and the reader would perhaps prefer to take in at one view
-all of Mr. Lincoln's courtships, save only that one which resulted in
-marriage.
-
-Three-quarters of a mile, or nearly so, north of Bowlin Greene's, and
-on the summit of a hill, stood the house of Bennett Able, a small frame
-building eighteen by twenty feet. Able and his wife were warm friends
-of Mr. Lincoln; and many of his rambles through the surrounding country,
-reading and talking to himself, terminated at their door, where he
-always found the latch-string on the outside, and a hearty welcome
-within. In October, 1833, Mr. Lincoln met there Miss Mary Owens, a
-sister of Mrs. Able, and, as we shall presently learn from his own
-words, admired her, although not extravagantly. She remained but four
-weeks, and then went back to her home in Kentucky.
-
-Miss Owens's mother being dead, her father married again; and Miss
-Owens, for good reasons of her own, thought she would rather live with
-her sister than with her stepmother. Accordingly, in the fall of 1836,
-she re-appeared at Able's, passing through New Salem on the day of the
-presidential election, where the men standing about the polls stared and
-wondered at her "beauty." Twenty eight or nine years of age, "she was,"
-in the language of Mr. L. M. Greene, "tall and portly; weighed about
-one hundred and twenty pounds, and had large blue eyes, with the finest
-trimmings I ever saw. She was jovial, social, loved wit and humor, had a
-liberal English education, and was considered wealthy. Bill," continues
-our excellent friend, "I am getting old; have seen too much trouble to
-give a lifelike picture of this woman. I won't try it. None of the
-poets or romance-writers has ever given to us a picture of a heroine so
-beautiful as a good description of Miss Owens in 1836 would be."
-
-Mrs. Hardin Bale, a cousin to Miss Owens, says "she was blue-eyed,
-dark-haired, handsome,--not pretty,--was rather large and tall,
-handsome, truly handsome, matronly looking, over ordinary size in height
-and weight.... Miss Owens was handsome, that is to say, noble-looking,
-matronly seeming."
-
-Respecting her age and looks, Miss. Owens herself makes the following
-note, Aug. 6, 1866:---
-
-"Born in the year eight; fair skin, deep-blue eyes, with dark curling
-hair; height five feet five inches, weighing about one hundred and fifty
-pounds."
-
-Johnson G. Greene is Miss Owens's cousin; and, whilst on a visit to her
-in 1866, he contrived to get her version of the Lincoln courtship at
-great length. It does not vary in any material part from the account
-currently received in the neighborhood, and given by various persons,
-whose oral or written testimony is preserved in Mr. Herndon's collection
-of manuscripts. Greene (J. G.) described her in terms about the same
-as those used by Mrs. Bale, adding that "she was a nervous and muscular
-woman," very "intellectual,"--"the most intellectual woman he ever
-saw,"--"with a forehead massive and angular, square, prominent, and
-broad."
-
-After Miss Owens's return to New Salem, in the fall of 1813, Mr. Lincoln
-was unremitting in his attentions; and wherever she went he was at
-her side. She had many relatives in the neighborhood,--the Bales, the
-Greenes, the Grahams: and, if she went to spend an afternoon or an
-evening with any of these, Abe was very likely to be on hand to conduct
-her home. He asked her to marry him; but she prudently evaded a positive
-answer until she could make up her mind about questionable points of his
-character. She did not think him coarse or cruel; but she did think
-him thoughtless, careless, not altogether as polite as he might be,--in
-short, "deficient," as she expresses it, "in those little links which
-make up the great chain of woman's happiness." His heart was good, his
-principles were high, his honor sensitive; but still, in the eyes of
-this refined, young lady, he did not seem to be quite the gentleman. "He
-was lacking in the smaller attentions;" and, in fact, the whole affair
-is explained when she tells us that "_his education was different from"
-hers_.
-
-One day Miss Owens and Mrs. Bowlin Greene were making their way slowly
-and tediously up the hill to Able's house, when they were joined by
-Lincoln. Mrs. Bowlin Greene was carrying "a great big fat child, heavy,
-and crossly disposed." Although the woman bent pitiably under her
-burden, Lincoln offered her no assistance, but, dropping behind with
-Miss Owens, beguiled the way according to his wishes. When they reached
-the summit, "Miss Owens said to Lincoln laughingly, 'You would not make
-a good husband. Abe.' They sat on the fence; and one word brought on
-another, till a split or breach ensued."
-
-Immediately after this misunderstanding, Lincoln went off toward Havana
-on a surveying expedition, and was absent about three weeks. On the
-first day of his return, one of Able's boys was sent up "to town" for
-the mail. Lincoln saw him at the post-office, and "asked if Miss Owens
-was at Mr. Able's." The boy said "Yes."--"Tell her," said Lin-join,
-"that I'll be down to see her in a few minutes." Now, Miss Owens had
-determined to spend that evening at Minter Graham's; and when the boy
-gave in the report, "she thought a moment, and said to herself, 'If
-I can draw Lincoln up there to Graham's, it will be all right.'" This
-scheme was to operate as a test of Abe's love; but it shared the fate of
-some of "the best-laid schemes of mice and men," and went "all agley."
-
-Lincoln, according to promise, went down to Able's, and asked if Miss
-Owens was in. Mrs. Able replied that she had gone to Graham's, about one
-and a half miles from Able's due south-west. Lincoln said, "Didn't she
-know I was coming?" Mrs. Able answered, "No;" but one of the children
-said, "Yes, ma, she did, for I heard Sam tell her so." Lincoln sat a
-while, and then went about his business. "The fat was now in the fire.
-Lincoln thought, as he was extremely poor, and Miss Owens very rich, it
-was a fling on him on that account. Abe was mistaken in his guesses,
-for wealth cut no figure in Miss Owens's eyes. Miss Owens regretted her
-course. Abe would not bend; and Miss Owens wouldn't. She said, if she
-had it to do over again she would play the cards differently.... She had
-two sons in the Southern army. She said that if either of them had got
-into difficulty, she would willingly have gone to old Abe for relief."
-
-In Miss Owens's letter of July 22, 1866, it will be observed! that she
-tacitly admitted to Mr. Gaines Greene "the circumstances in connection
-with Mrs. Greene and child." Although she here denies the precise words
-alleged to have been used by her in the little quarrel at the top of the
-hill, she does not deny the impression his conduct left upon her mind,
-but presents additional evidence of it by the relation of another
-incident of similar character, from which her inferences were the same.
-
-Fortunately we are not compelled, to rely upon tradition, however
-authentic, for the facts concerning this interesting episode in Mr.
-Lincoln's life. Miss Owens is still alive to tell her own tale, and
-we have besides his letters to the lady herself. Mr. Lincoln wrote his
-account of it as early as 1838. As in duty bound, we shall permit the
-lady to speak first. At her particular request, her present name and
-residence are suppressed.
-
-
-------, May 1, 1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-Dear Sir,--After quite a struggle with my feelings, I have at last
-decided to send you the letters in my possession written by Mr.
-Lincoln, believing, as I do, that you are a gentleman of honor, and will
-faithfully abide by all you have said.
-
-My associations with your lamented friend were in Menard County, whilst
-visiting a sister, who then resided near Petersburg. I have learned
-that my maiden name is now in your possession; and you have ere this, no
-doubt, been informed that I am a native Kentuckian.
-
-As regards Miss Rutledge, I cannot tell you any thing, she having died
-previous to my acquaintance with Mr. Lincoln; and I do not now recollect
-of ever hearing him mention her name. Please return the letters at your
-earliest convenience.
-
-Very respectfully yours,
-
-Mary S.------.
-
-
-------, May 22,1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-My dear Sir,--Really you catechise me in true lawyer style; but I feel
-you will have the goodness to excuse me if I decline answering all your
-questions in detail, being well assured that few women would have ceded
-as much as I have under all the circumstances.
-
-You say you have heard why our acquaintance terminated as it did. I,
-too, have heard the same bit of gossip; but I never used the remark
-which Madam Rumor says I did to Mr. Lincoln. I think I did on one
-occasion say to my sister, who was very anxious for us to be married,
-that I thought Mr. Lincoln was deficient in those little links which
-make up the chain of woman's happiness,--at least, it was so in my case.
-Not that I believed it proceeded from a lack of goodness of heart: but
-his training had been different from mine; hence there was not that
-congeniality which would otherwise have existed.
-
-From his own showing, you perceive that his heart and hand were at my
-disposal; and I suppose that my feelings were not sufficiently enlisted
-to have the matter consummated. About the beginning of the year 1833 I
-left Illinois, at which time our acquaintance and correspondence ceased
-without ever again being renewed.
-
-My father, who resided in Green County, Kentucky, was a gentleman of
-considerable means; and I am persuaded that few persons placed a higher
-estimate on education than he did.
-
-Respectfully yours,
-
-Mart S.------.
-
-
-------, July 22, 1866.
-
-Mr. W. H. Herndon.
-
-Dear Sir,--I do not think that you are pertinacious in asking the
-question relative to old Mrs. Bowlin Greene, because I wish to set you
-right on that question. Your information, no doubt, came through my
-cousin, Mr. Gaines Greene, who visited us last winter. Whilst here, he
-was laughing at me about Mr. Lincoln, and among other things spoke about
-the circumstance in connection with Mrs. Greene and child. My impression
-is now that I tacitly admitted it, for it was a season of trouble with
-me, and I gave but little heed to the matter. We never had any hard
-feelings toward each other that I know of. On no occasion did I say to
-Mr. Lincoln that I did not believe he would make a kind husband, because
-he did not tender his services to Mrs. Greene in helping of her carry
-her babe. As I said to you in a former letter, I thought him lacking
-in smaller attentions. One circumstance presents itself just now to my
-mind's eye. There was a company of us going to Uncle Billy Greene's. Mr.
-Lincoln was riding with me; and we had a very bad branch to cross. The
-other gentlemen were very officious in seeing that their partners got
-over safely. We were behind, he riding in, never looking back to see
-how I got along. When I rode up beside him, I remarked, "You are a nice
-fellow! I suppose you did not care whether my neck was broken or not."
-He laughingly replied (I suppose by way of compliment) that he knew I
-was plenty smart to take care of myself.
-
-In many things he was sensitive, almost to a fault. He told me of an
-incident: that he was crossing a prairie one day, and saw before him "a
-hog mired down," to use his own language. He was rather "fixed up;" and
-he resolved that he would pass on without looking towards the shoat.
-After he had gone by, he said the feeling was irresistible; and he had
-to look back, and the poor thing seemed to say wistfully, "There, now,
-my last hope is gone;" that he deliberately got down, and relieved it
-from its difficulty.
-
-In many things we were congenial spirits. In politics we saw eye to eye,
-though since then we differed as widely as the South is from the North.
-But methinks I hear you say, "Save me from a political woman!" So say I.
-
-The last message I ever received from him was about a year after we
-parted in Illinois. Mrs. Able visited Kentucky; and he said to her
-in Springfield, "Tell your sister that I think she was a great fool,
-because she did not stay here, and marry me." Characteristic of the man.
-
-Respectfully yours,
-
-Mary S.------.
-
-Vandalia, Dec. 13, 1836.
-
-Mary,--I have been sick ever since my arrival, or I should have written
-sooner. It is but little difference, however, as I have very little
-even yet to write. And more, the longer I can avoid the mortification
-of looking in the post-office for your letter, and not finding it, the
-better. You see I am mad about that _old letter_ yet. I don't like very
-well to risk you again. I'll try you once more, anyhow.
-
-The new State House is not yet finished, and consequently the
-Legislature is doing little or nothing. The Governor delivered an
-inflammatory political message, and it is expected there will be some
-sparring between the parties about it as soon as the two Houses get to
-business. Taylor delivered up his petitions for the new county to one
-of our members this morning. I am told he despairs of its success, on
-account of all the members from Morgan County opposing it. There are
-names enough on the petition, I think, to justify the members from our
-county in going for it; but if the members from Morgan oppose it, which
-they say they will, the chance will be bad.
-
-Our chance to take the seat of government to Springfield is better than
-I expected. An internal-improvement convention was held here since we
-met, which recommended a loan of several million of dollars, on the
-faith of the State, to construct railroads. Some of the Legislature are
-for it, and some against it: which has the majority I cannot tell.
-There is great strife and struggling for the office of the United States
-Senator here at this time. It is probable we shall ease their pains in
-a few days. The opposition men have no candidate of their own; and
-consequently they will smile as complacently at the angry snarl of the
-contending Van-Buren candidates and their respective friends, as the
-Christian does at Satan's rage. You recollect that I mentioned at the
-outset of this letter that I had been unwell. That is the fact, though
-I believe I am about well now; but that, with other things I cannot
-account for, have conspired, and have gotten my spirits so low that I
-feel that I would rather be any place in the world than here. I really
-cannot endure the thought of staying here ten weeks. Write back as soon
-as you get this, and, if possible, say something that will please me;
-for really I have not been pleased since I left you. This letter is
-so dry and stupid that I am ashamed to send it, but with my present
-feelings I cannot do any better.
-
-Give my best respects to Mr. and Mrs. Able and family.
-
-Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, May 7, 1837.
-
-Miss Mary S. Owens.
-
-Friend Mary,--I have commenced two letters to send you before this, both
-of which displeased me before I got half done, and so I tore them up.
-The first I thought was not serious enough, and the second was on the
-other extreme. I shall send this, turn out as it may.
-
-This thing of living in Springfield is rather a dull business, after
-all; at least, it is so to me. I am quite as lonesome here as I ever was
-anywhere in my life. I have been spoken to by but one woman since I've
-been here, and should not have been by her, if she could have avoided
-it. I've never been to church yet, nor probably shall not be soon. I
-stay away because I am conscious I should not know how to behave myself.
-
-I am often thinking about what we said of your coming to live at
-Springfield. I am afraid you would not be satisfied. There is a great
-deal of flourishing about in carriages here, which it would be your doom
-to see without sharing it. You would have to be poor, without the means
-of hiding your poverty. Do you believe you could bear that patiently?
-Whatever woman may cast her lot with mine, should any ever do so, it is
-my intention to do all in my power to make her happy and contented; and
-there is nothing I can imagine that would make me more unhappy than to
-fail in the effort. I know I should be much happier with you than the
-way I am, provided I saw no signs of discontent in you. What you have
-said to me may have been in the way of jest, or I may have misunderstood
-it. If so, then let it be forgotten; if otherwise, I much wish you would
-think seriously before you decide. For my part, I have already decided.
-What I have said I will most positively abide by, provided you wish
-it. My opinion is, that you had better not do it. You have not been
-accustomed to hardship, and it may be more severe than you now imagine.
-I know you are capable of thinking correctly on any subject; and, if you
-deliberate maturely upon this before you decide, then I am willing to
-abide your decision.
-
-You must write me a good long letter after you get this. You have
-nothing else to do; and, though it might not seem interesting to you
-after you have written it, it would be a good deal of company to me in
-this "busy wilderness." Tell your sister, I don't want to hear any more
-about selling out and moving, That gives me the hypo whenever I think of
-it.
-
-Yours, &c.,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Aug. 16, 1837.
-
-Friend Mary,--You will no doubt think it rather strange that I should
-write you a letter on the same day on which we parted; and I can only
-account for it by supposing that seeing you lately makes me think of you
-more than usual; while at our late meeting we had but few expressions
-of thoughts. You must know that I cannot see you, or think of you, with
-entire indifference; and yet it may be that you are mistaken in regard
-to what my real feelings toward you are. If I knew you were not, I
-should not trouble you with this letter. Perhaps any other man would
-know enough without further information; but I consider it my peculiar
-right to plead ignorance, and your bounden duty to allow the plea. I
-want in all cases to do right; and most particularly so in all cases
-with women. I want, at this particular time, more than any thing else,
-to do right with you: and if I knew it would be doing right, as I rather
-suspect it would, to let you alone, I would do it. And, for the purpose
-of making the matter as plain as possible, I now say that you can now
-drop the subject, dismiss your thoughts (if you ever had any) from me
-forever, and leave this letter unanswered, without calling forth one
-accusing murmur from me. And I will even go further, and say, that, if
-it will add any thing to your comfort or peace of mind to do so, it is
-my sincere wish that you should. Do not understand by this that I wish
-to cut your acquaintance. I mean no such thing. What I do wish is, that
-our further acquaintance shall depend upon yourself. If such further
-acquaintance would constitute nothing to your happiness, I am sure it
-would not to mine. If you feel yourself in any degree bound to me, I am
-now willing to release you, provided you wish it; while, on the other
-hand, I am willing, and even anxious, to bind you faster, if I can
-be convinced that it will, in any considerable degree, add to your
-happiness. This, indeed, is the whole question with me. Nothing would
-make me more miserable than to believe you miserable,--nothing more
-happy than to know you were so.
-
-In what I have now said, I think I cannot be misunderstood; and to make
-myself understood is the only object of this letter.
-
-If it suits you best to not answer this, farewell. A long life and
-a merry one attend you. But, if you conclude to write back, speak as
-plainly as I do. There can be neither harm nor danger in saying to me
-any thing you think, just in the manner you think it.
-
-My respects to your sister. Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-After his second meeting with Mary, Mr. Lincoln had little time to
-prosecute his addresses in person; for early in December he was called
-away to his seat in the Legislature; but, if his tongue was silent in
-the cause, his pen was busy.
-
-During the session of the Legislature of 1886-7, Mr. Lincoln made the
-acquaintance of Mrs. O. H. Browning, whose husband was also a member.
-The acquaintance ripened into friendship, and that winter and the next
-Mr. Lincoln spent a great deal of time in social intercourse with the
-Brownings. Mrs. Browning knew nothing as yet of the affair with Miss
-Owens; but as the latter progressed, and Lincoln became more and more
-involved, she noticed the ebb of his spirits, and often rallied him
-as the victim of some secret but consuming passion. With this for his
-excuse, Lincoln wrote her, after the adjournment of the Legislature, a
-full and connected account of the manner in which he had latterly been
-making "a fool of" himself. For many reasons the publication of this
-letter is an extremely painful duty. If it could be withheld, and the
-act decently reconciled to the conscience of a biographer professing to
-be honest and candid, it should never see the light in these pages. Its
-grotesque humor, its coarse exaggerations in describing the person of a
-lady whom the writer was willing to marry, its imputation of toothless
-and weatherbeaten old age to a woman really young and handsome, its
-utter lack of that delicacy of tone and sentiment which one naturally
-expects a gentleman to adopt when he thinks proper to discuss the merits
-of his late mistress,--all these, and its defective orthography, it
-would certainly be more agreeable to suppress than to publish. But, if
-we begin by omitting or mutilating a document which sheds so broad a
-light upon one part of his life and one phase of his character, why may
-we not do the like as fast and as often as the temptations arise? and
-where shall the process cease? A biography worth writing at all is worth
-writing fully and honestly; and the writer who suppresses or mangles
-the truth is no better than he who bears false witness in any other
-capacity. In April, 1838, Miss Owens finally departed from Illinois;
-and in that same month Mr. Lincoln wrote Mrs. Browning:--
-
-Springfield, April 1, 1838.
-
-Dear Madam,--Without appologising for being egotistical, I shall make
-the history of so much of my life as has elapsed since I saw you the
-subject of this letter. And, by the way, I now discover, that, in order
-to give a full and inteligible account of the things I have done and
-suffered since I saw you, I shall necessarily have to relate some that
-happened before.
-
-It was, then, in the autumn of 1836, that a married lady of my
-acquaintance, and who was a great friend of mine, being about to pay a
-visit to her father & other relatives residing in Kentucky, proposed
-to me that on her return she would bring a sister of hers with her on
-condition that I would engage to become her brother-in-law with all
-convenient despatch. I, of course, accepted the proposal, for you know
-I could not have done otherwise, had I really been averse to it; but
-privately, between you and me, I was most confoundedly well pleased with
-the project. I had seen the said sister some three years before, thought
-her inteligent and agreeable, and saw no good objection to plodding
-life through hand in hand with her. Time passed on, the lady took her
-journey, and in due time returned, sister in company, sure enough. This
-astonished me a little; for it appeared to me that her coming so
-readily showed that she was a trifle too willing; but, on reflection,
-it occurred to me that she might have been prevailed on by her married
-sister to come, without any thing concerning me ever having been
-mentioned to her; and so I concluded, that, if no other objection
-presented itself, I would consent to wave this. All this occurred to me
-on _hearing_ of her arrival in the neighborhood; for, be it remembered,
-I had not yet _seen_ her, except about three years previous, as above
-mentioned. In a few days we had an interview; and, although I had seen
-her before, she did not look as my imagination had pictured her. I knew
-she was oversize, but she now appeared a fair match for Falstaff. I knew
-she was called an "old maid," and I felt no doubt of the truth of at
-least half of the appelation; but now, when I beheld her, I could not
-for my life avoid thinking of my mother; and this, not from withered
-features, for her skin was too full of fat 'to permit of its contracting
-into wrinkles, but from her want of teeth, weather-beaten appearance
-in general, and from a kind of notion that ran in my head that nothing
-could have commenced at the size of infancy and reached her present bulk
-in less than thirty-five or forty years; and, in short, I was not at
-all pleased with her. But what could I do? I had told her sister that I
-would take her for better or for worse; and I made a point of honor and
-conscience in all things to stick to my word, especially if others had
-been induced to act on it, which in this case I had no doubt they had;
-for I was now fairly convinced that no other man on earth would have
-her, and hence the conclusion that they were bent on holding me to my
-bargain. "Well," thought I, "I have said it, and, be the consequences
-what they may, it shall not be my fault if I fail to do it." At once
-I determined to consider her my wife; and, this done, all my powers of
-discovery were put to work in search of perfections in her which might
-be fairly sett off against her defects. I tried to imagine her handsome,
-which, but for her unfortunate corpulency, was actually true. Exclusive
-of this, no woman that I have ever seen has a finer face. I also tried
-to convince myself that the mind was much more to be valued than the
-person; and in this she was not inferior, as I could discover, to any
-with whom I had been acquainted.
-
-Shortly after this, without attempting to come to any positive
-understanding with her, I sat out for Vandalia, when and where you first
-saw me. During my stay there I had letters from her which did not change
-my opinion of either her intelect or intention, but, on the contrary,
-confirmed it in both.
-
-All this while, although I was fixed, "firm as the surge-repelling
-rock," in my resolution, I found I was continually repenting the
-rashness which had led me to make it. Through life, I have been in no
-bondage, either real or imaginary, from the thraldom of which I so much
-desired to be free. After my return home, I saw nothing to change my
-opinions of her in any particular. She was the same, and so was I. I
-now spent my time in planing how I might get along through life after my
-contemplated change of circumstances should have taken place, and how I
-might procrastinate the evil day for a time, which I really dreaded as
-much, perhaps more, than an Irishman does the halter.
-
-After all my suffering upon this deeply-interesting subject, here I am,
-wholly, unexpectedly, completely, out of the "scrape;" and I now want to
-know if you can guess how I got out of it,--out, clear, in every sense
-of the term; no violation of word, honor, or conscience. I don't believe
-you can guess, and so I might as well tell you at once. As the lawyer
-says, it was done in the manner following, to wit: After I had delayed
-the matter as long as I thought I could in honor do (which, by the way,
-had brought me round into the last fall), I concluded I might as well
-bring it to a consumation without further delay; and so I mustered
-my resolution, and made the proposal to her direct: but, shocking to
-relate, she answered, No, At first I supposed she did it through an
-affectation of modesty, which I thought but ill became her under the
-peculiar circumstances of her case; but, on my renewal of the charge, I
-found she repeled it with greater firmness than before. I tried it again
-and again, but with the same success, or rather with the same want of
-success.
-
-I finally was forced to give it up; at which I verry unexpectedly found
-myself mortified almost beyond endurance. I was mortified, it seemed
-to me, in a hundred different ways. My vanity was deeply wounded by
-the reflection that I had so long been too stupid to discover her
-intentions, and at the same time never doubting that I understood them
-perfectly; and also that she, whom I had taught myself to believe nobody
-else would have, had actually rejected me with all my fancied greatness.
-And, to cap the whole, I then, for the first time, began to suspect that
-I was really a little in love with her. But let it all go. I'll try and
-outlive it. Others have been made fools of by the girls; but this can
-never with truth be said of me. I most emphatically, in this instance,
-made a fool of myself. I have now come to the conclusion never again to
-think of marrying, and for this reason: I can never be satisfied with
-any one who would be blockhead enough to have me.
-
-When you receive this, write me a long yarn about something to amuse me.
-Give my respects to Mr. Browning.
-
-Your sincere friend,
-
-A. Lincoln,
-
-Mrs. O. H. Browning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE majority of Mr. Lincoln's biographers--and they are many and
-credulous--tell us that he _walked_ from New Salem to Vandalia, a
-distance of one hundred miles, to take his seat, for the first time, in
-the Legislature of the State. But that is an innocent mistake; for he
-was resolved to appear with as much of the dignity of the senator as
-his circumstances would permit. It was for this very purpose that he
-had borrowed the two hundred dollars from Coleman Smoot; and, when the
-choice between riding and walking presented itself, he sensibly enough
-got into the stage, with his new clothes on, and rode to the scene of
-his labors.
-
-When he arrived there, he found a singular state of affairs. Duncan had
-been chosen Governor at the recent August election by "the whole-hog
-Jackson men;" but he was absent in Congress during the whole of the
-campaign; and, now that he came to the duties of his office, it was
-discovered that he had been all the while an anti-Jackson man, and was
-quite willing to aid the Whigs in furtherance of some of their worst
-schemes. These schemes were then just beginning to be hatched in great
-numbers; but in due time they were enacted into laws, and prepared
-Illinois with the proper weights of public debt and "rag" currency, to
-sink her deeper than her neighbors into the miseries of financial ruin
-in 1837. The speculating fever was just reaching Illinois; the land and
-town-lot business had barely taken shape at Chicago; and State banks and
-multitudinous internal improvements were yet to be invented. But this
-Legislature was a very wise one in its own conceit, and was not slow
-to launch out with the first of a series of magnificent experiments. It
-contented itself, however, with chartering a State bank, with a capital
-of one million five hundred thousand dollars; rechartering, with a
-capital of three hundred thousand dollars, the Shawneetown Bank, which
-had broken twelve years before; and providing for a loan of five hundred
-thousand dollars, on the credit of the State, wherewith to make a
-beginning on the Illinois and Michigan Canal. The bill for the latter
-project was drawn and introduced by Senator James M. Strode, the
-gentleman who described with such moving eloquence the horrors of
-Stillman's defeat. These measures Gov. Ford considers "the beginning of
-all the bad legislation which followed in a few years, and which, as is
-well known, resulted in general ruin." Mr. Lincoln favored them all, and
-faithfully followed out the policy of which they were the inauguration
-at subsequent sessions of the same body. For the present, nevertheless,
-he was a silent member, although he was assigned a prominent place on
-the Committee on Public Accounts and Expenditures. The bank-charters
-were drawn by a Democrat who hoped to find his account in the issue; all
-the bills were passed by a Legislature "nominally" Democratic; but the
-Board of Canal Commissioners was composed exclusively of Whigs, and the
-Whigs straightway assumed control of the banks.
-
-It was at a special session of this Legislature that Lincoln first saw
-Stephen A. Douglas, and, viewing his active little person with immense
-amusement, pronounced him "the _least_ man he ever saw." Douglas had
-come into the State (from Vermont) only the previous year, but, having
-studied law for several months, considered himself eminently qualified
-to be State's attorney for the district in which he lived, and was now
-come to Vandalia for that purpose. The place was already filled by a
-man of considerable distinction; but the incumbent remaining at home,
-possibly in blissful ignorance of his neighbor's design, was easily
-supplanted by the supple Vermonter.
-
-It is the misfortune of legislatures in general, as it was in those days
-the peculiar misfortune of the Legislature of Illinois, to be beset by
-a multitude of gentlemen engaged in the exclusive business of
-"log-rolling." Chief among the "rollers" were some of the most
-"distinguished" members, each assisted by an influential delegation from
-the district, bank, or "institution" to be benefited by the legislation
-proposed. An expert "log-roller," an especially wily and persuasive
-person, who could depict the merits of his scheme with roseate but
-delusive eloquence, was said to carry "a gourd of possum fat," and the
-unhappy victim of his art was said to be "_greased and swallowed_."
-
-It is not to be supposed that anybody ever succeeded in anointing a
-single square inch of Mr. Lincoln's person with the "fat" that deluded;
-but historians aver that "the Long Nine," of whom he was the longest
-and cleverest, possessed "gourds" of extraordinary dimensions, and
-distributed "grease" of marvellous virtues. But of that at another
-place.
-
-In 1836 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the Legislature; his
-colleagues on the Whig ticket in Sangamon being, for Representatives,
-John Dawson, William F. Elkin, N. W. Edwards, Andrew McCormick, Dan
-Stone, and R. L. Wilson; and for Senators, A. G. Herndon and Job
-Fletcher. They were all elected but one, and he was beaten by John
-Calhoun.
-
-Mr. Lincoln opened the campaign by the following manifesto:--
-
-New Salem, June 13, 1836.
-
-To the Editor of "The Journal."
-
-In your paper of last Saturday, I see a communication over the signature
-of "Many Voters," in which the candidates who are announced in the
-"Journal" are called upon to "show their hands." Agreed. Here's mine.
-
-I go for all sharing the privileges of the government who assist in
-bearing its burdens. Consequently, I go for admitting all _whites_ to
-the right of suffrage who pay taxes or bear arms (_by no means excluding
-females_).
-
-If elected, I shall consider the whole people of Sangamon my
-constituents, as well those that oppose as those that support me.
-
-While acting as their Representative, I shall be governed by their will
-on all subjects upon which I have the means of knowing what their will
-is; and upon all others I shall do what my own judgment teaches me
-will best advance their interests. Whether elected or not, I go for
-distributing the proceeds of the sales of the public lands to the
-several States, to enable our State, in common with others, to dig
-canals and construct railroads without borrowing money and paying the
-interest on it.
-
-_If alive on the first Monday in November, I shall vote for Hugh L.
-White for President._
-
-Very respectfully,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The elections were held on the first Monday in August, and the campaign
-began about six weeks or two months before. Popular meetings were
-advertised in "The Sangamon Journal" and "The State Register,"--organs
-of the respective parties. Not unfrequently the meetings were joint,
---composed of both parties,--when, as Lincoln would say, the candidates
-"put in their best licks," while the audience "rose to the height of
-the great argument" with cheers, taunts, cat-calls, fights, and other
-exercises appropriate to the free and untrammelled enjoyment of the
-freeman's boon.
-
-The candidates travelled from one grove to another on horseback; and,
-when the "Long Nine" (all over six feet in height) took the road, it
-must have been a goodly sight to see.
-
-"I heard Lincoln make a speech," says James Gourly, "in Mechanicsburg,
-Sangamon County, in 1836. John Neal had a fight at the time: the roughs
-got on him, and Lincoln jumped in and saw fair play. We staid for dinner
-at Green's, close to Mechanicsburg,--drank whiskey sweetened with
-honey. There the questions discussed were internal improvements, Whig
-principles." (Gourly was a great friend of Lincoln's, for Gourly had had
-a foot-race "with H. B. Truett, now of California," and Lincoln had been
-his "judge;" and it was a remarkable circumstance, that nearly everybody
-for whom Lincoln "judged" came out ahead.)
-
-"I heard Mr. Lincoln during the same canvass," continues Gourly. "It
-was at the Court House, where the State House now stands. The Whigs and
-Democrats had a general quarrel then and there. N. W. Edwards drew a
-pistol on Achilles Morris." But Gourly's account of this last scene
-is unsatisfactory, although the witness is willing; and we turn to
-Lincoln's colleague, Mr. Wilson, for a better one. "The Saturday evening
-preceding the election the candidates were addressing the people in
-the Court House at Springfield. Dr. Early, one of the candidates on
-the Democratic side, made some charge that N. W. Edwards, one of the
-candidates on the Whig side, deemed untrue. Edwards climbed on a table,
-so as to be seen by Early, and by every one in the house, and at the top
-of his voice told Early that the charge was false. The excitement that
-followed was intense,--so much so, that fighting men thought that a
-duel must settle the difficulty. Mr. Lincoln, by the programme, followed
-Early. He took up the subject in dispute, and handled it fairly, and
-with such ability that every one was astonished and pleased. So that
-difficulty ended there. Then, for the first time, developed by the
-excitement of the occasion, he spoke in that tenor intonation of voice
-that ultimately settled down into that clear, shrill monotone style of
-speaking that enabled his audience, however large, to hear distinctly
-the lowest sound of his voice."
-
-It was during this campaign, possibly at the same meeting, that Mr.
-Speed heard him reply to George Forquer. Forquer had been a leading
-Whig, one of their foremost men in the Legislature of 1834, but had then
-recently changed sides, and thereupon was appointed Register of the Land
-Office at Springfield. Mr. Forquer was an astonishing man: he not
-only astonished the people by "changing his coat in politics," but by
-building the best frame-house in Springfield, and erecting over it the
-only lightning-rod the entire region could boast of. At this meeting he
-listened attentively to Mr. Lincoln's first speech, and was much annoyed
-by the transcendent power with which the awkward young man defended the
-principles he had himself so lately abandoned. "The speech" produced
-a profound impression, "especially upon a large number of Lincoln's
-friends and admirers, who had come in from the country" expressly to
-hear and applaud him.
-
-"At the conclusion of Lincoln's speech" (we quote from Mr. Speed),
-"the crowd was dispersing, when Forquer rose and asked to be heard. He
-commenced by saying that the young man would have to be taken down, and
-was sorry that the task devolved upon him. He then proceeded to answer
-Lincoln's speech in a style, which, while it was able and fair, yet, in
-his whole manner, asserted and claimed superiority. Lincoln stood
-near him, and watched him during the whole of his speech. When Forquer
-concluded, he took the stand again. I have often heard him since, in
-court and before the people, but never saw him appear so well as upon
-that occasion. He replied to Mr. Forquer with great dignity and force;
-but I shall never forget the conclusion of that speech. Turning to Mr.
-Forquer, he said, that he had commenced his speech by announcing that
-'this young man would have to be taken down.' Turning then to the crowd,
-he said, 'It is for you, not for me, to say whether I am up or down. The
-gentleman has alluded to my being a young man: I am older in years than
-I am in the tricks and trades of politicians. I desire to live, and I
-desire place and distinction as a politician; but I would rather die
-now, than, like the gentleman, live to see the day that I would have to
-erect a lightning-rod to protect a guilty conscience from an offended
-God.'"
-
-He afterwards told Speed that the sight of that same rod "had led him to
-the study of the properties of electricity and the utility of the rod as
-a conductor."
-
-Among the Democratic orators stumping the county at this time was Dick
-Taylor, a pompous gentleman, who went abroad in superb attire, ruffled
-shirts, rich vest, and immense watch-chains, with shining and splendid
-pendants. But Dick was a severe Democrat in theory, made much of
-"the hard-handed yeomanry," and flung many biting sarcasms upon the
-aristocratic pretensions of the Whigs,--the "rag barons" and the
-manufacturing "lords." He was one day in the midst of a particularly
-aggravating declamation of this sort, "when Abe began to feel devilish,
-and thought he would take the wind out of Dick's sails by a little
-sport." He therefore "edged" slyly up to the speaker, and suddenly
-catching his vest by the lower corner, and giving it a sharp pull
-upward, it opened wide, and out fell upon the platform, in full view of
-the astonished audience, a mass of ruffled shirt, gold watch, chains,
-seals, and glittering jewels. Jim Matheny was there, and nearly
-broke his heart with mirth. "The crowd couldn't stand it, but shouted
-uproariously." It must have been then that Abe delivered the following
-speech, although Ninian W. Edwards places it in 1840:--
-
-"While he [Col. Taylor] was making these charges against the Whigs
-over the country, riding in fine carriages, wearing ruffled shirts,
-kid gloves, massive gold watch-chains, with large gold seals, and
-flourishing a heavy gold-headed cane, he [Lincoln] was a poor boy,
-hired on a flatboat at eight dollars a month, and had only one pair of
-breeches to his back, and they were buckskin,--'and,' said Lincoln, 'if
-you know the nature of buckskin, when wet and dried by the sun, they
-will shrink,--and mine kept shrinking, until they left several inches
-of my legs bare between the tops of my socks and the lower part of my
-breeches; and, whilst I was growing taller, they were becoming shorter,
-and so much tighter, that they left a blue streak around my legs that
-can be seen to this day. If you call this aristocracy, I plead guilty
-to the charge.'" Hitherto Sangamon County had been uniformly Democratic;
-but at this election the Whigs carried it by an average majority of
-about four hundred, Mr. Lincoln receiving a larger vote than any other
-candidate. The result was in part due to a transitory and abortive
-attempt of the anti-Jackson and anti-Van-Buren men to build up a third
-party, with Judge White of Tennessee as its leader. This party was not
-supposed to be wedded to the "specie circular," was thought to be open
-to conviction on the bank question, clamored loudly about the business
-interests and general distress of the country, and was actually in favor
-of the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands.
-In the nomenclature of Illinois, its members might have been called
-"nominal Jackson men;" that is to say, men who continued to act with the
-Democratic party, while disavowing its cardinal principles,--traders,
-trimmers, cautious schismatics who argued the cause of Democracy from a
-brief furnished by the enemy. The diversion in favor of White was just
-to the hand of the Whigs, and they aided it in every practicable way.
-Always for an expedient when an expedient would answer, a compromise
-when a compromise would do, the "hand" Mr. Lincoln "showed" at the
-opening of the campaign contained the "White" card among the highest of
-its trumps. "If alive on the first Monday in November, I shall vote for
-Hugh L. White for President." A number of local Democratic politicians
-assisting him to play it, it won the game in 1836, and Sangamon County
-went over to the Whigs.
-
-At this election Mr. Douglas was made a Representative from Morgan
-County, along with Col. Hardin, from whom he had the year before taken
-the State's attorneyship. The event is notable principally because Mr.
-Douglas was nominated by a convention, and not by the old system of
-self-announcement, which, under the influence of Eastern immigrants, like
-himself, full of party zeal, and attached to the customs of the places
-whence they came, was gradually but surely falling into disfavor. Mr.
-Douglas served only one session, and then became Register of the Land
-Office at Springfield. The next year he was nominated for Congress in
-the Peoria District, under the convention system, and in the same year
-Col. Stephenson was nominated for Governor in the same way. The Whigs
-were soon compelled to adopt the device which they saw marshalling the
-Democrats in a state of complete discipline; whilst they themselves were
-disorganized by a host of volunteer candidates and the operations of
-innumerable cliques and factions. At first "it was considered a Yankee
-contrivance," intended to abridge the liberties of the people; but
-the Whig "people" were as fond of victory, offices, and power as their
-enemies were, and in due time they took very kindly to this effectual
-means of gaining them. A speech of Ebenezer Peck of Chicago, "before
-a great meeting of the lobby, during the special session of 1835-6
-at Vandalia," being a production of special ingenuity and power,
-is supposed to have contributed largely to the introduction of the
-convention system into the middle and southern parts of the State. Mr.
-Peck was then a fervent Democrat, whom the Whigs delighted to malign
-as a Canadian monarchist; but in after times he was the fast and able
-friend of their great leader, Abraham Lincoln.
-
-One of the first and worst effects of the stricter organization
-of parties in Illinois, as well as in other States, was the strong
-diversion of public attention from State to Federal affairs. Individual
-candidates were no longer required to "show their hands:" they accepted
-"platforms" when they accepted nominations; and without a nomination
-it was mere quixotism to stand at all. District, State, and national
-conventions, acting and re-acting upon one another, produced a concert
-of sentiment and conduct which overlaid local issues, and repressed
-independent proceedings. This improved party machinery supplied the
-readiest and most effective means of distributing the rapidly-increasing
-patronage of the Federal Executive; and those who did not wish to be
-cut off from its enjoyment could do no less than re-affirm with becoming
-fervor, in their local assemblages, the latest deliverance of the faith
-by the central authority. The promoters of heresies and schisms, the
-blind leaders who misled a county or a State convention, and seduced it
-into the declaration of principles of its own, had their seats contested
-in the next general council of the party, were solemnly sat upon,
-condemned, "delivered over to Satan to be buffeted," and cast out of the
-household of faith, to wander in the wilderness and to live upon husks.
-It was like a feeble African bishop imputing heresy to the Christian
-world, with Rome at its head. A man like Mr. Lincoln, who earnestly
-"desired place and distinction as a politician," labored without hope
-while his party affinities remained the subject of a reasonable doubt.
-He must be "a whole-hog man" or nothing, a Whig or a Democrat. Mr.
-Lincoln chose his company with commendable decision, and wasted no
-tender regrets upon his "nominal" Democratic friends. For White against
-Harrison, in November, 1836, he led the Whigs into action when the
-Legislature met in December; and when the hard-cider campaign of 1840
-commenced, with its endless meetings and processions, its coon-skins
-and log-cabins, its intrigue, trickery, and fun, his musical voice
-rose loudest above the din for "Old Tippecanoe;" and no man did better
-service, or enjoyed those memorable scenes more, than he who was to be
-the beneficiary of a similar revival in 1860.
-
-When this legislature met in the winter of 1836-7, the bank and
-internal-improvement infatuation had taken full possession of a majority
-of the people, as well as of the politicians. To be sure, "Old Hickory"
-had given a temporary check to the wild speculations in Western land by
-the specie circular, about the close of his administration, whereby gold
-and silver were made "land-office money;" and the Government declined
-to exchange any more of the public domain for the depreciated paper of
-rotten and explosive banks. Millions of notes loaned by the banks on
-insufficient security or no security at all were by this timely
-measure turned back into the banks, or converted to the uses of a more
-legitimate and less dangerous business. But, even if the specie circular
-had not been repealed, it would probably have proved impotent against
-the evils it was designed to prevent, after the passage of the Act
-distributing among the States the surplus (or supposed surplus) revenues
-of the Federal Government.
-
-The last dollar of the old debt was paid in 1833. There were from time
-to time large unexpended and unappropriated balances in the treasury.
-What should be done with them? There was no sub-treasury as yet, and
-questions concerning the mere safe-keeping of these moneys excited the
-most tremendous political contests. The United States Bank had always
-had the use of the cash in the treasury in the form of deposits; but the
-bank abused its trust,--used its enormous power over the currency
-and exchanges of the country to achieve political results in its own
-interest, and, by its manifold sins and iniquities, compelled Gen.
-Jackson to remove the deposits. Ultimately the bank took shelter in
-Pennsylvania, where it began a new fraudulent life under a surreptitious
-clause tacked to the end of a road law on its passage through the
-General Assembly. In due time the "beast," as Col. Benton loved to call
-it, died in its chosen lair a shameful and ignominious death, cheating
-the public with a show of solvency to the end, and leaving a fine array
-of bill-holders and depositors to mourn one of the most remarkable
-delusions of modern times.
-
-Withdrawn, or rather withheld (for they were never withdrawn), from the
-Bank of the United States, the revenues of the Federal Government were
-deposited as fast as they accrued in specie-paying State banks.
-They were paid in the notes of the thousand banks, good, bad, and
-indifferent, whose promises to pay constituted the paper currency of the
-day. It was this money which the Whigs, aided by Democratic recusants,
-proposed to give away to the States. They passed an Act requiring it
-to be _deposited_ with the States,--ostensibly as a safe and convenient
-method of keeping it; but nobody believed that it would ever be called
-for, or paid if it was. It was simply an extraordinary largess; and
-pending the very embarrassment caused by itself, when the government
-had not a dollar wherewith to pay even a pension, and the temporary
-expedient was an issue of treasury notes against the better judgment of
-the party in power, the possibility of withdrawing these deposits was
-never taken into the account. The Act went into effect on the 1st of
-January, 1837, and was one of the immediate causes of the suspension
-and disasters of that year. "The condition of our deposit banks was
-desperate,--wholly inadequate to the slightest pressure on their vaults
-in the ordinary course of business, much less that of meeting the daily
-government drafts and the approaching deposit of near forty millions
-with the States." Nevertheless, the deposits began at the rate of
-ten millions to the quarter. The deposit banks "blew up;" and all the
-others, including that of the United States, closed their doors to
-customers and bill-holders, which gave them more time to hold public
-meetings, imputing the distress of the country to the hard-money policy
-of Jackson and Van Buren, and agitating for the re-charter of Mr.
-Biddle's profligate concern as the only remedy human ingenuity could
-devise.
-
-It was in the month previous to the first deposit with the
-States,--about the time when Gov. Ford says, "lands and town-lots were
-the only articles of export" from Illinois; when the counters of Western
-land-offices were piled high with illusory bank-notes in exchange for
-public lands, and when it was believed that the West was now at last
-about to bound forward in a career of unexampled prosperity, under the
-forcing process of public improvements by the States, with the aid and
-countenance of the Federal Government,--that Mr. Lincoln went up to
-attend the first session of the new Legislature at Vandalia. He was big
-with projects: his real public service was just now about to begin. In
-the previous Legislature he had been silent, observant, studious. He had
-improved the opportunity so well, that of all men in this new body, of
-equal age in the service, he was the smartest parliamentarian and the
-cunningest "log-roller." He was fully determined to identify himself
-conspicuously with the "liberal" legislation in contemplation, and
-dreamed of a fame very different from that which he actually obtained as
-an antislavery leader. It was about this time that he told his friend,
-Mr. Speed, that he aimed at the great distinction of being called "the
-De Witt Clinton of Illinois."
-
-Meetings with a view to this sort of legislation had been held in all,
-or nearly all, the counties in the State during the preceding summer
-and fall. Hard-money, strict-construction, no-monopoly, anti-progressive
-Democrats were in a sad minority. In truth, there was little division
-of parties about these matters which were deemed so essential to the
-prosperity of a new State. There was Mr. Lincoln, and there was Mr.
-Douglas, in perfect unison as to the grand object to be accomplished,
-but mortally jealous as to which should take the lead in accomplishing
-it. A few days before the Legislature assembled, "a mass convention" of
-the people of Sangamon County "instructed" their members "to vote for a
-_general system of internal improvements_." The House of Representatives
-organized in the morning; and in the evening its hall was surrendered
-to a convention of delegates from all parts of the State, which "devised
-and recommended to the Legislature a system of internal improvements,
-the chief feature of which was, that it should be commensurate with
-the wants of the people." This result was arrived at after two days of
-debate, with "Col. Thomas Mather, of the State Bank, as president."
-
-Mr. Lincoln served on the Committee on Finance, and was a most laborious
-member, instant in season and out of season, for the great measures of
-the Whig party. It was to his individual exertion that the Whigs were
-indebted in no small degree for the complete success of their favorite
-schemes at this session. A railroad from Galena to the mouth of the Ohio
-was provided for; another from Alton to Shawneetown; another from Alton
-to Mount Carmel; another from Alton to the eastern boundary of the State
-towards Terre Haute; another from Quincy by way of Springfield to
-the Wabash; another from Bloomington to Pekin; another from Peoria to
-Warsaw,--in all about thirteen hundred miles. But in this comprehensive
-"system," "commensurate with the wants of the people," the rivers were
-not to be overlooked; and accordingly the Kaskaskia, the Illinois, the
-Great Wabash, the Little Wabash, and the Rock rivers were to be duly
-improved. To set these little matters in motion, a loan of eight
-millions of dollars was authorized; and, to complete the canal from
-Chicago to Peru, another loan of four millions of dollars was voted
-at the same session,--two hundred thousand dollars being given as a
-gratuity to those counties which seemed to have no special interest in
-any of the foregoing projects. Work on all these roads was to commence,
-not only at the same time, but at both ends of each road, and at all
-the river-crossings. There were as yet no surveys of any route, no
-estimates, no reports of engineers, or even unprofessional viewers.
-"Progress" was not to wait on trifles; capitalists were supposed to be
-lying in wait to catch these precious bonds; the money would be raised
-in a twinkling, and being applied with all the skill of "a hundred De
-Witt Clintons,"--a class of gentlemen at that time extremely numerous
-and obtrusive,--the loan would build the railroads, the railroads would
-build cities, cities would create farms, foreign capital would rush
-to so inviting a field, the lands would be taken up with marvellous
-celerity, and the "land-tax" going into a sinking fund, _that_, with
-some tolls and certain sly speculations to be made by the State, would
-pay principal and interest of the debt without ever a cent of taxation
-upon the people. In short, everybody was to be enriched, while the
-munificence of the State in selling its credit and spending the proceeds
-would make its empty coffers overflow with ready money. It was a dark
-stroke of statesmanship, a mysterious device in finance, which, whether
-from being misunderstood, or from being mismanaged, bore from the
-beginning fruits the very reverse of those it had promised.
-
-A Board of Canal Commissioners was already in existence; but now were
-established, as necessary parts of the new "system," a Board of Fund
-Commissioners and a Board of Commissioners of Public Works.
-
-The capital stock of the Shawneetown Bank was increased to one million
-seven hundred thousand dollars, and that of the State Bank to three
-million one hundred thousand dollars. The State took the new stock, and
-proposed to pay for it "with the surplus revenues of the United States,
-and the residue by a sale of State bonds." The banks were likewise
-made fiscal agencies, to place the loans, and generally to manage the
-railroad and canal funds. The career of these banks is an extremely
-interesting chapter in the history of Illinois,--little less so than the
-rise and collapse of the great internal-improvement system. But, as it
-has already a place in a chronicle of wider scope and greater merit than
-this, it is enough to say that in due time they went the way of their
-kind,--the State lost by them, and they lost by the State, in morals as
-well as in money.
-
-The means used in the Legislature to pass the "system" deserve some
-notice for the instruction of posterity. "First, a large portion of
-the people were interested in the success of the canal, which was
-threatened, if other sections of the State were denied the improvements
-demanded by them; and thus the friends of the canal were forced to
-log-roll for that work by supporting others which were to be ruinous to
-the country. Roads and improvements were proposed everywhere, to enlist
-every section of the State. Three or four efforts were made to pass a
-smaller system; and, when defeated, the bill would be amended by the
-addition of other roads, until a majority was obtained for it. Those
-counties which could not be thus accommodated were to share in the fund
-of two hundred thousand dollars. Three roads were appointed to terminate
-at Alton, before the Alton interest would agree to the system. The seat
-of government was to be removed to Springfield. Sangamon County, in
-which Springfield is situated, was then represented by two Senators
-and seven Representatives, called the 'Long Nine,' all Whigs but one.
-Amongst them were some dexterous jugglers and managers in politics,
-whose whole object was to obtain the seat of government for Springfield.
-This delegation, from the beginning of the session, threw itself as
-a unit in support of, or in opposition to, every local measure of
-interest, but never without a bargain for votes in return on the
-seat-of-government question. Most of the other counties were small,
-having but one Representative and many of them with but one for a
-whole representative district; and this gave Sangamon County a decided
-preponderance in the log-rolling system of those days. It is worthy of
-examination whether any just and equal legislation can ever be sustained
-where some of the counties are great and powerful, and others feeble.
-But by such means 'The Long-Nine' rolled along like a snowball,
-gathering accessions of strength at every turn, until they swelled up
-a considerable party for Springfield, which party they managed to take
-almost as a unit in favor of the internal-improvement system, in
-return for which the active supporters of that system were to vote for
-Springfield to be the seat of government. Thus it was made to cost the
-State about six millions of dollars to remove the seat of government
-from Vandalia to Springfield, half of which sum would have purchased all
-the real estate in that town at three prices; and thus by log-rolling
-on the canal measure; by multiplying railroads; by terminating three
-railroads at Alton, that Alton might become a great city in opposition
-to St. Louis; by distributing money to some of the counties to be wasted
-by the county commissioners; and by giving the seat of government to
-Springfield,--was the whole State bought up, and bribed to approve the
-most senseless and disastrous policy which ever crippled the energies of
-a growing country." 1
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-Enumerating the gentlemen who voted for this combination of
-evils,--among them Stephen A. Douglas, John A. McClernand, James
-Shields, and Abraham Lincoln,--and reciting the high places of honor and
-trust to which most of them have since attained, Gov. Ford pronounces
-"all of them spared monuments of popular wrath, evincing how safe it is
-to a politician, but how disastrous it may be to the country, to keep
-along with the present fervor of the people."
-
-"It was a maxim with many politicians just to keep along even with the
-humor of the people, right or wrong;" and this maxim Mr. Lincoln held
-then, as ever since, in very high estimation. But the "humor" of his
-constituents was not only intensely favorable to the new scheme of
-internal improvements: it was most decidedly their "humor" to have the
-capital at Springfield, and to make a great man of the legislator who
-should take it there. Mr. Lincoln was doubtless thoroughly convinced
-that the popular view of all these matters was the right one; but, even
-if he had been unhappily afflicted with individual scruples of his own,
-he would have deemed it but simple duty to obey the almost unanimous
-voice of his constituency. He thought he never could serve them better
-than by giving them just what they wanted; and that to collect the
-will of his people, and register it by his own vote, was the first
-and leading obligation of a representative. It happened that on this
-occasion the popular feeling fell in very pleasantly with his young
-dream of rivalling the fame of Clinton; and here, also, was a fine
-opportunity of repeating, in a higher strain and on a loftier stage, the
-ingenious arguments, which, in the very outset of his career, had proved
-so hard for "Posey and Ewing," when he overthrew those worthies in the
-great debate respecting the improvement of the Sangamon River.
-
-"The Internal-Improvement Bill," says Mr. Wilson (one of the "Long
-Nine"), "and a bill to permanently locate the seat of government of the
-State, were the great measures of the session of 1836-7. Vandalia was
-then the seat of government, and had been for a number of years. A new
-state house had just been built. Alton, Decatur, Peoria, Jacksonville,
-Illiapolis, and Springfield were the points seeking the location, if
-removed from Vandalia. The delegation from Sangamon were a unit, acting
-in concert in favor of the permanent location at Springfield. The bill
-was introduced at an early day in the session, to locate, by a joint
-vote of both Houses of the Legislature. The friends of the other points
-united to defeat the bill, as each point thought the postponement of the
-location to some future period would give strength to their location.
-The contest on this bill was long and severe. Its enemies laid it on
-the table twice,--once on the table to the fourth day of July, and
-once indefinitely postponed it. To take a bill from the table is always
-attended with difficulty; but when laid on the table to a day beyond
-the session, or when indefinitely postponed, it requires a vote of
-reconsideration, which always is an intense struggle. In these dark
-hours, when our bill to all appearances was beyond resuscitation, and
-all our opponents were jubilant over our defeat, and when friends could
-see no hope, Mr. Lincoln never for one moment despaired; but, collecting
-his colleagues to his room for consultation, his practical common sense,
-his thorough knowledge of human nature, then made him an overmatch for
-his compeers, and for any man that I have ever known."
-
-"We surmounted all obstacles, passed the bill, and, by a joint vote of
-both Houses, located the seat of government of the State of Illinois at
-Springfield, just before the adjournment of the Legislature, which took
-place on the fourth day of March, 1837. The delegation acting during
-the whole session upon all questions as a unit, gave them strength and
-influence, that enabled them to carry through their measures and give
-efficient aid to their friends. The delegation was not only remarkable
-for their numbers, but for their length, most of them measuring six
-feet and over. It was said at the time that that delegation measured
-fifty-four feet high. Hence they were known as 'The Long Nine.' So that
-during that session, and for a number of years afterwards, all the bad
-laws passed at that session of the Legislature were chargeable to the
-management and influence of 'The Long Nine.'
-
-"He (Mr. Lincoln) was on the stump and in the halls of the Legislature a
-ready debater, manifesting extraordinary ability in his peculiar manner
-of presenting his subject. He did not follow the beaten track of other
-speakers and thinkers, but appeared to comprehend the whole situation
-of the subject, and take hold of its principles. He had a remarkable
-faculty for concentration, enabling him to present his subject in such a
-manner, as nothing but conclusions were presented."
-
-It was at this session of the Legislature, March 3, 1837, that Mr.
-Lincoln began that antislavery record upon which his fame through all
-time must chiefly rest. It was a very mild beginning; but even that
-required uncommon courage and candor in the day and generation in which
-it was done.
-
-The whole country was excited concerning the doctrines and the practices
-of the Abolitionists. These agitators were as yet but few in numbers:
-but in New England they comprised some of the best citizens, and the
-leaders were persons of high character, of culture and social influence;
-while, in the Middle States, they were, for the most part, confined
-to the Society of Friends, or Quakers. All were earnest, active, and
-uncompromising in the propagation of their opinions; and, believing
-slavery to be the "sum of all villanies," with the utmost pertinacity
-they claimed the unrestricted right to disseminate their convictions in
-any manner they saw fit, regardless of all consequences. They paid not
-the slightest heed to the wishes or the opinions of their opponents.
-They denounced all compromises with an unsparing tongue, and would allow
-no law of man to stand, in their eyes, above the law of God.
-
-George Thompson, identified with emancipation in the British West
-Indies, had come and gone. For more than a year he addressed public
-meetings in New England, the Central States, and Ohio, and contributed
-not a little to the growing excitement by his fierce denunciations of
-the slave-holding class, in language with which his long agitation in
-England had made him familiar. He was denounced, insulted, and
-mobbed; and even in Boston he was once posted as an "infamous foreign
-scoundrel," and an offer was made of a hundred dollars to "snake him
-out" of a public meeting. In fact, Boston was not at all behind other
-cities and towns in its condemnation of the Abolitionists. A
-great meeting in Faneuil Hall, called by eighteen hundred leading
-citizens,--Whigs and Democrats,--condemned their proceedings in language
-as strong and significant as Richard Fletcher, Peleg Sprague, and
-Harrison Gray Otis could write it. But Garrison still continued
-to publish "The Liberator," filling it with all the uncompromising
-aggressiveness of his sect, and distributing it throughout the Southern
-States. It excited great alarm in the slaveholding communities where its
-secret circulation, in the minds of the slaveholders, tended to incite
-the slaves to insurrections, assassinations, and running away; but
-in the place where it was published it was looked upon with general
-contempt and disgust. When the Mayor of Baltimore wrote to the Mayor of
-Boston to have it suppressed, the latter (the eloquent Otis) replied,
-"that his officers had ferreted out the paper and its editor, whose
-office was an obscure hole; his only visible auxiliary a negro boy; his
-supporters a few insignificant persons of all colors."
-
-At the close of the year 1835, President Jackson had called the
-attention of Congress to the doings of these people in language
-corresponding to the natural wrath with which he viewed the character of
-their proceedings. "I must also," said he, "invite your attention to the
-painful excitements in the South by attempts to circulate through the
-mails inflammatory appeals addressed to the passions of slaves, in
-prints and various sorts of publications calculated to stimulate them
-to insurrection, and to produce all the horrors of civil war. It is
-fortunate for the country that the good sense, the generous feeling, and
-deep-rooted attachment of the people of the non-slaveholding States to
-the Union and their fellow-citizens of the same blood in the South have
-given so strong and impressive a tone to the sentiments entertained
-against the proceedings of the misguided persons who have engaged in
-these unconstitutional and wicked attempts, and especially against
-the emissaries from foreign parts, who have dared to interfere in this
-matter, as to authorize the hope that these attempts will no longer
-be persisted in.... I would therefore call the special attention of
-Congress to the subject, and respectfully suggest the propriety of
-passing such a law as will prohibit, under severe penalties, the
-circulation in the Southern States, through the mail, of incendiary
-publications, intended to instigate the slaves to insurrection."
-
-Mr. Clay said the sole purpose of the Abolitionists was to array one
-portion of the Union against the other. "With that in view, in all their
-leading prints and publications, the alleged horrors of slavery are
-depicted in the most glowing and exaggerated colors, to excite the
-imaginations and stimulate the rage of the people of the Free States
-against the people of the slaveholding States.... Why are the Slave
-States wantonly and cruelly assailed? Why does the abolition press teem
-with publications tending to excite hatred and animosity on the part of
-the Free States against the Slave States?... Why is Congress petitioned?
-Is their purpose to appeal to our understanding, and actuate our
-humanity? And do they expect to accomplish that purpose by holding us
-up to the scorn and contempt and detestation of the people of the Free
-States and the whole civilized world?... Union on the one side will
-beget union on the other.... One section will stand in menacing, hostile
-array against another; the collision of opinion will be quickly followed
-by the clash of arms."
-
-Mr. Everett, then (1836) Governor of Massachusetts, informed the
-Legislature, for the admonition of these unsparing agitators against
-the peace of the South, that "every thing that tends to disturb the
-relations created by this compact [the Constitution] is at war with its
-spirit; and whatever, by direct and necessary operation, is calculated
-to excite an insurrection among the slaves, has been held by highly
-respectable legal authority an offence against the peace of this
-Commonwealth, which may be prosecuted as a misdemeanor at common law."
-It was proposed in the Legislature to pass an act defining the offence
-with more certainty, and attaching to it a severer penalty. The
-Abolitionists asked to be heard before the committee; and Rev. S. J.
-May, Ellis Gray Loring, Prof. Charles Follen, Samuel E. Sewell, and
-others of equal ability and character, spoke in their behalf. They
-objected to the passage of such an act in the strongest terms, and
-derided the value of a Union which could not protect its citizens in
-one of their most cherished rights. During the hearing, several bitter
-altercations took place between them and the chairman.
-
-In New York, Gov. Marcy called upon the Legislature "to do what may be
-done consistently with the great principles of civil liberty, to put an
-end to the evils which the Abolitionists are bringing upon us and the
-whole country." The "character" and the "interests" of the State were
-equally at stake, and both would be sacrificed unless these furious and
-cruel fanatics were effectually suppressed.
-
-In May, 1836, the Federal House of Representatives resolved, by
-overwhelming votes, that Congress had no right to interfere with slavery
-in the States, or in the District of Columbia, and that henceforth all
-abolition petitions should be laid on the table without being printed or
-referred. And, one day later than the date of Mr. Lincoln's protest, Mr.
-Van Buren declared in his inaugural, that no bill abolishing slavery
-in the District of Columbia, or meddling with it in the States where it
-existed, should ever receive his signature. "There was no other form,"
-says Benton, "at that time, in which slavery agitation could manifest
-itself, or place it could find a point to operate; the ordinance of 1787
-and the compromise of 1820 having closed up the Territories against
-it. Danger to slave property in the States, either by direct action,
-or indirectly through the District of Columbia, were the only points of
-expressed apprehension."
-
-Abolition agitations fared little better in the twenty-fifth Congress
-than in the twenty-fourth. At the extra session in September of 1837,
-Mr. Slade of Vermont introduced two petitions for the abolition of
-slavery in the District of Columbia; but, after a furious debate and a
-stormy scene, they were disposed of by the adoption of the following:--
-
-"Resolved, That all petitions, memorials, and papers, touching the
-abolition of slavery, or the buying, selling, or transferring of slaves,
-in any State, District, or Territory, of the United States, be laid on
-the table, without being debated, printed, read, or referred; and that
-no further action whatever shall be had thereon."
-
-In Illinois, at the time we speak of (March, 1837), an Abolitionist was
-rarely seen, and scarcely ever heard of. In many parts of the State such
-a person would have been treated as a criminal. It is true, there were
-a few Covenanters, with whom hatred of slavery in any form and wherever
-found was an essential part of their religion. Up to 1824 they had
-steadily refused to vote, or in any other way to acknowledge the State
-government, regarding it as "an heathen and unbaptized institution,"
-because the Constitution failed to recognize "Jesus Christ as the head
-of the government, and the Holy Scriptures as the only rule of faith and
-practice." It was only when it was proposed to introduce slavery into
-Illinois by an alteration of that "heathen" Constitution, that the
-Covenanters consented to take part in public affairs. The movement which
-drew them out proved to be a long and unusually bitter campaign, lasting
-full eighteen months, and ending in the fall of 1824, with a popular
-majority of several thousand against calling a convention for the
-purpose of making Illinois a Slave State. Many of the antislavery
-leaders in _this_ contest--conspicuous among whom was Gov. Coles--were
-gentlemen from Slave States, who had emancipated their slaves before
-removal, and were opposed to slavery, not upon religious or moral
-grounds, but because they believed it would be a material injury to the
-new country. Practically no other view of the question was discussed;
-and a person who should have undertaken to discuss it from the "man and
-brother" stand-point of more modern times would have been set down as a
-lunatic. A clear majority of the people were against the introduction of
-slavery into their own State; but that majority were fully agreed with
-their brethren of the minority, that those who went about to interfere
-with slavery in the most distant manner in the places where it already
-existed were deserving of the severest punishment, as the common enemies
-of society. It was in those days a mortal offence to call a man an
-Abolitionist, for Abolitionist was synonymous with thief. Between a band
-of men who stole horses and a band of men who stole negroes, the popular
-mind made small distinctions in the degrees of guilt. They were regarded
-as robbers, disturbers of the peace, the instigators of arson,
-murder, poisoning, rape; and, in addition to all this, traitors to the
-government under which they lived, and enemies to the Union which gave
-us as a people liberty and strength. In testimony of these sentiments,
-Illinois enacted a "black code" of most preposterous and cruel
-severity,--a code that would have been a disgrace to a Slave State, and
-was simply an infamy in a free one. It borrowed the provisions of the
-most revolting laws known among men, for exiling, selling, beating,
-bedevilling, and torturing negroes, whether bond or free. Under this law
-Gov. Coles, the leader of the antislavery party, who had emancipated his
-slaves, and settled them around him in his new home, but had neglected
-to file a bond with the condition that his freedmen should behave well
-and never become a charge upon the public, was fined two hundred dollars
-in each case; and, so late as 1852, the writer of these pages very
-narrowly escaped the same penalty for the same offence.
-
-In 1835-36 Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy had been publishing a moderately
-antislavery paper at St. Louis. But the people of that city did not look
-with favor upon his enterprise; and, after meeting with considerable
-opposition, in the summer of 1836 he moved his types and press across
-the river to Alton, Ill. Here he found an opposition more violent than
-that from which he had fled. His press was thrown into the river the
-night after its arrival; and he was informed that no abolition paper
-would be allowed in the town. The better class of citizens, however,
-deprecated the outrage, and pledged themselves to reimburse Mr. Lovejoy,
-in case he would agree not to make his paper an abolition journal. Mr.
-Lovejoy assured them it was not his purpose to establish such a paper in
-Alton, but one of a religious character: at the same time he would not
-give up his right as an American citizen to publish whatever he pleased
-on any subject, holding himself answerable to the laws of his country
-in so doing. With this general understanding, he was permitted to go
-forward. He continued about a year, discussing in his paper the slavery
-question occasionally; not, however, in a violent manner, but with a
-tone of moderation. This policy, however, was not satisfactory: it was
-regarded as a violation of his pledge; and the contents of his
-office were again destroyed. Mr. Lovejoy issued an appeal for aid to
-re-establish his paper, which met with a prompt and generous response.
-He proposed to bring up another press, and announced that armed
-men would protect it: meantime, a committee presented him with some
-resolutions adopted at a large meeting of the citizens of Alton,
-reminding him that he had previously given a pledge that in his paper he
-would refrain from advocating abolitionism) and also censuring him for
-not having kept his promise, and desiring to know if he intended to
-continue the publication of such doctrines in the future. His response
-consisted of a denial of the right of any portion of the people of
-Acton to prescribe what questions he should or should not discuss in his
-paper. Great excitement followed: another press was brought up on
-the 21st of September, which shortly after followed the fate of its
-predecessors. Another arrived Nov. 7, 1837, and was conveyed to a stone
-warehouse by the riverside, where Mr. Lovejoy and a few friends (some
-of them not Abolitionists) resolved to defend it to the last. That night
-they were attacked. First there was a brief parley, then a volley
-of stones, then an attempt to carry the building by assault. At this
-juncture a shot was fired out of a second-story window, which killed a
-young man in the crowd. It was said to have been fired by Lovejoy; and,
-as the corpse was borne away, the wrath of the populace knew no bounds.
-It was proposed to get powder from the magazine, and blow the warehouse
-up. Others thought the torch would be a better agent; and, finally, a
-man ran up a ladder to fire the roof. Lovejoy came out of the door, and,
-firing one shot, retreated within, where he rallied the garrison for a
-sortie. In the mean time many shots were fired both by the assailants
-and the assailed. The house was once actually set on fire by one person
-from the mob, and saved by another. But the courage of Mr. Lovejoy's
-friends was gradually sinking, and they responded but faintly to his
-strong appeals for action. As a last resource, he rushed to the
-door with a single companion, gun in hand, and was shot dead on the
-threshold. The other man was wounded in the leg, the warehouse was in
-flames, the mob grew more ferocious over the blood that had been
-shed, and riddled the doors and windows with volleys from all sorts of
-fire-arms. The Abolitionists had fought a good fight; but seeing now
-nothing but death before them, in that dismal, bloody, and burning
-house, they escaped down the river-bank, by twos and threes, as best
-they could, and their press was tumbled after them, into the river.
-And thus ended the first attempt to establish an abolition paper in
-Illinois. The result was certainly any thing but encouraging, and
-indicated pretty clearly what must have been the general state of public
-feeling throughout the State in regard to slavery agitation.
-
-In fact, no State was more alive to the necessity of repressing the
-Abolitionists than Illinois; and accordingly it was proposed in the
-Legislature to take some action similar to that which had been
-already taken, or was actually pending, in the legislatures of sister
-Commonwealths, from Massachusetts through the list. A number of
-resolutions were reported, and passed with no serious opposition. The
-record does not disclose the precise form in which they passed; but
-that is of little consequence now. That they were extreme enough may be
-gathered from the considerate language of the protest, and from the fact
-that _such a protest_ was considered necessary at all. The protest was
-undoubtedly the product of Mr. Lincoln's pen, for his adroit directness
-is seen in every word of it. He could get but one man--his colleague,
-Dan Stone--to sign with him.
-
-March 3,1837.
-
-The following protest was presented to the House, which was read, and
-ordered to be spread on the journals, to wit:--
-
-Resolutions upon the subject of domestic slavery having passed both
-branches of the General Assembly at its present session, the undersigned
-hereby protest against the passage of the same.
-
-They believe that the institution of slavery is founded on both
-injustice and bad policy; but that the promulgation of abolition
-doctrines tends rather to increase than abate its evils.
-
-They believe that the Congress of the United States has no power, under
-the Constitution, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the
-different States.
-
-They believe that the Congress of the United States has the power, under
-the Constitution, to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, but
-that the power ought not to be exercised, unless at the request of the
-people of the District.
-
-The difference between these opinions and those contained in the said
-resolutions is their reason for entering this protest.
-
-(Signed) Dan Stone,
-
-A. Lincoln, Representatives from the County of Sanqamon.
-
-Mr. Lincoln says nothing here about slavery in the Territories. The
-Missouri Compromise being in full force, and regarded as sacred by
-all parties, it was one of its chief effects that both sections were
-deprived of any pretext for the agitation of that question, from
-which every statesman, Federalist or Republican, Whig or Democratic,
-apprehended certain disaster to the Union. Neither would Mr. Lincoln
-suffer himself to be classed with the few despised Quakers, Covenanters,
-and Puritans, who were so frequently disturbing the peace of the country
-by abolition-memorials to Congress and other public bodies. Slavery,
-says the protest, is wrong in principle, besides being bad in economy;
-but "the promulgation of abolition doctrines" is still worse. In the
-States which choose to have it, it enjoys a constitutional immunity
-beyond the reach of any "higher law;" and Congress must not touch
-it, otherwise than to shield and protect it. Even in the District of
-Columbia, Mr. Lincoln and Dan Stone would leave it entirely to the will
-of the people. In fact, the whole paper, plain and simple as it is,
-seems to have been drawn with no object but to avoid the imputation
-of extreme views on either side. And from that day to the day of his
-inauguration, Mr. Lincoln never saw the time when he would have altered
-a word of it. He never sided with the Lovejoys. In his eyes their work
-tended "rather to increase than to abate" the evils of slavery, and was
-therefore unjust, as well as futile. Years afterwards he was the steady
-though quiet opponent of Owen Lovejoy, and declared that Lovejoy's
-nomination for Congress over Leonard Swett "almost turned him blind."
-When, in 1860, the Democrats called Mr. Lincoln an Abolitionist, and
-cited the protest of 1837 to support the charge, friends pointed to
-the exact language of the document as his complete and overwhelming
-refutation.
-
-On the 10th of May, the New York banks suspended specie payments, and
-two days afterwards the Bank of the United States and the Philadelphia
-banks did likewise. From these the stoppage and the general ruin, among
-business men and speculators alike, spread throughout the country.
-Nevertheless, the Fund Commissioners of Illinois succeeded in placing a
-loan during the summer, and before the end of the year work had begun
-on many railroads. "Money was as plenty as dirt. Industry, in place of
-being stimulated, actually languished. We exported nothing, and every
-thing was paid for by the borrowed money expended among us." And this
-money was bank-paper, such as a pensioner upon the Government of the
-United States scorned to take in payment of his gratuity, after the
-deposit banks had suspended or broken, with thirty-two millions of
-Government money in their possession.
-
-The banks which had received such generous legislation from the
-Legislature that devised the internal-improvement system were not
-disposed to see that batch of remarkable enterprises languish for want
-of their support. One of them took at par and sold nine hundred thousand
-dollars of bonds; while the other took one million seven hundred and
-sixty-five thousand dollars, which it used as capital, and expanded its
-business accordingly. But the banks were themselves in greater danger
-than the internal-improvement system. If the State Bank refused specie
-payments for sixty days, its charter was forfeited under the Act of
-Assembly. But they were the main-stay of all the current speculations,
-public and private; and having besides large sums of public money in
-their hands, the governor was induced to call a special session of the
-Legislature in July, 1837, to save them from impending dissolution. This
-was done by an act authorizing or condoning the suspension of specie
-payments. The governor had not directly recommended this, but he
-had most earnestly recommended the repeal or modification of the
-internal-improvement system; and _that_ the Legislature positively
-refused. This wise body might be eaten by its own dogs, but it was
-determined not to eat _them_; and in this direction there was no
-prospect of relief for two years more. According to Gov. Ford, the cool,
-reflecting men of the State anxiously hoped that their rulers might
-be able to borrow no more money, but in this they were immediately and
-bitterly disappointed. The United States Bank took some of their bonds.
-Some were sold at par in this country, and others at nine per cent
-discount in Europe.
-
-In 1838, a governor (Carlin) was elected who was thought by many to be
-secretly hostile to the "system;" and a new Legislature was chosen, from
-which it was thought something might be hoped. Mr. Lincoln was again
-elected, with a reputation so much enhanced by his activity and address
-in the last Legislature, that this time he was the candidate of his
-party for speaker. The nomination, however, was a barren honor, and
-known to be such when given. Col. Ewing was chosen by a plurality of
-one,--two Whigs and two Democrats scattering their votes. Mr. Lincoln
-kept his old place on the Finance Committee. At the first session the
-governor held his peace regarding the "system;" and, far from repealing
-it, the Legislature added a new feature to it, and voted another
-$800,000.
-
-But the Fund Commissioners were in deep water and muddy water: they had
-reached the end of their string. The credit of the State was gone,
-and already were heard murmurs of repudiation. Bond County had in the
-beginning pronounced the system a swindle upon the people; and Bond
-County began to have admirers. Some of the bonds had been lent to New
-York State banks to start upon; and the banks had presently failed. Some
-had been sold on credit. Some were scattered about in various places on
-special deposit. Others had been sent to London for sale, where the firm
-that was selling them broke with the proceeds of a part of them in their
-hands. No expedients sufficed any longer. There was no more money to be
-got, and nothing left to do, but to "wind up the system," and begin the
-work of common sense by providing for the interest on the sums already
-expended. A special session of the Legislature in 1838-9 did the
-"winding up," and thenceforth, for some years, there was no other
-question so important in Illinois State politics as how to pay the
-interest on the vast debt outstanding for this account. Many gentlemen
-discovered that De Witt Clintons were rare, and in certain contingencies
-very precious. Among these must have been Mr. Lincoln. But being again,
-elected to the Legislature in 1840, again the acknowledged leader and
-candidate of his party for speaker, he ventured in December of that year
-to offer an expedient for paying the interest on the debt; but it was
-only an expedient, and a very poor one, to avoid the obvious but
-unpopular resort of direct taxation.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln moved to strike out the bill and amendment, and insert the
-following:--
-
-"An Act providing for the payment of interest on the State debt.
-
-"Section 1.--Be it enacted by the people of the State of Illinois
-represented in the General Assembly, that the governor be authorized and
-required to issue, from time to time, such an amount of State bonds, to
-be called the 'Illinois Interest Bonds,' as may be absolutely necessary
-for the payment of the interest upon the lawful debt of the State,
-contracted before the passage of this Act.
-
-"Section 2.--Said bonds shall bear interest at the rate of----per cent
-per annum, payable half-yearly at----, and be reimbursable in years from
-their respective issuings.
-
-"Section 3.--That the State's portion of the tax hereafter arising from
-all lands which were not taxable in the year one thousand eight hundred
-and forty is hereby set apart as an exclusive fund for the payment of
-interest on the said 'Illinois Interest Bonds;' and the faith of the
-State is hereby pledged that said fund shall be applied to that object,
-and no other, except at any time there should be a surplus; in which
-case such surplus shall became a part of the general funds of the
-treasury.
-
-"Section 4.--That hereafter the sum of thirty cents for each hundred
-dollars' worth of all taxable property shall be paid into the State
-treasury; and no more than forty cents for each hundred dollars' worth
-of such taxable property shall be levied and collected for county
-purposes."
-
-It was a loose document. The governor was to determine the "amount"
-of bonds "necessary," and the sums for which they should be issued.
-Interest was to be paid only upon the "lawful" debt; and the governor
-was left to determine what part of it _was_ lawful, and what unlawful.
-The last section lays a specific tax; but the proceeds are in no way
-connected with the "interest bonds."
-
-"Mr. Lincoln said he submitted this proposition with great diffidence.
-He had felt his share of the responsibility devolving upon us in the
-present crisis; and, after revolving in his mind every scheme which
-seemed to afford the least prospect of relief, he submitted this as the
-result of his own deliberations.
-
-"The details of the bill might be imperfect; but he relied upon the
-correctness of its general features.
-
-"By the plan proposed in the original bill of hypothecating our bonds,
-he was satisfied we could not get along more than two or three months
-before some other step would be necessary: another session would have to
-be called, and new provisions made.
-
-"It might be objected that these bonds would not be salable, and the
-money could not be raised in time. He was no financier; but he believed
-these bonds thus secured would be equal to the best in market. A perfect
-security was provided for the interest; and it was this characteristic
-that inspired confidence, and made bonds salable. If there was any
-distrust, it could not be because our means of fulfilling promises were
-distrusted. He believed it would have the effect to raise our other
-bonds in market.
-
-"There was another objection to this plan, which applied to the original
-bill; and that was as to the impropriety of borrowing money to pay
-interest on borrowed money,--that we are hereby paying compound
-interest. To this he would reply, that, if it were a fact that our
-population and wealth were increasing in a ratio greater than the
-increased interest hereby incurred, then this was not a good objection.
-If our increasing means would justify us in deferring to a future time
-the resort to taxation, then we had better pay compound interest than
-resort to taxation now. He was satisfied, that, by a direct tax now,
-money enough could not be collected to pay the accruing interest. The
-bill proposed to provide in this way for interest not otherwise provided
-for. It was not intended to apply to those bonds for the interest on
-which a security had already been provided.
-
-"He hoped the House would seriously consider the proposition. He had no
-pride in its success as a measure of his own, but submitted it to
-the wisdom of the House, with the hope, that, if there was any thing
-objectionable in it, it would be pointed out and amended."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's measure did not pass. There was a large party in favor,
-not only of passing the interest on the State debt, which fell due in
-the coming January and July, but of repudiating the whole debt outright.
-Others thought the State ought to pay, not the full face of its bonds,
-but only the amount received for them; while others still contended
-that, whereas, many of the bonds had been irregularly, illegally,
-and even fraudulently disposed of, there ought to be a particular
-discrimination made against _these_, and these only. "At last Mr.
-Cavarly, a member from Green, introduced a bill of two sections,
-authorizing the Fund Commissioners to hypothecate internal-improvement
-bonds to the amount of three hundred thousand dollars, and which
-contained the remarkable provision, that the proceeds were to be applied
-by that officer to the payment of all interest _legally_ due on the
-public debt; thus shifting from the General Assembly, and devolving on
-the Fund Commissioner, the duty of deciding on the legality of the debt.
-Thus, by this happy expedient, conflicting opinions were reconciled
-without direct action on the matter in controversy, and thus the two
-Houses were enabled to agree upon a measure to provide temporarily for
-the interest on the public debt. The Legislature further provided, at
-this session, for the issue of interest bonds, to be sold in the market
-at what they would bring; and an additional tax of ten cents on the
-hundred dollars' worth of property was imposed and pledged, to pay the
-interest on these bonds. By these contrivances, the interest for
-January and July, 1841, was paid. The Fund Commissioner hypothecated
-internal-improvement bonds for the money first due; and his successor in
-office, finding no sale for Illinois stocks, so much had the credit of
-the State fallen, was compelled to hypothecate eight hundred and four
-thousand dollars of interest bonds for the July interest. On this
-hypothecation he was to have received three hundred and twenty-one
-thousand six hundred dollars, but was never paid more than two hundred
-and sixty-one thousand five hundred dollars. These bonds have never
-been redeemed from the holders, though eighty of them were afterwards
-repurchased, and three hundred and fifteen thousand dollars of them
-were received from the Shawneetown Bank for State stock in that
-institution."1
-
- 1 Ford's History of Illinois.
-
-This session (the session of 1840-1) had been called two weeks earlier
-than usual, to provide for the January interest on the debt. But the
-banks had important business of their own in view, and proceeded to
-improve the occasion. In 1837, and every year since then, the banks
-had succeeded in getting acts of the Legislature which condoned their
-suspension of specie payments. But, by the terms of the last act, their
-charters were forfeited unless they resumed before the adjournment of
-the next session. The Democrats, however, maintained that the present
-special session was _a session_ in the sense of the law, and that,
-before its adjournment, the banks must hand out "the hard," or die. On
-the other hand, the Whigs held this session, and the regular session
-which began on the first Monday in December, to be one and the same, and
-proposed to give the banks another winter's lease upon life and rags.
-But the banks were a power in the land, and knew how to make themselves
-felt. They were the depositories of the State revenues. The auditor's
-warrants were drawn upon them, and the members of the Legislature paid
-in their money. The warrants were at a discount of fifty per cent; and,
-if the banks refused to cash them, the members would be compelled to go
-home more impecunious than they came. The banks, moreover, knew how
-to make "opportune loans to Democrats;" and, with all these aids, they
-organized a brilliant and eventually a successful campaign. In the
-eyes of the Whigs they were "the institutions of the country," and the
-Democrats were guilty of incivism in attacking them. But the Democrats
-retorted with a string of overwhelming slang about rag barons, rags,
-printed lies, bank vassals, ragocracy, and the "British-bought, bank,
-blue-light, Federal, Whig party." It was a fierce and bitter contest;
-and, witnessing it, one might have supposed that the very existence
-of the State, with the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
-happiness, depended upon the result. The Democrats were bent upon
-carrying an adjournment _sine die_; which, according to their theory,
-killed the banks. To defeat this, the Whigs resorted to every expedient
-of parliamentary tactics, and at length hit upon one entirely unknown
-to any of the standard manuals: they tried to absent themselves in
-sufficient numbers to leave no quorum behind. "If the Whigs absented
-themselves," says Mr. Gillespie, a Whig member, "there would not be a
-quorum left, even with the two who should be deputed to call the ayes
-and noes. The Whigs immediately held a meeting, and resolved that they
-would all stay out, except Lincoln and me, who were to call the ayes
-and noes. We appeared in the afternoon: motion to adjourn _sine die_
-was made, and we called the ayes and noes. The Democrats discovered the
-game, and the sergeant-at-arms was sent out to gather up the absentees.
-There was great excitement in the House, which was then held in a church
-at Springfield. We soon discovered that several Whigs had been caught
-and brought in, and that the plan had been spoiled; and we--Lincoln
-and I--determined to leave the hall, and, going to the door, found
-it locked, and then raised a window and jumped out, but not until
-the Democrats had succeeded in adjourning. Mr. Grid-ley of McLean
-accompanied us in our exit.... I think Mr. Lincoln always regretted
-that he entered into that arrangement, as he deprecated every thing that
-savored of the revolutionary."
-
-In the course of the debate on the Apportionment Bill, Mr. Lincoln had
-occasion to address the House in defence of "The Long Nine," who were
-especially obnoxious to the Democrats. The speech concluded with the
-following characteristic passage:--
-
-"The gentleman had accused old women of being partial to the number
-nine; but this, he presumed, was without foundation. A few years since,
-it would be recollected by the House, that the delegation from this
-county were dubbed by way of eminence 'The Long Nine,' and, by way of
-further distinction, he had been called 'The Longest of the Nine.'
-Now," said Mr. Lincoln, "I desire to say to my friend from Monroe (Mr.
-Bissell), that if any woman, old or young, ever thought there was any
-peculiar charm in this distinguished specimen of number nine, I have as
-yet been so unfortunate as not to have discovered it." (Loud applause.)
-
-But this Legislature was full of excitements. Besides the questions
-about the public debt and the bank-charters, the Democrats proposed to
-legislate the Circuit judges out of office, and reconstruct the Supreme
-Court to suit themselves. They did this because the Supreme judges had
-already decided one question of some political interest against them,
-and were now about to decide another in the same way. The latter was a
-question of great importance; and, in order to avoid the consequences of
-such a decision, the Democrats were eager for the extremest measures.
-
-The Constitution provided that all free white male _inhabitants_ should
-vote upon six months' residence. This, the Democrats held, included
-aliens; while the Whigs held the reverse. On this grave judicial
-question, parties were divided precisely upon the line of their
-respective interests. The aliens numbered about ten thousand, and
-nine-tenths of them voted steadily with the Democracy. Whilst a great
-outcry concerning it was being made from both sides, and fierce disputes
-raged in the newspapers and on the stump, two Whigs at Galena got up an
-amicable case, to try it in a quiet way before a Whig judge, who held
-the Circuit Courts in their neighborhood. The judge decided for his
-friends, like a man that he was. The Democrats found it out, and raised
-a popular tumult about it that would have put Demetrius the silversmith
-to shame. They carried the case to the Supreme Court, where it was
-argued before the Whig majority, in December, 1889, by able and
-distinguished counsellors,--Judge Douglas being one of them; but the
-only result was a continuance to the next June. In the mean time Judge
-Smith, the only Democrat on the bench, was seeking favor with his party
-friends by betraying to Douglas the secrets of the consultation-room.
-
-With his aid, the Democrats found a defect in the record, which sent the
-case over to December, 1840, and adroitly secured the alien vote for the
-great elections of that memorable year. The Legislature elected then was
-overwhelmingly Democratic; and, having good reason to believe that
-the aliens had small favor to expect from this court, they determined
-forthwith to make a new one that would be more reasonable. There were
-now nine Circuit judges in the State, and four Supreme judges, under the
-Act of 1835. The offices of the Circuit judges the Democrats concluded
-to abolish, and to create instead nine Supreme judges, who should
-perform circuit duties. This they called "reforming the judiciary;" and
-"thirsting for vengeance," as Gov. Ford says, they went about the work
-with all the zeal, but with very little of the disinterested devotion,
-which reformers are generally supposed to have. Douglas, counsel for one
-of the litigants, made a furious speech "in the lobby," demanding the
-destruction of the court that was to try his cause; and for sundry grave
-sins which he imputed to the judges he gave Smith--his friend Smith--as
-authority. It was useless to oppose it: this "reform" was a foregone
-conclusion. It was called the "Douglas Bill;" and Mr. Douglas was
-appointed to one of the new offices created by it. But Mr. Lincoln, E.
-D. Baker, and other Whig members, entered upon the journal the following
-protest:--
-
-"For the reasons thus presented, and for others no less apparent, the
-undersigned cannot assent to the passage of the bill, or permit it to
-become a law without this evidence of their disapprobation; and they now
-protest against the re-organization of the judiciary: Because,
-
-"1st. It violates the great principles of free government by subjecting
-the judiciary to the Legislature.
-
-"2d. It is a fatal blow at the independence of the judges and the
-constitutional term of their offices.
-
-"3d. It is a measure not asked for, or wished for, by the people.
-
-"4th. It will greatly increase the expense of our courts, or else
-greatly diminish their utility.
-
-"5th. It will give our courts a political and partisan character,
-thereby impairing public confidence in their decisions.
-
-"6th. It will impair our standing with other States and the world.
-
-"7th. It is a party measure for party purposes, from which no practical
-good to the people can possibly arise, but which may be the source of
-immeasurable evils.
-
-"The undersigned are well aware that this protest will be altogether
-unavailing with the majority of this body. The blow has already fallen;
-and we are compelled to stand by, the mournful spectators of the ruin it
-will cause."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was elected in 1840, to serve, of course, until the next
-election in August, 1842; but for reasons of a private nature, to be
-explained hereafter, he did not appear during the session of 1841-2.
-
-In concluding this chapter, taking leave of New Salem, Vandalia, and
-the Legislature, we cannot forbear another quotation from Mr. Wilson,
-Lincoln's colleague from Sangamon, to whom we are already so largely in
-debt:--
-
-"In 1838 many of the Long Nines were candidates for re-election to the
-Legislature. A question of the division of the county was one of the
-local issues. Mr. Lincoln and myself, among others, residing in the
-portion of the county sought to be organized into a new county, and
-opposing the division, it became necessary that I should make a special
-canvass through the north-west part of the county, then known as Sand
-Ridge. I made the canvass; Mr. Lincoln accompanied me; and, being
-personally well acquainted with every one, we called at nearly every
-house. At that time it was the universal custom to keep some whiskey in
-the house, for private use and to treat friends. The subject was always
-mentioned as a matter of etiquette, but with the remark to Mr. Lincoln,
-'You never drink, but maybe your friend would like to take a little.'
-I never saw Mr. Lincoln drink. He often told me he never drank; had
-no desire for drink, nor the companionship of drinking men. Candidates
-never treated anybody in those times unless they wanted to do so.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln remained in New Salem until the spring of 1837, when he
-went to Springfield, and went into the law-office of John T. Stuart as a
-partner in the practice of law, and boarded with William Butler.
-
-"During his stay in New Salem he had no property other than what was
-necessary to do his business, until after he stopped in Springfield. He
-was not avaricious to accumulate property, neither was he a spendthrift.
-He was almost always during those times hard up. He never owned land.
-
-"The first trip he made around the circuit after he commenced the
-practice of law, I had a horse, saddle, and bridle, and he had none.
-I let him have mine. I think he must have been careless, as the saddle
-skinned the horse's back.
-
-"While he lived in New Salem he visited me often. He would stay a day or
-two at a time: we generally spent the time at the stores in Athens. He
-was very fond of company: telling or hearing stories told was a
-source of great amusement to him. He was not in the habit of reading
-much,--never read novels. Whittling pine boards and shingles, talking
-and laughing, constituted the entertainment of the days and evenings.
-
-"In a conversation with him about that time, he told me, that, although
-he appeared to enjoy life rapturously, still he was the victim of
-terrible melancholy. He sought company, and indulged in fun and hilarity
-without restraint, or stint as to time; but when by himself, he told me
-that he was so overcome by mental depression that he never dared carry
-a knife in his pocket; and as long as I was intimately acquainted with
-him, previous to his commencement of the practice of the law, he never
-carried a pocket-knife. Still he was not misanthropic: he was kind and
-tender-hearted in his treatment to others.
-
-"In the summer of 1837 the citizens of Athens and vicinity gave the
-delegation then called the 'Long Nine' a public dinner, at which Mr.
-Lincoln and all the others were present. He was called out by the toast,
-'Abraham Lincoln, one of Nature's noblemen.' I have often thought, that,
-if any man was entitled to that compliment, it was he."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-UNDER the Act of Assembly, due in great part to Mr. Lincoln's exertions,
-the removal of the archives and other public property of the State from
-Vandalia to Springfield began on the fourth day of July, 1839, and was
-speedily completed. At the time of the passage of the Act, in the winter
-of 1836-7, Mr. Lincoln determined to follow the capital, and establish
-his own residence at Springfield. The resolution was natural and
-necessary; for he had been studying law in all his intervals of leisure,
-and wanted a wider field than the justice's court at New Salem to begin
-the practice. Henceforth Mr. Lincoln might serve in the Legislature,
-attend to his private business, and live snugly at home. In addition to
-the State courts, the Circuit and District Courts of the United States
-sat here. The eminent John McLean of Ohio was the justice of the Supreme
-Court who sat in this circuit, with Judge Pope of the District Court,
-from 1839 to 1849, and after that with Judge Drummond. The first
-terms of these courts, and the first session of the Legislature at
-Springfield, were held in December, 1839. The Senate sat in one church,
-and the House in another.
-
-Mr. Lincoln got his license as an attorney early in 1837, "and commenced
-practice regularly as a lawyer in the town of Springfield in March"
-of that year. His first case was that of Hawthorne vs. Wooldridge,
-dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff, for whom Mr. Lincoln's name was
-entered. There were then on the list of attorneys at the Springfield bar
-many names of subsequent renown. Judge Stephen T. Logan was on the bench
-of the Circuit Court under the Act of 1835. Stephen A. Douglas had made
-his appearance as the public prosecutor at the March term of 1836; and
-at the same term E. D. Baker had been admitted to practice. Among the
-rest were John T. Stuart, Cyrus Walker, S. H. Treat, Jesse B. Thomas,
-George Forquer, Dan Stone, Ninian W. Edwards, John J. Hardin, Schuyler
-Strong, A. T. Bledsoe, and Josiah Lamborn.
-
-By this time Mr. Lincoln enjoyed considerable local fame as a
-politician, but none, of course, as a lawyer. He therefore needed
-a partner, and got one in the person of John T. Stuart, an able and
-distinguished Whig, who had relieved his poverty years before by the
-timely loan of books with which to study law, and who had from the first
-promoted his political fortunes with zeal as disinterested as it was
-effective. The connection promised well for Mr. Lincoln, and no doubt
-did well during the short period of its existence. The courtroom was
-in Hoffman's Row; and the office of Stuart & Lincoln was in the second
-story above the court-room. It was a "little room," and generally a
-"dirty one." It contained "a small dirty bed,"--on which Lincoln lounged
-and slept,--a buffalo-robe, a chair, and a bench. Here the junior
-partner, when disengaged from the cares of politics and the Legislature,
-was to be found pretty much all the time, "reading, abstracted and
-gloomy." Springfield was a small village, containing between one and two
-thousand inhabitants. There were no pavements: the street-crossings were
-made of "chunks," stones, and sticks. Lincoln boarded with Hon. William
-Butler, a gentleman who possessed in an eminent degree that mysterious
-power which guides the deliberations of party conventions and
-legislative bodies to a foregone conclusion. Lincoln was very poor,
-worth nothing, and in debt,--circumstances which are not often alleged
-in behalf of the modern legislator; but "Bill Butler" was his friend,
-and took him in with little reference to board-bills and the settlement
-of accounts. According to Dr. Jayne, he "fed and clothed him for years;"
-and this signal service, rendered at a very critical time, Mr. Lincoln
-forgot wholly when he was in Congress, and Butler wanted to be Register
-of the Land Office, as well as when he was President of the United
-States, and opportunities of repayment were multitudinous. It is
-doubtless all true; but the inference of personal ingratitude on the
-part of Mr. Lincoln will not bear examination. It will be shown at
-another place that Mr. Lincoln regarded all public offices within his
-gift as a sacred trust, to be administered solely for the people, and as
-in no sense a fund upon which he could draw for the payment of private
-accounts. He _never_ preferred his friends to his enemies, but rather
-the reverse, as if fearful that he might by bare possibility be
-influenced by some unworthy motive. He was singularly cautious to
-avoid the imputation of fidelity to his friends at the expense of his
-opponents.
-
-In Coke's and Blackstone's time the law was supposed to be "a jealous
-mistress;" but in Lincoln's time, and at Springfield, she was any
-thing but exacting. Politicians courted her only to make her favor the
-stepping-stone to success in other employments. Various members of that
-bar have left great reputations to posterity, but none of them were
-earned solely by the legitimate practice of the law. Douglas is
-remembered as a statesman, Baker as a political orator, Hardin as a
-soldier, and some now living, like Logan and Stuart, although eminent
-in the law, will be no less known to the history of the times as
-politicians than as lawyers. Among those who went to the law for a
-living, and to the people for fame and power, was Mr. Lincoln. He was
-still a member of the Legislature when he settled at Springfield, and
-would probably have continued to run for a seat in that body as often
-as his time expired, but for the unfortunate results of the
-"internal-improvement system," the hopeless condition of the State
-finances, and a certain gloominess of mind, which arose from private
-misfortunes that befell him about the time of his retirement. We do
-not say positively that these were the reasons why Mr. Lincoln made no
-effort to be re-elected to the Legislature of 1840; but a careful study
-of all the circumstances will lead any reasonable man to believe that
-they were. He was intensely ambitious, longed ardently for place and
-distinction, and never gave up a prospect which seemed to him good when
-he was in a condition to pursue it with honor to himself and fairness
-to others. Moreover State politics were then rapidly ceasing to be
-the high-road to fame and fortune. Although the State of Illinois was
-insolvent, unable to pay the interest on her public debt, and many were
-talking about repudiating the principal, the great campaign of 1840 went
-off upon national issues, and little or nothing was said about questions
-of State policy. Mr. Lincoln felt and obeyed this tendency of the public
-mind, and from 1837 onward his speeches--those that were printed and
-those that were not--were devoted chiefly, if not exclusively, to
-Federal affairs.
-
-In January, 1837, he delivered a lecture before the Springfield Lyceum
-on the subject of the "_Perpetuation of our Free Institutions_." As a
-mere declamation, it is unsurpassed in the annals of the West. Although
-delivered in mid-winter, it is instinct with the peculiar eloquence of
-the most fervid Fourth of July.
-
-"In the great journal of things," began the orator, "happening under the
-sun, we, the American People, find our account running under date of
-the nineteenth century of the Christian era. We find ourselves in the
-peaceful possession of the fairest portion of the earth, as regards
-extent of territory, fertility of soil, and salubrity of climate.
-We find ourselves under the government of a system of political
-institutions conducing more essentially to the ends of civil and
-religious liberty than any of which the history of former times tells
-us. We, when mounting the stage of existence, found ourselves the
-legal inheritors of these fundamental blessings. We toiled not in the
-acquisition or establishment of them: they are a legacy bequeathed us
-by a _once_ hardy, brave, and patriotic, but _now_ lamented and departed
-race of ancestors. Theirs was the task (and nobly they performed it) to
-possess themselves, and, through themselves, us, of this goodly land,
-and to uprear upon its hills and valleys a political edifice of
-liberty and equal rights: 'tis ours only to transmit these--the former
-unprofaned by the foot of an invader, the latter undecayed by the lapse
-of time and untorn by usurpation--to the latest generation that fate
-shall permit the world to know. This task, gratitude to our fathers,
-justice to ourselves, duty to posterity,--all imperatively require us
-faithfully to perform.
-
-"How, then, shall we perform it? At what point shall we expect the
-approach of danger? Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to
-step the ocean and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe,
-Asia, and Africa combined, with all the treasure of the earth (our own
-excepted) in their military chest, with a Bonaparte for a commander,
-could not, by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the
-Blue Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years!
-
-"At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected? I
-answer, if it ever reach us, it must spring up amongst us. It cannot
-come from abroad. If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its
-author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all
-time, or die by suicide.
-
-"I hope I am not over-wary; but, if I am not, there is even now
-something of ill-omen amongst us. I mean the increasing disregard for
-law which pervades the country, the growing disposition to substitute
-the wild and furious passions in lieu of the sober judgment of courts,
-and the worse than savage mobs for the executive ministers of justice.
-This disposition is awfully fearful in any community, and that it now
-exists in ours, though grating to our feelings to admit it, it would be
-a violation of truth and an insult to our intelligence to deny. Accounts
-of outrages committed by mobs form the every-day news of the times.
-They have pervaded the country from New England to Louisiana; they are
-neither peculiar to the eternal snows of the former, nor the burning sun
-of the latter. They are not the creature of climate; neither are they
-confined to the slaveholding or non-slaveholding States. Alike they
-spring up among the pleasure-hunting masters of Southern slaves and
-the order-loving citizens of the land of steady habits. Whatever, then,
-their cause may be, it is common to the whole country."
-
-The orator then adverts to the doings of recent mobs in various parts
-of the country, and insists, that, if the spirit that produced them
-continues to increase, the laws and the government itself must fall
-before it: bad citizens will be encouraged, and good ones, having no
-protection against the lawless, will be glad to receive an individual
-master who will be able to give them the peace and order they desire.
-That will be the time when the usurper will put down his heel on
-the neck of the people, and batter down the "fair fabric" of free
-institutions. "Many great and good men," he says, "sufficiently
-qualified for any task they should undertake, may ever be found,
-whose ambition would aspire to nothing beyond a seat in Congress, a
-gubernatorial or a presidential chair; _but such belong not to the
-family of the lion or the tribe of the eagle._1 What! Think you these
-places would satisfy an Alexander, a Caesar, or a Napoleon? Never!
-Towering genius disdains a beaten path. It seeks regions hitherto
-unexplored. It sees no distinction in adding story to story upon the
-monuments of fame erected to the memory of others. It denies that it
-is glory enough to serve under any chief. It scorns to tread in the
-footsteps of any predecessor, however illustrious. It thirsts and burns
-for distinction; and, if possible, it will have it, whether at the
-expense of emancipating slaves or enslaving freemen.... Another reason
-which once _was_, but which, to the same extent, _is now no more_, has
-done much in maintaining our institutions thus far. I mean the powerful
-influence which the interesting scenes of the Revolution had upon the
-_passions_ of the people as distinguished from their judgment." This
-influence, the lecturer maintains, was kept alive by the presence of
-the surviving soldiers of the Revolution, who were in some sort "living
-histories," and concludes with this striking peroration:--
-
-"But those histories are gone. They _can_ be read no more forever. They
-_were_ a fortress of strength; but what invading foeman could never do,
-the silent artillery of time _has done_,--the levelling of its
-walls. They are gone. They _were_ a forest of giant oaks; but the
-all-resistless hurricane has swept over them, and left only here and
-there a lonely trunk, despoiled of its verdure, shorn of its foliage,
-unshading and unshaded, to murmur in a few more gentle breezes, and to
-combat with its mutilated limbs a few more rude storms, then to sink and
-be no more. They _were_ the pillars of the temple of liberty; and now
-that they have crumbled away, that temple must fall, unless we, the
-descendants, supply their places with other pillars hewn from the same
-solid quarry of sober reason. Passion has helped us, but can do so
-no more. It will in future be our enemy. Reason--cold, calculating,
-unimpassioned reason--must furnish all the materials for our future
-support and defence. Let those materials be moulded into _general
-intelligence, sound morality_, and, in particular, _a reverence for the
-Constitution and the laws_; and that we improved to the last, that we
-revered his name to the last, that during his long sleep we permitted no
-hostile foot to pass or desecrate his resting-place, shall be that which
-to learn the last trump shall awaken our Washington. Upon these let the
-proud fabric of freedom rest as the rock of its basis, and as truly as
-has been said of the only greater institution, 'The gates of hell shall
-not prevail against it."'
-
- 1 The italics are the orator's.
-
-These extracts from a lecture carefully composed by Mr. Lincoln at the
-mature age of twenty-eight, and after considerable experience in the
-public service, are worthy of attentive perusal. To those familiar with
-his sober and pure style at a later age, these sophomoric passages will
-seem incredible. But they were thought "able and eloquent" by the "Young
-Men's Lyceum" of Springfield: he was "solicited to furnish a copy for
-publication," and they were duly printed in "The Sangamon Journal." In
-the mere matter of rhetoric, they compare favorably with some of his
-other productions of nearly the same date. This was what he would have
-called his "growing time;" and it is intensely interesting to witness
-the processes of such mental growth as his. In time, gradually, but
-still rapidly, his style changes completely: the constrained and
-unnatural attempts at striking and lofty metaphor disappear, and the
-qualities which produced the Gettysburg address--that model of unadorned
-eloquence--begin to be felt. He finds the people understand him better
-when he comes down from his stilts, and talks to them from their own
-level.
-
-Political discussions at Springfield were apt to run into heated and
-sometimes unseemly personal controversies. When Douglas and Stuart were
-candidates for Congress in 1838, they fought like tigers in Herndon's
-grocery, over a floor that was drenched with slops, and gave up the
-struggle only when both were exhausted. Then, as a further entertainment
-to the populace, Mr. Stuart ordered out a "barrel of whiskey and wine."
-
-On the election-day in 1840, it was reported to Mr. Lincoln that one
-Radford, a contractor on the railroad, had brought up his men, and taken
-full possession of one of the polling-places. Lincoln started off to
-the precinct on a slow trot. Radford knew him well, and a little stern
-advice reversed proceedings without any fighting. Among other remarks,
-Lincoln said, "Radford, you'll spoil and blow if you live much longer."
-He wanted to hit Radford, but could get no chance to do so, and
-contented himself with confiding his intentions to Speed. "I intended
-just to knock him down, and leave him kicking."
-
-The same year, Col. Baker was making a speech to a promiscuous audience
-in the court-room,--"a rented room in Hoffman's Row." It will be
-remembered that Lincoln's office was just above, and he was listening
-to Baker through a large hole or trap-door in the ceiling. Baker warmed
-with his theme, and, growing violent and personally offensive,
-declared at length, "that wherever there was a land-office, there was
-a Democratic newspaper to defend its corruptions." "This," says John B.
-Webber, "was a personal attack on my brother, George Webber. I was in
-the Court House, and in my anger cried, 'Pull him down!'" A scene of
-great confusion ensued, threatening to end in a general riot, in which
-Baker was likely to suffer. But just at the critical moment Lincoln's
-legs were seen coming through the hole; and directly his tall figure
-was standing between Baker and the audience, gesticulating for silence.
-"Gentlemen," said he, "let us not disgrace the age and country in which
-we live. This is a land where freedom of speech is guaranteed. Mr Baker
-has a right to speak, and ought to be permitted to do so. I am here to
-protect him, and no man shall take him from this stand if I can prevent
-it." Webber only recollects that "some one made some soothing, kind
-remarks," and that he was properly "held until the excitement ceased,"
-and the affair "soon ended in quiet and peace."
-
-In 1838, or 1840, Jesse B. Thomas made an intemperate attack upon the
-"Long Nine," and especially upon Mr. Lincoln, as the longest and worst
-of them. Lincoln was not present at the meeting; but being sent for, and
-informed of what had passed, he ascended the platform, and made a reply
-which nobody seems to remember, but which everybody describes as a
-"terrible skinning" of his victim. Ellis says, that, at the close of a
-furious personal denunciation, he wound up by "mimicking" Thomas, until
-Thomas actually cried with vexation and anger. Edwards, Speed, Ellis,
-Davis, and many others, refer to this scene, and, being asked whether
-Mr. Lincoln could not be vindictive upon occasion, generally respond,
-"Remember the Thomas skinning."
-
-The most intimate friend Mr. Lincoln ever had, at this or any other
-time, was probably Joshua F. Speed. In 1836 he settled himself in
-Springfield, and did a thriving business as a merchant. Ellis was one
-of his clerks, and so also was William H. Herndon, Mr. Lincoln's future
-partner. This store was for years Lincoln's familiar haunt. There he
-came to while away the tedious evenings with Speed and the congenial
-company that naturally assembled around these choice spirits. He even
-slept in the store room as often as he slept at home, and here made to
-Speed the most confidential communications he ever made to mortal man.
-If he had on earth "a bosom crony," it was Speed, and that deep and
-abiding attachment subsisted unimpaired to the day of Mr. Lincoln's
-death. In truth, there were good reasons why he should think of Speed
-with affection and gratitude, for through life no man rendered him more
-important services.
-
-One night in December, 1839, Lincoln, Douglas, Baker, and some other
-gentlemen of note, were seated at Speed's hospitable fire in the store.
-They got to talking politics, got warm, hot, angry. Douglas sprang up
-and said, "Gentlemen, this is no place to talk politics: we will discuss
-the questions publicly with you," and much more in a high tone of banter
-and defiance. A few days afterwards the Whigs had a meeting, at which
-Mr. Lincoln reported a resolution challenging the Democrats to a joint
-debate. The challenge was accepted; and Douglas, Calhoun, Lamborn, and
-Jesse B. Thomas were deputed by the Democrats to meet Logan, Baker,
-Browning, and Lincoln on the part of the Whigs. The intellectual
-encounter between these noted champions is still described by those
-who witnessed it as "the great debate." It took place in the Second
-Presbyterian Church, in the hearing of as many people as could get into
-the building, and was adjourned from night to night. When Mr. Lincoln's
-turn came, the audience was very thin; but, for all that, his speech
-was by many persons considered the best one of the series. To this day,
-there are some who believe he had assistance in the preparation of it.
-Even Mr. Herndon accused Speed of having "had a hand in it," and got
-a flat denial for his answer. At all events, the speech was a popular
-success, and was written out, and published in "The Sangamon Journal,"
-of March 6, 1840. The exordium was a sort of complaint that must have
-had a very depressing effect upon both the speaker and his hearers:--
-
-"Fellow-Citizens,--It is peculiarly embarrassing to me to attempt a
-continuance of the discussion, on this evening, which has been conducted
-in this hall on several preceding ones. It is so, because on each of
-these evenings there was a much fuller attendance than now, without any
-reason for its being so, except the greater interest the community feel
-in the speakers who addressed them then, than they do in him who is to
-do so now. I am, indeed, apprehensive that the few who have attended
-have done so more to spare me of mortification, than in the hope of
-being interested in any thing I may be able to say. This circumstance
-casts a damp upon my spirits which I am sure I shall be unable to
-overcome during the evening.
-
-"The subject heretofore and now to be discussed is the Sub-Treasury
-scheme of the present administration, as a means of collecting,
-safe-keeping, transferring, and disbursing the revenues of the nation,
-as contrasted with a National Bank for the same purposes. Mr. Douglas
-has said that we (the Whigs) have not dared to meet them (the Locos) in
-argument on this question. I protest against this assertion. I say we
-have again and again, during this discussion, urged facts and arguments
-against the Sub-Treasury which they have neither dared to deny nor
-attempted to answer. But lest some may be led to believe that we really
-wish to avoid the question, I now propose, in my humble way, to urge
-these arguments again; at the same time begging the audience to mark
-well the positions I shall take, and the proofs I shall offer to sustain
-them, and that they will not again allow Mr. Douglas or his friends to
-escape the force of them by a round and groundless assertion that we
-dare not meet them in argument.
-
-"Of the Sub-Treasury, then, as contrasted with a National Bank, for the
-before-enumerated purposes, I lay down the following propositions, to
-wit:--
-
-"1st. It will injuriously affect the community by its operation on the
-circulating medium.
-
-"2d. It will be a more expensive fiscal agent.
-
-"3d. It will be a less secure depository for the public money."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's objections to the Sub-Treasury were those commonly urged
-by its enemies, and have been somewhat conclusively refuted by the
-operation of that admirable institution from the hour of its adoption
-to the present. "The extravagant expenditures" of Mr. Van Buren's
-administration, however, was a standard topic of the Whigs in those
-days, and, sliding gracefully off from the Sub-Treasury, Mr. Lincoln
-dilated extensively upon this more attractive subject. This part of his
-speech was entirely in reply to Mr. Douglas. But, when he came to answer
-Mr. Lamborn's remarks, he "got in a hard hit" that must have brought
-down the house.
-
-"Mr. Lamborn insists that the difference between the Van Buren party and
-the Whigs is, that, although the former sometimes err in practice,
-they are always correct in principle, whereas the latter are wrong
-in principle; and, the better to impress this proposition, he uses a
-figurative expression in these words: 'The Democrats are vulnerable in
-the heel, but they are sound in the heart and head.' The first branch of
-the figure,--that is, that the Democrats are vulnerable in the heel,--I
-admit is not merely figuratively but literally true. Who that looks but
-for a moment at their Swartwouts, their Prices, their Harringtons,
-and their hundreds of others, scampering away with the public money to
-Texas, to Europe, and to every spot of the earth where a villain may
-hope to find refuge from justice, can at all doubt that they are most
-distressingly affected in their heels with a species of 'running itch.'
-It seems that this malady of their heels operates on the sound-headed
-and honest-hearted creatures very much like the cork-leg in the comic
-song did on its owner, which, when he had once got started on it, the
-more he tried to stop it, the more it would run away. At the hazard of
-wearing this point threadbare, I will relate an anecdote which seems to
-be too strikingly in point to be omitted. A witty Irish soldier who
-was always boasting of his bravery when no danger was near, but
-who invariably retreated without orders at the first charge of the
-engagement, being asked by his captain why he did so, replied, 'Captain,
-I have as brave a heart as Julius Caesar ever had, but somehow or other,
-whenever danger approaches, my cowardly legs will run away with it.' So
-with Mr. Lamborn's party. They take the public money into their hands
-for the most laudable purpose that wise heads and honest hearts can
-dictate; but, before they can possibly get it out again, their rascally
-vulnerable heels will run away with them."
-
-But, as in the lecture before the Lyceum, Mr. Lincoln reserved his most
-impressive passage, his boldest imagery, and his most striking metaphor,
-for a grand and vehement peroration.
-
-"Mr. Lamborn refers to the late elections in the States, and, from their
-results, confidently predicts every State in the Union will vote for Mr.
-Van Buren at the next presidential election. Address that argument to
-cowards and knaves: with the free and the brave it will affect nothing.
-It may be true: if it must, let it. Many free countries have lost their
-liberty, and ours may lose hers; but, if she shall, be it my proudest
-plume, not that I was the last to desert, but that I never deserted her.
-I know that the great volcano at Washington, aroused and directed by the
-evil spirit that reigns there, is belching forth the lava of political
-corruption in a current broad and deep, which is sweeping with frightful
-velocity over the whole length and breadth of the land, bidding fair to
-leave unscathed no green spot or living thing; while on its bosom are
-riding, like demons on the wave of hell, the imps of that evil spirit,
-and fiendishly taunting all those who dare to resist its destroying
-course with the hopelessness of their efforts; and, knowing this, I
-cannot deny that all may be swept away. Broken by it, I, too, may
-be; bow to it, I never will. The probability that we may fall in the
-struggle ought not to deter us from the support of a cause we believe
-to be just. It shall not deter me. If ever I feel the soul within me
-elevate and expand to those dimensions, not wholly unworthy of its
-almighty Architect, it is when I contemplate the cause of my country,
-deserted by all the world beside, and I standing up boldly, alone,
-hurling defiance at her victorious oppressors. Here, without
-contemplating consequences, before Heaven and in face of the world, I
-swear eternal fealty to the just cause, as I deem it, of the land of
-my life, my liberty, and my love. And who that thinks with me will not
-fearlessly adopt that oath that I take? Let none falter who thinks he is
-right, and we may succeed. But if, after all, we shall fail, be it so:
-we still shall have the proud consolation of saying to our consciences,
-and to the departed shade of our country's freedom, that the cause
-approved of our judgment and adored of our hearts, in disaster, in
-chains, in torture, in death, we never faltered in defending."
-
-Considering that the times were extremely peaceful, and that the speaker
-saw no bloodshed except what flowed from the noses of belligerents
-in the groceries about Springfield, the speech seems to have been
-unnecessarily defiant.
-
-In 1840 Mr. Lincoln was a candidate for presidential elector on the
-Harrison ticket, and stumped a large part of the State. He and Douglas
-followed Judge Treat's court all around the circuit, "and spoke in the
-afternoons." The Harrison club at Springfield became thoroughly familiar
-with his voice. But these one-sided affairs were not altogether suited
-to his temper: through his life he preferred a joint discussion, and
-the abler the man pitted against him, the better he liked it. He knew he
-shone in retort, and sought every opportunity to practise it. From 1838
-to 1858, he seems to have followed up Douglas as a regular business
-during times of great political excitement, and only on one or two
-occasions did he find the "Little Giant" averse to a conflict. Here, in
-1840, they came in collision, as they did in 1839, and as they continued
-to do through twenty or more years, until Lincoln became President of
-the United States, and Douglas's disappointments were buried with his
-body. Once during this Harrison campaign they had a fierce discussion
-before a meeting assembled in the market-house. In the course of his
-speech, Lincoln imputed to Van Buren the great sin of having voted
-in the New York State Convention for negro suffrage with a property
-qualification. Douglas denied the fact; and Lincoln attempted to prove
-his statement by reading a certain passage from Holland's "Life of Van
-Buren," containing a letter from Van Buren to one Mr. Fithian. Whereupon
-"Douglas got mad," snatched up the book, and, tossing it into the crowd,
-remarked sententiously, although not conclusively, "Damn such a book!"
-
-"He was very sensitive," says Mr. Gillespie, "where he thought he had
-failed to come up to the expectations of his friends. I remember a case.
-He was pitted by the Whigs, in 1840, to debate with Mr. Douglas, the
-Democratic champion. Lincoln did not come up to the requirements of the
-occasion. He was conscious of his failure; and I never saw any man so
-much distressed. He begged to be permitted to try it again, and was
-reluctantly indulged; and in the next effort he transcended our highest
-expectations. I never heard, and never expect to hear, such a triumphant
-vindication as he then gave of Whig measures or policy. He never after,
-to my knowledge, fell below himself."
-
-It must by this time be clear to the reader that Mr. Lincoln was never
-agitated by any passion more intense than his wonderful thirst for
-distinction. There is good evidence that it furnished the feverish
-dreams of his boyhood; and no man that knew him well can doubt that it
-governed all his conduct, from the hour when he astonished himself by
-his oratorical success against Posey and Ewing, in the back settlements
-of Macon County, to the day when the assassin marked him as the first
-hero of the restored Union, re-elected to his great office, surrounded
-by every circumstance that could minister to his pride, or exalt his
-sensibilities,--a ruler whose power was only less wide than his renown.
-He never rested in the race he had determined to run; he was ever ready
-to be honored; he struggled incessantly for place. There is no instance
-where an important office seemed to be within his reach, and he did not
-try to get it. Whatsoever he did in politics, at the bar, in private
-life, had more or less reference to this great object of his life. It
-is not meant to be said that he was capable of any shameful act,
-any personal dishonor, any surrender or concealment of political
-convictions. In these respects, he was far better than most men. It was
-not in his nature to run away from the fight, or to desert to the enemy;
-but he was quite willing to accept his full share of the fruits of
-victory.
-
-Born in the humblest circumstances, uneducated, poor, acquainted with
-flatboats and groceries, but a stranger to the drawing-room, it was
-natural that he should seek in a matrimonial alliance those social
-advantages which he felt were necessary to his political advancement.
-This was, in fact, his own view of the matter; but it was strengthened
-and enforced by the counsels of those whom he regarded as friends.
-
-[Miss Mary Lincoln. Wife of the President 270]
-
-In 1839 Miss Mary, daughter of Hon. Robert S. Todd of Lexington, Ky.,
-came to live with her sister, Mrs. Ninian W. Edwards, at Springfield.
-Like Miss Owens, Miss Todd had a stepmother, with whom she failed to
-"agree," and for that reason the Edwardses offered her a home with them.
-She was young,--just twenty-one,--her family was of the best, and her
-connections in Illinois among the most refined and distinguished people.
-Her mother having died when she was a little girl, she had been educated
-under the care of a French lady, "opposite Mr. Clay's." She was gifted
-with rare talents, had a keen sense of the ridiculous, a ready insight
-into the weaknesses of individual character, and a most fiery and
-ungovernable temper. Her tongue and her pen were equally sharp.
-High-bred, proud, brilliant, witty, and with a will that bent every one
-else to her purpose, she took Mr. Lincoln captive the very moment she
-considered it expedient to do so.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was a rising politician, fresh from the people, and
-possessed of great power among them: Miss Todd was of aristocratic and
-distinguished family, able to lead through the awful portals of "good
-society" whomsoever they chose to countenance. It was thought that a
-union between them could not fail of numerous benefits to both parties.
-Mr. Edwards thought so; Mrs. Edwards thought so; and it was not long
-before Mary Todd herself thought so. She was very ambitious, and even
-before she left Kentucky announced her belief that she was "destined
-to be the wife of some future President." For a little while she was
-courted by Douglas as well as by Lincoln; but she is said to have
-refused the "Little Giant," "on account of his bad morals." Being asked
-which of them she intended to have, she answered, "The one that has the
-best chance of being President." She decided in favor of Lincoln, and,
-in the opinion of some of her husband's friends, aided to no small
-extent in the fulfilment of the prophecy which the bestowal of her hand
-implied. A friend of Miss Todd was the wife of an elderly but wealthy
-gentleman; and being asked by one of the Edwards coterie why she had
-married "such an old, dried-up husband, such a withered-up old buck,"
-she answered that "He had lots of horses and gold." But Mary Todd spoke
-up in great surprise, and said, "Is that true? I would rather marry
-a good man, a man of mind, with hope and bright prospects ahead for
-position, fame, and power, than to marry all the horses, gold, and bones
-in the world."
-
-Mrs. Edwards, Miss Todd's sister, tells us that Mr. Lincoln "was charmed
-with Mary's wit and fascinated with her quick sagacity, her will, her
-nature and culture." "I have happened in the room," she says, "where
-they were sitting often and often, and Mary led the conversation.
-Lincoln would listen, and gaze on her as if drawn by some superior
-power,--irresistibly so: he listened, but never scarcely said a word....
-Lincoln could not hold a lengthy conversation with a lady,--was not
-sufficiently educated and intelligent in the female line to do so."
-
-Mr. Lincoln and Mary were engaged, and their marriage was only a
-question of time. But Mr. Lincoln's love-affairs were destined never
-to run smoothly, and now one Miss Matilda Edwards made her "sweet
-appearance," and brought havoc in her train. She was the sister of
-Ninian W. Edwards, and came to spend a year with her brother. She was
-very fair, and soon was the reigning belle. No sooner did Lincoln know
-her than he felt his heart change. The other affair, according to the
-Edwardses, according to Stuart, according to Herndon, according to
-Lincoln and everybody else, was a "policy match;" but _this_ was love.
-For a while he evidently tried hard to go on as before, but his feelings
-were too strong to be concealed. Mr. Edwards endeavored to reconcile
-matters by getting his sister to marry Speed; but the rebellious beauty
-refused Speed incontinently (as she did Douglas too), and married Mr.
-Schuyler Strong. Poor Lincoln never whispered a word of his passion to
-her: his high sense of honor prevented that, and perhaps she would not
-have listened to him if it had been otherwise.
-
-At length, after long reflection, in great agony of spirit, Mr. Lincoln
-concluded that duty required him to make a candid statement of his
-feelings to the lady who was entitled to his hand. He wrote her a
-letter, and told her gently but plainly that he did not love her. He
-asked Speed to deliver it; but Speed advised him to burn it. "Speed,"
-said Mr. Lincoln, "I always knew you were an obstinate man. If you won't
-deliver it, I'll get some one else to do it." But Speed now had the
-letter in his hand; and, emboldened by the warm friendship that existed
-between them, replied, "I shall not deliver it, nor give it to you to be
-delivered. Words are forgotten, misunderstood, passed by, not noticed
-in a private conversation; but once put your words in writing, and they
-stand as a living and eternal monument against you. If you think you
-have _will_ and manhood enough to go and see her, and speak to her
-what you say in that letter, you may do that." Lincoln went to see
-her forthwith, and reported to Speed. He said, that, when he made his
-somewhat startling communication, she rose and said, "'The deceiver
-shall be deceived: woe is me!' alluding to a young man she had fooled."
-Mary told him she knew the reason of his change of heart, and released
-him from his engagement. Some parting endearments took place between
-them, and then, as the natural result of those endearments, a
-reconciliation.
-
-We quote again from Mrs. Edwards:--
-
-"Lincoln and Mary were engaged; every thing was ready and prepared
-for the marriage, even to the supper. Mr. Lincoln failed to meet his
-engagement. Cause, insanity!
-
-"In his lunacy he declared he hated Mary and loved Miss Edwards. This is
-true, yet it was not his real feelings. A crazy man hates those he loves
-when at himself. Often, often, is this the case. The world had it that
-Mr. Lincoln backed out, and this placed Mary in a peculiar situation;
-and to set herself right, and free Mr. Lincoln's mind, she wrote a
-letter to Mr. Lincoln, stating that she would release him from his
-engagement.... The whole of the year was a crazy spell. Miss Edwards
-was at our house, say a year. I asked Miss Edwards if Mr. Lincoln ever
-mentioned the subject of his love to her. Miss Edwards said, 'On my
-word, he never mentioned such a subject to me: he never even stooped to
-pay me a compliment.'"
-
-In the language of Mr. Edwards, "Lincoln went as crazy as a loon," and
-was taken to Kentucky by Speed, who kept him "until he recovered." He
-"did not attend the Legislature in 1841-2 for this reason."
-
-Mr. Herndon devoutly believes that Mr. Lincoln's insanity grew out of a
-most extraordinary complication of feelings,--aversion to the marriage
-proposed, a counter-attachment to Miss Edwards, and a new access of
-unspeakable tenderness for the memory of Ann Rutledge,--the old love
-struggling with a new one, and each sending to his heart a sacrificial
-pang as he thought of his solemn engagement to marry a third person. In
-this opinion Mr. Speed appears to concur, as shown by his letter below.
-At all events, Mr. Lincoln's derangement was nearly, if not quite,
-complete. "We had to remove razors from his room," says Speed, "take
-away all knives, and other dangerous things. It was terrible." And now
-Speed determined to do for him what Bowlin Greene had done on a similar
-occasion at New Salem. Having sold out his store on the 1st of January,
-1841, he took Mr. Lincoln with him to his home in Kentucky, and kept
-him there during most of the summer and fall, or until he seemed
-sufficiently restored to be given his liberty again at Springfield, when
-he was brought back to his old quarters. During this period, "he was at
-times very melancholy," and, by his own admission, "almost contemplated
-self-destruction." It was about this time that he wrote some gloomy
-lines under the head of "Suicide," which were published in "The Sangamon
-Journal." Mr. Herndon remembered something about them; but, when he
-went to look for them in the office-file of the "Journal," he found them
-neatly cut out,--"supposed to have been done," says he, "by Lincoln."
-Speed's mother was much pained by the "deep depression" of her guest,
-and gave him a Bible, advising him to read it, to adopt its precepts,
-and pray for its promises. He acknowledged this attempted service, after
-he became President, by sending her a photograph of himself, with this
-inscription: "To my very good friend, Mrs. Lucy G. Speed, from whose
-pious hands I received an Oxford Bible twenty years ago." But Mrs.
-Speed's medicine, the best ever offered for a mind diseased, was of
-no avail in this case. Among other things, he told Speed, referring
-probably to his inclination to commit suicide, "that he had done nothing
-to make any human being remember that he had lived, and that to connect
-his name with the events transpiring in his day and generation, and so
-impress himself upon them as to link his name with something that would
-redound to the interest of his fellow-man, was what he desired to live
-for." Of this conversation he pointedly reminded Speed at the time, or
-just before the time, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation.
-
-What took place after his return to Springfield cannot be better told
-than in the words of the friends of both parties. "Mr. Edwards and
-myself," says Mrs. Edwards, "after the first crash of things, told Mary
-and Lincoln that they had better not ever marry; that their natures,
-minds, education, raising, &c., were so different, that they could not
-live happy as man and wife; had better never think of the subject again.
-All at once we heard that Mr. Lincoln and Mary had secret meetings at
-Mr. S. Francis's, editor of 'The Springfield Journal.' Mary said the
-reason this was so, the cause why it was, was that the world, woman
-and man, were uncertain and slippery, and that it was best to keep the
-secret courtship from all eyes and ears. Mrs. Lincoln told Mr. Lincoln,
-that, though she had released him in the letter spoken of, yet she would
-hold the question an open one,--that is, that she had not changed her
-mind, but felt as always.... The marriage of Mr. Lincoln and Mary was
-quick and sudden,--one or two hours' notice." How poor Mr. Lincoln felt
-about it, may be gathered from the reminiscences of his friend, J.
-H. Matheny, who says, "that Lincoln and himself, in 1842, were very
-friendly; that Lincoln came to him one evening and said, 'Jim, I shall
-have to marry that girl.'" He was married that evening, but Matheny
-says, "he looked as if he was going to the slaughter," and that Lincoln
-"had often told him, directly and individually, that he was driven into
-the marriage; that it was concocted and planned by the Edwards family;
-that Miss Todd--afterwards Mrs. Lincoln--was crazy for a week or so, not
-knowing what to do; and that he loved Miss Edwards, and went to see her,
-and not Mrs. Lincoln."
-
-The license to marry was issued on the 4th of November, 1842, and on
-the same day the marriage was celebrated by Charles Dresser, "M.G."
-With this date carefully borne in mind, the following letters are of
-surpassing interest. They are relics, not only of a great man, but of a
-great agony.
-
-The first is from Mr. Speed to Mr. Herndon, and explains the
-circumstances under which the correspondence took place. Although it
-is in part a repetition of what the reader already knows, it is of such
-peculiar value, that we give it in full:--
-
-W. H. Herndon, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--I enclose you copies of all the letters of any interest from
-Mr. Lincoln to me.
-
-Some explanation may be needed, that you may rightly understand their
-import.
-
-In the winter of 1840 and 1841 he was unhappy about his engagement to
-his wife,--not being entirely satisfied that his _heart_ was going with
-his hand. How much he suffered then on that account, none know so well
-as myself: he disclosed his whole heart to me.
-
-In the summer of 1841 I became engaged to my wife. He was here on a
-visit when I courted her; and, strange to say, something of the same
-feeling which I regarded as so foolish in him took possession of me, and
-kept me very unhappy from the time of my engagement until I was married.
-
-This will explain the deep interest he manifested in his letters on my
-account.
-
-Louisville, Nov. 30, 1866.
-
-If you use the letters (and some of them are perfect gems) do it care
-fully, so as not to wound the feelings of Mrs. Lincoln.
-
-One thing is plainly discernible: if I had not been married and
-happy,--far more happy than I ever expected to be,--he would not have
-married.
-
-I have erased a name which I do not wish published. If I have failed
-to do it anywhere, strike it out when you come to it. That is the
-word------.
-
-I thank you for your last lecture. It is all new to me, but so true
-to my appreciation of Lincoln's character, that, independent of my
-knowledge of you, I would almost swear to it.
-
-Lincoln wrote a letter (a long one, which he read to me) to Dr. Drake,
-of Cincinnati, descriptive of his case. Its date would be in December,
-1840, or early in January, 1841. I think that he must have informed
-Dr. D. of his early love for Miss Rutledge, as there was a part of the
-letter which he would not read.
-
-It would be worth much to you, if you could procure the original.
-
-Charles D. Drake, of St. Louis, may have his father's papers. The date
-which I give you will aid in the search.
-
-I remember Dr. Drake's reply, which was, that he would not undertake to
-prescribe for him without a personal interview. I would advise you to
-make some effort to get the letter.
-
-Your friend, &c.,
-
-J. F. Speed.
-
-The first of the papers from Mr. Lincoln's pen is a letter of advice and
-consolation to his friend, for whom he apprehends the terrible things
-through which, by the help of that friend, he has himself just passed.
-
-My dear Speed,--Feeling, as you know I do, the deepest solicitude for
-the success of the enterprise you are engaged in, I adopt this as the
-last method I can invent to aid you, in case (which God forbid) you
-shall need any aid. I do not place what I am going to say on paper,
-because I can say it better in that way than I could by word of mouth;
-but, were I to say it orally before we part, most likely you would
-forget it at the very time when it might do you some good. As I think it
-reasonable that you will feel very badly sometime between this and the
-final consummation of your purpose, it is intended that you shall read
-this just at such a time. Why I say it is reasonable that you will
-feel very badly yet, is because of three _special causes_ added to _the
-general one_ which I shall mention.
-
-The general cause is, that you are naturally of a nervous temperament,
-and this I say from what I have seen of you personally, and what you
-have told me concerning your mother at various times, and concerning
-your brother William at the time his wife died. The first special cause
-is your _exposure to bad weather_ on your journey, which my experience
-clearly proves to be very severe on defective nerves. The second is
-the _absence of all business and conversation_ of friends, which might
-divert your mind, give it occasional rest from the intensity of thought
-which will sometimes wear the sweetest idea threadbare, and turn it to
-the bitterness of death.
-
-The third is _the rapid and near approach of that crisis on which all
-your thoughts and feelings concentrate._
-
-If from all these causes you shall escape, and go through triumphantly,
-without another "twinge of the soul," I shall be most happily but most
-egregiously deceived. If, on the contrary, you shall, as I expect you
-will at some time, be agonized and distressed, let me, who have some
-reason to speak with judgment on such a subject, beseech you to ascribe
-it to the causes I have mentioned, and not to some false and ruinous
-suggestion of the Devil.
-
-"But," you will say, "do not your causes apply to every one engaged in a
-like undertaking?" By no means. _The particular causes_, to a greater
-or less extent, perhaps, do apply in all cases; but the _general
-one_,--nervous debility, which is the key and conductor of all the
-particular ones, and without which they would be utterly harmless,
-though it _does_ pertain to you,--_does not_ pertain to one in a
-thousand. It is out of this that the painful difference between you and
-the mass of the world springs.
-
-I know what the painful point with you is at all times when you are
-unhappy: it is an apprehension that you do not love her as you should.
-What nonsense! How came you to court her? Was it because you thought she
-deserved it, and that you had given her reason to expect it? If it was
-for that, why did not the same reason make you court Ann Todd, and at
-least twenty others of whom you can think, and to whom it would apply
-with greater force than to _her?_ Did you court her for her wealth? Why,
-you know she had none. But you say you reasoned yourself into it. What
-do you mean by that? Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason
-yourself out of it? Did you not think, and partly form the purpose, of
-courting her the first time you ever saw her or heard of her? What had
-reason to do with it at that early stage? There was nothing at that time
-for reason to work upon. Whether she was moral, amiable, sensible,
-or even of good character, you did not, nor could then know, except,
-perhaps, you might infer the last from the company you found her in.
-
-All you then did or could know of her was her personal _appearance and
-deportment_; and these, if they impress at all, impress the heart, and
-not the head.
-
-Say candidly, were not those heavenly _black eyes_ the whole basis of
-all your early _reasoning_ on the subject? After you and I had once been
-at the residence, did you not go and take me all the way to Lexington
-and back, for no other purpose but to get to see her again, on our
-return on that evening to take a trip for that express object?
-
-What earthly consideration would you take to find her scouting and
-despising you, and giving herself up to another? But of this you have no
-apprehension; and therefore you cannot bring it home to your feelings.
-
-I shall be so anxious about you, that I shall want you to write by every
-mail. Your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., Feb. 3, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Your letter of the 25th January came to hand to-day. You
-well know that I do not feel my own sorrows much more keenly than I do
-yours, when I know of them; and yet I assure you I was not much hurt by
-what you wrote me of your excessively bad feeling at the time you wrote.
-Not that I am less capable of sympathizing with you now than ever, not
-that I am less your friend than ever, but because I hope and believe
-that your present anxiety and distress about her health and her life
-must and will forever banish those horrid doubts which I know you
-sometimes felt as to the truth of your affection for her. If they can
-once and forever be removed (and I almost feel a presentiment that the
-Almighty has sent your present affliction expressly for that object),
-surely, nothing can come in their stead to fill their immeasurable
-measure of misery. The death-scenes of those we love are surely painful
-enough; but these we are prepared for and expect to see: they happen to
-all, and all know they must happen. Painful as they are, they are not
-an unlooked-for sorrow. Should she, as you fear, be destined to an early
-grave, it is indeed a great consolation to know that she is so well
-prepared to meet it.. Her religion, which you once disliked so much, I
-will venture you now prize most highly.
-
-But I hope your melancholy bodings as to her early death are not well
-founded. I even hope that ere this reaches you, she will have returned
-with improved and still-improving health, and that you will have met
-her, and forgotten the sorrows of the past in the enjoyment of the
-present. I would say more if I could, but it seems that I have said
-enough. It really appears to me that you yourself ought to rejoice, and
-not sorrow, at this indubitable evidence of your undying affection for
-her.
-
-Why, Speed, if you did not love her, although you might not wish her
-death, you would most certainly be resigned to it. Perhaps this point is
-no longer a question with you, and my pertinacious dwelling upon it is
-a rude intrusion upon your feelings. If so, you must pardon me. You know
-the hell I have suffered on that point, and how tender I am upon it.
-You know I do not mean wrong. I have been quite clear of hypo since you
-left, even better than I was along in the fall. I have seen------but
-once. She seemed very cheerful, and so I said nothing to her about what
-we spoke of.
-
-Old Uncle Billy Herndon is dead, and it is said this evening that Uncle
-Ben Ferguson will not live. This, I believe, is all the news, and enough
-at that, unless it were better.
-
-Write me immediately on the receipt of this.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., Feb. 13, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 1st inst. came to hand three or four days ago.
-When this shall reach you, you will have been Fanny's husband several
-days. You know my desire to befriend you is everlasting; that I will
-never cease while I know how to do any thing.
-
-But you will always hereafter be on ground that I have never occupied,
-and consequently, if advice were needed, I might advise wrong. I do
-fondly hope, however, that you will never again need any comfort from
-abroad. But, should I be mistaken in this, should excessive pleasure
-still be accompanied with a painful counterpart at times, still let me
-urge you, as I have ever done, to remember, in the depth and even agony
-of despondency, that very shortly you are to feel well again. I am now
-fully convinced that you love her as ardently as you are capable of
-loving. Your ever being happy in her presence, and your intense anxiety
-about her health, if there were nothing else, would place this beyond
-all dispute in my mind. I incline to think it probable that your nerves
-will fail you occasionally for a while; but once you get them firmly
-graded now, that trouble is over forever.
-
-I think if I were you, in case my mind were not exactly right, I would
-avoid being _idle_. I would immediately engage in some business, or go
-to making preparations for it, which would be the same thing.
-
-If you went through the ceremony calmly, or even with sufficient
-composure not to excite alarm in any present, you are safe beyond
-question, and in two or three months, to say the most, will be the
-happiest of men.
-
-I would desire you to give my particular respects to Fanny; but perhaps
-you will not wish her to know you have received this, lest she should
-desire to see it. Make her write me an answer to my last letter to her;
-at any rate, 1 would set great value upon a note or letter from her.
-
-Write me whenever you have leisure.
-
-Yours forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--I have been quite a man since you left.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 16th inst., announcing that Miss Fanny and you
-are "no more twain, but one flesh," reached me this morning. I have no
-way of telling how much happiness I wish you both, though I believe you
-both can conceive it. I feel somewhat jealous of both of you now:
-you will be so exclusively concerned for one another, that I shall be
-forgotten entirely. My acquaintance with Miss Fanny (I call her this,
-lest you should think I am speaking of your mother) was too short for me
-to reasonably hope to long be remembered by her; and still I am sure I
-shall not forget her soon. Try if you cannot remind her of that debt she
-owes me,--and be sure you do not interfere to prevent her paying it.
-
-I regret to learn that you have resolved to not return to Illinois.
-I shall be very lonesome without you. How miserable things seem to be
-arranged in this world! If we have no friends, we have no pleasure; and,
-if we have them, we are sure to lose them, and be doubly pained by the
-loss. I did hope she and you would make your home here; but I own I have
-no right to insist. You owe obligations to her ten thousand times
-more sacred than you can owe to others, and in that light let them be
-respected and observed. It is natural that she should desire to remain
-with her relatives and friends. As to friends, however, _she_ could not
-need them anywhere: she would have them in abundance here.
-
-Give my kind remembrance to Mr. Williamson and his family, particularly
-Miss Elizabeth; also to your mother, brother, and sisters. Ask little
-Eliza Davis if she will ride to town with me if I come there again.
-
-And, finally, give Fanny a double reciprocation of all the love she sent
-me. Write me often, and believe me
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Poor Easthouse is gone at last. He died a while before day this
-morning. They say he was very loath to die.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 25, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--I received yours of the 12th, written the day you went down
-to William's place, some days since, but delayed answering it till I
-should receive the promised one of the 16th, which came last night. I
-opened the letter with intense anxiety and trepidation; so much, that,
-although it turned out better than I expected, I have hardly yet, at the
-distance of ten hours, become calm.
-
-I tell you, Speed, our forebodings (for which you and I are peculiar)
-are all the worst sort of nonsense. I fancied, from the time I received
-your letter of Saturday, that the one of Wednesday was never to come,
-and yet it did come, and, what is more, it is perfectly clear, both from
-its tone and handwriting, that you were much happier, or, if you think
-the term preferable, less miserable, when you wrote it, than when you
-wrote the last one before. You had so obviously improved at the
-very time I so much fancied you would have grown worse. You say that
-something indescribably horrible and alarming still haunts you. You will
-not say that three months from now, I will venture. When your nerves
-once get steady now, the whole trouble will be over forever. Nor should
-you become impatient at their being even very slow in becoming steady.
-Again you say, you much fear that that Elysium of which you have dreamed
-so much is never to be realized. Weil, if it shall not, I dare swear it
-will not be the fault of her who is now your wife. I now have no doubt,
-that it is the peculiar misfortune of both you and me to dream dreams of
-Elysium far exceeding all that any thing earthly can realize. Far short
-of your dreams as you may be, no woman could do more to realize them
-than that same black-eyed Fanny. If you could but contemplate her
-through my imagination, it would appear ridiculous to you that any one
-should for a moment think of being unhappy with her. My old father
-used to have a saying, that, "If you make a bad bargain, hug it all the
-tighter;" and it occurs to me, that, if the bargain you have just closed
-can possibly be called a bad one, it is certainly the most pleasant one
-for applying that maxim to which my fancy can by any effort picture.
-
-I write another letter, enclosing this, which you can show her, if she
-desires it. I do this because she would think strangely, perhaps, should
-you tell her that you received no letters from me, or, telling her you
-do, refuse to let her see them. I close this, entertaining the confident
-hope that every successive letter I shall have from you (which I here
-pray may not be few, nor far between) may show you possessing a more
-steady hand and cheerful heart than the last preceding it.
-
-As ever, your friend,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, March 27, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 10th inst. was received three or four days
-since. You know I am sincere when I tell you the pleasure its contents
-gave me was and is inexpressible. As to your farm matter, I have
-no sympathy with you. I have no farm, nor ever expect to have, and
-consequently have not studied the subject enough to be much interested
-with it. I can only say that I am glad you are satisfied and pleased
-with it.
-
-But on that other subject, to me of the most intense interest whether in
-joy or sorrow, I never had the power to withhold my sympathy from you.
-It cannot be told how it now thrills me with joy to hear you say you
-are "_far happier than you ever expected to be_." That much I know is
-enough. I know you too well to suppose your expectations were not, at
-least, sometimes extravagant, and, if the reality exceeds them all, I
-say, Enough, dear Lord. I am not going beyond the truth when I tell you,
-that the short space it took me to read your last letter gave me more
-pleasure than the total sum of all I have enjoyed since that fatal 1st
-of January, 1841. Since then it seems to me I should have been entirely
-happy, but for the never-absent idea that there is _one_ still unhappy
-whom I have contributed to make so. That still kills my soul. I cannot
-but reproach myself for even wishing to be happy while she is otherwise.
-She accompanied a large party on the railroad cars to Jacksonville
-last Monday, and on her return spoke, so that I heard of it, of having
-enjoyed the trip exceedingly. God be praised for that.
-
-You know with what sleepless vigilance I have watched you ever since the
-commencement of your affair; and, although I am almost confident it is
-useless, I cannot forbear once more to say, that I think it is even yet
-possible for your spirits to flag down and leave you miserable. If they
-should, don't fail to remember that they cannot long remain so. One
-thing I can tell you which I know you will be glad to hear, and that is
-that I have seen------and scrutinized her feelings as well as I could,
-and am fully convinced she is far happier now than she has been for the
-last fifteen months past.
-
-You will see by the last "Sangamon Journal" that I have made a
-temperance speech on the 22d of February, which I claim that Fanny
-and you shall read as an act of charity to me; for I cannot learn that
-anybody else has read it, or is likely to. Fortunately, it is not very
-long, and I shall deem it a sufficient compliance with my request if one
-of you listens while the other reads it.
-
-As to your Lockridge matter, it is only necessary to say that there
-has been no court since you left, and that the next commences to-morrow
-morning, during which I suppose we cannot fail to get a judgment.
-
-I wish you would learn of Everett what he would take, over and above a
-discharge, for all trouble we have been at, to take his business out
-of our hands and give it to somebody else. It is impossible to collect
-money on that or any other claim here now, and, although you know I am
-not a very petulant man, I declare I am almost out of patience with Mr.
-Everett's endless importunity. It seems like he not only writes all
-the letters he can himself, but gets everybody else in Louisville and
-vicinity to be constantly writing to us about his claim. I have always
-said that Mr. Everett is a very clever fellow, and I am very sorry
-he cannot be obliged; but it does seem to me he ought to know we are
-interested to collect his claim, and therefore would do it if we could.
-
-I am neither joking nor in a pet when I say we would thank him to
-transfer his business to some other, without any compensation for what
-we have done, provided he will see the court cost paid, for which we are
-security.
-
-The sweet violet you enclosed came safely to hand, but it was so dry,
-and mashed so flat, that it crumbled to dust at the first attempt
-to handle it. The juice that mashed out of it stained a place in the
-letter, which I mean to preserve and cherish for the sake of her who
-procured it to be sent. My renewed good wishes to her in particular, and
-generally to all such of your relations who know me.
-
-As ever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Ill., July 4, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 16th June was received only a day or two
-since. It was not mailed at Louisville till the 25th. You speak of the
-great time that has elapsed since I wrote you. Let me explain that. Your
-letter reached here a day or two after I had started on the circuit. I
-was gone five or six weeks, so that I got the letters only a few weeks
-before Butler started to your country. I thought it scarcely worth while
-to write you the news which he could and would tell you more in detail.
-On his return, he told me you would write me soon, and so I waited for
-your letter. As to my having been displeased with your advice, surely
-you know better than that. I know you do, and therefore will not labor
-to convince you. True, that subject is painful to me; but it is not your
-silence, or the silence of all the world, that can make me forget it. I
-acknowledge the correctness of your advice too; but, before I resolve
-to do the one thing or the other, I must gain my confidence in my own
-ability to keep my resolves when they are made. In that ability you know
-I once prided myself, as the only or chief gem of my character: that
-gem I lost, how and where you know too well. I have not yet regained it;
-and, until I do, I cannot trust myself in any matter of much importance.
-I believe now, that, had you understood my case at the time as well as I
-understood yours afterwards, by the aid you would have given me I should
-have sailed through clear; but that does not now afford me sufficient
-confidence to begin that or the like of that again.
-
-You make a kind acknowledgment of your obligations to me for your
-present happiness. I am much pleased with that acknowledgment. But a
-thousand times more am I pleased, to know that you enjoy a degree of
-happiness worthy of an acknowledgment. The truth is, I am not sure that
-there was any went with me in the part I took in your difficulty: I was
-drawn to it as by fate. If I would, I could not have done less than
-I did. I always was superstitious: I believe God made me one of the
-instruments of bringing your Fanny and you together, which union I have
-no doubt he had fore-ordained. Whatever he designs, he will do for me
-yet. "Stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord" is my text just
-now. If, as you say, you have told Fanny all, I should have no objection
-to her seeing this letter, but for its reference to our friend here:
-let her seeing it depend upon whether she has ever known any thing of my
-affairs; and, if she has not, do not let her.
-
-I do not think I can come to Kentucky this season. I am so poor, and
-make so little headway in the world, that I drop back in a month of
-idleness as much as I gain in a year's sowing. I should like to visit
-you again. I should like to see that "sis" of yours that was absent when
-I was there, though I suppose she would run away again, if she were to
-hear I was coming.
-
-My respects and esteem to all your friends there, and, by your
-permission, my love to your Fanny. Ever yours, Lincoln.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 5, 1842.
-
-Dear Speed,--You have heard of my duel with Shields, and I have now
-to inform you that the duelling business still rages in this city. Day
-before yesterday Shields challenged Butler, who accepted, and proposed
-fighting next morning at sunrising in Bob Allen's meadow, one hundred
-yards' distance, with rifles. To this Whitesides, Shields's second, said
-"no," because of the law. Thus ended duel No. 2. Yesterday Whiteside
-chose to consider himself insulted by Dr. Merryman, so sent him a kind
-of _quasi_-challenge, inviting him to meet him at the Planter's House in
-St. Louis, on the next Friday, to settle their difficulty. Merryman made
-me his friend, and sent W. a note, inquiring to know if he meant his
-note as a challenge, and, if so, that he would, according to the law
-in such case made and provided, prescribe the terms of the meeting. W.
-returned for answer, that, if M. would meet him at the Planter's House
-as desired, he would challenge him. M. replied in a note, that he denied
-W.'s right to dictate time and place, but that he (M.) would waive the
-question of time, and meet him at Louisiana, Mo. Upon my presenting this
-note to W., and stating verbally its contents, he declined receiving it,
-saying he had business in St. Louis, and it was as near as Louisiana.
-Merryman then directed me to notify Whiteside that he should publish the
-correspondence between them, with such comments as he thought fit. This
-I did. Thus it stood at bedtime last night. This morning Whiteside, by
-his friend Shields, is praying for a new trial, on the ground that he
-was mistaken in Merryman's proposition to meet him at Louisiana, Mo.,
-thinking it was the State of Louisiana. This Merryman hoots at, and
-is preparing his publication; while the town is in a ferment, and a
-street-fight somewhat anticipated.
-
-But I began this letter, not for what I have been writing, but to
-say something on that subject which you know to be of such infinite
-solicitude to me. The immense sufferings you endured from the first days
-of September till the middle of February you never tried to conceal from
-me, and I well understood. You have now been the husband of a lovely
-woman nearly eight months. That you are happier now than the day you
-married her, I well know; for without you could not be living. But I
-have your word for it, too, and the returning elasticity of spirits
-which is manifested in your letters. But I want to ask a close question,
-"Are you now in _feeling_, as well as _judgment_, glad you are married
-as you are?" From anybody but me this would be an impudent question, not
-to be tolerated; but I know you will pardon it in me. Please answer it
-quickly, as I am impatient to know.
-
-I have sent my love to your Fanny so often, I fear she is getting tired
-of it. However, I venture to tender it again,
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-In the last of these letters, Mr. Lincoln refers to his "duel with
-Shields." That was another of the disagreeable consequences which flowed
-from his fatal entanglement with Mary. Not content with managing a
-timid, although half-frantic and refractory, lover, her restless spirit
-led her into new fields of adventure. Her pen was too keen to be idle in
-the political controversies of the time. As a satirical writer, she
-had no rival of either sex at Springfield, and few, we venture to say,
-anywhere else. But that is a dangerous talent: the temptations to use it
-unfairly are numerous and strong; it inflicts so much pain, and almost
-necessarily so much injustice, upon those against whom it is directed,
-that its possessor rarely, if ever, escapes from a controversy without
-suffering from the desperation it provokes. Mary Todd was not disposed
-to let her genius rust for want of use; and, finding no other victim
-handy, she turned her attention to James Shields, "Auditor." She had a
-friend, one Miss Jayne, afterwards Mrs. Trumbull, who helped to keep
-her literary secrets, and assisted as much as she could in worrying the
-choleric Irishman. Mr. Francis, the editor, knew very well that Shields
-was "a fighting-man;" but the "pieces" sent him by the wicked ladies
-were so uncommonly rich in point and humor, that he yielded to a
-natural inclination, and printed them, one and all. Below we give a few
-specimens:--
-
-LETTER FROM THE LOST TOWNSHIPS.
-
-Lost Townships, Aug. 27, 1842.
-
-Dear Mr. Printer,--I see you printed that long letter I sent you a spell
-ago: I'm quite encouraged by it, and can't keep from writing again. I
-think the printing of my letters will be a good thing all round,--it
-will give me the benefit of being known by the world, and give the world
-the advantage of knowing what's going on in the Lost Townships, and
-give your paper respectability besides. So here comes another. Yesterday
-afternoon I hurried through cleaning up the dinner-dishes, and stepped
-over to Neighbor S----, to see if his wife Peggy was as well as mought be
-expected, and hear what they called the baby. Well, when I got there,
-and just turned round the corner of his log-cabin, there he was setting
-on the doorstep reading a newspaper.
-
-"How are you, Jeff?" says I. He sorter started when he heard me, for he
-hadn't seen me before.
-
-"Why," says he, "I'm mad as the devil, Aunt'Becca!"
-
-"What about?" says I: "ain't its hair the right color? None of that
-nonsense, Jeff: there ain't an honester woman in the Lost Townships
-than"--
-
-"Than who?" says he: "what the mischief are you about?"
-
-I began to see I was running the wrong trail, and so says I, "Oh!
-nothing: I guess I was mistaken a little, that's all. But what is it
-you're mad about?" "Why," says he, "I've been tugging ever since harvest
-getting out wheat and hauling it to the river, to raise State-Bank paper
-enough to pay my tax this year, and a little school-debt I owe; and
-now, just as I've got it, here I open this infernal 'Extra Register,'
-expecting to find it full of 'Glorious Democratic Victories' and
-'High-Comb'd Cocks,' when, lo and behold! I find a set of fellows
-calling themselves officers of State have forbidden the tax-collectors
-and school-commissioners to receive State paper at all; and so here it
-is, dead on my hands. I don't now believe all the plunder I've got will
-fetch ready cash enough to pay my taxes and that school-debt."
-
-I was a good deal thunderstruck myself; for that was the first I had
-heard of the proclamation, and my old man was pretty much in the same
-fix with Jeff. We both stood a moment staring at one another, without
-knowing what to say. At last says I, "Mr. S------, let me look at that
-paper." He handed it to me, when I read the proclamation over.
-
-"There, now," says he, "did you ever see such a piece of impudence
-and imposition as that?" I saw Jeff was in a good tune for saying some
-ill-natured things, and so I tho't I would just argue a little on the
-contrary side, and make him rant a spell if I could.
-
-"Why," says I, looking as dignified and thoughtful as I could, "it seems
-pretty tough, to be sure, to have to raise silver where there's none to
-be raised; but then, you see, 'there will be danger of loss' if it ain't
-done."
-
-"Loss, damnation 1" says he. "I defy Daniel Webster, I defy King
-Solomon, I defy the world,--I defy--I defy--yes, I defy even you,
-Aunt'Becca, to show how the people can lose any thing by paying their
-taxes in State paper."
-
-"Well," says I, "you see what the officers of State say about it, and
-they are a desarnin' set of men. But," says I, "I guess you're mistaken
-about what the proclamation says. It don't say the people will lose any
-thing by the paper money being taken for taxes. It only says 'there will
-be danger of loss;' and though it is tolerable plain that the people
-can't lose by paying their taxes in something they can get easier than
-silver, instead of having to pay silver; and though it is just as plain
-that the State can't lose by taking State-Bank paper, however low it
-may be, while she owes the bank more than the whole revenue, and can pay
-that paper over on her debt, dollar for dollar,--still there is danger
-of loss to the 'officers of State;' and you know, Jeff, we can't get
-along without officers of State."
-
-"Damn officers of State!" says he: "that's what you Whigs are always
-hurrahing for."
-
-"Now, don't swear so, Jeff," says I: "you know I belong to the meetin',
-and swearin' hurts my feelins'."
-
-"Beg pardon, Aunt'Becca," says he; "but I do say it's enough to make Dr.
-Goddard swear, to have tax to pay in silver, for nothing only that Ford
-may get his two thousand a year, and Shields his twenty-four hundred a
-year, and Carpenter his sixteen hundred a year, and all without 'danger
-of loss' by taking it in State paper. Yes, yes: it's plain enough now
-what these officers of State mean by 'danger of loss.' Wash, I s'pose,
-actually lost fifteen hundred dollars out of the three thousand that two
-of these 'officers of State' let him steal from the treasury, by
-being compelled to take it in State paper. Wonder if we don't have a
-proclamation before long commanding us to make up this loss to Wash in
-silver."
-
-And so he went on till his breath run out, and he had to stop. I
-couldn't think of any thing to say just then; and so I begun to look
-over the paper again. "Ay! here's another proclamation, or something
-like it."
-
-"Another!" says Jeff; "and whose egg is it, pray?"
-
-I looked to the bottom of it, and read aloud, "Your obedient servant,
-Jas. Shields, Auditor."
-
-"Aha!" says Jeff, "one of them same three fellows again. Well, read it,
-and let's hear what of it."
-
-I read on till I came to where it says, "The object of this measure is
-to suspend the collection of the revenue for the current year."
-
-"Now stop, now stop!" says he: "that's a lie a'ready, and I don't want
-to hear of it."
-
-"Oh! maybe not," says I.
-
-"I say it--is--a--lie. Suspend the collection, indeed! Will the
-collectors, that have taken their oaths to make the collection, dare
-to suspend it? Is there any thing in the law requiring them to perjure
-themselves at the bidding of James Shields? Will the greedy gullet of
-the penitentiary be satisfied with swallowing him instead of all them,
-if they should venture to obey him? And would he not discover some
-'danger of loss,' and be off, about the time it came to taking their
-places?
-
-"And suppose the people attempt to suspend, by refusing to pay, what
-then? The collectors would just jerk up their horses and cows, and the
-like, and sell them to the highest bidder for silver in hand, without
-valuation or redemption. Why, Shields didn't believe that story himself:
-it was never meant for the truth. If it was true, why was it not writ
-till five days after the proclamation? Why didn't Carlin and Carpenter
-sign it as well as Shields? Answer me that, Aunt'Becca. I say it's a
-lie, and not a well-told one at that. It grins out like a copper dollar.
-Shields is a fool as well as a liar. With him truth is out of the
-question; and, as for getting a good bright passable lie out of him, you
-might as well try to strike fire from a cake of tallow. I stick to it,
-it's all an infernal Whig lie!"
-
-"A Whig lie! Highty tighty!"
-
-"Yes, a Whig lie; and it's just like every thing the cursed British
-Whigs do. First they'll do some divilment, and then they'll tell a lie
-to hide it. And they don't care how plain a lie it is: they think they
-can cram any sort of a one down the throats of the ignorant Locofocos,
-as they call the Democrats."
-
-"Why, Jeff, you're crazy: you don't mean to say Shields is a Whig!"
-
-"_Yes, I do."_
-
-"Why, look here! the proclamation is in your own Democratic paper, as
-you call it."
-
-"I know it; and what of that? They only printed it to let us Democrats
-see the deviltry the Whigs are at."
-
-"Well, but Shields is the auditor of this Loco--I mean this Democratic
-State."
-
-"So he is, and Tyler appointed him to office."
-
-"Tyler appointed him?"
-
-"Yes (if you must chaw it over), Tyler appointed him; or, if it wasn't
-him, it was old Granny Harrison, and that's all one. I tell you,
-Aunt'Becca, there's no mistake about his being a Whig. Why, his very
-looks shows it,--every thing about him shows it: if I was deaf and
-blind, I could tell him by the smell. I seed him when I was down in
-Springfield last winter. They had a sort of a gatherin' there one night
-among the grandees, they called a fair. All the gals about town was
-there; and all the handsome widows and married women, finickin' about,
-trying to look like gals, tied as tight in the middle, and puffed out
-at both ends, like bundles of fodder that hadn't been stacked yet, but
-wanted stackin' pretty bad. And then they had tables all round the
-house kivered over with [ ] caps, and pincushions, and ten thousand such
-little knick-knacks, tryin' to sell'em to the fellows that were bowin'
-and scrapin' and kungeerin' about'em. They wouldn't let no Democrats in,
-for fear they'd disgust the ladies, or scare the little gals, or dirty
-the floor. I looked in at the window, and there was this same fellow
-Shields floatin' about on the air, without heft or earthly substance,
-just like a lock of cat-fur where cats had been fightin'.
-
-"He was paying his money to this one, and that one, and t'other one, and
-sufferin' great loss because it wasn't silver instead of State paper;
-and the sweet distress he seemed to be in,--his very features, in the
-ecstatic agony of his soul, spoke audibly and distinctly, 'Dear girls,
-it is distressing, but I cannot marry you all. Too well I know how
-much you suffer; but do, do remember, it is not my fault that I am so
-handsome and so interesting.'
-
-"As this last was expressed by a most exquisite contortion of his face,
-he seized hold of one of their hands, and squeezed, and held on to it
-about a quarter of an hour. 'O my good fellow!' says I to myself, 'if
-that was one of our Democratic gals in the Lost Townships, the way
-you'd get a brass pin let into you, would be about up to the head.' He
-a Democrat! Fiddlesticks! I tell you, Aunt'Becca, he's a Whig, and no
-mistake: nobody but a Whig could make such a conceity dunce of himself."
-
-"Well," says I, "maybe he is; but, if he is, I'm mistaken the worst
-sort. Maybe so, maybe so; but, if I am, I'll suffer by it; I'll be a
-Democrat if it turns out that Shields is a Whig; considerin' you shall
-be a Whig if he turns out a Democrat."
-
-"A bargain, by jingoes!" says he; "but how will we find out?"
-
-"Why," says I, "we'll just write, and ax the printer."
-
-"Agreed again!" says he; "and, by thunder! if it does turn out that
-Shields is a Democrat, I never will"--
-
-"Jefferson,--Jefferson"--
-
-"What do you want, Peggy?"
-
-"Do get through your everlasting clatter sometime, and bring me a gourd
-of water: the child's been crying for a drink this live-long hour."
-
-"Let it die, then: it may as well die for water as to be taxed to death
-to fatten officers of State."
-
-Jeff run off to get the water, though, just like he hadn't been sayin'
-any thing spiteful; for he's a raal good-hearted fellow, after all, once
-you get at the foundation of him.
-
-I walked into the house, and "Why, Peggy," says I, "I declare, we like
-to forgot you altogether."
-
-"Oh, yes!" says she, "when a body can't help themselves, everybody
-soon forgets'em; but, thank God! by day after to-morrow I shall be well
-enough to milk the cows, and pen the calves, and wring the contrary
-ones' tails for'em, and no thanks to nobody."
-
-"Good-evening, Peggy," says I; and so I sloped, for I seed she was mad
-at me for making Jeff neglect her so long.
-
-And now, Mr. Printer, will you be sure to let us know in your next paper
-whether this Shields is a Whig or a Democrat? I don't care about it for
-myself, for I know well enough how it is already; but I want to convince
-Jeff. It may do some good to let him, and others like him, know who
-and what those officers of State are. It may help to send the present
-hypocritical set to where they belong, and to fill the places they now
-disgrace with men who will do more work for less pay, and take a fewer
-airs while they are doing it. It ain't sensible to think that the same
-men who get us into trouble will change their course; and yet it's
-pretty plain, if some change for the better is not made, it's not long
-that either Peggy or I, or any of us, will have a cow left to milk, or a
-calf's tail to wring.
-
-Yours, truly,
-
-Rebecca------.
-
-Lost Townships, Sept. 8,1842. Dear Mr. Printer,--I was a-standin' at the
-spring yesterday a-washin' out butter, when I seed Jim Snooks a-ridin'
-up towards the house for very life like, when, jist as I was a wonderin'
-what on airth was the matter with him, he stops suddenly, and ses he,
-"Aunt'Becca, here's somethin' for you;" and with that he hands out your
-letter. Well, you see I steps out towards him, not thinkin' that I had
-both hands full of butter; and seein' I couldn't take the letter, you
-know, without greasin' it, I ses, "Jim, jist you open it, and read it
-for me." Well, Jim opens it, and reads it; and would you believe it,
-Mr. Editor? I was so completely dumfounded, and turned into stone, that
-there I stood in the sun, a-workin' the butter, and it a-runnin' on the
-ground, while he read the letter, that I never thunk what I was about
-till the hull on't run melted on the ground, and was lost. Now, sir,
-it's not for the butter, nor the price of the butter, but, the Lord have
-massy on us, I wouldn't have sich another fright for a whole firkin of
-it. Why, when I found out that it was the man what Jeff seed down to
-the fair that had demanded the author of my letters, threatnin' to
-take personal satisfaction of the writer, I was so skart that I tho't I
-should quill-wheel right where I was.
-
-You say that Mr. S. is offended at being compared to cat's fur, and
-is as mad as a March hare (that ain't far), because I told about the
-squeezin'. Now, I want you to tell Mr. S, that, rather than fight, I'll
-make any apology; and, if he wants personal satisfaction, let him only
-come here, and he may squeeze my hand as hard as I squeeze the butter,
-and, if that ain't personal satisfaction, I can only say that he is the
-fust man that was not satisfied with squeezin' my hand. If this should
-not answer, there is one thing more that I would do rather than get a
-lickin'. I have all along expected to die a widow; but, as Mr. S.
-is rather good-looking than otherwise, I must say I don't care if
-we compromise the matter by--really, Mr. Printer, I can't help
-blushin'--but I--it must come out--I--but widowed modesty--well, if I
-must, I must--wouldn't he--maybe sorter, let the old grudge drap if I
-was to consent to be--be--h-i-s w-i-f-e? I know he's a fightin' man, and
-would rather fight than eat; but isn't marryin' better than fightin',
-though it does sometimes run into it? And I don't think, upon the whole,
-that I'd be sich a bad match neither: I'm not over sixty, and am just
-four feet three in my bare feet, and not much more round the girth; and
-for color, I wouldn't turn my back to nary gal in the Lost Townships.
-But, after all, maybe I'm countin' my chickins before they' re hatched,
-and dreamin' of matrimonial bliss when the only alternative reserved for
-me may be a lickin'. Jeff tells me the way these fire-eaters do is to
-give the challenged party choice of weapons, &c., which bein' the case,
-I'll tell you in confidence that I never fights with any thing but
-broomsticks, or hot water, or a shovelful of coals, or some such thing;
-the former of which being somewhat like a shillalah, may not be very
-objectionable to him. I will give him choice, however, in one thing, and
-that is, whether, when we fight, I shall wear breeches or he petticoats;
-for I presume that change is sufficient to place us on an equality.
-
-Yours, &c.
-
-Rebecca------.
-
-P. S.--Jist say to your friend, if he concludes to marry rather than
-fight, I shall only inforce one condition: that is, if he should ever
-happen to gallant any young gals home of nights from our house, he must
-not squeeze their hands.
-
-It is by no means a subject of wonder that these publications threw
-Mr. James Shields into a state of wrath. A thin-skinned, sensitive,
-high-minded, and high-tempered man, tender of his honor, and an Irishman
-besides, it would have been strange indeed, if he had not felt
-like snuffing blood. But his rage only afforded new delights to his
-tormentors; and when it reached its height, "Aunt'Becca" transformed
-herself to "Cathleen," and broke out in rhymes like the following, which
-Miss Jayne's brother "Bill" kindly consented to "drop" for the amiable
-ladies.
-
- [For The Journal.]
-
- Ye Jew's-harps awake! The A------s won:
- Rebecca the widow has gained Erin's son;
- The pride of the North from Emerald Isle
- Has been wooed and won by a woman's smile.
- The combat's relinquished, old loves all forgot:
- To the widow he's bound. Oh, bright be his lot!
- In the smiles of the conquest so lately achieved,
- Joyful be his bride, "widowed modesty" relieved.
- The footsteps of time tread lightly on flowers,
- May the cares of this world ne'er darken his hours!
- But the pleasures of life are fickle and coy
- As the smiles of a maiden sent off to destroy.
- Happy groom! in sadness, far distant from thee,
- The Fair girls dream only of past times of glee
- Enjoyed in thy presence; whilst the soft blarnied store
- Will be fondly remembered as relics of yore,
- And hands that in rapture you oft would have prest
- In prayer will be clasped that your lot may be blest.
-
- Cathleen.
-
-It was too bad. Mr. Shields could stand it no longer. He sent Gen.
-Whiteside to Mr. Francis, to demand the name of the person who wrote the
-letters from the "Lost Townships;" and Mr. Francis told him it was _A.
-Lincoln_. This information led to a challenge, a sudden scampering off
-of parties and friends to Missouri, a meeting, an explanation, and a
-peaceful return.
-
-Abraham Lincoln in the field of honor, sword in hand, manoeuvred by a
-second learned in the _duello_, would be an attractive spectacle under
-any circumstances. But with a celebrated man for an antagonist, and a
-lady's humor the occasion, the scene is one of transcendent interest;
-and the documents which describe it are well entitled to a place in his
-history. The letter of Mr. Shields's second, being first in date, is
-first in order.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 3, 1842. To the Editor op "The Sangamon Journal."
-
-Sir,--To prevent misrepresentation of the recent affair between Messrs.
-Shields and Lincoln, I think it proper to give a brief narrative of the
-facts of the case, as they came within my knowledge; for the truth
-of which I hold myself responsible, and request you to give the same
-publication. An offensive article in relation to Mr. Shields appeared in
-"The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d September last; and, on demanding the
-author, Mr. Lincoln was given up by the editor. Mr. Shields, previous to
-this demand, made arrangements to go to Quincy on public business; and
-before his return Mr. Lincoln had left for Tremont, to attend the court,
-with the intention, as we learned, of remaining on the circuit several
-weeks. Mr. Shields, on his return, requested me to accompany him to
-Tremont; and, on arriving there, we found that Dr. Merryman and Mr.
-Butler had passed us in the night, and got there before us. We arrived
-in Tremont on the 17th ult.; and Mr. Shields addressed a note to Mr.
-Lincoln immediately, informing him that he was given up as the author of
-some articles that appeared in "The Sangamon Journal" (one more over the
-signature having made its appearance at this time), and requesting
-him to _retract_ the offensive allusions contained in said articles in
-relation to his private character. Mr. Shields handed this note to me to
-deliver to Mr. Lincoln, and directed me, at the same time, not to
-enter into any verbal communication, or be the bearer of any verbal
-explanation, as such were always liable to misapprehension. This note
-was delivered by me to Mr. Lincoln, stating, at the same time, that I
-would call at his convenience for an answer. Mr. Lincoln, in the evening
-of the same day, handed me a letter addressed to Mr. Shields. In this
-he gave or offered no explanation, but stated therein that he could not
-submit to answer further, on the ground that Shields's note contained
-an assumption of facts and also a menace. Mr. Shields then addressed
-him another note, in which he disavowed all intention to menace, and
-requested to know whether he (Mr. Lincoln) was the author of either of
-the articles which appeared in "The Journal," headed "Lost Townships,"
-and signed "Rebecca;" and, if so, he repeated his request of a
-retraction of the offensive matter in relation to his private character;
-if not, his denial would be held sufficient. This letter was returned to
-Mr. Shields unanswered, with a verbal statement "that there could be no
-further negotiation between them until the first note was withdrawn."
-Mr. Shields thereupon sent a note designating me as his friend, to which
-Mr. Lincoln replied by designating Dr. Merryman. These three last notes
-passed on Monday morning, the 19th. Dr. Merryman handed me Mr. Lincoln's
-last note when by ourselves. I remarked to Dr. Merryman that the matter
-was now submitted to us, and that I would propose that he and myself
-should pledge our words of honor to each other to try to agree upon
-terms of amicable arrangement, and compel our principals to accept of
-them. To this he readily assented, and we shook hands upon the pledge.
-It was then mutually agreed that we should adjourn to Springfield, and
-there procrastinate the matter, for the purpose of effecting the secret
-arrangement between him and myself. All this I kept concealed from Mr.
-Shields. Our horse had got a little lame in going to Tremont, and
-Dr. Merryman invited me to take a seat in his buggy. I accepted the
-invitation the more readily, as I thought, that leaving Mr. Shields in
-Tremont until his horse would be in better condition to travel would
-facilitate the private agreement between Dr. Merryman and myself. I
-travelled to Springfield part of the way with him, and part with Mr.
-Lincoln; but nothing passed between us on the journey in relation to the
-matter in hand. We arrived in Springfield on Monday night. About noon on
-Tuesday, to my astonishment, a proposition was made to meet in Missouri,
-within three miles of Alton, on the next Thursday! The weapons, cavalry
-broadswords of the largest size; the parties to stand on each side of
-a barrier, and to be confined to a limited space. As I had not
-been consulted at all on the subject, and considering the private
-understanding between Dr. Merryman and myself, and it being known that
-Mr. Shields was left at Tremont, such a proposition took me by surprise.
-However, being determined not to violate the laws of the State, I
-declined agreeing upon the terms until we should meet in Missouri.
-Immediately after, I called upon Dr. Merryman, and withdrew the pledge
-of honor between him and myself in relation to a secret arrangement. I
-started after this to meet Mr. Shields, and met him about twenty miles
-from Springfield. It was late on Tuesday night when we both reached the
-city, and learned that Dr. Merryman had left for Missouri, Mr. Lincoln
-having left before the proposition was made, as Dr. Merryman had himself
-informed me. The time and place made it necessary to start at once.
-We left Springfield at eleven o'clock on Tuesday night, travelled all
-night, and arrived in Hillsborough on Wednesday morning, where we
-took in Gen. Ewing. From there we went to Alton, where we arrived on
-Thursday; and, as the proposition required three friends on each side, I
-was joined by Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, as the friends of Mr. Shields.
-
-We then crossed to Missouri, where a proposition was made by Gen.
-Hardin and Dr. English (who had arrived there in the mean time as mutual
-friends) to refer the matter to, I think, four friends for a settlement.
-This I believed Mr. Shields would refuse, and declined seeing him; but
-Dr. Hope, who conferred with him upon the subject, returned, and stated
-that Mr. Shields declined settling the matter through any other than the
-friends he had selected to stand by him on that occasion. The friends of
-both the parties finally agreed to withdraw the papers (temporarily) to
-give the friends of Mr. Lincoln an opportunity to explain. Whereupon the
-friends of Mr. Lincoln, to wit, Messrs. Merryman, Bledsoe, and Butler,
-made a full and satisfactory explanation in relation to the article
-which appeared in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, the only one written
-by him. This was all done without the knowledge or consent of Mr.
-Shields; and he refused to accede to it until Dr. Hope, Gen. Ewing, and
-myself declared the apology sufficient, and that we could not sustain
-him in going further. I think it necessary to state further, that no
-explanation or apology had been previously offered on the part of Mr.
-Lincoln to Mr. Shields, and that none was ever communicated by me to
-him, nor was any ever offered to me, unless a paper read to me by Dr.
-Merryman after he had handed me the broadsword proposition on Tuesday.
-I heard so little of the reading of the paper, that I do not know fully
-what it purported to be; and I was the less inclined to inquire, as Mr.
-Lincoln was then gone to Missouri, and Mr. Shields not yet arrived from
-Tremont. In fact, I could not entertain any offer of the kind, unless
-upon my own responsibility; and that I was not disposed to do after what
-had already transpired.
-
-I make this statement, as I am about to be absent for some time, and
-I think it due to all concerned to give a true version of the matter
-before I leave.
-
-Your obedient servant,
-
-John D. Whiteside.
-
-To which Mr. Merryman replied:--
-
-Springfield, Oct. 8, 1842.
-
-Editors of "The Journal."
-
-Gents,--By your paper of Friday, I discover that Gen. Whiteside has
-published his version of the late affair between Messrs. Shields and
-Lincoln. I now bespeak a hearing of my version of the same affair, which
-shall be true and full as to all material facts.
-
-On Friday evening, the 16th of September, I learned that Mr. Shields
-and Gen. Whiteside had started in pursuit of Mr. Lincoln, who was at
-Tremont, attending court. I knew that Mr. Lincoln was wholly unpractised
-both as to the diplomacy and weapons commonly employed in similar
-affairs; and I felt it my duty, as a friend, to be with him, and, so far
-as in my power, to prevent any advantage being taken of him as to either
-his honor or his life. Accordingly, Mr. Butler and myself started,
-passed Shields and Whiteside in the night, and arrived at Tremont ahead
-of them on Saturday morning. I told Mr. Lincoln what was brewing, and
-asked him what course he proposed to himself. He stated that he was
-wholly opposed to duelling, and would do any thing to avoid it that
-might not degrade him in the estimation of himself and friends; but, if
-such degradation or a fight were the only alternative, he would fight.
-
-In the afternoon Shields and Whiteside arrived, and very soon the former
-sent to Mr. Lincoln by the latter the following note or letter:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17,1842.
-
-A. Lincoln, Esq.--I regret that my absence on public business compelled
-me to postpone a matter of private consideration a little longer than I
-could have desired. It will only be necessary, however, to account for
-it by informing you that I have been to Quincy on business that would
-not admit of delay. I will now state briefly the reasons of my troubling
-you with this communication, the disagreeable nature of which I regret,
-as I had hoped to avoid any difficulty with any one in Springfield while
-residing there, by endeavoring to conduct myself in such a way amongst
-both my political friends and opponents, as to escape the necessity of
-any. Whilst thus abstaining from giving provocation, I have become
-the object of slander, vituperation, and personal abuse, which, were I
-capable of submitting to, I would prove myself worthy of the whole of
-it.
-
-In two or three of the last number's of "The Sangamon Journal," articles
-of the most personal nature, and calculated to degrade me, have made
-their appearance. On inquiring, I was informed by the editor of that
-paper, through the medium of my friend, Gen. Whiteside, that you are
-the author of those articles. This information satisfies me that I have
-become, by some means or other, the object of your secret hostility. I
-will not take the trouble of inquiring into the reason of all this;
-but I will take the liberty of requiring a full, positive, and
-absolute retraction of all offensive allusions used by you in these
-communications, in relation to my private character and standing as a
-man, as an apology for the insults conveyed in them.
-
-This may prevent consequences which no one will regret more than myself.
-
-Your ob't serv't,
-
-[Copy.] Jas. Shields.
-
-About sunset Gen. Whiteside called again, and received from Mr. Lincoln
-the following answer to Mr. Shields's note:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17, 1812
-
-Jas. Shields, Esq.--Your note of to-day was handed me by Gen. Whiteside.
-In that note, you say you have been informed, through the medium of the
-editor of "The Journal," that I am the author of certain articles
-in that paper which you deem personally abusive of you; and, without
-stopping to inquire whether I really am the author, or to point out what
-is offensive in them, you demand an unqualified retraction of all that
-is offensive, and then proceed to hint at consequences.
-
-Now, sir, there is in this so much assumption of facts, and so much of
-menace as to consequences, that I cannot submit to answer that note any
-further than I have, and to add, that the consequence to which I suppose
-you allude would be matter of as great regret to me as it possibly could
-to you. Respectfully,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-In about an hour Gen. Whiteside called again with another note from Mr.
-Shields; but after conferring with Mr. Butler for a long time, say two
-or three hours, returned without presenting the note to Mr. Lincoln.
-This was in consequence of an assurance from Mr. Butler that Mr. Lincoln
-could not receive any communication from Mr. Shields, unless it were a
-withdrawal of his first note, or a challenge. Mr. Butler further stated
-to Gen. Whiteside, that, on the withdrawal of the first note, and a
-proper and gentlemanly request for an explanation, he had no doubt one
-would be given. Gen. Whiteside admitted that that was the course Mr.
-Shields ought to pursue, but deplored that his furious and intractable
-temper prevented his having any influence with him to that end. Gen. W.
-then requested us to wait with him until Monday morning, that he might
-endeavor to bring Mr. Shields to reason.
-
-On Monday morning he called and presented Mr. Lincoln the same note
-as, Mr. Butler says, he had brought on Saturday evening. It was as
-follows:--
-
-Tremont, Sept. 17, 1842.
-
-A. Lincoln, Esq.--In your reply to my note of this date, you intimate
-that I assume facts and menace consequences, and that you cannot submit
-to answer it further. As now, sir, you desire it, I will be a little
-more particular. The editor of "The Sangamon Journal" gave me to
-understand that you are the author of an article which appeared,
-I think, in that paper of the 2d September inst., headed "The Lost
-Townships," and signed Rebecca or 'Becca. I would therefore take the
-liberty of asking whether you are the author of said article, or any
-other over the same signature which has appeared in any of the late
-numbers of that paper. If so, I repeat my request of an absolute
-retraction of all offensive allusion contained therein in relation to my
-private character and standing. If you are not the author of any of the
-articles, your denial will be sufficient. I will say further, it is not
-my intention to menace, but to do myself justice.
-
-Your ob't serv't,
-
-[Copy.] Jas. Shields.
-
-This Mr. Lincoln perused, and returned to Gen. Whiteside, telling
-him verbally, that he did not think it consistent with his honor to
-negotiate for peace with Mr. Shields, unless Mr. Shields would withdraw
-his former offensive letter.
-
-In a very short time Gen. Whiteside called with a note from Mr. Shields,
-designating Gen. Whiteside as his friend, to which Mr. Lincoln instantly
-replied, designating me as his. On meeting Gen. Whiteside, he proposed
-that we should pledge our honor to each other that we would endeavor
-to settle the matter amicably; to which I agreed, and stated to him the
-only conditions on which it could be so settled; viz., the withdrawal
-of Mr. Shields's first note; which he appeared to think reasonable, and
-regretted that the note had been written,--saying, however, that he had
-endeavored to prevail on Mr. Shields to write a milder one, but had not
-succeeded. He added, too, that I must promise not to mention it, as he
-would not dare to let Mr. Shields know that he was negotiating peace;
-for, said he, "He would challenge me next, and as soon cut my throat
-as not." Not willing that he should suppose my principal less dangerous
-than his own, I promised not to mention our pacific intentions to Mr.
-Lincoln or any other person; and we started for Springfield forthwith.
-
-We all, except Mr. Shields, arrived in Springfield late at night on
-Monday. We discovered that the affair had, somehow, got great publicity
-in Springfield, and that an arrest was probable. To prevent this, it was
-agreed by Mr. Lincoln and myself that he should leave early on Tuesday
-morning. Accordingly, he prepared the following instructions for my
-guide, on a suggestion from Mr. Butler that he had reason to believe
-that an attempt would be made by the opposite party to have the matter
-accommodated:--
-
-In case Whiteside shall signify a wish to adjust this affair without
-further difficulty, let him know, that, if the present papers be
-withdrawn, and a note from Mr. Shields asking to know if I am the author
-of the articles of which he complains, and asking that I shall make him
-gentlemanly satisfaction if I am the author, and this without menace or
-dictation as to what that satisfaction shall be, a pledge is made that
-the following answer shall be given:--
-
-"I did write the 'Lost Township' letter which appeared in the 'Journal'
-of the 2d inst., but had no participation in any form in any other
-article alluding to you. I wrote that wholly for political effect. I had
-no intention of injuring your personal or private character, or standing
-as a man or a gentleman; and I did not then think, and do not now think,
-that that article could produce, or has produced, that effect against
-you; and, had I anticipated such an effect, would have forborne to write
-it. And I will add, that your conduct towards me, so far as I knew, had
-always been gentlemanly, and that I had no personal pique against you,
-and no cause for any."
-
-If this should be done, I leave it with you to manage what shall and
-what shall not be published.
-
-If nothing like this is done, the preliminaries of the fight are to
-be:--
-
-1st, Weapons.--Cavalry broadswords of the largest size, precisely
-equal in all respects, and such as now used by the cavalry company at
-Jacksonville.
-
-2d, Position.--A plank ten feet long, and from nine to twelve inches
-broad, to be firmly fixed on edge on the ground as the line between us,
-which neither is to pass his foot over upon forfeit of his life. Next, a
-line drawn on the ground on either side of said plank and parallel with
-it, each at the distance of the whole length of the sword and three
-feet additional from the plank; and the passing of his own such line
-by either party during the fight shall be deemed a surrender of the
-contest.
-
-3d, Time.--On Thursday evening at 5 o'clock, if you can get it so; but
-in no case to be at a greater distance of time than Friday evening at 5
-o'clock.
-
-4th, Place.--Within three miles of Alton, on the opposite side of the
-river, the particular spot to be agreed on by you.
-
-Any preliminary details coming within the above rules, you are at
-liberty to make at your discretion; but you are in no case to swerve
-from these rules, or to pass beyond their limits.
-
-In the course of the forenoon I met Gen. Whiteside, and he again
-intimated a wish to adjust the matter amicably. I then read to him Mr.
-Lincoln's instructions to an adjustment, and the terms of the hostile
-meeting, if there must be one, both at the same time.
-
-He replied that it was useless to talk of an adjustment, if it could
-only be effected by the _withdrawal_ of Mr. Shields's paper, for such
-withdrawal Mr. Shields would never consent to; adding, that he would as
-soon think of asking Mr. Shields to "butt his brains out against a
-brick wall as to withdraw that paper." He proceeded: "I see but one
-course,--that is a desperate remedy:'tis to tell them, if they will not
-make the matter up, they must fight us." I replied, that, if he chose to
-fight Mr. Shields to compel him to do right, he might do so; but as for
-Mr. Lincoln, he was on the defensive, and, I believed, in the right, and
-I should do nothing to compel him to do wrong. Such withdrawal having
-been made indispensable by Mr. Lincoln, I cut this matter short as to an
-adjustment, an I proposed to Gan. Whiteside to accept the terms of the
-fight, which he refused to do until Mr. Shields's arrival in town,
-but agreed, verbally, that Mr. Lincoln's friends should procure the
-broadswords, and take them to the ground. In the afternoon he came to
-me, saying that some persons were swearing out affidavits to have us
-arrested, and that he intended to meet Mr. Shields immediately, and
-proceed to the place designated; lamenting, however, that I would not
-delay the time, that he might procure the interference of Gov. Ford and
-Gen. Ewing to mollify Mr. Shields. I told him that an accommodation,
-except upon the terms I mentioned, was out of the question; that to
-delay the meeting was to facilitate our arrest; and, as I was determined
-not to be arrested, I should leave town in fifteen minutes. I then
-pressed his acceptance of the preliminaries, which he disclaimed upon
-the ground that it would interfere with his oath of office as Fund
-Commissioner. I then, with two other friends, went to Jacksonville,
-where we joined Mr. Lincoln about 11 o'clock on Tuesday night. Wednesday
-morning we procured the broadswords, and proceeded to Alton, where we
-arrived about 11, A.M., on Thursday. The other party were in town before
-us. We crossed the river, and they soon followed. Shortly after, Gen.
-Hardin and Dr. English presented to Gen. Whiteside and myself the
-following note:--
-
-Alton, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Messrs. Whiteside and Merryman.--As the mutual personal friends of
-Messrs. Shields and Lincoln, but without authority from either, we
-earnestly desire to see a reconciliation of the misunderstanding
-which exists between them. Such difficulties should always be arranged
-amicably, if it is possible to do so with honor to both parties.
-
-Believing ourselves, that such an arrangement can possibly be effected,
-we respectfully, but earnestly, submit the following proposition for
-your consideration:--
-
-Let the whole difficulty be submitted to four or more gentlemen, to
-be selected by yourselves, who shall consider the affair, and report
-thereupon for your consideration.
-
-John J. Hardin.
-
-E. W. English.
-
-To this proposition Gen. Whiteside agreed: I declined doing so without
-consulting Mr. Lincoln. Mr. Lincoln remarked, that, as they had accepted
-the proposition, he would do so, but directed that his friends should
-make no terms except those first proposed. Whether the adjustment was
-finally made upon these very terms, and no other, let the following
-documents attest:--
-
-Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Gentlemen,--All papers in relation to the matter in controversy between
-Mr. Shields and Mr. Lincoln having been withdrawn by the friends of the
-parties concerned, the friends of Mr. Shields ask the friends of Mr.
-Lincoln to explain all offensive matter in the articles which appeared
-in "The Sangamon Journal" of the 2d, 9th, and 16th of September, under
-the signature of "Rebecca," and headed "Lost Townships."
-
-It is due to Gen. Hardin and Mr. English to state that their
-interference was of the most courteous and gentlemanly character.
-
-John D. Whiteside.
-
-Wm. Lee D. Ewino.
-
-T. M. Hope.
-
-Missouri, Sept. 22, 1842.
-
-Gentlemen,--All papers in relation to the matter in controversy between
-Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Shields having been withdrawn by the friends of
-the parties concerned, we, the undersigned, friends of Mr. Lincoln,
-in accordance with your request that explanation of Mr. Lincoln's
-publication in relation to Mr. Shields in "The Sangamon Journal" of the
-2d, 9th, and 16th of September be made, take pleasure in saying, that,
-although Mr. Lincoln was the writer of the article signed "Rebecca"
-in the "Journal" of the 2d, and that only, yet he had no intention of
-injuring the personal or private character or standing of Mr. Shields
-as a gentleman or a man, and that Mr. Lincoln did not think, nor does he
-now think, that said article could produce such an effect; and, had Mr.
-Lincoln anticipated such an effect, he would have forborne to write
-it. We will further state, that said article was written solely for
-political effect, and not to gratify any personal pique against Mr.
-Shields, for he had none, and knew of no cause for any It is due to Gen.
-Hanlin and Mr. English to say that their interference was of the most
-courteous and gentlemanly character.
-
-E. H. Merryman.
-
-A. T. Bledsoe.
-
-Wm. Butler.
-
-Let it be observed now, that Mr. Shields's friends, after agreeing to
-the arbitrament of four disinterested gentlemen, declined the contract,
-saying that Mr. Shields wished his own friends to act for him. They then
-proposed that we should explain without any withdrawal of papers. This
-was promptly and firmly refused, and Gen. Whiteside himself pronounced
-the papers withdrawn. They then produced a note requesting us to
-"_disavow_" all offensive intentions in the publications, &c., &c. This
-we declined answering, and only responded to the above request for an
-explanation.
-
-These are the material facts in relation to the matter, and I think
-present the case in a very different light from the garbled and
-curtailed statement of Gen. Whiteside. Why he made that statement I know
-not, unless he wished to detract from the honor of Mr. Lincoln. This was
-ungenerous, more particularly as he on the ground requested us not to
-make in our explanation any quotations from the "Rebecca papers;" also
-not to make _public the terms of reconciliation_, and to unite with them
-in defending the honorable character of the adjustment.
-
-Gen. W., in his publication, says, "The friends of both parties agreed
-to withdraw the papers (temporarily) to give the friends of Mr. Lincoln
-an opportunity to explain." This I deny. I say the papers were withdrawn
-to enable Mr. Shields's friends to _ask_ an explanation; and I appeal to
-the documents for proof of my position.
-
-By looking over these documents, it will be seen that Mr. Shields
-had not before asked for an _explanation_, but had all the time been
-dictatorily insisting on a _retraction_.
-
-Gen. Whiteside, in his communication, brings to light much of Mr.
-Shields's manifestations of bravery behind the scenes. I can do nothing
-of the kind for Mr. Lincoln. He took his stand when I first met him at
-Tremont, and maintained it _calmly_ to the last, without difficulty or
-difference between himself and his friends.
-
-I cannot close this article, lengthy as it is, without testifying to the
-honorable and gentlemanly conduct of Gen. Ewing and Dr. Hope, nor indeed
-can I say that I saw any thing objectionable in the course of Gen.
-Whiteside up to the time of his communication. This is so replete with
-prevarication and misrepresentation, that I cannot accord to the General
-that candor which I once supposed him to possess. He complains that I
-did not procrastinate time according to agreement. He forgets that by
-his own act he cut me off from that chance in inducing me, by promise,
-not to communicate our secret contract to Mr. Lincoln. Moreover, I could
-see no consistency in wishing for an extension of time at that stage of
-the affair, when in the outset they were in so precipitate a hurry, that
-they could not wait three days for Mr. Lincoln to return from Tremont,
-but must hasten there, apparently with the intention of bringing the
-matter to a speedy issue. He complains, too, that, after inviting him
-to take a seat in my buggy, I never broached the subject to him on
-our route here. But was I, the defendant in the case, with a challenge
-hanging over me, to make advances, and beg a reconciliation? Absurd!
-Moreover, the valorous general forgets that he beguiled the tedium
-of the journey by recounting to me his exploits in many a well-fought
-battle,--dangers by "flood and field" in which I don't believe he ever
-participated,--doubtless with a view to produce a salutary effect on
-my nerves, and impress me with a proper notion of his fire-eating
-propensities.
-
-One more main point of his argument, and I have done. The General seems
-to be troubled with a convenient shortness of memory on some occasions.
-He does not remember that any explanations were offered at any time,
-unless it were a paper read when the "broadsword proposition" was
-tendered, when his mind was so confused by the anticipated clatter of
-broadswords, or _something else_, that he did "not know fully what
-it purported to be." The truth is, that by unwisely refraining from
-mentioning it to his principal, he placed himself in a dilemma which he
-is now endeavoring to shuffle out of. By his inefficiency, and want of
-knowledge of those laws which govern gentlemen in matters of this kind,
-he has done great injustice to his principal, a gentleman who I believe
-is ready at all times to vindicate his honor manfully, but who has been
-unfortunate in the selection of his friend; and this fault he is now
-trying to wipe out by doing an act of still greater injustice to Mr.
-Lincoln.
-
-E. H. Merryman.
-
-And so Mr. Lincoln acknowledged himself to have been the author of one
-of the "Lost Township Letters." Whether he was or not, was known only
-perhaps to Miss Todd and himself. At the time of their date, he was
-having secret meetings with her at Mr. Francis's house, and endeavoring
-to nerve himself to the duty of marrying her, with what success the
-letters to Speed are abundant evidence. It is probable that Mary
-composed them fresh from these stolen conferences; that some of Mr.
-Lincoln's original conceptions and peculiarities of style unwittingly
-crept into them, and that here and there he altered and amended the
-manuscript before it went to the printer. Such a connection with a
-lady's productions made it obligatory upon him to defend them. But
-why avow one, and disavow the rest? It is more than likely that he was
-determined to take just enough responsibility to fight upon, provided
-Shields should prove incorrigible, and not enough to prevent a peaceful
-issue, if the injured gentleman should be inclined to accept an apology.
-
-After his marriage, Mr. Lincoln took up his residence at the "Globe
-Tavern," where he had a room and boarding for man and wife for the
-moderate sum of four dollars per week. But, notwithstanding cheap
-living, he was still as poor as ever, and gave "poverty" as one of his
-reasons for not paying a friendly visit which seemed to be expected of
-him.
-
-At the bar and in political affairs he continued to work with as much
-energy as before, although his political prospects seem just now to have
-suffered an unexpected eclipse. In 1843, Lincoln, Hardin, and Baker were
-candidates for the Whig congressional nomination; but between Hardin
-and Baker there was "bitter hostility," and between Baker and Lincoln
-"suspicion and dislike." The contest was long and fierce; but, before it
-was over, Lincoln reluctantly withdrew in favor of Baker. He had had a
-hard time of it, and had been compelled to meet accusations of a very
-strange character. Among other things, he was charged with being
-an aristocrat; with having deserted his old friends, the people, by
-marrying a proud woman on account of her blood and family. This hurt him
-keenly, and he took great pains to disprove it; but this was not all.
-He was called an infidel by some, a Presbyterian here, an Episcopalian
-there; so that by turns he incurred the hostility of all the most
-powerful religious societies in the district.
-
-On the 24th of March, he wrote to Mr. Speed as follows:--
-
-Springfield, March 24, 1843.
-
-Dear Speed,--... We had a meeting of the Whigs of the county here on
-last Monday to appoint delegates to a district convention; and Baker
-beat me, and got the delegation instructed to go for him. The meeting,
-in spite of my attempt to decline it, appointed me one of the delegates;
-so that, in getting Baker the nomination, I shall be fixed a good deal
-like a fellow who is made a groomsman to a man that has cut him out,
-and is marrying his own dear "gal." About the prospects of your having a
-namesake at our town, can't say exactly yet.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-He was now a Baker delegate, pledged to get him the nomination if he
-could; and yet he was far from giving up the contest in his own behalf.
-Only two days after the letter to Speed, he wrote to Mr. Morris:--
-
-Springfield, Ill., March 26, 1843.
-
-Friend Morris,--Your letter of the 23d was received on yesterday
-morning, and for which (instead of an excuse, which you thought proper
-to ask) I tender you my sincere thanks. It is truly gratifying to me
-to learn, that, while the people of Sangamon have cast me off, my old
-friends of Menard, who have known me longest and best, stick to me.
-It would astonish, if not amuse, the older citizens (a stranger,
-friendless, uneducated, penniless boy, working on a flat-boat at ten
-dollars per month) to learn that I have been put down here as the
-candidate of pride, wealth, and aristocratic family distinction. Yet
-so, chiefly, it was. There was, too, the strangest combination of
-church-influence against me. Baker is a Campbellite; and therefore, as I
-suppose, with few exceptions, got all that church.
-
-My wife has some relations in the Presbyterian churches, and some with
-the Episcopal churches; and therefore, wherever it would tell, I was set
-down as either the one or the other, while it was everywhere contended
-that no Christian ought to go for me, because I belonged to no church,
-was suspected of being a deist, and had talked about fighting a duel.
-With all these things, Baker, of course, had nothing to do. Nor do I
-complain of them. As to his own church going for him, I think that was
-right enough: and as to the influences I have spoken of in the other,
-though they were very strong, it would be grossly untrue and unjust to
-charge that they acted upon them in a body, or were very near so. I only
-mean that those influences levied a tax of a considerable per cent upon
-my strength throughout the religious controversy. But enough of this.
-
-You say, that, in choosing a candidate for Congress, you have an
-equal right with Sangamon; and in this you are undoubtedly earnest. In
-agreeing to withdraw if the Whigs of Sangamon should go against me, I
-did not mean that they alone were worth consulting, but that if she,
-with her heavy delegation, should be against me, it would be impossible
-for me to succeed; and therefore I had as well decline. And in relation
-to Menard having rights, permit me fully to recognize them, and to
-express the opinion, that, if she and Mason act circumspectly, they will
-in the convention be able so far to enforce their rights as to decide
-absolutely which _one_ of the candidates shall be successful. Let me
-show the reason of this. Hardin, or some other Morgan candidate, will
-get Putnam, Marshall, Woodford, Tazewell, and Logan,--make sixteen.
-Then you and Mason, having three, can give the victory to either side.
-
-You say you shall instruct your delegates for me, unless I object. I
-certainly shall not object. That would be too pleasant a compliment for
-me to tread in the dust. And besides, if any thing should happen (which,
-however, is not probable) by which Baker should be thrown out of the
-fight, I would be at liberty to accept the nomination if I could get
-it. I do, however, feel myself bound not to hinder him in any way from
-getting the nomination. I should despise myself were I to attempt it.
-I think, then, it would be proper for your meeting to appoint three
-delegates, and to instruct them to go for some one as a first choice,
-some one else as a second, and perhaps some one as a third; and, if in
-those instructions I were named as the first choice, it would gratify me
-very much.
-
-If you wish to hold the balance of power, it is important for you to
-attend to and secure the vote of Mason also. You should be sure to have
-men appointed delegates that you know you can safely confide in. If
-yourself and James Short were appointed for your county, all would be
-safe; but whether Jim's woman affair a year ago might not be in the way
-of his appointment is a question. I don't know whether you know it, but
-I know him to be as honorable a man as there is in the world. You have
-my permission, and even request, to show this letter to Short; but to no
-one else, unless it be a very particular friend, who you know will not
-speak of it.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Will you write me again?
-
-[Illustration: Joshua F. Speed 306]
-
-To Martin M. Morris, Petersburg, 111.
-
-And finally to Speed on the same subject:--
-
-Springfield, May 18, 1843.
-
-Dear Speed,--Yours of the 9th inst. is duly received, which I do not
-meet as a "bore," but as a most welcome visitor. I will answer the
-business part of it first.
-
-In relation to our Congress matter here, you were right in supposing I
-would support the nominee. Neither Baker nor I, however, is the man, but
-Hardin, so far as I can judge from present appearances. We shall have no
-split or trouble about the matter,--all will be harmony. In relation to
-the "coming events" about which Butler wrote you, I had not heard one
-word before I got your letter; but I have so much confidence in the
-judgment of a Butler on such a subject, that I incline to think there
-may be some reality in it. What day does Butler appoint? By the way, how
-do "events" of the same sort come on in your family? Are you
-possessing houses and lands, and oxen and asses, and men-servants and
-maid-servants, and begetting sons and daughters? We are not keeping
-house, but boarding at the Globe Tavern, which is very well kept now
-by a widow lady of the name of Beck. Our room (the same Dr. Wallace
-occupied there) and boarding only costs us four dollars a week. Ann Todd
-was married something more than a year since to a fellow by the name of
-Campbell, and who, Mary says, is pretty much of a "dunce," though he has
-a little money and property. They live in Boonville, Mo., and have not
-been heard from lately enough for me to say any thing about her health.
-I reckon it will scarcely be in our power to visit Kentucky this year.
-Besides poverty and the necessity of attending to business, those
-"coming events," I suspect, would be somewhat in the way. I most
-heartily wish you and your Fanny would not fail to come. Just let us
-know the time, and we will have a room provided for you at our house,
-and all be merry together for a while. Be sure to give my respects to
-your mother and family: assure her, that, if I ever come near her, I
-will not fail to call and see her. Mary joins in sending love to your
-Fanny and you.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-After the "race," still smarting from the mortification of defeat,
-and the disappointment of a cherished hope, he took his old friend Jim
-Matheny away off to a solitary place in the woods, "and then and there,"
-"with great emphasis," protested that he had not grown proud, and was
-not an aristocrat. "Jim," said he, in conclusion, "I am now, and always
-shall be, the same Abe Lincoln that I always was."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-IN 1844 Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for elector on the Whig
-ticket. Mr. Clay, as he has said himself, was his "_beau-ideal_ of a
-statesman," and he labored earnestly and as effectually as any one else
-for his election. For the most part, he still had his old antagonists
-to meet in the Springfield region, chief among whom this year was John
-Calhoun. With him and others he had joint debates, running through
-several nights, which excited much popular feeling. One of his old
-friends and neighbors, who attended all these discussions, speaks in
-very enthusiastic terms of Mr. Calhoun, and, after enumerating his many
-noble gifts of head and heart, concludes that "Calhoun came nearer of
-whipping Lincoln in debate than Douglas did."
-
-Mr. Lincoln made many speeches in Illinois, and finally, towards the
-close of the campaign, he went over into Indiana, and there continued
-"on the stump" until the end. Among other places he spoke at Rockport on
-the Ohio,--where he had first embarked for New Orleans with Gentry,--at
-Gentryville, and at a place in the country about two miles from the
-cabin where his father had lived. While he was in the midst of his
-speech at Gentryville, his old friend, Nat Grigsby, entered the room.
-Lincoln recognized him on the instant, and, stopping short in his
-remarks, cried out, "There's Nat!" Without the slightest regard for
-the proprieties of the occasion, he suspended his address totally, and,
-striding from the platform, began scrambling through the audience and
-over the benches, toward the modest Nat, who stood near the door.
-When he reached him, Lincoln shook his hand "cordially;" and, after
-felicitating himself sufficiently upon the happy meeting, he returned to
-the platform, and finished his speech. When that was over, Lincoln could
-not make up his mind to part with Nat, but insisted that they must sleep
-together. Accordingly, they wended their way to Col. Jones's, where that
-fine old Jackson Democrat received his distinguished "clerk" with all
-the honors he could show him. Nat says, that in the night a cat "began
-mewing, scratching, and making a fuss generally." Lincoln got up, took
-the cat in his hands, and stroking its back "gently and kindly," made
-it sparkle for Nat's amusement. He then "gently" put it out of the door,
-and, returning to bed, "commenced telling stories and talking over old
-times."
-
-It is hardly necessary to say, that the result of the canvass was a
-severe disappointment to Mr. Lincoln. No defeat but his own could have
-given him more pain; and thereafter he seems to have attended quietly to
-his own private business until the Congressional canvass of 1846.
-
-It was thought for many years by some persons well informed, that
-between Lincoln, Logan, Baker, and Hardin,--four very conspicuous Whig
-leaders,--there was a secret personal understanding that they four
-should "rotate" in Congress until each had had a term. Baker succeeded
-Hardin in 1844; Lincoln was elected in 1846, and Logan was nominated,
-but defeated, in 1848. Lincoln publicly declined to contest the
-nomination with Baker in 1844; Hardin did the same for Lincoln in 1846
-(although both seem to have acted reluctantly), and Lincoln refused to
-run against Logan in 1848. Col. Matheny and others insist, with great
-show of reason, that the agreement actually existed; and, if such
-was the case, it was practically carried out, although Lincoln was a
-candidate against Baker, and Hardin against Lincoln, as long as either
-of them thought there was the smallest prospect of success. They
-might have done this, however, merely to keep other and less tractable
-candidates out of the field. That Lincoln would cheerfully have made
-such a bargain to insure himself a seat in Congress, there can be no
-doubt; but the supposition that he did do it can scarcely be reconciled
-with the feeling displayed by him in the conflict with Baker, or the
-persistency of Hardin, to a very late hour, in the contest of 1846.
-
-At all events, Mr. Lincoln and Gen. Hardin were the two, and the only
-two, candidates for the Whig nomination in 1846. The contest was much
-like the one with Baker, and Lincoln was assailed in much the same
-fashion. He was called a deist and an infidel, both before and after his
-nomination, and encountered in a less degree the same opposition from
-the members of certain religious bodies that had met him before. But
-with Hardin he maintained personal relations the most friendly. The
-latter proposed to alter the mode of making the nomination; and, in
-the letter conveying this desire to Mr. Lincoln, he also offered to
-stipulate that each candidate should remain within the limits of his own
-county. To this Mr. Lincoln replied, "As to your proposed stipulation
-that all the candidates shall remain in their own counties, and restrain
-their friends to the same, it seems to me, that, on reflection, you will
-see the fact of your having been in Congress has, in various ways, so
-spread your name in the district as to give you a decided advantage in
-such a stipulation. I appreciate your desire to keep down excitement,
-and I promise you to 'keep cool' under the circumstances."
-
-On the 26th of February, 1846, "The Journal" contained Gen. Hardin's
-card declining to be "longer considered a candidate," and in its
-editorial comments occurred the following: "We have had, and now have,
-no doubt that he (Hardin) has been, and now is, a great favorite with
-the Whigs of the district. He states, in substance, that there was never
-any understanding on his part that his name was not to be presented
-in the canvasses of 1844 and 1846. This, we believe, is strictly true.
-Still, the doings of the Pekin Convention did seem to point that way;
-and the general's voluntary declination as to the canvass of 1844 was
-by many construed into an acquiescence on his part. These things had led
-many of his most devoted friends to not expect him to be a candidate
-at this time. Add to this the relation that Mr. Lincoln bears, and has
-borne, to the party, and it is not strange that many of those who are as
-strongly devoted to Gen. Hardin as they are to Mr. Lincoln should prefer
-the latter at this time. We do not entertain a doubt, that, if we could
-reverse the positions of the two men, that a very large portion of those
-who now have supported Mr. Lincoln most warmly would have supported Gen.
-Hardin quite as warmly." This article was admirably calculated to soothe
-Gen. Hardin, and to win over his friends. It was wise and timely. The
-editor was Mr. Lincoln's intimate friend. It is marked by Mr. Lincoln's
-style, and has at least one expression which was peculiar to him.
-
-In its issue of May 7, "The Journal" announced the nomination as having
-been made at Petersburg, on the Friday previous, and said further, "This
-nomination was, of course, anticipated, there being no other candidate
-in the field. Mr. Lincoln, we all know, is a good Whig, a good man, an
-able speaker, and richly deserves, as he enjoys, the confidence of the
-Whigs of this district and of the State."
-
-Peter Cartwright, the celebrated pioneer Methodist preacher, noted for
-his piety and combativeness, was Mr. Lincoln's competitor before the
-people. We know already the nature of the principal charges against Mr.
-Lincoln's personal character; and these, with the usual criticism upon
-Whig policy, formed the staple topics of the campaign on the Democratic
-side. But Peter himself did not escape with that impunity which might
-have been expected in the case of a minister of the gospel. Rough
-tongues circulated exaggerated stories of his wicked pugnacity and his
-worldly-mindedness, whilst the pretended servant of the Prince of peace.
-Many Democrats looked with intense disgust upon his present candidacy,
-and believed, that, by mingling in politics, he was degrading his office
-and polluting the Church. One of these Democrats told Mr. Lincoln what
-he thought, and said, that, although it was a hard thing to vote
-against his party, he would do it if it should be necessary to defeat
-Cartwright. Mr. Lincoln told him, that on the day of the election he
-would give him a candid opinion as to whether the vote was needed or
-not Accordingly, on that day, he called upon the gentleman, and said, "I
-have got the preacher,... and don't want your vote."
-
-Clay's majority in this district in 1844 had been but nine hundred and
-fourteen; whereas it now gave Mr. Lincoln a majority of fifteen hundred
-and eleven, in a year which had no Presidential excitements to bring
-out electors. In 1848 Gen. Taylor's majority was smaller by ten, and the
-same year the Whig candidate for Congress was defeated by a hundred and
-six.
-
-In the following letter to Mr. Speed, he intimates that the first
-sensations of pleasure attending his new distinction were not of long
-duration; at least, that there were moments in which, if he did not
-forget his greatness, it afforded him little joy.
-
-Springfield, Oct. 22, 1846.
-
-Dear Speed,--
-
-You no doubt assign the suspension of our correspondence to the true
-philosophic cause; though it must be confessed by both of us, that this
-is rather a cold reason for allowing a friendship such as ours to die
-out by degrees. I propose now, that, upon receipt of this, you shall
-be considered in my debt, and under obligations to pay soon, and that
-neither shall remain long in arrears hereafter. Are you agreed?
-
-Being elected to Congress, though I am very grateful to our friends for
-having done it, has not pleased me as much as I expected.
-
-We have another boy, born the 10th of March. He is very much such a
-child as Bob was at his age, rather of a longer order. Bob is "short
-and low," and expect always will be. He talks very plainly,--almost as
-plainly as anybody. He is quite smart enough. I sometimes fear he is one
-of the little rare-ripe sort, that are smarter at about five than
-ever after. He has a great deal of that sort of mischief that is the
-offspring of much animal spirits. Since I began this letter, a messenger
-came to tell me Bob was lost; but by the time I reached the house his
-mother had found him, and had him whipped; and by now, very likely,
-he is run away again. Mary has read your letter, and wishes to be
-remembered to Mrs. S. and you, in which I most sincerely join her. As
-ever yours.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-At the meeting of the Thirtieth Congress Mr. Lincoln took his seat, and
-went about the business of his office with a strong determination to
-do something memorable. He was the only Whig member from Illinois, and
-would be carefully watched. His colleagues were several of them old
-acquaintances of the Vandalia times. They were John McClernand, O. B.
-Ficklin, William A. Richardson, Thomas J. Turner, Robert Smith, and
-John Wentworth (Long John). And at this session that alert, tireless,
-ambitious little man, Stephen A. Douglas, took his seat in the Senate.
-
-The roll of this House shone with an array of great and brilliant names.
-Robert C. Winthrop was the Speaker. On the Whig side were John Quincy
-Adams, Horace Mann, Hunt of New York, Collamer of Vermont, Ingersoll of
-Pennsylvania, Botts and Goggin of Virginia, Morehead of Kentucky,
-Caleb B. Smith of Indiana, Stephens and Toombs of Georgia, Gentry of
-Tennessee, and Vinton and Schenck of Ohio. On the Democratic side were
-Wilmot of Pennsylvania, McLane of Maryland, McDowell of Virginia, Rhett
-of South Carolina, Cobb of Georgia, Boyd of Kentucky, Brown and Thompson
-of Mississippi, and Andrew Johnson and George W. Jones of Tennessee.
-In the Senate were Webster, Calhoun, Benton, Berrien, Clayton, Bell,
-Hunter, and William R. King.
-
-The House organized on the 6th; and the day previous to that. Mr.
-Lincoln wrote to his friend and partner, William H. Herndon:--
-
-Washington, Dec. 5, 1847.
-
-Dear William,--You may remember that about a year ago a man by the name
-of Wilson (James Wilson, I think) paid us twenty dollars as an advance
-fee to attend to a case in the Supreme Court for him, against a Mr.
-Campbell, the record of which case was in the hands of Mr. Dixon of
-St. Louis, who never furnished it to us. When I was at Bloomington last
-fall, I met a friend of Wilson, who mentioned the subject to me, and
-induced me to write to Wilson, telling him that I would leave the ten
-dollars with you which had been left with me to pay for making abstracts
-in the case, so that the case may go on this winter; but I came away,
-and forgot to do it. What I want now is to send you the money to be used
-accordingly, if any one comes on to start the case, or to be retained by
-you if no one does.
-
-There is nothing of consequence new here. Congress is to organize
-to-morrow. Last night we held a Whig caucus for the House, and nominated
-Winthrop of Massachusetts for Speaker, Sargent of Pennsylvania for
-Sergeant-at-arms, Homer of New Jersey Doorkeeper, and McCormick of
-District of Columbia Postmaster. The Whig majority in the House is
-so small, that, together with some little dissatisfaction, leaves it
-doubtful whether we will elect them all.
-
-This paper is too thick to fold, which is the reason I send only a
-halfsheet.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Again on the 13th, to the same gentleman:--
-
-Washington, Dec. 13, 1847.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter advising me of the receipt of our fee in the
-bank-case is just received, and I don't expect to hear another as good
-a piece of news from Springfield while I am away. I am under no
-obligations to the bank; and I therefore wish you to buy bank
-certificates, and pay my debt there, so as to pay it with the least
-money possible. I would as soon you should buy them of Mr. Ridgely, or
-any other person at the bank, as of any one else, provided you can get
-them as cheaply. I suppose, after the bank-debt shall be paid, there
-will be some money left, out of which I would like to have you pay
-Lavely and Stout twenty dollars, and Priest and somebody (oil-makers)
-ten dollars, for materials got for house-painting. If there shall still
-be any left, keep it till you see or hear from me.
-
-I shall begin sending documents so soon as I can get them. I wrote you
-yesterday about a "Congressional Globe." As you are all so anxious for
-me to distinguish myself, I have concluded to do so before long.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was a member of the Committee on Post-offices and
-Post-roads, and in that capacity had occasion to study the claim of a
-mail-contractor who had appealed to Congress against a decision of the
-Department. Mr. Lincoln made a speech on the case, in which, being
-his first, he evidently felt some pride, and reported progress to his
-friends at home:--
-
-Washington, Jan. 8, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of Dec. 27 was received a day or two ago. I
-am much obliged to you for the trouble you have taken, and promise
-to take, in my little business there. As to speech-making, by way of
-getting the hang of the House, I made a little speech two or three days
-ago, on a post-office question of no general interest. I find speaking
-_here and elsewhere_ about the same thing. I was about as badly scared,
-and no worse, as I am when I speak in court. I expect to make one within
-a week or two, in which I hope to succeed well enough to wish you to see
-it.
-
-It is very pleasant to me to learn from you that there are some who
-desire that I should be re-elected. I most heartily thank them for the
-kind partiality; and I can say, as Mr. Clay said of the annexation of
-Texas, that "_personally_ I would not object" to a re-election, although
-I thought at the time, and still think, it would be quite as well for
-me to return to the law at the end of a single term. I made the
-declaration, that I would not be a candidate again, more from a wish to
-deal fairly with others, to keep peace among our friends, and to keep
-the district from going to the enemy, than for any cause personal to
-myself; so that, if it should so happen _that nobody else wishes to be
-elected_, I could not refuse the people the right of sending me again.
-But to enter myself as a competitor of others, or to authorize any one
-so to enter me, is what my word and honor forbid.
-
-I get some letters intimating a probability of so much difficulty
-amongst our friends as to lose us the district; but I remember such
-letters were written to Baker when my own case was under consideration,
-and I trust there is no more ground for such apprehension now than there
-was then.
-
-Remember I am always glad to receive a letter from you.
-
-Most truly your friend,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Thoroughly hostile to Polk, and hotly opposed to the war, Mr. Lincoln
-took an active, although not a leading part in the discussions relating
-to the commencement and conduct of the latter. He was politician enough,
-however, to go with the majority of his party in voting supplies to the
-troops, and thanks to the generals, whilst censuring the President
-by solemnly declaring that the "war was unnecessarily and
-unconstitutionally begun by the President of the United States." But
-his position, and the position of the Whigs, will be made sufficiently
-apparent by the productions of his own pen.
-
-On the 22d of December, 1847, Mr. Lincoln introduced a preamble and
-resolutions, which attained great celebrity in Illinois under the title
-of "Spot Resolutions," and in all probability lost the party a great
-many votes in the Springfield district. They were as follows:--
-
-Whereas, The President of the United States, in his Message of May 11,
-1846, has declared that "the Mexican Government not only refused
-to receive him [the envoy of the United States], or listen to his
-propositions, but, after a long-continued series of menaces, has at last
-invaded _our territory_, and shed the blood of our fellow-citizens on
-_our own soil_;"
-
-And again, in his Message of Dec. 8, 1846, that "we had ample cause of
-war against Mexico long before the breaking out of hostilities; but even
-then we forbore to take redress into our own hands until Mexico herself
-became the aggressor, by invading _our soil_ in hostile array, and
-shedding the blood of our citizens;"
-
-And yet again, in his Message of Dec. 7, 1847, that "the Mexican
-Government refused even to hear the terms of adjustment which he [our
-minister of peace] was authorized to propose, and finally, under wholly
-unjustifiable pretexts, involved the two countries in war, by invading
-the territory of the State of Texas, striking the first blow, and
-shedding the blood of our citizens on _our own soil_;" and,
-
-Whereas, This House is desirous to obtain a full knowledge of all the
-facts which go to establish whether the particular spot on which the
-blood of our citizens was so shed was or was not at that time "_our own
-soil_;" therefore,
-
-Resolved by the House of Representatives, That the President of the
-United States be respectfully requested to inform this House,--
-
-1st. Whether the spot on which the blood of our citizens was shed, as
-in his Messages declared, was or was not within the territory of Spain,
-at least after the treaty of 1819, until the Mexican revolution.
-
-2d. Whether that spot is or is not within the territory which was
-wrested from Spain by the revolutionary government of Mexico.
-
-3d. Whether that spot is or is not within a settlement of people, which
-settlement has existed ever since long before the Texas revolution,
-and until its inhabitants fled before the approach of the United States
-army.
-
-4th. Whether that settlement is or is not isolated from any and all
-other settlements by the Gulf and the Rio Grande on the south and west,
-and by wide, uninhabited regions on the north and east.
-
-5th. Whether the people of that settlement, or a majority of them, or
-any of them, have ever submitted themselves to the government or laws
-of Texas or of the United States, by consent or by compulsion, either by
-accepting office, or voting at elections, or paying tax, or serving on
-juries, or having process served upon them, or in any other way.
-
-6th. Whether the people of that settlement did or did not flee from the
-approach of the United States army, leaving unprotected their homes and
-their growing crops, _before_ the blood was shed, as in the Messages
-stated; and whether the first blood, so shed, was or was not shed within
-the enclosure of one of the people who had thus fled from it.
-
-7th. Whether our _citizens_, whose blood was shed, as in his Messages
-declared, were or were not at that time armed officers and soldiers,
-sent into that settlement by the military order of the President,
-through the Secretary of War.
-
-8th. Whether the military force of the United States was or was not so
-sent into that settlement after Gen. Taylor had more than once intimated
-to the War Department, that, in his opinion, no such movement was
-necessary to the defence or protection of Texas.
-
-Mr. Lincoln improved the first favorable opportunity (Jan. 12, 1818), to
-address the House in the spirit of the "Spot Resolutions."
-
-In Committee of the Whole House, Jan. 12, 1848.
-
-Mr. Lincoln addressed the Committee as follows:--
-
-Mr. Chairman,--Some, if not at all, of the gentlemen on the other side
-of the House, who have addressed the Committee within the last two days,
-have spoken rather complainingly, if I have rightly understood them,
-of the vote given a week or ten days ago, declaring that the war
-with Mexico was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President. I admit that such a vote should not be given in mere party
-wantonness, and that the one given is justly censurable, if it have no
-other or better foundation. I am one of those who joined in that vote,
-and did so under my best impression of the _truth_ of the case. How I
-got this impression, and how it may possibly be removed, I will now
-try to show. When the war began, it was my opinion that all those who,
-because of knowing too _little_, or because of knowing too _much_,
-could not conscientiously approve the conduct of the President (in the
-beginning of it), should, nevertheless, as good citizens and patriots,
-remain silent on that point, at least till the war should be ended. Some
-leading Democrats, including ex-President Van Buren, have taken this
-same view, as I understand them; and I adhered to it, and acted upon it,
-until since I took my seat here; and I think I should still adhere to
-it, were it not that the President and his friends will not allow it
-to be so. Besides the continual effort of the President to argue every
-silent vote given for supplies into an indorsement of the justice and
-wisdom of his conduct; besides that singularly candid paragraph in his
-late Message, in which he tells us that Congress, with great unanimity
-(only two in the Senate and fourteen in the House dissenting), had
-declared that "by the act of the Republic of Mexico a state of war
-exists between that government and the United States;" when the same
-journals that informed him of this also informed him, that, when
-that declaration stood disconnected from the question of supplies,
-sixty-seven in the House, and not fourteen merely, voted against it;
-besides this open attempt to prove by telling the _truth_ what he could
-not prove by telling the _whole truth_, demanding of all who will not
-submit to be misrepresented, in justice to themselves, to speak out;
-besides all this, one of my colleagues [Mr. Richardson], at a very early
-day in the session, brought in a set of resolutions expressly indorsing
-the original justice of the war on the part of the President. Upon
-these resolutions, when they shall be put on their passage, I shall be
-_compelled_ to vote; so that I cannot be silent if I would. Seeing this,
-I went about preparing myself to give the vote understandingly when it
-should come. I carefully examined the President's Messages, to ascertain
-what he himself had said and proved upon the point. The result of this
-examination was to make the impression, that, taking for true all
-the President states as facts, he falls far short of proving his
-justification; and that the President would have gone further with his
-proof, if it had not been for the small matter that the _truth_ would
-not permit him. Under the impression thus made, I gave the vote
-before mentioned. I propose now to give concisely the process of the
-examination I made, and how I reached the conclusion I did.
-
-The President, in his first Message of May, 1846, declares that the soil
-was _ours_ on which hostilities were commenced by Mexico; and he repeats
-that declaration, almost in the same language, in each successive annual
-Message,--thus showing that he esteems that point a highly essential
-one. In the importance of that point I entirely agree with the
-President. To my judgment, it is the _very point_ upon which he should
-be justified or condemned. In his Message of December, 1846, it seems
-to have occurred to him, as is certainly true, that title, ownership
-to soil, or any thing else, is not a simple fact, but is a conclusion
-following one or more simple facts; and that it was incumbent upon him
-to present the facts from which he concluded the soil was ours on which
-the first blood of the war was shed.
-
-Accordingly, a little below the middle of page twelve, in the Message
-last referred to, he enters upon that task; forming an issue and
-introducing testimony, extending the whole to a little below the middle
-of page fourteen. Now, I propose to try to show that the whole of this,
-issue and evidence, is, from beginning to end, the sheerest deception.
-The issue, as he presents it, is in these words: "But there are those
-who, conceding all this to be true, assume the ground that the true
-western boundary of Texas is the Nueces, instead of the Rio Grande; and
-that, therefore, in marching our army to the east bank of the latter
-river, we passed the Texan line, and invaded the Territory of Mexico."
-Now, this issue is made up of two affirmatives, and no negative. The
-main deception of it is, that it assumes as true, that one river or the
-other is necessarily the boundary, and cheats the superficial thinker
-entirely out of the idea that possibly the boundary is somewhere between
-the two, and not actually at either. A further deception is, that it
-will let in evidence which a true issue would exclude. A true issue made
-by the President would be about as follows: "I say the soil _was ours_
-on which the first blood was shed; there are those who say it was not."
-
-I now proceed to examine the President's evidence, as applicable to
-such an issue. When that evidence is analyzed, it is all included in the
-following propositions:--
-
-1. That the Rio Grande was the western boundary of Louisiana, as we
-purchased it of France in 1803.
-
-2. That the Republic of Texas always claimed the Rio Grande as her
-western boundary.
-
-3. That, by various acts, she had claimed it on paper.
-
-4. That Santa Anna, in his treaty with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande
-as her boundary.
-
-5. That Texas _before_, and the United States _after_ annexation, had
-_exercised_ jurisdiction _beyond_ the Nueces, _between_ the two rivers.
-
-6. That our Congress _understood_ the boundary of Texas to extend beyond
-the Nueces.
-
-Now for each of these in its turn:--
-
-His first item is, that the Rio Grande was the western boundary of
-Louisiana, as we purchased it of France in 1803; and, seeming to expect
-this to be disputed, he argues over the amount of nearly a page to prove
-it true; at the end of which, he lets us know, that, by the treaty of
-1819, we sold to Spain the whole country, from the Rio Grande eastward
-to the Sabine. Now, admitting for the present, that the Rio Grande was
-the boundary of Louisiana, what, under Heaven, had that to do with the
-present boundary between us and Mexico? How, Mr. Chairman, the line that
-once divided your land from mine can still be the boundary between us
-after I have sold my land to you, is, to me, beyond all comprehension.
-And how any man, with an honest purpose only of proving the truth, could
-ever have thought of introducing such a fact to prove such an issue, is
-equally incomprehensible. The outrage upon common right, of seizing as
-our own what we have once sold, merely because it was ours before we
-sold it, is only equalled by the outrage on common sense of any attempt
-to justify it.
-
-The President's next piece of evidence is, that "The Republic of Texas
-always _claimed_ this river (Rio Grande) as her western boundary." That
-is not true, in fact. Texas _has_ claimed it, but she has not _always_
-claimed it. There is, at least, one distinguished exception. Her State
-Constitution--the public's most solemn and well-considered act, that
-which may, without impropriety, be called her last will and testament,
-revoking all others--makes no such claim. But suppose she had always
-claimed it. Has not Mexico always claimed the contrary? So that there is
-but claim against claim, leaving nothing proved until we get back of the
-claims, and find which has the better _foundation._
-
-Though not in the order in which the President presents his evidence,
-I now consider that class of his statements which are, in substance,
-nothing more than that Texas has, by various acts of her Convention and
-Congress, claimed the Rio Grande as her boundary--_on paper_. I mean
-here what he says about the fixing of the Rio Grande as her boundary
-in her old constitution (not her State Constitution), about forming
-congressional districts, counties, &c. Now, all this is but naked
-_claim_; and what I have already said about claims is strictly
-applicable to this. If I should claim your land by word of mouth, that
-certainly would not make it mine; and if I were to claim it by a deed
-which I had made myself, and with which you had nothing to do, the claim
-would be quite the same in substance, or rather in utter nothingness.
-
-I next consider the President's statement that Santa Anna, in his
-_treaty_ with Texas, recognized the Rio Grande as the western boundary
-of Texas. Besides the position so often taken that Santa Anna, while a
-prisoner of war, a captive, _could not_ bind Mexico by a treaty, which
-I deem conclusive,--besides this, I wish to say something in relation
-to this treaty, so called by the President, with Santa Anna. If any man
-would like to be amused by a sight at that _little_ thing, which
-the President calls by that _big_ name, he can have it by turning to
-"Niles's Register," vol. 1. p. 336. And if any one should suppose that
-"Niles's Register" is a curious repository of so mighty a document as
-a solemn treaty between nations, I can only say that I learned, to a
-tolerable degree of certainty, by inquiry at the State Department, that
-the President himself never saw it anywhere else. By the way, I believe
-I should not err if I were to declare, that, during the first ten years
-of the existence of that document, it was never by anybody _called_
-a treaty; that it was never so called till the President, in his
-extremity, attempted, by so calling it, to wring something from it in
-justification of himself in connection with the Mexican war. It has none
-of the distinguishing features of a treaty. It does not call itself a
-treaty. Santa Anna does not therein assume to bind Mexico: he assumes
-only to act as president, commander-in-chief of the Mexican army and
-navy; stipulates that the then present hostilities should cease, and
-that he would not himself take up arms, nor influence the Mexican
-people to take up arms, against Texas during the existence of the war of
-independence. He did not recognize the independence of Texas; he did not
-assume to put an end to the war, but clearly indicated his expectation
-of its continuance; he did not say one word about boundary, and most
-probably never thought of it. It is stipulated therein that the Mexican
-forces should evacuate the Territory of Texas, _passing to the other
-side of the Rio Grande;_ and in another article it is stipulated, that,
-to prevent collisions between the armies, the Texan army should not
-approach nearer than within five leagues,--of what is not said; but
-clearly, from the object stated, it is of the Rio Grande. Now, if this
-is a treaty recognizing the Rio Grande as the boundary of Texas, it
-contains the singular feature of stipulating that Texas shall not go
-within five leagues of _her own_ boundary.
-
-Next comes the evidence of Texas before annexation, and the United
-States afterwards, exercising jurisdiction beyond the Nueces, and
-between the two rivers. This actual exercise of jurisdiction is the very
-class or quality of evidence we want. It is excellent so far as it goes;
-but does it go far enough? He tells us it went beyond the Nueces; but he
-does not tell us it went to the Rio Grande. He tells us jurisdiction
-was exercised between the two rivers; but he does not tell us it was
-exercised over all the territory between them. Some simple-minded people
-think it possible to cross one river and go beyond it, without going
-all the way to the next; that jurisdiction may be exercised between two
-rivers without covering all the country between them. I know a man,
-not very unlike myself, who exercises jurisdiction over a piece of land
-between the Wabash and the Mississippi; and yet so far is this from
-being all there is between those rivers, that it is just a hundred
-and fifty-two feet long by fifty wide, and no part of it much within
-a hundred miles of either. He has a neighbor between him and the
-Mississippi,--that is, just across the street, in that direction,--whom,
-I am sure, he could neither persuade nor force to give up his
-habitation; but which, nevertheless, he could certainly annex, if it
-were to be done by merely standing on his own side of the street and
-claiming it, or even sitting down and writing a deed for it.
-
-But next, the President tells us, the Congress of the United States
-understood the State of Texas they admitted into the Union to extend
-beyond the Nueces. Well, I suppose they did,--I certainly so understand
-it,--but how far beyond? That Congress did not understand it to extend
-clear to the Rio Grande, is quite certain by the fact of their joint
-resolutions for admission, expressly leaving all questions of boundary
-to future adjustment. And it may be added, that Texas herself is proved
-to have had the same understanding of it that our Congress had, by
-the fact of the exact conformity of her new Constitution to those
-resolutions.
-
-I am now through the whole of the President's evidence; and it is a
-singular fact, that, if any one should declare the President sent the
-army into the midst of a settlement of Mexican people, who had never
-submitted, by consent or by force, to the authority of Texas or of the
-United States, and that there, and thereby, the first blood of the war
-was shed, there is not one word in all the President has said which
-would either admit or deny the declaration. In this strange omission
-chiefly consists the deception of the President's evidence,--an omission
-which, it does seem to me, could scarcely have occurred but by design.
-My way of living leads me to be about the courts of justice; and there I
-have sometimes seen a good lawyer, struggling for his client's neck in a
-desperate case, employing every artifice to work round, befog, and cover
-up with many words, some position pressed upon him by the prosecution,
-which he dared not admit, and yet could not deny. Party bias may help to
-make it appear so; but, with all the allowance I can make for such bias,
-it still does appear to me that just such, and from just such necessity,
-are the President's struggles in this case.
-
-Some time after my colleague (Mr. Richardson) introduced the
-resolutions I have mentioned, I introduced a preamble, resolution, and
-interrogatories, intended to draw the President out, if possible, on
-this hitherto untrodden ground. To show their relevancy, I propose to
-state my understanding of the true rule for ascertaining the boundary
-between Texas and Mexico. It is, that, _wherever_ Texas was _exercising_
-jurisdiction was hers; and wherever Mexico was exercising jurisdiction
-was hers; and that whatever separated the actual exercise of
-jurisdiction of the one from that of the other was the true boundary
-between them. If, as is probably true, Texas was exercising jurisdiction
-along the western bank of the Nueces, and Mexico was exercising it along
-the eastern bank of the Rio Grande, then neither river was the boundary,
-but the uninhabited country between the two was. The extent of our
-territory in that region depended, not on any treaty-fixed boundary (for
-no treaty had attempted it), but on revolution. Any people anywhere,
-being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake
-off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better.
-This is a most valuable, a most sacred right,--a right which, we hope
-and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to
-cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to
-exercise it. Any portion of such people that can may revolutionize, and
-make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit. More than
-this, a _majority_ of any portion of such people may revolutionize,
-putting down a _minority_, intermingled with or near about them, who
-may oppose their movements. Such minority was precisely the case of the
-Tories of our own Revolution. It is a quality of revolutions not to go
-by old lines or old laws, but to break up both, and make new ones. As to
-the country now in question, we bought it of France in 1803, and sold
-it to Spain in 1819, according to the President's statement. After this,
-all Mexico, including Texas, revolutionized against Spain; and, still
-later, Texas revolutionized against Mexico. In my view, just so far
-as she carried her revolution, by obtaining the _actual,_ willing or
-unwilling, submission of the people, _so far_ the country was hers, and
-no farther.
-
-Now, sir, for the purpose of obtaining the very best evidence as to
-whether Texas had actually carried her revolution to the place where the
-hostilities of the present war commenced, let the President answer the
-interrogatories I proposed, as before mentioned, or some other similar
-ones. Let him answer fully, fairly, and candidly. Let him answer
-with _facts_, and not with arguments. Let him remember he sits where
-Washington sat; and, so remembering, let him answer as Washington would
-answer. As a nation should not, and the Almighty will not, be evaded,
-so let him attempt no evasion, no equivocation. And if, so answering,
-he can show that the soil was ours where the first blood of the war was
-shed; that it was not within an inhabited country, or, if within such,
-that the inhabitants had submitted themselves to the civil authority of
-Texas, or of the United States, and that the same is true of the site
-of Fort Brown, then I am with him for his justification. In that case,
-I shall be most happy to reverse the vote I gave the other day. I have a
-selfish motive for desiring that the President may do this: I expect
-to give some votes, in connection with the war, which, without his so
-doing, will be of doubtful propriety, in my own judgment, but which will
-be free from the doubt if he does so. But if he cannot or will not do
-this,--if, on any pretence, or no pretence, he shall refuse or omit
-it,--then I shall be fully convinced of what I more than suspect
-already,--that he is deeply conscious of being in the wrong; that he
-feels the blood of this war, like the blood of Abel, is crying to Heaven
-against him; that he ordered Gen. Taylor into the midst of a peaceful
-Mexican settlement, purposely to bring on a war; that, originally
-having some strong motive--what I will not stop now to give my opinion
-concerning--to involve the two countries in a war, and trusting to
-escape scrutiny by fixing the public gaze upon the exceeding brightness
-of military glory,--that attractive rainbow that rises in showers of
-blood, that serpent's eye that charms to destroy,--he plunged into it,
-and has swept on and on, till, disappointed in his calculation of the
-ease with which Mexico might be subdued, he now finds himself he knows
-not where. How like the half-insane mumbling of a fever-dream is the
-whole war part of the late Message! At one time telling us that Mexico
-has nothing whatever that we can get but territory; at another, showing
-us how we can support the war by levying contributions on Mexico. At
-one time urging the national honor, the security of the future, the
-prevention of foreign interference, and even the good of Mexico herself,
-as among the objects of the war; at another, telling us that, "to reject
-indemnity by refusing to accept a cession of territory, would be to
-abandon all our just demands, and to wage the war, bearing all its
-expenses, without a purpose or definite object." So, then, the
-national honor, security of the future, and every thing but territorial
-indemnity, may be considered the no purposes and indefinite objects of
-the war! But having it now settled that territorial indemnity is the
-only object, we are urged to seize, by legislation here, all that he
-was content to take a few months ago, and the whole province of Lower
-California to boot, and to still carry on the war,--to take all we are
-fighting for, and still fight on. Again, the President is resolved,
-under all circumstances, to have full territorial indemnity for the
-expenses of the war; but he forgets to tell us how we are to get the
-excess after those expenses shall have surpassed the value of the
-whole of the Mexican territory. So, again, he insists that the separate
-national existence of Mexico shall be maintained; but he does not tell
-us how this can be done after we shall have taken all her territory.
-Lest the questions I here suggest be considered speculative merely, let
-me be indulged a moment in trying to show they are not.
-
-The war has gone on some twenty months; for the expenses of which,
-together with an inconsiderable old score, the President now claims
-about one-half of the Mexican territory, and that by far the better
-half, so far as concerns our ability to make any thing out of it. It is
-comparatively uninhabited; so that we could establish land-offices in
-it, and raise some money in that way. But the other half is already
-inhabited, as I understand it, tolerably densely for the nature of
-the country; and all its lands, or all that are valuable, already
-appropriated as private property. How, then, are we to make any thing
-out of these lands with this encumbrance on them, or how remove the
-encumbrance? I suppose no one will say we should kill the people,
-or drive them out, or make slaves of them, or even confiscate their
-property? How, then, can we make much out of this part of the territory?
-If the prosecution of the war has, in expenses, already equalled the
-better half of the country, how long its future prosecution will be in
-equalling the less valuable half is not a speculative but a practical
-question, pressing closely upon us; and yet it is a question which the
-President seems never to have thought of.
-
-As to the mode of terminating the war and securing peace, the President
-is equally wandering and indefinite. First, it is to be done by a
-more vigorous prosecution of the war in the vital parts of the enemy's
-country; and, after apparently talking himself tired on this point, the
-President drops down into a half-despairing tone, and tells us, that
-"with a people distracted and divided by contending factions, and a
-government subject to constant changes, by successive revolutions, _the
-continued success of our arms may fail to obtain a satisfactory peace."_
-Then he suggests the propriety of wheedling the Mexican people to desert
-the counsels of their own leaders, and, trusting in our protection,
-to set up a government from which we can secure a satisfactory peace,
-telling us that, "_this may become the only mode of obtaining such a
-peace_." But soon he falls into doubt of this, too, and then drops back
-on to the already half-abandoned ground of "more vigorous prosecution."
-All this shows that the President is in no wise satisfied with his own
-positions. First, he takes up one, and, in attempting to argue us into
-it, he argues himself out of it; then seizes another, and goes through
-the same process; and then, confused at being able to think of nothing
-new, he snatches up the old one again, which he has some time before
-cast off. His mind, tasked beyond its power, is running hither and
-thither, like some tortured creature on a burning surface, finding no
-position on which it can settle down and be at ease.
-
-Again, it is a singular omission in this Message, that it nowhere
-intimates _when_ the President expects the war to terminate. At its
-beginning, Gen. Scott was, by this same President, driven into disfavor,
-if not disgrace, for intimating that peace could not be conquered in
-less than three or four months. But now at the end of about twenty
-months, during which time our arms have given us the most splendid
-successes,--every department, and every part, land and water, officers
-and privates, regulars and volunteers, doing all that men could do, and
-hundreds of things which it had ever before been thought that men could
-not do,--after all this, this same President gives us a long Message
-without showing us that, _as to the end,_ he has himself even an
-imaginary conception. As I have before said, he knows not where he is.
-He is a bewildered, confounded, and miserably perplexed man. God grant
-he may be able to show that there is not something about his conscience
-more painful than all his mental perplexity.
-
-This speech he hastened to send home as soon as it was printed; for,
-while throughout he trod on unquestionable Whig ground, he had excellent
-reasons to fear the result. The following is the first letter to Mr.
-Herndon after the delivery of the speech, and notifying him of the
-fact:--
-
-Washington, Jan. 19, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Enclosed you find a letter of Louis W. Candler. What
-is wanted is, that you shall ascertain whether the claim upon the note
-described has received any dividend in the Probate Court of Christian
-County, where the estate of Mr. Overton Williams has been administered
-on. If nothing is paid on it, withdraw the note and send it to me, so
-that Candler can see the indorser of it. At all events, write me all
-about it, till I can somehow get it off hands. I have already been
-bored more than enough about it; not the least of which annoyance is his
-cursed, unreadable, and ungodly handwriting.
-
-I have made a speech, a copy of which I will send you by next mail.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-About the last of January, or the first of February, he began to hear
-the first murmurs of alarm and dissatisfaction from his district. He was
-now on the defensive, and compelled to write long and tedious letters
-to pacify some of the Whigs. Of this character are two extremely
-interesting epistles to Mr. Herndon:--
-
-Washington, Feb. 1, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of the 19th ult. was received last night, and
-for which I am much obliged. The only thing in it that I wish to talk to
-you about at once is, that, because of my vote for Ashmun's amendment,
-you fear that you and I disagree about the war. I regret this, not
-because of any fear we shall remain disagreed after you have read this
-letter, but because if you misunderstand, I fear other good friends
-may also. That vote affirms, that the war was unnecessarily and
-unconstitutionally commenced by the President; and I will stake my life,
-that, if you had been in my place, you would have voted just as I did.
-Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie? I know you
-would not. Would you have gone out of the House,--skulked the vote? I
-expect not. If you had skulked one vote, you would have had to skulk
-many more before the end of the session. Richardson's resolutions,
-introduced before I made any move, or gave any vote upon the subject,
-make the direct question of the justice of the war; so that no man
-can be silent if he would. You are compelled to speak; and your only
-alternative is to tell the _truth or tell a lie_. I cannot doubt which
-you would do.
-
-This vote has nothing to do in determining my votes on the questions of
-supplies. I have always intended, and still intend, to vote supplies;
-perhaps not in the precise form recommended by the President, but in a
-better form for all purposes, except Locofoco party purposes. It is
-in this particular you seem mistaken. The Locos are untiring in their
-efforts to make the impression that all who vote supplies, or take part
-in the war, do, of necessity, approve the President's conduct in the
-beginning of it; but the Whigs have, from the beginning, made and kept
-the distinction between the two. In the very first act nearly all the
-Whigs voted against the preamble declaring that war existed by the act
-of Mexico; and yet nearly all of them voted for the supplies. As to the
-Whig men who have participated in the war, so far as they have spoken to
-my hearing, they do not hesitate to denounce as unjust the President's
-conduct in the beginning of the war. They do not suppose that such
-denunciation is directed by undying hatred to them, as "The Register"
-would have it believed. There are two such Whigs on this floor (Col.
-Haskell and Major James). The former fought as a colonel by the side of
-Col. Baker, at Cerro Gordo, and stands side by side with me in the
-vote that you seem dissatisfied with. The latter, the history of whose
-capture with Cassius Clay you well know, had not arrived here when that
-vote was given; but, as I understand, he stands ready to give just such
-a vote whenever an occasion shall present. Baker, too, who is now here,
-says the truth is undoubtedly that way; and, whenever he shall speak
-out, he will say so. Col. Donaphin, too, the favorite Whig of Missouri,
-and who overrun all Northern Mexico, on his return home, in a public
-speech at St. Louis, condemned the administration in relation to the
-war, if I remember. G. T. M. Davis, who has been through almost the
-whole war, declares in favor of Mr. Clay; from which I infer that he
-adopts the sentiments of Mr. Clay, generally at least. On the other
-hand, I have heard of but one Whig who has been to the war attempting
-to justify the President's conduct. That one was Capt. Bishop; editor of
-"The Charleston Courier," and a very clever fellow. I do not mean this
-letter for the public, but for you. Before it reaches you, you will have
-seen and read my pamphlet speech, and, perhaps, scared anew by it. After
-you get over your scare, read it over again, sentence by sentence, and
-tell me honestly what you think of it. I condensed all I could for fear
-of being cut off by the hour rule; and, when I got through, I had spoken
-but forty-five minutes. Yours forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, Feb. 15, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter of the 29th January was received last night.
-Being exclusively a constitutional argument, I wish to submit some
-reflections upon it in the same spirit of kindness that I know actuates
-you. Let me first state what I understand to be your position. It is,
-that, if it shall become necessary _to repel invasion_, the President
-may, without violation of the Constitution, cross the line, and _invade_
-the territory of another country; and that whether such _necessity_
-exists in any given case, the President is the _sole_ judge.
-
-Before going farther, consider well whether this is, or is not, your
-position. If it is, it is a position that neither the President himself,
-nor any friend of his, so far as I know, has ever taken. Their only
-positions are, first, that the soil was ours where the hostilities
-commenced; and second, that, whether it was rightfully ours or not,
-Congress had annexed it, and the President, for that reason, was bound
-to defend it, both of which are as clearly proved to be false in fact
-as you can prove that your house is mine. That soil was not ours; and
-Congress did not annex, or attempt to annex it. But to return to your
-position. Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation whenever he
-shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion, and you allow him to do so
-_whenever he may choose to say_ he deems it necessary for such purpose,
-and you allow him to make war at pleasure. Study to see if you can fix
-_any limit_ to his power in this respect, after having given him so much
-as you propose. If to-day he should choose to say he thinks it necessary
-to invade Canada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could
-you stop him? You may say to him, "I see no probability of the British
-invading us;" but he will say to you, "Be silent: I see it, if you
-don't."
-
-The provision of the Constitution giving the war-making power to
-Congress was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons:
-kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars,
-pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the
-object. This our convention understood to be the most oppressive of all
-kingly oppressions; and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that
-_no one man_ should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us.
-But your view destroys the whole matter, and places our President where
-kings have always stood.
-
-Write soon again.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-But the Whig National Convention to nominate a candidate for the
-Presidency was to meet at Philadelphia on the 1st of June, and Mr.
-Lincoln was to be a member. He was not a Clay man: he wanted a candidate
-that could be elected; and he was for "Old Rough," as the only available
-material at hand. But let him explain himself:--
-
-Washington, April 30, 1848.
-
-Dear Williams,--I have not seen in the papers any evidence of a movement
-to send a delegate from your circuit to the June Convention. I wish to
-say that I think it all important that a delegate should be sent. Mr.
-Clay's chance for an election is just no chance at all. He might get New
-York; and that would have elected in 1844, but it will not now, because
-he must now, at the least, lose Tennessee, which he had then, and in
-addition the fifteen new votes of Florida, Texas, Iowa, and Wisconsin.
-I know our good friend Browning is a great admirer of Mr. Clay, and
-I therefore fear he is favoring his nomination. If he is, ask him to
-discard feeling, and try if he can possibly, as a matter of judgment,
-count the votes necessary to elect him.
-
-In my judgment we can elect nobody but Gen. Taylor; and we cannot elect
-him without a nomination. Therefore don't fail to send a delegate.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-To Archibald Williams, Esq.
-
-Washington, June 12, 1848.
-
-Dear Williams,--On my return from Philadelphia, where I had been
-attending the nomination of "Old Rough," I found your letter in a mass
-of others which had accumulated in my absence. By many, and often, it
-had been said they would not abide the nomination of Taylor; but, since
-the deed has been done, they are fast falling in, and in my opinion we
-shall have a most overwhelming, glorious triumph. One unmistakable
-sign is, that all the odds and ends are with us,--Barnburners, Native
-Americans, Tyler men, disappointed, office-seeking Locofocos, and the
-Lord knows what. This is important, if in nothing else, in showing
-which way the wind blows. Some of the sanguine men here set down all the
-States as certain for Taylor but Illinois, and it is doubtful. Cannot
-something be done even in Illinois? Taylor's nomination takes the Locos
-on the blind side. It turns the war thunder against them. The war is now
-to them the gallows of Haman, which they built for us, and on which they
-are doomed to be hanged themselves.
-
-Excuse this short letter. I have so many to write that I cannot devote
-much time to any one.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-But his young partner in the law gave him a great deal of annoyance. Mr.
-Herndon seems to have been troubled by patriotic scruples. He could
-not understand how the war had been begun unconstitutionally and
-unnecessarily by President Polk, nor how the Whigs could vote supplies
-to carry on the war without indorsing the war itself. Besides all this,
-he sent news of startling defections; and the weary Representative took
-up his pen again and again to explain, defend, and advise:--
-
-Washington, June 22,1848.
-
-Dear William,--Last night I was attending a sort of caucus of the Whig
-members, held in relation to the coming Presidential election. The whole
-field of the nation was scanned; and all is high hope and confidence.
-Illinois is expected to better her condition in this race. Under these
-circumstances, judge how heart-rending it was to come to my room and
-find and read your discouraging letter of the 15th. We have made no
-gains, but have lost "H. R. Robinson, Turner, Campbell, and four or five
-more." Tell Arney to reconsider, if he would be saved. Baker and I used
-to do something, but I think you attach more importance to our absence
-than is just. There is another cause: in 1840, for instance, we had two
-Senators and five Representatives in Sangamon; now, we have part of one
-Senator and two Representatives. With quite one-third more people than
-we had then, we have only half the sort of offices which are sought by
-men of the speaking sort of talent. This, I think, is the chief cause.
-Now, as to the young men. You must not wait to be brought forward by the
-older men. For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into
-notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men.
-You young men get together and form a Rough and Ready Club, and have
-regular meetings and speeches. Take in everybody that you can get.
-Harrison, Grimsley, Z. A. Enos, Lee Kimball, and C. W. Matheny will do
-to begin the thing; but, as you go along, gather up all the shrewd,
-wild boys about town, whether just of age or a little under age,--Chris.
-Logan, Reddick Ridgely, Lewis Zwizler, and hundreds such. Let every one
-play the part he can play best,--some speak, some sing, and all hollow
-(holler ED). Your meetings will be of evenings; the older men, and the
-women, will go to hear you; so that it will not only contribute to
-the election of "Old Zack," but will be an interesting pastime, and
-improving to the intellectual faculties of all engaged. Don't fail to do
-this.
-
-You ask me to send you all the speeches made about "Old Zack," the war,
-&c., &c. Now, this makes me a little impatient. I have regularly sent
-you "The Congressional Globe" and "Appendix," and you cannot have
-examined them, or you would have discovered that they contain every
-speech made by every man in both Houses of Congress, on every subject,
-during the session. Can I send any more? Can I send speeches that nobody
-has made? Thinking it would be most natural that the newspapers would
-feel interested to give at least some of the speeches to their readers,
-I, at the beginning of the session, made arrangements to have one copy
-of "The Globe" and "Appendix" regularly sent to each Whig paper of the
-district. And yet, with the exception of my own little speech, which was
-published in two only of the then five, now four, Whig papers, I do not
-remember having seen a single speech, or even extract from one, in any
-single one of those papers. With equal and full means on both sides, I
-will venture that "The State Register" has thrown before its readers
-more of Locofoco speeches in a month than all the Whig papers of the
-district have done of Whig speeches during the session.
-
-If you wish a full understanding of the war, I repeat what I believe I
-said to you in a letter once before, that the whole, or nearly so, is
-to be found in the speech of Dixon of Connecticut. This I sent you in
-pamphlet, as well, as in "The Globe." Examine and study every sentence
-of that speech thoroughly, and you will understand the whole subject.
-
-You ask how Congress came to declare that war had existed by the act of
-Mexico. Is it possible you don't understand that yet? You have at
-least twenty speeches in your possession that fully explain it. I
-will, however, try it once more. The news reached Washington of the
-commencement of hostilities on the Rio Grande, and of the great peril of
-Gen. Taylor's army. Everybody, Whigs and Democrats, was for sending them
-aid, in men and money. It was necessary to pass a bill for this. The
-Locos had a majority in both Houses, and they brought in a bill with a
-preamble, saying, _Whereas_, War exists by the act of Mexico, therefore
-we send Gen. Taylor money. The Whigs moved to strike out the preamble,
-so that they could vote to send the men and money, without saying any
-thing about how the war commenced; but, being in the minority, they were
-voted down, and the preamble was retained. Then, on the passage of the
-bill, the question came upon them, "Shall we vote for preamble and bill
-both together, or against both together?" They did not want to vote
-against sending help to Gen. Taylor, and therefore they voted for both
-together. Is there any difficulty in understanding this? Even my little
-speech shows how this was; and, if you will go to the library, you
-may get "The Journal" of 1845-46, in which you can find the whole for
-yourself.
-
-We have nothing published yet with special reference to the Taylor race;
-but we soon will have, and then I will send them to everybody. I made
-an internal-improvement speech day before yesterday, which I shall
-send home as soon as I can get it written out and printed,--and which I
-suppose nobody will read.
-
-Your friend as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, July 10, 1848.
-
-Dear William,--Your letter covering the newspaper slips was received
-last night. The subject of that letter is exceedingly painful to me;
-and I cannot but think there is some mistake in your impression of the
-motives of the old men. I suppose I am now one of the old men; and I
-declare, on my veracity, which I think is good with you, that nothing
-could afford me more satisfaction than to learn that you and others of
-my young friends at home were doing battle in the contest, and endearing
-themselves to the people, and taking a stand far above any I have ever
-been able to reach in their admiration. I cannot conceive that other old
-men feel differently. Of course, I cannot demonstrate what I say; but
-I was young once, and I am sure I was never ungenerously thrust back. I
-hardly know what to say. The way for a young man to rise is to improve
-himself every way he can, never suspecting that anybody wishes to hinder
-him. Allow me to assure you that suspicion and jealousy never did help
-any man in any situation. There may sometimes be ungenerous attempts to
-keep a young man down; and they will succeed, too, if he allows his
-mind to be diverted from its true channel, to brood over the attempted
-injury. Cast about, and see if this feeling has not injured every person
-you have ever known to fall into it.
-
-Now, in what I have said, I am sure you will suspect nothing but
-sincere friendship. I would save you from a fatal error. You have been a
-laborious, studious young man. You are far better informed on almost all
-subjects than I have ever been. You cannot fail in any laudable object,
-unless you allow your mind to be improperly directed. I have some the
-advantage of you in the world's experience, merely by being older; and
-it is this that induces me to advise.
-
-You still seem to be a little mistaken about "The Congressional Globe"
-and "Appendix." They contain _all_ of the speeches that are published
-in any way. My speech and Dayton's speech, which you say you got in
-pamphlet form, are both, word for word, in the "Appendix." I repeat
-again, all are there.
-
-Your friend, as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The "internal-improvement" speech to which Mr. Lincoln alludes in one of
-these letters was delivered on the 20th of June, and contained nothing
-remarkable or especially characteristic. It was in the main merely the
-usual Whig argument in favor of the constitutionality of Mr. Clay's
-"American System."
-
-But, after the nominations at Baltimore and Philadelphia, everybody
-in either House of Congress who could compose any thing at all "on his
-legs," or in the closet, felt it incumbent upon him to contribute at
-least one electioneering speech to the political literature of the day.
-At last, on the 27th of July, Mr. Lincoln found an opportunity to make
-his. Few like it have ever been heard in either of those venerable
-chambers. It is a common remark of those who know nothing of the
-subject, that Mr. Lincoln was devoid of imagination; but the reader of
-this speech will entertain a different opinion. It opens to us a mind
-fertile in images sufficiently rare and striking, but of somewhat
-questionable taste. It must have been heard in amazement by those
-gentlemen of the House who had never known a Hanks, or seen a New Salem.
-
-SPEECH ON THE PRESIDENCY AND GENERAL POLITICS.
-
-DELIVERED IN THE HOUSE, JULY 27, 1848.
-
-Mr. Speaker,--Our Democratic friends seem to be in great distress
-because they think our candidate for the Presidency don't suit us. Most
-of them cannot find out that Gen. Taylor has any principles at all;
-some, however, have discovered that he has one, but that that one is
-entirely wrong. This one principle is his position on the veto power.
-The gentleman from Tennessee (Mr. Stanton), who has just taken his
-seat, indeed, has said there is very little, if any, difference on this
-question between Gen. Taylor and all the Presidents; and he seems to
-think it sufficient detraction from Gen. Taylor's position on it, that
-it has nothing new in it. But all others whom I have heard speak
-assail it furiously. A new member from Kentucky (Mr. Clarke) of very
-considerable ability, was in particular concern about it. He thought it
-altogether novel and unprecedented for a President, or a Presidential
-candidate, to think of approving bills whose constitutionality may not
-be entirely clear to his own mind. He thinks the ark of our safety
-is gone, unless Presidents shall always veto such bills as, in their
-judgment, may be of doubtful constitutionality. However clear Congress
-may be of their authority to pass any particular act, the gentleman from
-Kentucky thinks the President must veto it if he has doubts about it.
-Now, I have neither time nor inclination to argue with the gentleman
-on the veto power as an original question; but I wish to show that Gen.
-Taylor, and not he, agrees with the earliest statesmen on this question.
-When the bill chartering the first Bank of the United States passed
-Congress, its constitutionality was questioned; Mr. Madison, then in
-the House of Representatives, as well as others, had opposed it on
-that ground. Gen. Washington, as President, was called on to approve or
-reject it. He sought and obtained, on the constitutional question, the
-separate written opinions of Jefferson, Hamilton, and Edmund Randolph;
-they then being respectively Secretary of State, Secretary of the
-Treasury, and Attorney-General. Hamilton's opinion was for the power;
-while Randolph's and Jefferson's were both against it. Mr. Jefferson,
-in his letter dated Feb. 15, 1791, after giving his opinion decidedly
-against the constitutionality of that bill, closed with the paragraph
-which I now read:--
-
-"It must be admitted, however, that, unless the President's mind, on
-a view of every thing which is urged for and against this bill, is
-tolerably clear that it is unauthorized by the Constitution; if the pro
-and the con hang so even as to balance his judgment, a just respect
-for the wisdom of the Legislature would naturally decide the balance in
-favor of their opinion; it is chiefly for cases where they are clearly
-misled by error, ambition, or interest, that the Constitution has placed
-a check in the negative of the President."
-
-Gen. Taylor's opinion, as expressed in his Allison letter, is as I now
-read:--
-
-"The power given by the veto is a high conservative power, but, in my
-opinion, should never be exercised, except in cases of clear violation
-of the Constitution, or manifest haste and want of consideration by
-Congress."
-
-It is here seen, that, in Mr. Jefferson's opinion, if, on the
-constitutionality of any given bill, the President doubts, he is not to
-veto it, as the gentleman from Kentucky would have him to do, but is
-to defer to Congress, and approve it. And if we compare the opinions of
-Jefferson and Taylor, as expressed in these paragraphs, we shall find
-them more exactly alike than we can often find any two expressions
-having any literal difference. None but interested fault-finders can
-discover any substantial variation.
-
-But gentlemen on the other side are unanimously agreed that Gen. Taylor
-has no other principle. They are in utter darkness as to his opinions on
-any of the questions of policy which occupy the public attention. But
-is there any doubt as to what he will do on the prominent question, if
-elected? Not the least. It is not possible to know what he will or would
-do in every imaginable case, because many questions have passed away,
-and others doubtless will arise, which none of us have yet thought
-of; but on the prominent questions of currency, tariff, internal
-improvements, and Wilmot Proviso, Gen. Taylor's course is at least as
-well defined as is Gen. Cass's. Why, in their eagerness to get at Gen.
-Taylor, several Democratic members here have desired to know whether, in
-case of his election, a bankrupt-law is to be established. Can they tell
-us Gen. Cass's opinion on this question? (Some member answered, He is
-against it.") Ay, how do you know he is? There is nothing about it in
-the platform, nor elsewhere, that I have seen. If the gentleman knows
-any thing which I do not, he can show it. But to return: Gen. Taylor, in
-his Allison letter, says,--
-
-"Upon the subject of the tariff, the currency, the improvement of our
-great highways, rivers, lakes, and harbors, the will of the people,
-as expressed through their Representatives in Congress, ought to be
-respected and carried out by the Executive."
-
-Now, this is the whole matter: in substance, it is this: The people say
-to Gen. Taylor, "If you are elected, shall we have a national bank?"
-He answers, "Your will, gentlemen, not mine"--"What about the
-tariff?"--"Say yourselves."--"Shall our rivers and harbors be
-improved?"--"Just as you please."--"If you desire a bank, an alteration
-of the tariff, internal improvements, any or all, I will not hinder you:
-if you do not desire them, I will not attempt to force them on you. Send
-up your members of Congress from the various districts, with opinions
-according to your own, and if they are for these measures, or any of
-them, I shall have nothing to oppose: if they are not for them, I shall
-not, by any appliances whatever, attempt to dragoon them into their
-adoption." Now, can there be any difficulty in understanding this? To
-you, Democrats, it may not seem like principle; but surely you cannot
-fail to perceive the position plain enough. The distinction between it
-and the position of your candidate is broad and obvious, and I admit
-you have a clear right to show it is wrong, if you can; but you have
-no right to pretend you cannot see it at all. We see it, and to us it
-appears like principle, and the best sort of principle at that,--the
-principle of allowing the people to do as they please with their own
-business. My friend from Indiana (Mr. C. B. Smith) has aptly asked, "Are
-you willing to trust the people?" Some of you answered substantially,
-"We are willing to trust the people; but the President is as much the
-representative of the people as Congress." In a certain sense, and to a
-certain extent, he is the representative of the people. He is elected by
-them as well as Congress is. But can he, in the nature of things, know
-the wants of the people as well as three hundred other men coming from
-all the various localities of the nation? If so, where is the propriety
-of having a Congress? That the Constitution gives the President a
-negative on legislation, all know; but that this negative should be so
-combined with platforms and other appliances as to enable him, and, in
-fact, almost compel him, to take the whole of legislation into his own
-hands, is what we object to, is what Gen. Taylor objects to, and is what
-constitutes the broad distinction between you and us. To thus transfer
-legislation is clearly to take it from those who understand with
-minuteness the interests of the people, and give it to one who does not
-and cannot so well understand it. I understand your idea,--that if a
-Presidential candidate avow his opinion upon a given question, or rather
-upon all questions, and the people, with full knowledge of this, elect
-him, they thereby distinctly approve all those opinions. This, though
-plausible, is a most pernicious deception. By means of it, measures are
-adopted or rejected contrary to the wishes of the whole of one party,
-and often nearly half of the other. The process is this: Three, four, or
-half a dozen questions are prominent at a given time; the party selects
-its candidate, and he takes his position on each of these questions.
-On all but one his positions have already been indorsed at former
-elections, and his party fully committed to them; but that one is new,
-and a large portion of them are against it. But what are they to do? The
-whole are strung together, and they must take all or reject all. They
-cannot take what they like, and leave the rest. What they are already
-committed to being the majority, they shut their eyes and gulp the
-whole. Next election, still another is introduced in the same way. If
-we run our eyes along the line of the past, we shall see that almost, if
-not quite, all the articles of the present Democratic creed have been at
-first forced upon the party in this very way. And just now, and just so,
-opposition to internal improvements is to be established if Gen. Cass
-shall be elected. Almost half the Democrats here are for improvements,
-but they will vote for Cass; and, if he succeeds, their votes will have
-aided in closing the doors against improvements. Now, this is a process
-which we think is wrong. We prefer a candidate, who, like Gen. Taylor,
-will allow the people to have their own way, regardless of his private
-opinion; and I should think the internal-improvement Democrats, at
-least, ought to prefer such a candidate. He would force nothing on them
-which they don't want; and he would allow them to have improvements
-which their own candidate, if elected, will not.
-
-Mr. Speaker, I have said Gen. Taylor's position is as well defined as is
-that of Gen. Cass. In saying this, I admit I do not certainly know what
-he would do on the Wilmot Proviso. I am a Northern man, or, rather, a
-Western Free State man, with a constituency I believe to be, and with
-personal feelings I know to be, against the extension of slavery.
-As such, and with what information I have, I hope and _believe_ Gen.
-Taylor, if elected, would not veto the proviso; but I do not _know_ it.
-Yet, if I knew he would, I still would vote for him. I should do so,
-because, in my judgment, his election alone can defeat Gen. Cass; and
-because, _should_ slavery thereby go into the territory we now have,
-just so much will certainly happen by the election of Cass, and, in
-addition, a course of policy leading to new wars, new acquisitions of
-territory, and still farther extensions of slavery. One of the two is to
-be President; which is preferable?
-
-But there is as much doubt of Cass on improvements as there is of Taylor
-on the proviso. I have no doubt myself of Gen. Cass on this question,
-but I know the Democrats differ among themselves as to his position. My
-internal-improvement colleague (Mr. Wentworth) stated on this floor the
-other day, that he was satisfied Cass was for improvements, because he
-had voted for all the bills that he (Mr. W.) had. So far, so good.
-But Mr. Polk vetoed some of these very bills; the Baltimore Convention
-passed a set of resolutions, among other things, approving these vetoes;
-and Cass declares, in his letter accepting the nomination, that he has
-carefully read these resolutions, and that he adheres to them as firmly
-as he approves them cordially. In other words, Gen. Cass voted for the
-bills, and thinks the President did right to veto them; and his friends
-here are amiable enough to consider him as being on one side or the
-other, just as one or the other may correspond with their own respective
-inclinations. My colleague admits that the platform declares against the
-constitutionality of a general system of improvement, and that Gen. Cass
-indorses the platform; but he still thinks Gen. Cass is in favor of some
-sort of improvements. Well, what are they? As he is against _general_
-objects, those he is for must be particular and local. Now, this
-is taking the subject precisely by the wrong end.
-
-_Particularity_--expending the money of the _whole_ people for an
-object which will benefit only a _portion_ of them--is the greatest real
-objection to improvements, and has been so held by Gen. Jackson, Mr.
-Polk, and all others, I believe, till now. But now, behold, the objects
-most general, nearest free from this objection, are to be rejected,
-while those most liable to it are to be embraced. To return: I cannot
-help believing that Gen. Cass, when he wrote his letter of acceptance,
-well understood he was to be claimed by the advocates of both sides
-of this question, and that he then closed the door against all further
-expressions of opinion, purposely to retain the benefits of that double
-position. His subsequent equivocation at Cleveland, to my mind, proves
-such to have been the case.
-
-One word more, and I shall have done with this branch of the subject.
-You Democrats and your candidate, in the main, are in favor of laying
-down in advance a platform,--a set of party positions, as a unit; and
-then of enforcing the people, by every sort of appliance, to ratify
-them, however unpalatable some of them may be. We and our candidate are
-in favor of making Presidential elections and the legislation of the
-country distinct matters; so that the people can elect whom they please,
-and afterward legislate just as they please, without any hinderance,
-save only so much as may guard against infractions of the Constitution,
-undue haste, and want of consideration. The difference between us is
-clear as noonday. That we are right, we cannot doubt. We hold the true
-republican position. In leaving the people's business in their hands, we
-cannot be wrong. We are willing, and even anxious, to go to the people
-on this issue.
-
-But I suppose I cannot reasonably hope to convince you that we have any
-principles. The most I can expect is, to assure you that we think we
-have, and are quite contented with them. The other day, one of the
-gentlemen from Georgia (Mr. Iverson), an eloquent man, and a man of
-learning, so far as I can judge, not being learned myself, came down
-upon us astonishingly. He spoke in what "The Baltimore American" calls
-the "scathing and withering style." At the end of his second severe
-flash I was struck blind, and found myself feeling with my fingers for
-an assurance of my continued physical existence. A little of the bone
-was left, and I gradually revived. He eulogized Mr. Clay in high
-and beautiful terms, and then declared that we had deserted all our
-principles, and had turned Henry Clay out, like an old horse, to root.
-This is terribly severe. It cannot be answered by argument; at least, I
-cannot so answer it. I merely wish to ask the gentleman if the Whigs
-are the only party he can think of, who sometimes turn old horses out
-to root? Is not a certain Martin Van Buren an old horse which your own
-party have turned out to root? and is he not rooting a little to your
-discomfort about now? But, in not nominating Mr. Clay, we deserted our
-principles, you say. Ah! in what? Tell us, ye men of principles, what
-principle we violated? We say you did violate principle in discarding
-Van Buren, and we can tell you how. You violated the primary,
-the cardinal, the one great living principle of all Democratic
-representative government,--the principle that the representative is
-bound to carry out the known will of his constituents. A large majority
-of the Baltimore Convention of 1844 were, by their constituents,
-instructed to procure Van Buren's nomination if they could.
-In violation, in utter, glaring contempt of this, you rejected
-him,--rejected him, as the gentleman from New York (Mr. Birdsall), the
-other day expressly admitted, for _availability_,--that same "general
-availability" which you charge upon us, and daily chew over here, as
-something exceedingly odious and unprincipled. But the gentleman from
-Georgia (Mr. Iverson) gave us a second speech yesterday, all well
-considered and put down in writing, in which Van Buren was scathed
-and withered a "few" for his present position and movements. I cannot
-remember the gentleman's precise language, but I do remember he put Van
-Buren down, down, till he got him where he was finally to "stink" and
-"rot."
-
-Mr. Speaker, it is no business or inclination of mine to defend Martin
-Van Buren. In the war of extermination now waging between him and his
-old admirers, I say, Devil take the hindmost--and the foremost. But
-there is no mistaking the origin of the breach; and, if the curse of
-"stinking" and "rotting" is to fall on the first and greatest violators
-of principle in the matter, I disinterestedly suggest, that the
-gentleman from Georgia and his present co-workers are bound to take it
-upon themselves.
-
-While I have Gen. Cass in hand, I wish to say a word about his political
-principles. As a specimen, I take the record of his progress on the
-Wilmot Proviso. In "The Washington Union" of March 2, 1847, there is a
-report of the speech of Gen. Cass, made the day before in the Senate,
-on the Wilmot Proviso, during the delivery of which, Mr. Miller of New
-Jersey is reported to have interrupted him as follows, to wit:--
-
-"Mr. Miller expressed his great surprise at the change in the sentiments
-of the Senator from Michigan, who had been regarded as the great
-champion of freedom in the North-west, of which he was a distinguished
-ornament. Last year the Senator from Michigan was understood to be
-decidedly in favor of the Wilmot Proviso; and, as no reason had been
-stated for the change, he (Mr. Miller) could not refrain from the
-expression of his extreme surprise."
-
-To this, Gen. Cass is reported to have replied as follows, to wit:--
-
-"Mr. Cass said, that the course of the Senator from New Jersey was
-most extraordinary. Last year he (Mr. Cass) should have voted for the
-proposition had it come up. But circumstances had altogether changed.
-The honorable Senator then read several passages from the remarks as
-given above which he had committed to writing, in order to refute such a
-charge as that of the Senator from New Jersey."
-
-In the "remarks above committed to writing," is one numbered 4, as
-follows, to wit:--
-
-"4th. Legislation would now be wholly imperative, because no territory
-hereafter to be acquired can be governed without an act of Congress
-providing for its government. And such an act, on its passage, would
-open the whole subject, and leave the Congress called on to pass it free
-to exercise its own discretion, entirely uncontrolled by any declaration
-found in the statute-book."
-
-In "Niles's Register," vol. lxxiii., p. 293, there is a letter of Gen.
-Cas? to A. O. P. Nicholson of Nashville, Tenn., dated Dec. 24, 1847,
-from which the following are correct extracts:--
-
-"The Wilmot Proviso has been before the country some time. It has been
-repeatedly discussed in Congress, and by the public press. I am strongly
-impressed with the opinion that a great change has been going on in the
-public mind upon this subject,--in my own as well as others; and that
-doubts are resolving themselves into convictions, that the principle it
-involves should be kept out of the national Legislature, and left to the
-people of the Confederacy in their respective local governments.
-
-"Briefly, then, I am opposed to the exercise of any jurisdiction by
-Congress over this matter; and I am in favor of leaving the people of
-any territory which may be hereafter acquired, the right to regulate it
-themselves, under the general principles of the Constitution. Because,
-
-"1. I do not see in the Constitution any grant of the requisite power
-to Congress; and I am not disposed to extend a doubtful precedent
-beyond its necessity,--the establishment of territorial governments when
-needed,--leaving to the inhabitants all the rights compatible with the
-relations they bear to the Confederation."
-
-These extracts show, that, in 1846, Gen. Cass was for the Proviso _at
-once_; that, in March, 1847, he was still for it, _but not just then_;
-and that in December, 1847, he was _against_ it altogether. This is a
-true index to the whole man. When the question was raised in 1846, he
-was in a blustering hurry to take ground for it. He sought to be in
-advance, and to avoid the uninteresting position of a mere follower; but
-soon he began to see glimpses of the great Democratic ox-gad waving in
-his face, and to hear indistinctly a voice saying, "Back!" "Back, sir!"
-"Back a little!" He shakes his head, and bats his eyes, and blunders
-back to his position of March, 1847; but still the gad waves, and the
-voice grows more distinct, and sharper still,--"Back, sir!" "Back, I
-say!" "Further back!" and back he goes to the position of December,
-1847; at which the gad is still, and the voice soothingly says, "So!"
-"Stand still at that."
-
-Have no fears, gentlemen, of your candidate: he exactly suits you, and
-we congratulate you upon it. However much you may be distressed about
-our candidate, you have all cause to be contented and happy with your
-own. If elected, he may not maintain all, or even any, of his positions
-previously taken; but he will be sure to do whatever the party exigency,
-for the time being, may require; and that is precisely what you want. He
-and Van Buren are the same "manner of men;" and, like Van Buren, he will
-never desert you till you first desert him.
-
-[After referring at some length to extra "charges" of Gen. Cass upon the
-Treasury, Mr. Lincoln continued:---]
-
-But I have introduced Gen. Cass's accounts here chiefly to show the
-wonderful physical capacities of the man. They show that he not only did
-the labor of several men at the same _time_, but that he often did it,
-at several _places_ many hundred miles apart, _at the same time_. And
-at eating, too, his capacities are shown to be quite as wonderful. From
-October, 1821, to May, 1822, he ate ten rations a day in Michigan, ten
-rations a day here in Washington, and nearly five dollars' worth a day
-besides, partly on the road between the two places. And then there is an
-important discovery in his example,--the art of being paid for what one
-eats, instead of having to pay for it. Hereafter, if any nice young man
-shall owe a bill which he cannot pay in any other way, he can just board
-it out. Mr. Speaker, we have all heard of the animal standing in doubt
-between two stacks of hay, and starving to death: the like of that would
-never happen to Gen. Cass. Place the stacks a thousand miles apart, he
-would stand stock-still, midway between them, and eat them both at once;
-and the green grass along the line would be apt to suffer some, too, at
-the same time. By all means make him President, gentlemen. He will feed
-you bounteously--if--if--there is any left after he shall have helped
-himself.
-
-But as Gen. Taylor is, par excellence, the hero of the Mexican War, and
-as you Democrats say we Whigs have always opposed the war, you think it
-must be very awkward and embarrassing for us to go for Gen. Taylor.
-The declaration that we have always opposed the war is true or false
-accordingly as one may understand the term "opposing the war." If to
-say "the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President," by opposing the war, then the Whigs have very generally
-opposed it. Whenever they have spoken at all, they have said this; and
-they have said it on what has appeared good reason to them: the marching
-an army into the midst of a peaceful Mexican settlement, frightening
-the inhabitants away, leaving their growing crops and other property
-to destruction, to you may appear a perfectly amiable, peaceful,
-unprovoking procedure; but it does not appear so to us. So to call such
-an act, to us appears no other than a naked, impudent absurdity, and we
-speak of it accordingly. But if when the war had begun, and had become
-the cause of the country, the giving of our money and our blood, in
-common with yours, was support of the war, then it is not true that we
-have always opposed the war. With few individual exceptions, you have
-constantly had our votes here for all the necessary supplies. And, more
-than this, you have had the services, the blood, and the lives of our
-political brethren in every trial, and on every field. The beardless
-boy and the mature man, the humble and the distinguished,--you have had
-them. Through suffering and death, by disease and in battle, they have
-endured and fought and fallen with you. Clay and Webster each gave a
-son, never to be returned. From the State of my own residence, besides
-other worthy but less known Whig names, we sent Marshall, Morrison,
-Baker, and Hardin: they all fought, and one fell, and in the fall of
-that one we lost our best Whig man. Nor were the Whigs few in number,
-or laggard in the day of danger. In that fearful, bloody, breathless
-struggle at Buena Vista, where each man's hard task was to beat back
-five foes or die himself, of the five high officers who perished, four
-were Whigs.
-
-In speaking of this, I mean no odious comparison between the
-lion-hearted Whigs and Democrats who fought there. On other occasions,
-and among the lower officers and privates on that occasion, I doubt not
-the proportion was different. I wish to do justice to all. I think of
-all those brave men as Americans, in whose proud fame, as an American,
-I, too, have a share. Many of them, Whigs and Democrats, are my
-constituents and personal friends; and I thank them,--more than thank
-them,--one and all, for the high, imperishable honor they have conferred
-on our common State.
-
-But the distinction between the _cause of the President in beginning
-the war,_ and the _cause of the country after it was begun_, is a
-distinction which you cannot perceive. To you, the President and the
-country seem to be all one. You are interested to see no distinction
-between them; and I venture to suggest that possibly your interest
-blinds you a little. We see the distinction, as we think, clearly
-enough; and our friends, who have fought in the war, have no difficulty
-in seeing it also. What those who have fallen would say, were they alive
-and here, of course we can never know; but with those who have returned
-there is no difficulty. Col. Haskell and Major Gaines, members here,
-both fought in the war; and one of them underwent extraordinary perils
-and hardships; still they, like all other Whigs here, vote on the record
-that the war was unnecessarily and unconstitutionally commenced by the
-President. And even Gen. Taylor himself, the noblest Roman of them all,
-has declared that, as a citizen, and particularly as a soldier, it is
-sufficient for him to know that his country is at war with a foreign
-nation, to do all in his power to bring it to a speedy and honorable
-termination, by the most vigorous and energetic operations, without
-inquiring about its justice, or any thing else connected with it.
-
-Mr. Speaker, let our Democratic friends be comforted with the assurance
-that we are content with our position, content with our company, and
-content with our candidate; and that although they, in their generous
-sympathy, think we ought to be miserable, we really are not, and that
-they may dismiss the great anxiety they have on our account.1
-
- 1 The following passage has generally been omitted from this
- speech, as published in the "Lives of Lincoln." The reason
- for the omission is quite obvious.
-
-"But the gentleman from Georgia further says, we have deserted all our
-principles, and taken shelter under Gen. Taylor's military coat-tail;
-and he seems to think this is exceedingly degrading. Well, as his faith
-is, so be it unto him. But can he remember no other military coat-tail,
-under which a certain other party have been sheltering for near a
-quarter of a century? Has he no acquaintance with the ample military
-coat-tail of Gen. Jackson? Does he not know that his own party have run
-the last five Presidential races under that coat-tail? and that they are
-now running the sixth under the same cover? Yes, sir, that coat-tail was
-used, not only for Gen, Jackson himself, but has been clung to with
-the grip of death by every Democratic candidate since. You have never
-ventured, and dare not now venture, from under it. Your campaign papers
-have constantly been 'Old Hickories,' with rude likenesses of the old
-general upon them; hickory poles and hickory brooms your never-ending
-emblems. Mr. Polk himself was 'Young Hickory.' 'Little Hickory,' or
-something so; and even now your campaign paper here is proclaiming that
-Cass and Butler are of the 'Hickory stripe.' No, sir, you dare not give
-it up. Like a horde of hungry ticks, you have stuck to the tail of the
-Hermitage lion to the end of his life; and you are still sticking to it,
-and drawing a loathsome sustenance from it, after he is dead. A fellow
-once advertised that he had made a discovery by which he could make a
-new man out of an old one, and have enough of the stuff left to make a
-little yellow dog. Just such a discovery has Gen. Jackson's popularity
-been to you. You not only twice made President of him out of it, but
-you have enough of the stuff left to make Presidents of several
-comparatively small men since; and it is your chief reliance now to make
-still another.
-
-"Mr. Speaker, old horses and military coat-tails, or tails of any sort,
-are not figures of speech such as I would be the first to introduce into
-discussions here; but, as the gentleman from Georgia has thought fit
-to introduce them, he and you are welcome to all you have made, or can
-make, by them. If you have any more old horses, trot them out; any more
-tails, just cock them, and come at us.
-
-"I repeat, I would not introduce this mode of discussion here; but
-I wish gentlemen on the other side to understand, that the use of
-degrading figures is a game at which they may find themselves unable to
-take all the winnings. ["We give it up."] Ay, you give it up, and well
-you may; but for a very different reason from that which you would have
-us understand. The point--the power to hurt--of all figures, consists
-in the _truthfulness_ of their application; and, understanding this, you
-may well give it up. They are weapons which hit you, but miss us.
-
-"But, in my hurry, I was very near closing on this subject of military
-tails before I was done with it. There is one entire article of the sort
-I have not discussed yet; I mean the military tail you Democrats are now
-engaged in dovetailing on to the great Michigander. Yes, sir, all his
-biographers (and they are legion) have him in hand, tying him to a
-military tail, like so many mischievous boys tying a dog to a bladder of
-beans. True, the material is very limited, but they are at it might and
-main. He invaded Canada without resistance, and he _out_vaded it without
-pursuit. As he did both under orders, I suppose there was, to him,
-neither credit nor discredit; but they are made to constitute a large
-part of the tail. He was not at Hull's surrender, but he was close by;
-he was volunteer aid to Gen. Harrison on the day of the battle of the
-Thames; and, as you said in 1840 Harrison was picking whortleberries
-two miles off while the battle was fought, I suppose it is a just
-conclusion, with you, to say Cass was aiding Harrison to pick
-whortleberries. This is about all, except the mooted question of the
-broken sword. Some authors say he broke it; some say he threw it away;
-and some others, who ought to know, say nothing about it. Perhaps it
-would be a fair historical compromise to say, if he did not break it, he
-did not do any thing else with it.
-
-"By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero? Yes sir:
-in the days of the Black-Hawk War, I fought, bled, and came away.
-Speaking of Gen. Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at
-Stillman's defeat, but I was about as near it as Cass was to Hull's
-surrender; and, like him, I saw the place very soon afterwards. It is
-quite certain I did not break my sword, for I had none to break; but I
-bent my musket pretty badly on one occasion. If Cass broke his sword,
-the idea is, he broke it in desperation: I bent the musket by accident.
-If Gen. Cass went in advance of me picking whortleberries,
-
-I guess I surpassed him in charges upon the wild onions. If he saw any
-live fighting Indians, it was more than I did, but I had a good many
-bloody struggles with the mosquitoes; and, although I never fainted from
-loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry, "Mr. Speaker,
-if ever I should conclude to doff whatever our Democratic friends may
-suppose there is of black-cockade Federalism about me, and, thereupon,
-they shall take me up as their candidate for the Presidency, I protest
-that they shall not make fun of me, as they have of Gen. Cass, by
-attempting to write me into a military hero."
-
-Congress adjourned on the 14th of August; but Mr. Lincoln went up to
-New England, and made various campaign speeches before he returned home.
-They were not preserved, and were probably of little importance.
-
-Soon after his return to Washington, to take his seat at the second
-session of the Thirtieth Congress, he received a letter from his father,
-which astonished and perhaps amused him. His reply intimates grave
-doubts concerning the veracity of his correspondent.
-
-Washington, Dec. 24, 1848. My dear Father,--Your letter of the 7th
-was received night before last. I very cheerfully send you the twenty
-dollars, which sum you say is necessary to save your land from sale. It
-is singular that you should have forgotten a judgment against you; and
-it is more singular that the plaintiff should have let you forget it
-so long; particularly as I suppose you always had property enough to
-satisfy a judgment of that amount. Before you pay it, it would be well
-to be sure you have not paid, or at least that you cannot prove you have
-paid it.
-
-Give my love to mother and all the connections.
-
-Affectionately your son,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The second session was a quiet one. Mr. Lincoln did nothing to attract
-public attention in any marked degree. He attended diligently and
-unobtrusively to the ordinary duties of his office, and voted generally
-with the Whig majority. One Mr. Gott, however, of New York, offered a
-resolution looking to the abolition of the slave-trade in the District
-of Columbia, and Mr. Lincoln was one of only three or four Northern
-Whigs who voted to lay the resolution on the table. At another time,
-however, Mr. Lincoln proposed a substitute for the Gott resolution,
-providing for gradual and compensated emancipation, with the consent
-of the people of the District, to be ascertained at a general election.
-This measure he evidently abandoned, and it died a natural death among
-the rubbish of "unfinished business." His record on the Wilmot Proviso
-has been thoroughly exposed, both by himself and Mr. Douglas, and in the
-Presidential campaign by his friends and foes. He said himself, that he
-had voted for it "about forty-two times." It is not likely that he had
-counted the votes when he made this statement, but spoke according to
-the best of his "knowledge and belief."
-
-The following letters are printed, not because they illustrate the
-author's character more than a thousand others would, but because they
-exhibit one of the many perplexities of Congressional life.
-
-Springfield, April 25, 1849.
-
-Dear Thompson,--A tirade is still kept up against me here for
-recommending T. R. King. This morning it is openly avowed that my
-supposed influence at Washington shall be broken down generally, and
-King's prospects defeated in particular. Now, what I have done in this
-matter, I have done at the request of you and some other friends in
-Tazewell; and I therefore ask you to either admit it is wrong, or come
-forward and sustain me. If the truth will permit, I propose that you
-sustain me in the following manner: copy the enclosed scrap in your own
-handwriting, and get everybody (not three or four, but three or four
-hundred) to sign it, and then send it to me. Also, have six, eight, or
-ten of our best known Whig friends there to write me individual letters,
-stating the truth in this matter as they understand it. Don't neglect
-or delay in the matter. I understand information of an indictment having
-been found against him about three years ago for gaming, or keeping a
-gaming-house, has been sent to the Department. I shall try to take care
-of it at the Department till your action can be had and forwarded on.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Washington, June 5, 1849.
-
-Dear William,--Your two letters were received last night. I have a great
-many letters to write, and so cannot write very long ones. There must be
-some mistake about Walter Davis saying I promised him the Post-office. I
-did not so promise him. I did tell him, that, if the distribution of the
-offices should fall into my hands, he should have something; and, if
-I shall be convinced he has said any more than this, I shall be
-disappointed.
-
-I said this much to him, because, as I understand, he is of good
-character, is one of the young men, is of the mechanics, and always
-faithful, and never troublesome, a Whig and is poor, with the support
-of a widow-mother thrown almost exclusively on him by the death of his
-brother. If these are wrong reasons, then I have been wrong; but I
-have certainly not been selfish in it, because, in my greatest need of
-friends, he was against me and for Baker.
-
-Yours as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-P. S.--Let the above be confidential.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-LIKE most other public men in America, Mr. Lincoln made his bread by
-the practice of his profession, and the better part of his fame by
-the achievements of the politician. He was a lawyer of some note,
-and, compared with the crowds who annually take upon themselves the
-responsible office of advocate and attorney, he might very justly have
-been called a good one; for he regarded his office as a trust, and
-selected and tried his cases, not with a view to personal gain, but to
-the administration of justice between suitors. And here, midway in
-his political career, it is well enough to pause, and take a leisurely
-survey of him in his other character of country lawyer, from the time
-he entered the bar at Springfield until he was translated from it to the
-Presidential chair. It is unnecessary to remind the reader (for by this
-time it must be obvious enough) that the aim of the writer is merely to
-present facts and contemporaneous opinions, with as little comment as
-possible.
-
-In the courts and at the bar-meetings immediately succeeding his death,
-his professional brethren poured out in volumes their testimony to his
-worth and abilities as a lawyer. But, in estimating the value of this
-testimony, it is fair to consider the state of the public mind at the
-time it was given,--the recent triumph of the Federal arms under his
-direction; the late overwhelming indorsement of his administration; the
-unparalleled devotion of the people to his person as exhibited at the
-polls; the fresh and bitter memories of the hideous tragedy that took
-him off; the furious and deadly passions it inspired in the one party,
-and the awe, indignation, and terror it inspired in the other. It was
-no time for nice and critical examinations, either of his mental or his
-moral character; and it might have been attended with personal danger to
-attempt them. For days and nights together it was considered treason to
-be seen in public with a smile on the face. Men who spoke evil of the
-fallen chief, or even ventured a doubt concerning the ineffable purity
-and saintliness of his life, were pursued by mobs, were beaten to death
-with paving-stones, or strung up by the neck to lampposts. If there was
-any rivalry, it was as to who should be foremost and fiercest among his
-avengers, who should canonize him in the most solemn words, who should
-compare him to the most sacred character in all history, sacred and
-profane. He was prophet, priest, and king; he was Washington; he was
-Moses; and there were not wanting even those who likened him to the God
-and Redeemer of all the earth. These latter thought they discovered in
-his lowly origin, his kindly nature, his benevolent precepts, and
-the homely anecdotes in which he taught the people, strong points of
-resemblance between him and the divine Son of Mary. Even at this day,
-men are not wanting in prominent positions in life, who knew Mr. Lincoln
-well, and who do not hesitate to make such a comparison.
-
-[Illustration: Judge David Davis 349]
-
-For many years, Judge David Davis was the near friend and the intimate
-associate of Mr. Lincoln. He presided in the court where Lincoln was
-oftenest heard: year in and year out they travelled together from
-town to town, from county to county, riding frequently in the same
-conveyance, and lodging in the same room. Although a judge on the bench,
-Mr. Davis watched the political course of his friend with affectionate
-solicitude, and more than once interposed most effectually to advance
-his fortunes. When Mr. Lincoln ascended to the Presidency, it was well
-understood that no man enjoyed more confidential relations with him than
-Judge Davis. At the first opportunity, he commissioned Judge Davis an
-Associate Justice of that august tribunal, the Supreme Court of the
-United States; and, upon his death, Judge Davis administered upon his
-estate at the request of his family. Add to this the fact, that, among
-American jurists, Judge Davis's fame is, if not peerless, at least not
-excelled by that of any man whose reputation rests upon his labors as
-they appear in the books of Reports, and we may very fairly consider
-him a competent judge of the professional character of Mr. Lincoln. At
-Indianapolis, Judge Davis spoke of him as follows:--
-
-"I enjoyed for over twenty years the personal friendship of Mr. Lincoln.
-We were admitted to the bar about the same time, and travelled for many
-years what is known in Illinois as the Eighth Judicial Circuit. In 1848,
-when I first went on the bench, the circuit embraced fourteen counties,
-and Mr. Lincoln went with the court to every county. Railroads were
-not then in use, and our mode of travel was either on horseback or in
-buggies.
-
-"This simple life he loved, preferring it to the practice of the law
-in a city, where, although the remuneration would be greater, the
-opportunity would be less for mixing with the great body of the people,
-who loved him, and whom he loved. Mr. Lincoln was transferred from the
-bar of that circuit to the office of President of the United States,
-having been without official position since he left Congress in 1849. In
-all the elements that constitute the great lawyer, he had few equals.
-He was great both at _nisi prius_ and before an appellate tribunal. He
-seized the strong points of a cause, and presented them with clearness
-and great compactness. His mind was logical and direct, and he did not
-indulge in extraneous discussion. Generalities and platitudes had no
-charms for him. An unfailing vein of humor never deserted him; and he
-was always able to chain the attention of court and jury, when the cause
-was the most uninteresting, by the appropriateness of his anecdotes.
-
-"His power of comparison was large, and he rarely failed in a legal
-discussion to use that mode of reasoning. The framework of his mental
-and moral being was honesty, and a wrong cause was poorly defended by
-him. The ability which some eminent lawyers possess, of explaining away
-the bad points of a cause by ingenious sophistry, was denied him. In
-order to bring into full activity his great powers, it was necessary
-that he should be convinced of the right and justice of the matter which
-he advocated. When so convinced, whether the cause was great or small,
-he was usually successful. He read law-books but little, except when
-the cause in hand made it necessary; yet he was usually self-reliant,
-depending on his own resources, and rarely consulting his brother
-lawyers, either on the management of his case or on the legal questions
-involved.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was the fairest and most accommodating of practitioners,
-granting all favors which he could do consistently with his duty to
-his client, and rarely availing himself of an unwary oversight of his
-adversary.
-
-"He hated wrong and oppression everywhere; and many a man whose
-fraudulent conduct was undergoing review in a court of justice has
-writhed under his terrific indignation and rebukes. He was the most
-simple and unostentatious of men in his habits, having few wants, and
-those easily supplied.
-
-"To his honor be it said, that he never took from a client, even when
-the cause was gained, more than he thought the service was worth and the
-client could reasonably afford to pay. The people where he practised law
-were not rich, and his charges were always small.
-
-"When he was elected President, I question whether there was a lawyer
-in the circuit, who had been at the bar as long a time, whose means were
-not larger. It did not seem to be one of the purposes of his life to
-accumulate a fortune. In fact, outside of his profession, he had no
-knowledge of the way to make money, and he never even attempted it.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was loved by his brethren of the bar; and no body of men
-will grieve more at his death, or pay more sincere tributes to his
-memory. His presence on the circuit was watched for with interest, and
-never failed to produce joy and hilarity. When casually absent, the
-spirits of both bar and people were depressed. He was not fond of
-controversy, and would compromise a lawsuit whenever practicable."
-
-More or other evidence than this may, perhaps, be superfluous. Such an
-eulogium, from such a source, is more than sufficient to determine
-the place Mr. Lincoln is entitled to occupy in the history, or, more
-properly speaking, the traditions, of the Western bar. If Sir Matthew
-Hale had spoken thus of any lawyer of his day, he would have insured
-to the subject of his praise a place in the estimation of men only less
-conspicuous and honorable than that of the great judge himself. At the
-risk, however, of unnecessary accumulation, we venture to record an
-extract from Judge Drummond's address at Chicago:--
-
-"With a probity of character known to all, with an intuitive insight
-into the human heart, with a clearness of statement which was in itself
-an argument, with uncommon power and felicity of illustration,--often,
-it is true, of a plain and homely kind,--and with that sincerity and
-earnestness of manner which carried conviction, he was, perhaps, one
-of the most successful jury lawyers we ever had in the State. He always
-tried a case fairly and honestly. He never intentionally misrepresented
-the evidence of a witness, nor the argument of an opponent. He met both
-squarely, and, if he could not explain the one or answer the other,
-substantially admitted it. He never misstated the law, according to
-his own intelligent view of it. Such was the transparent candor and
-integrity of his nature, that he could not well, or strongly, argue a
-side or a cause that he thought wrong. Of course, he felt it his duty to
-say what could be said, and to leave the decision to others; but there
-could be seen in such cases the inward struggles of his own mind. In
-trying a case, he might occasionally dwell too long upon, or give too
-much importance to, an inconsiderable point; but this was the exception,
-and generally he went straight to the citadel of the cause or question,
-and struck home there, knowing, if that were won, the outworks would
-necessarily fall. He could hardly be called very learned in his
-profession, and yet he rarely tried a cause without fully understanding
-the law applicable to it; and I have no hesitation in saying he was one
-of the ablest lawyers I have ever known. If he was forcible before
-a jury, he was equally so with the court. He detected, with unerring
-sagacity, the weak points of an opponent's argument, and pressed his own
-views with overwhelming strength. His efforts were quite unequal; and it
-might happen that he would not, on some occasions, strike one as at all
-remarkable. But let him be thoroughly roused,--let him feel that he was
-right, and that some principle was involved in his cause,--and he would
-come out with an earnestness of conviction, a power of argument, and a
-wealth of illustration, that I have never seen surpassed."
-
-Mr. Lincoln's partnership with John T. Stuart began on the 27th of
-April, 1837, and continued until the 14th of April, 1841, when it was
-dissolved, in consequence of Stuart's election to Congress. In that same
-year (1841), Mr. Lincoln united in practice with Stephen T. Logan, late
-presiding judge of the district, and they remained together until 1845.
-
-Soon afterwards he formed a copartnership with William H. Herndon, his
-friend, familiar, and, we may almost say, biographer,--a connection
-which terminated only when the senior partner took an affectionate leave
-of the old circuit, the old office, home, friends, and all familiar
-things, to return no more until he came a blackened corpse. "He once
-told me of you," says Mr. Whitney in one of his letters to Mr. Herndon,
-"that he had taken you in as partner, supposing that you had a system,
-and would keep things in order, but that he found that you had no more
-system than he had, but that you were a fine lawyer; so that he was
-doubly disappointed." 1
-
- 1 The following letter exhibits the character of his early
- practice, and gives us a glimpse into his social and
- political life;--
-
- Springfield, Dec. 23,1839.
-
- Dear--,--Dr. Henry will write you all the political news. I
- write this about some little matters of business. You
- recollect you told me you had drawn the Chicago Masack
- money, and sent it to the claimants. A d----d hawk-billed
- Yankee is here besetting me at every turn I take, saying
- that Robert Kenzie never received the eighty dollars to
- which he was entitled.
-
- Can you tell any thing about the matter? Again, old Mr.
- Wright, who lives up South Fork somewhere, is teasing me
- continually about some deeds, which he says he left with
- you, but which I can find nothing of. Can you tell where
- they are? The Legislature is in session, and has suffered
- the bank to forfeit its charter without benefit of clergy.
- There seems but little disposition to resuscitate it.
-
- Whenever a letter comes from you to Mrs.------, I carry it
- to her, and then I see Betty:
-
- she is a tolerable nice fellow now. Maybe I will write again
- when I get more time.
-
- Your friend as ever,
-
- A. Lincoln.
-
- P. S.--The Democratic giant is here, but he is not now worth
- talking about.
-
- A. L.
-
-As already stated by Judge Davis, Mr. Lincoln was not "a great reader of
-law-books;" but what he knew he knew well, and within those limits
-was self-reliant and even intrepid. He was what is sometimes called "a
-case-lawyer,"--a man who reasoned almost entirely to the court and jury
-from analagous causes previously decided and reported in the books, and
-not from the elementary principles of the law, or the great
-underlying reasons for its existence. In consultation he was cautious,
-conscientious, and painstaking, and was seldom prepared to advise,
-except after careful and tedious examination of the authorities. He did
-not consider himself bound to take every case that was brought to him,
-nor to press all the points in favor of a client who in the main was
-right and entitled to recover. He is known to have been many times on
-the verge of quarrelling with old and valued friends, because he could
-not see the justice of their claims, and, therefore, could not be
-induced to act as their counsel. Henry McHenry, one of his New-Salem
-associates, brought him a case involving the title to a piece of land.
-McHenry had placed a family in a cabin which Mr. Lincoln believed to be
-situated on the other side of the adversary's line. He told McHenry that
-he must move the family out. "McHenry said he should not do it. 'Well,'
-said Mr. Lincoln, 'if you do not, I shall not attend to the suit.'
-McHenry said he did not care a d--n whether he did or not; that he
-(Lincoln) was not all the lawyer there was in town. Lincoln studied
-a while, and asked about the location of the cabin,... and then said,
-'McHenry, you are right: I will attend to the suit,' and did attend to
-it, and gained it; and that was all the harsh words that passed."
-
-"A citizen of Springfield," says Mr. Herndon, "who visited our office
-on business about a year before Mr. Lincoln's nomination, relates the
-following:--
-
-"'Mr. Lincoln was seated at his table, listening very attentively to a
-man who was talking earnestly in a low tone. After the would-be client
-had stated the facts of his case, Mr. Lincoln replied, "Yes, there is
-no reasonable doubt but that I can gain your case for you. I can set a
-whole neighborhood at loggerheads; I can distress a widowed mother
-and her six fatherless children, and thereby get for you six hundred
-dollars, which rightfully belongs, it appears to me, as much to the
-woman and her children as it does to you. You must remember that some
-things that are legally right are not morally right. I shall not take
-your case, but will give you a little advice, for which I will charge
-you nothing. You seem to be a sprightly, energetic man. I would advise
-you to try your hand at making six hundred dollars in some other way."'"
-
-In the summer of 1841, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a curious case. The
-circumstances impressed him very deeply with the insufficiency and
-danger of "circumstantial evidence;" so much so, that he not only wrote
-the following account of it to Speed, but another more extended one,
-which was printed in a newspaper published at Quincy, 111. His mind was
-full of it: he could think of nothing else. It is apparent that in his
-letter to Speed he made no pause to choose his words: there is nothing
-constrained, and nothing studied or deliberate about it; but its
-simplicity, perspicuity, and artless grace make it a model of English
-composition. What Goldsmith once said of Locke may better be said of
-this letter: "He never says more nor less than he ought, and never makes
-use of a word that he could have changed for a better."
-
-Springfield, June 19,1841.
-
-Dear Speed,--We have had the highest state of excitement here for a
-week past that our community has ever witnessed; and although the public
-feeling is somewhat allayed, the curious affair which aroused it is very
-far from being over yet, cleared of mystery. It would take a quire of
-paper to give you any thing like a full account of it, and I therefore
-only propose a brief outline. The chief personages in the drama are
-Archibald Fisher, supposed to be murdered, and Archibald Trailor, Henry
-Trailor, and William Trailor, supposed to have murdered him. The three
-Trailors are brothers: the first, Arch., as you know, lives in town;
-the second, Henry, in Clary's Grove; and the third, William, in Warren
-County; and Fisher, the supposed murdered, being without a family, had
-made his home with William. On Saturday evening, being the 29th of May,
-Fisher and William came to Henry's in a one-horse dearborn, and there
-staid over Sunday; and on Monday all three came to Springfield (Henry on
-horseback), and joined Archibald at Myers's, the Dutch carpenter.
-That evening at supper Fisher was missing, and so next morning some
-ineffectual search was made for him; and on Tuesday, at 1 o'clock, p.m.,
-William and Henry started home without him. In a day or two Henry and
-one or two of his Clary-Grove neighbors came back for him again, and
-advertised his disappearance in the papers. The knowledge of the matter
-thus far had not been general, and here it dropped entirely, till about
-the 10th inst., when Keys received a letter from the postmaster in
-Warren County, that William had arrived at home, and was telling a very
-mysterious and improbable story about the disappearance of Fisher, which
-induced the community there to suppose he had been disposed of unfairly.
-Keys made this letter public, which immediately set the whole town and
-adjoining county agog. And so it has continued until yesterday. The mass
-of the people commenced a systematic search for the dead body, while
-Wickersbam was despatched to arrest Henry Trailor at the Grove, and Jim
-Maxcy to Warren to arrest William. On Monday last, Henry was brought in,
-and showed an evident inclination to insinuate that he knew Fisher to be
-dead, and that Arch, and William had killed him. He said he guessed the
-body could be found in Spring Creek, between the Beardstown Road and
-Hickox's mill. Away the people swept like a herd of buffalo, and cut
-down Hickox's mill-dam _nolens volens_, to draw the water out of the
-pond, and then went up and down, and down and up the creek, fishing and
-raking, and raking and ducking, and diving for two days, and, after all,
-no dead body found. In the mean time a sort of a scuffling-ground had
-been found in the brush in the angle, or point, where the road leading
-into the woods past the brewery, and the one leading in past the brick
-grove meet. From the scuffle-ground was the sign of something about
-the size of a man having been dragged to the edge of the thicket, where
-joined the track of some small wheeled carriage drawn by one horse,
-as shown by the road-tracks. The carriage-track led off toward Spring
-Creek. Near this drag-trail Dr. Merryman found two hairs, which, after a
-long scientific examination, he pronounced to be triangular human hair,
-which term, he says, includes within it the whiskers, the hair growing
-under the arms, and on other parts of the body; and he judged that these
-two were of the whiskers, because the ends were cut, showing that
-they had flourished in the neighborhood of the razor's operations. On
-Thursday last Jim Maxcy brought in William Trailor from Warren. On the
-same day Arch, was arrested, and put in jail. Yesterday (Friday) William
-was put upon his examining trial before May and Lavely. Archibald and
-Henry were both present. Lamborn prosecuted, and Logan, Baker, and your
-humble servant defended. A great many witnesses were introduced and
-examined, but I shall only mention those whose testimony seemed most
-important. The first of these was Capt. Ransdell. He swore, that, when
-William and Henry left Springfield for home on Tuesday before mentioned,
-they did not take the direct route,--which, you know, leads by the
-butcher-shop,--but that they followed the street north until they got
-opposite, or nearly opposite, May's new house, after which he could not
-see them from where he stood; and it was afterwards proved, that, in
-about an hour after they started, they came into the street by the
-butcher's shop from towards the brick-yard. Dr. Merryman and others
-swore to what is stated about the scuffle-ground, drag-trail, whiskers,
-and carriage-tracks. Henry was then introduced by the prosecution.
-He swore, that, when they started for home, they went out north, as
-Ransdell stated, and turned down west by the brick-yard into the woods,
-and there met Archibald; that they proceeded a small distance farther,
-when he was placed as a sentinel to watch for and announce the approach
-of any one that might happen that way; that William and Arch, took the
-dearborn out of the road a small distance to the edge of the thicket,
-where they stopped, and he saw them lift the body of a man into it; that
-they then moved off with the carriage in the direction of Hickox's mill,
-and he loitered about for something like an hour, when William returned
-with the carriage, but without Arch., and said they had put him in a
-safe place; that they went somehow, he did not know exactly how, into
-the road close to the brewery, and proceeded on to Clary's Grove. He
-also stated that some time during the day William told him that he and
-Arch, had killed Fisher the evening before; that the way they did it was
-by him (William) knocking him down with a club, and Arch, then choking
-him to death. An old man from Warren, called Dr. Gilmore, was then
-introduced on the part of the defence. He swore that he had known Fisher
-for several years; that Fisher had resided at his house a long time at
-each of two different spells,--once while he built a barn for him, and
-once while he was doctored for some chronic disease; that two or three
-years ago Fisher had a serious hurt in his head by the bursting of
-a gun, since which he had been subject to continued bad health and
-occasional aberration of mind. He also stated that on last Tuesday,
-being the same day that Maxcy arrested William Trailor, he (the doctor)
-was from home in the early part of the day, and on his return, about 11
-o'clock, found Fisher at his house in bed, and apparently very unwell;
-that he asked him how he had come from Springfield; that Fisher said he
-had come by Peoria, and also told of several other places he had been
-at, more in the direction of Peoria, which showed that he at the time
-of speaking did not know where he had been wandering about in a state
-of derangement. He further stated, that in about two hours he received
-a note from one of Trail-or's friends, advising him of his arrest, and
-requesting him to go on to Springfield as a witness, to testify as to
-the state of Fisher's health in former times; that he immediately set
-off, calling up two of his neighbors as company, and, riding all evening
-and all night, overtook Maxcy and William at Lewiston in Fulton. County;
-That Maxcy refusing to discharge Trailor upon his statement, his two
-neighbors returned, and he came on to Springfield. Some question being
-made as to whether the doctor's story was not a fabrication, several
-acquaintances of his (among whom was the same postmaster who wrote to
-Keys, as before mentioned) were introduced as sort of compurgators, who
-swore that they knew the doctor to be of good character for truth
-and veracity, and generally of good character in every way. Here the
-testimony ended, and the Trailors were discharged, Arch, and William
-expressing, both in word and manner, their entire confidence that Fisher
-would be found alive at the doctor's by Galloway, Mallory, and Myers,
-who a day before had been despatched for that purpose; while Henry still
-protested that no power on earth could ever show Fisher alive. Thus
-stands this curious affair. When the doctor's story was first made
-public, it was amusing to scan and contemplate the countenances, and
-hear the remarks, of those who had been actively engaged in the search
-for the dead body: some looked quizzical, some melancholy, and some
-furiously angry. Porter, who had been very active, swore he always knew
-the man was not dead, and that he had not stirred an inch to hunt for
-him: Langford, who had taken the lead in cutting down Hickox's mill-dam,
-and wanted to hang Hickox for objecting, looked most awfully woebegone;
-he seemed the "_wictim of hunrequited affection_," as represented in the
-comic almanacs we used to laugh over. And Hart, the little drayman
-that hauled Molly home once, said it was too damned bad to have so much
-trouble, and no hanging, after all.
-
-I commenced this letter on yesterday, since which I received yours of
-the 13th. I stick to my promise to come to Louisville. Nothing new here,
-except what I have written. I have not seen------since my last trip; and
-I am going out there as soon as I mail this letter.
-
-Yours forever,
-
-Lincoln.
-
-On the 3d of December, 1839, Mr. Lincoln was admitted to practice in
-the Circuit Court of the United States; and on the same day the names
-of Stephen A. Douglas, S. H. Treat, Schuyler Strong, and two other
-gentlemen, were placed on the same roll. The "Little Giant" is always in
-sight!
-
-The first speech he delivered in the Supreme Court of the State was
-one the like of which will never be heard again, and must have led the
-judges to doubt the sanity of the new attorney. We give it in the form
-in which it seems to be authenticated by Judge Treat:--
-
-"A case being called for hearing in the Court, Mr. Lincoln stated
-that he appeared for the appellant, and was ready to proceed with the
-argument. He then said, 'This is the first case I have ever had in this
-court, and I have therefore examined it with great care. As the Court
-will perceive, by looking at the abstract of, the record, the only
-question in the case is one of authority. I have not been able to find
-any authority sustaining _my_ side of the case, but I _have found_
-several cases directly in point on the _other_ side. I will now give
-_these_ cases, and then submit the case.'"
-
-The testimony of all the lawyers, his contemporaries and rivals, is in
-the same direction. "But Mr. Lincoln's love of justice and fair play,"
-says Mr. Gillespie, "was his predominating trait. I have often listened
-to him when I thought he would certainly state his case out of Court.
-It was not in his nature to assume, or to attempt to bolster up, a false
-position. He would abandon his case first. He did so in the case of
-Buckmaster for the use of Denham vs. Beenes and Arthur, in our Supreme
-Court, in which I happened to be opposed to him. Another gentleman, less
-fastidious, took Mr. Lincoln's place, and gained the case."
-
-In the Patterson trial--a case of murder which attained some
-celebrity--in Champaign County, Ficklin and Lamon prosecuted, and
-Lincoln and Swett defended. After hearing the testimony, Mr. Lincoln
-felt himself morally paralyzed, and said, "Swett, the man is guilty:
-you defend him; I can't." They got a fee of five hundred or a thousand
-dollars; of which Mr. Lincoln declined to take a cent, on the ground
-that it justly belonged to Swett, whose ardor, courage, and eloquence
-had saved the guilty man from justice.
-
-It was probably his deep sense of natural justice, his irresistible
-propensity to get at the equities of the matter in hand, that made him
-so utterly impatient of all arbitrary or technical rules. Of these he
-knew very little,--less than an average student of six months: "Hence,"
-says Judge Davis, "a child could make use of the simple and technical
-rules, the means and mode of getting at justice, better than Lincoln
-could." "In this respect," says Mr. Herndon, "I really think he was very
-deficient."
-
-Sangamon County was originally in the First Judicial Circuit; but under
-the Constitution of 1848, and sundry changes in the Judiciary Acts, it
-became the Eighth Circuit. It was in 1848 that Judge Davis came on the
-bench for the first time. The circuit was a very large one, containing
-fourteen counties, and comprising the central portion of the State.
-Lincoln travelled all over it--first with Judge Treat and then with
-Judge Davis--twice every year, and was thus absent from Springfield
-and home nearly, if not quite, six months out of every twelve. "In my
-opinion," says Judge Davis, "Lincoln was as happy as _he_ could be,
-on this circuit, and happy in no other place. This was his place of
-enjoyment. As a general rule, of a Saturday evening, when all the
-lawyers would go home [the judge means those who were close enough to
-get there and back by the time their cases were called] and see their
-families and friends, Lincoln would refuse to go." "It was on this
-circuit," we are told by an authority equally high, "that he shone as a
-_nisi prius_ lawyer; it was on this circuit Lincoln thought, spoke, and
-acted; it was on this circuit that the people met, greeted, and cheered
-on the man; it was on this circuit that he cracked his jokes, told his
-stories, made his money, and was happy as nowhere in the world beside."
-When, in 1857, Sangamon County was cut off from the Eighth Circuit by
-the act creating the Eighteenth, "Mr. Lincoln would still continue with
-Judge Davis, first finishing his business in Sangamon."
-
-On his return from one of these long journeys, he found that Mrs.
-Lincoln had taken advantage of his absence, and, with the connivance and
-assistance of his neighbor, Gourly, had placed a second story and a new
-roof on his house. Approaching it for the first time after this rather
-startling alteration, and pretending not to recognize it, he called to
-a man on the street, "Stranger, can you tell me where Lincoln lives? He
-used to live here."
-
-When Mr. Lincoln first began to "ride the circuit," he was too poor to
-own horseflesh or vehicle, and was compelled to borrow from his friends.
-But in due time he became the proprietor of a horse, which he fed and
-groomed himself, and to which he was very much attached. On this animal
-he would set out from home, to be gone for weeks together, with no
-baggage but a pair of saddle-bags, containing a change of linen, and
-an old cotton umbrella, to shelter him from sun or rain. When he got a
-little more of this world's goods, he set up a one-horse buggy,--a
-very sorry and shabby-looking affair, which he generally used when the
-weather promised to be bad. But the lawyers were always glad to see him,
-and the landlords hailed his coming with pleasure. Yet he was one of
-those peculiar, gentle, uncomplaining men, whom those servants of
-the public who keep "hotels" would generally put off with the most
-indifferent accommodations. It was a very significant remark of a lawyer
-thoroughly acquainted with his habits and disposition, that "Lincoln
-was never seated next the landlord at a crowded table, and never got a
-chicken liver or the best cut from the roast." If rooms were scarce, and
-one, two, three, or four gentlemen were required to lodge together, in
-order to accommodate some surly man who "stood upon his rights," Lincoln
-was sure to be one of the unfortunates. Yet he loved the life, and never
-went home without reluctance.
-
-From Mr. S. O. Parks of Lincoln, himself a most reputable lawyer, we
-have two or three anecdotes, which we give in his own language:--
-
-"I have often said, that, for a man who was for the quarter of a century
-both a lawyer and a politician, he was the most honest man I ever knew.
-He was not only morally honest, but intellectually so. He could not
-reason falsely: if he attempted it, he failed. In politics he never
-would try to mislead. At the bar, when he thought he was wrong, he was
-the weakest lawyer I ever saw. You know this better than I do. But I
-will give you an example or two which occurred in this county, and which
-you may not remember.
-
-"A man was indicted for larceny: Lincoln, Young, and myself defended
-him. Lincoln was satisfied by the evidence that he was guilty, and ought
-to be convicted. He called Young and myself aside, and said, 'If you can
-say any thing for the man, do it. I can't: if I attempt, the jury will
-see that I think he is guilty, and convict him, of course.' The case was
-submitted by us to the jury without a word. The jury failed to agree;
-and before the next term the man died. Lincoln's honesty undoubtedly
-saved him from the penitentiary.
-
-"In a closely-contested civil suit, Lincoln had proved an account for
-his client, who was, though he did not know it at the time, a very
-slippery fellow. The opposing attorney then proved a receipt clearly
-covering the entire cause of action. By the time he was through, Lincoln
-was missing. The court sent for him to the hotel. 'Tell the judge,' said
-he, 'that I can't come: _my hands are dirty; and I came over to clean
-them!_'
-
-"In the case of Harris and Jones vs. Buckles, Harris wanted Lincoln to
-assist you and myself. His answer was characteristic: 'Tell Harris it's
-no use to _waste money on me_ in that case: he'll get beat.'"
-
-Mr. Lincoln was prone to adventures in which _pigs_ were the other
-party. The reader has already enjoyed one from the pen of Miss Owen; and
-here is another, from an incorrigible humorist, a lawyer, named J. H.
-Wickizer:--
-
-"In 1855 Mr. Lincoln and myself were travelling by buggy from Woodford
-County Court to Bloomington, 111.; and, in passing through a little
-grove, we suddenly heard the terrific squealing of a little pig near by
-us. Quick as thought Mr. Lincoln leaped out of the buggy, seized a club,
-pounced upon the old sow, and beat her lustily: she was in the act of
-eating one of her young ones. Thus he saved the pig, and then remarked,
-'By jing! the unnatural old brute shall not devour her own progeny!'
-This, I think, was his first proclamation of freedom."
-
-But Mr. Wickizer gives us another story, which most happily illustrates
-the readiness of Mr. Lincoln's wit:--
-
-"In 1858, in the court at Bloomington, Mr. Lincoln was engaged in a case
-of no great importance; but the attorney on the other side, Mr. S------,
-a young lawyer of fine abilities (now a judge of the Supreme Court of
-the State), was always very sensitive about being beaten, and in this
-case manifested unusual zeal and interest. The case lasted until late
-at night, when it was finally submitted to the jury. Mr. S------spent a
-sleepless night in anxiety, and early next morning learned, to his great
-chagrin, that he had lost the case. Mr. Lincoln met him at the Court
-House, and asked him what had become of his case. With lugubrious
-countenance and melancholy tone, Mr. S-said, 'It's gone to hell.'--'Oh,
-well!' replied Lincoln, 'then you'll see it again!'"
-
-Although the humble condition and disreputable character of some of his
-relations and connections were the subject of constant annoyance and
-most painful reflections, he never tried to shake them off, and
-never abandoned them when they needed his assistance. A son of his
-foster-brother, John Johnston, was arrested in------County for stealing
-a watch.
-
-Mr. Lincoln went to the same town to address a mass meeting while the
-poor boy was in jail. He waited until the dusk of the evening, and then,
-in company with Mr. H. C. Whitney, visited the prison. "Lincoln knew he
-was guilty," says Mr. Whitney, "and was very deeply affected,--more
-than I ever saw him. At the next term of the court, upon the State's
-Attorney's consent, Lincoln and I went to the prosecution witnesses, and
-got them to come into open court, and state that they did not care to
-presecute." The boy was released; and that evening, as the lawyers were
-leaving the town in their buggies, Mr. Lincoln was observed to get down
-from his, and walk back a short distance to a poor, distressed-looking
-young man who stood by the roadside. It was young Johnston. Mr. Lincoln
-engaged for a few moments apparently in earnest and nervous conversation
-with him, then giving him some money, and returning to his buggy, drove
-on.
-
-A thousand tales could be told of Mr. Lincoln's amusing tricks and
-eccentricities on these quiet rides from county to county, in company
-with judges and lawyers, and of his quaint sayings and curious doings at
-the courts in these Western villages. But, much against our will, we are
-compelled to make selections, and present a few only, which rest upon
-the most undoubted authority.
-
-It is well known that he used to carry with him, on what Mr. Stuart
-calls "the tramp around the circuit," ordinary school-books,--from
-Euclid down to an English grammar,--and study them as he rode along, or
-at intervals of leisure in the towns where he stopped. He supplemented
-these with a copy of Shakspeare, got much of it by rote, and recited
-long passages from it to any chance companion by the way.
-
-He was intensely fond of cutting wood with an axe; and he was often
-seen to jump from his buggy, seize an axe out of the hands of a roadside
-chopper, take his place on the log in the most approved fashion, and,
-with his tremendous long strokes, cut it in two before the man could
-recover from his surprise.
-
-It was this free life that charmed him, and reconciled him to existence.
-Here he forgot the past, with all its cruelties and mortifications:
-here were no domestic afflictions to vex his weary spirit and to try his
-magnanimous heart.
-
-"After he had returned from Congress," says Judge Davis, "and had lost
-his practice, Goodrich of Chicago proposed to him to open a law-office
-in Chicago, and go into partnership with him. Goodrich had an extensive
-practice there. Lincoln refused to accept, and gave as a reason, that he
-tended to consumption; that, if he went to Chicago, he would have to
-sit down and study hard, and it would kill him; that he would rather go
-around the circuit--the Eighth Judicial Circuit--than to sit down and
-die in Chicago."
-
-In the summer of 1857, at a camp-meeting in Mason County, one Metzgar
-was most brutally murdered. The affray took place about half a mile
-from the place of worship, near some wagons loaded with liquors and
-provisions. Two men, James H. Norris and William D. Armstrong, were
-indicted for the crime. Norris was tried in Mason County, convicted of
-manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of eight
-years. But Armstrong, the popular feeling being very high against him in
-Mason, "took a change of venue to Cass County," and was there tried
-(at Beardstown) in the spring of 1858. Hitherto Armstrong had had
-the services of two able counsellors, but now their efforts were
-supplemented by those of a most determined and zealous volunteer.
-
-Armstrong was the son of Jack and Hannah Armstrong of New Salem, the
-child whom Mr. Lincoln had rocked in the cradle while Mrs. Armstrong
-attended to other household duties. His life was now in imminent peril:
-he seemed clearly guilty; and, if he was to be saved, it must be by the
-interposition of some power which could deface that fatal record in the
-Norris trial, refute the senses of witnesses, and make a jury forget
-themselves and their oaths. Old Hannah had one friend whom she devoutly
-believed could accomplish this. She wrote to Mr. Lincoln, and he replied
-that he would defend the boy. (She says she has lost his letter.)
-Afterwards she visited him at Springfield, and prepared him for the
-event as well as she could, with an understanding weakened by a long
-strain of severe and almost hopeless reflection.
-
-When the trial came on, Mr. Lincoln appeared for the defence. His
-colleague, Mr. Walker, had possessed him of the record in the Norris
-case; and, upon close and anxious examination, he was satisfied that the
-witnesses could, by a well-sustained and judicious cross-examination, be
-made to contradict each other in some important particulars. Mr. Walker
-"handled" the victims of this friendly design, while Mr. Lincoln sat
-by and suggested questions. Nevertheless, to the unskilled mind, the
-testimony seemed to be absolutely conclusive against the prisoner, and
-every word of it fell like a new sentence of death. Norris had beaten
-the murdered man with a club from behind, while Armstrong had pounded
-him in the face with a slung-shot deliberately prepared for the
-occasion; and, according to the medical men, either would have been
-fatal without the other. But the witness whose testimony bore hardest
-upon Armstrong swore that the crime was committed about eleven o'clock
-at night, and that he saw the blows struck by the light of a moon nearly
-full, and standing in the heavens about where the sun would stand at
-ten o'clock in the morning. It is easy to pervert and even to destroy
-evidence like this; and here Mr. Lincoln saw an opportunity which nobody
-had dreamed of on the Norris trial. He handed to an officer of the court
-an almanac, and told him to give it back to him when he should call for
-it in presence of the jury. It was an almanac of the year previous to
-the murder.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln," says Mr. Walker, "made the closing argument for the
-defence. At first he spoke slowly, and carefully reviewed the whole
-testimony,--picked it all to pieces, and showed that the man had not
-received his wounds at the place or time named by the witnesses, _but
-afterwards, and at the hands of some one else_" "The evidence bore
-heavily upon his client," says Mr. Shaw, one of the counsel for the
-prosecution. "There were many witnesses, and each one seemed to add one
-more cord that seemed to bind him down, until Mr. Lincoln was something
-in the situation of Gulliver after his first sleep in Lilliput. But,
-when he came to talk to the jury (that was always his forte), he
-resembled Gulliver again. He skilfully untied here and there a knot,
-and loosened here and there a peg, until, fairly getting warmed up,
-he raised himself in his full power, and shook the arguments of his
-opponents from him as if they were cobwebs." In due time he called for
-the almanac, and easily proved by it, that, at the time the main witness
-declared the moon was shining in great splendor, there was, in fact, no
-moon at all, but black darkness over the whole scene. In the "roar
-of laughter" and undisguised astonishment succeeding this apparent
-demonstration, court, jury, and counsel forgot to examine that seemingly
-conclusive almanac, and let it pass without a question concerning its
-genuineness.1
-
-In conclusion, Mr. Lincoln drew a touching picture of Jack Armstrong
-(whose gentle spirit alas! had gone to that place of coronation for
-the meek), and Hannah,--this sweet-faced old lady with the silver
-locks,--welcoming to their humble cabin a strange and penniless boy,
-to whom Jack, with that Christian benevolence which distinguished him
-through life, became as a father, and the guileless Hannah even more
-than a mother. The boy, he said, stood before them pleading for the life
-of his benefactors' son,--the staff of the widow's declining years.
-
- 1 Mr. E. J. Loomis, assistant in charge of the "Nautical
- Almanac" office, Washington, D.C., under date of Aug.
- 1,1871, says,--
-
- "Referring to the 'Nautical Almanac' for 1857, I find, that,
- between the hours of ten and eleven o'clock on the night of
- the 29th of August, 1857, the moon was within one hour of
- setting.
-
- "The computed time of its setting on that night is 11 h. 57
- m.,--three minutes before midnight.
-
- "The moon was only two days past its first quarter, and
- could hardly be mistaken for 'nearly full.'"
-
- "In the case of the People vs. Armstrong, I was assisting
- prosecuting counsel. The prevailing belief at that time, and
- I may also say at the present, in Cass County, was as
- follows:--
-
- "Mr. Lincoln, previous to the trial, handed an almanac of
- the year previous to the murder to an officer of the court,
- stating that he might call for one during the trial, and, if
- he did, to send him that one. An important witness for the
- People had fixed the time of the murder to be in the night,
- near a camp-meeting; 'that the moon was about in the same
- place that the sun would be at ten o'clock in the morning,
- and was nearly full,'therefore he could see plainly, &c. At
- the proper time, Mr. Lincoln called to the officer for an
- almanac; and the one prepared for the occasion was shown by
- Mr. 'Lincoln, he reading from it at the time referred to by
- the witness 'The moon had already set;' that in the roar of
- laughter the jury and opposing counsel forgot to look at the
- date. Mr. Carter, a lawyer of this city (Beardstown), who
- was present at, but not engaged in, the Armstrong case, says
- he is satisfied that the almanac was of the year previous,
- and thinks he examined it at the time. This was the general
- impression in the court-room. I have called on the sheriff
- who officiated at that time (James A. Dick), who says that
- he saw a 'Goudy's Almanac' lying upon Mr. Lincoln's table
- during the trial, and that Mr. Lincoln took it out of his
- own pocket. Mr. Dick does not know the date of it. I have
- seen several of the petit jurymen who sat upon the case, who
- only recollect that the almanac floored the witness. But one
- of the jurymen, the foreman, Mr. Milton Logan, says that it
- was the one for the year of the murder, and no trick about
- it; that he is willing to make an affidavit that he examined
- it as to date, and that it was an almanac of the year of the
- murder. My own opinion is, that when an almanac was called
- for by Mr. Lincoln, two were brought, one of the year of the
- murder, and one of the year previous; that Mr. Lincoln was
- entirely innocent of any deception in the matter. I the more
- think this, from the fact that Armstrong was not cleared by
- any want of testimony against him, but by the irresistible
- appeal of Mr. Lincoln in his favor."--Henry Shaw.
-
-"The last fifteen minutes of his speech," his colleague declares, "was
-as eloquent as I ever heard; and such the power and earnestness with
-which he spoke to that jury, that all sat as if entranced, and, when
-he was through, found relief in a gush of tears." "He took the jury by
-storm," says one of the prosecutors. "There were tears in Mr. Lincoln's
-eyes while he spoke, but they were genuine. His sympathies were fully
-enlisted in favor of the young man, and his terrible sincerity could
-not help but arouse the same passion in the jury. I have said a hundred
-times that it was Lincoln's speech that saved that criminal from the
-gallows." In the language of Hannah, who sat by enchanted, "he told the
-stories about our first acquaintance,--what I did for him, and how I did
-it;" and she thinks it "was truly eloquent."
-
-"As to the trial," continues Hannah, "Lincoln said to me, 'Hannah, your
-son will be cleared before sundown.' He and the other lawyers addressed
-the jury, and closed the case. I went down at Thompson's pasture: Stator
-came to me, and told me soon that my son was cleared and a free man.
-I went up to the Court House: the jury shook hands with me, so did the
-Court, so did Lincoln. We were all affected, and tears, streamed down
-Lincoln's eyes. He then remarked to me, 'Hannah, what did I tell you? I
-pray to God that William may be a good boy hereafter; that this lesson
-may prove in the end a good lesson to him and to all.'... After the
-trial was over, Lincoln came down to where I was in Beardstown. I asked
-him what he charged me; told him I was poor. He said, 'Why, Hannah, I
-sha'n't charge you a cent,--never. Any thing I can do for you I will do
-for you willing and freely without charges.' He wrote to me about some
-land which some men were trying to get from me, and said, 'Hannah, they
-can't get your land. Let them try it in the Circuit Court, and then you
-appeal it; bring it to Supreme Court, and I and Herndon will attend to
-it for nothing.'"
-
-This boy William enlisted in the Union army. But in 1863 Hannah
-concluded she "wanted" him. She does not say that William was laboring
-under any disability, or that he had any legal right to his discharge.
-She merely "wanted" him, and wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect. He
-replied promptly by telegraph:--
-
-September, 1863.
-
-Mrs. Hannah Armstrong,--I have just ordered the discharge of your boy
-William, as you say, now at Louisville, Ky.
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-For many years Mr. Lincoln was the attorney of the Illinois Central
-Railway Company; and, having rendered in some recent causes most
-important and laborious services, he presented a bill in 1857 for five
-thousand dollars. He pressed for his money, and was referred to some
-under-official who was charged with that class of business. Mr. Lincoln
-would probably have modified his bill, which seemed exorbitant as
-charges went among country lawyers, but the company treated him with
-such rude insolence, that he contented himself with a formal demand,
-and then immediately instituted suit on the claim. The case was tried at
-Bloomington before Judge Davis; and, upon affidavits of N. B. Judd, O.
-H.
-
-Browning, S. T. Logan, and Archy Williams, respecting the value of the
-services, was decided in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment given for
-five thousand dollars. This was much more money than Mr. Lincoln had
-ever had at one time.
-
-In the summer of 1859 Mr. Lincoln went to Cincinnati to argue the
-celebrated McCormick reaping-machine case. Mr. Edwin M. Stanton, whom he
-never saw before, was one of his colleagues, and the leading counsel
-in the case; and although the other gentlemen engaged received him with
-proper respect, Mr. Stanton treated him with such marked and habitual
-discourtesy, that he was compelled to withdraw from the case. When he
-reached home he said that he had "never been so brutally treated as by
-that man Stanton;" and the facts justified the statement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-WE have seen already, from one of his letters to Mr. Herndon, that Mr.
-Lincoln was personally quite willing to be a candidate for Congress the
-second time. But his "honor" forbade: he had given pledges, and made
-private arrangements with other gentlemen, to prevent "the district
-from going to the enemy." Judge Logan was nominated in his place; and,
-although personally one of the most popular men in Illinois, he was
-sadly beaten, in consequence of the record which the Whig party had made
-"against the war." It was well as it was; for, if Mr. Lincoln had been
-the candidate, he would have been still more disastrously defeated,
-since it was mainly the votes he had given in Congress which Judge Logan
-found it so difficult to explain and impossible to defend.
-
-[Illustration: Stephen T. Logan 371]
-
-Mr. Lincoln was an applicant, and a very urgent one, for the office of
-Commissioner of the General Land-Office in the new Whig administration.
-He moved his friends to urge him in the newspapers, and wrote to some
-of his late associates in Congress (among them Mr. Schenck of Ohio),
-soliciting their support. But it was all of no avail; Mr. Justin
-Butterfield (also an Illinoisian) beat him in the race to Washington,
-and got the appointment. It is said by one of Mr. Lincoln's numerous
-biographers, that he often laughed over his failure to secure this great
-office, pretending to think it beneath his merits; but we can find no
-evidence of the fact alleged, and have no reason to believe it.
-
-Mr. Fillmore subsequently offered him the governorship of Oregon. The
-news reached him whilst away at court at Tremont or Bloomington. Mr.
-Stuart and others "coaxed him to take it;" the former insisting that
-Oregon would soon become a State, and he one of its senators. Mr.
-Lincoln saw it all, and said he would accept "if his wife would
-consent." But his wife "refused to do so;" and time has shown that she
-was right, as she usually was when it came to a question of practical
-politics.
-
-From the time of his retirement from Congress to 1854, when the repeal
-of the Missouri Compromise and the Kansas-Nebraska Bill broke the hollow
-truce of 1856, which Mr. Clay and his compeers fondly regarded as a
-peace, Mr. Lincoln's life was one of comparative political inactivity.
-He did not believe that the sectional agitations could be permanently
-stilled by the devices which then seemed effectual to the foremost
-statesmen of either party and of both sections. But he was not disposed
-to be forward in the renewal of them. He probably hoped against
-conviction that time would allay the animosities which endangered at
-once the Union and the principles of free government, which had thus far
-preserved a precarious existence among the North American States.
-
-Coming home to Springfield from the Tremont court in 1850 in company
-with Mr. Stuart, he said, "The time will come when we must all be
-Democrats or Abolitionists. When that time comes, my mind is made up.
-The 'slavery question' can't be compromised."--"So is my mind made up,"
-replied his equally firm companion; and at that moment neither doubted
-on which side he would find the other when the great struggle took
-place.
-
-The Whig party everywhere, in Congress and in their conventions, local
-and national, accepted the compromise of 1850 under the leadership of
-Mr. Clay and Mr. Webster. Mr. Lincoln did the same; for, from the hour
-that party lines were distinctly and closely drawn in his State, he
-was an unswerving party man. But although he said nothing against those
-measures, and much in favor of them, it is clear that he accepted the
-result with reluctance. He spoke out his disapproval of the Fugitive
-Slave Law as it was passed, believing and declaring wherever he went,
-that a negro man apprehended as a slave should have the privilege of a
-trial by jury, instead of the summary processes provided by the law.
-
-"Mr. Lincoln and I were going to Petersburg in 1850, I think," says Mr.
-Herndon. "The political world was dead: the compromises of 1850 seemed
-to settle the negro's fate. Things were stagnant; and all hope for
-progress in the line of freedom seemed to be crushed out. Lincoln was
-speculating with me about the deadness of things, and the despair which
-arose out of it, and deeply regretting that his human strength and
-power were limited by his nature to rouse and stir up the world. He said
-gloomily, despairingly, sadly, 'How hard, oh! how hard it is to die and
-leave one's country no better than if one had never lived for it! The
-world is dead to hope, deaf to its own death-struggle, made known by a
-universal cry, What is to be done? Is any thing to be done? Who can
-do any thing? and how is it to be done? Did you ever think of these
-things?'"
-
-In 1850 Mr. Lincoln again declined to be a candidate for Congress; and a
-newspaper called "The Tazewell Mirror" persisting in naming him for
-the place, he published a letter, refusing most emphatically to be
-considered a candidate. The concluding sentence alleged that there were
-many men among the Whigs of the district who would be as likely as he to
-bring "the district right side up."
-
-Until the death of his excellent step-mother, Sarah Bush Lincoln, Mr.
-Lincoln never considered himself free for a moment from the obligation
-to look after and care for her family. She had made herself his mother;
-and he regarded her and her children as near relatives,--much nearer
-than any of the Hankses.
-
-The limit of Thomas Lincoln's life was rapidly approaching. Mrs.
-Chapman, his step-daughter, wrote Mr. Lincoln to that effect; and so did
-John Johnston. He began to fear that the straitened circumstances of the
-household might make them think twice before they sent for a doctor, or
-procured other comforts for the poor old man, which he needed, perhaps,
-more than drugs. He was too busy to visit the dying man, but sent him
-a kind message, and directed the family to get whatever was wanted upon
-his credit.
-
-Springfield, Jan. 12,1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--On the day before yesterday I received a letter from
-Harriet, written at Greenup. She says she has just returned from your
-house, and that father is very low, and will hardly recover. She also
-says that you have written me two letters, and that, although you do not
-expect me to come now, you wonder that I do not write. I received both
-your letters; and, although I have not answered them, it is not because
-I have forgotten them, or not been interested about them, but because
-it appeared to me I could write nothing which could do any good. You
-already know I desire that neither father nor mother shall be in want of
-any comfort, either in health or sickness, while they live; and I feel
-sure you have not failed to use my name, if necessary, to procure a
-doctor or any thing else for father in his present sickness. My business
-is such that I could hardly leave home now, if it were not, as it is,
-that my own wife is sick a-bed. (It is a case of baby sickness, and, I
-suppose, is not dangerous.) I sincerely hope father may yet recover
-his health; but, at all events, tell him to remember to call upon and
-confide in our great and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away
-from him in any extremity. He notes the fall of a sparrow, and numbers
-the hairs of our heads; and he will not forget the dying man who puts
-his trust in him. Say to him, that, if we could meet now, it is doubtful
-whether it would not be more painful than pleasant; but that, if it be
-his lot to go now, he will soon have a joyous meeting with loved ones
-gone before, and where the rest of us, through the help of God, hope ere
-long to join them.
-
-Write me again when you receive this.
-
-Affectionately,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Before and after the death of Thomas Lincoln, John Johnston and Mr.
-Lincoln had a somewhat spirited correspondence regarding John's present
-necessities and future plans. John was idle, thriftless, penniless, and
-as much disposed to rove as poor old Tom had been in his earliest and
-worst days. This lack of character and enterprise on John's part added
-seriously to Mr. Lincoln's anxieties concerning his step-mother, and
-greatly embarrassed his attempts to provide for her. At length he
-wrote John the following energetic exhortation, coupled with a most
-magnanimous pecuniary offer. It is the letter promised in a previous
-chapter, and makes John an intimate acquaintance of the reader:--
-
-Dear Johnston,--Your request for eighty dollars, I do not think it
-best to comply with now. At the various times when I have helped you a
-little, you have said to me, "We can get along very well now;" but in a
-very short time I find you in the same difficulty again. Now, this can
-only happen by some defect in your conduct. What that defect is, I
-think I know. You are not _lazy_, and still you are an _idler_. I doubt
-whether, since I saw you, you have done a good whole day's work in any
-one day. You do not very much dislike to work, and still you do not work
-much, merely because it does not seem to you that you could get much for
-it. This habit of uselessly wasting time is the whole difficulty; and it
-is vastly important to you, and still more so to your children, that you
-should break the habit. It is more important to them, because they have
-longer to live, and can keep out of an idle habit before they are in it
-easier than they can get out after they are in.
-
-You are now in need of some money; and what I propose is, that you shall
-go to work, "tooth and nail," for somebody who will give you money for
-it. Let father and your boys take charge of things at home, prepare for
-a crop, and make the crop, and you go to work for the best money-wages,
-or in discharge of any debt you owe, that you can get; and, to secure
-you a fair reward for your labor, I now promise you, that, for every
-dollar you will, between this and the first of next May, get for your
-own labor, either in money or as your own indebtedness, I will then give
-you one other dollar. By this, if you hire yourself at ten dollars a
-month, from me you will get ten more, making twenty dollars a month for
-your work. In this I do not mean you shall go off to St. Louis, or the
-lead-mines, or the gold-mines in California; but I mean for you to go at
-it for the best wages you can get close to home, in Cole's County. Now,
-if you will do this, you will be soon out of debt, and, what is better,
-you will have a habit that will keep you from getting in debt again.
-But, if I should now clear you out of debt, next year you would be just
-as deep in as ever. You say you would almost give your place in heaven
-for $70 or $80. Then you value your place in heaven very cheap; for I am
-sure you can, with the offer I make, get the seventy or eighty dollars
-for four or five months' work. You say, if I will furnish you the money,
-you will deed me the land, and, if you don't pay the money back, you
-will deliver possession. Nonsense! If you can't now live with the land,
-how will you then live without it? You have always been kind to me,
-and I do not mean to be unkind to you. On the contrary, if you will but
-follow my advice, you will find it worth more than eighty times eighty
-dollars to you.
-
-Affectionately your brother,
-
-A. Lincoln
-
-Again he wrote:--
-
-Shelbyville, Nov. 4, 1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--When I came into Charleston day before yesterday, I
-learned that you are anxious to sell the land where you live, and move
-to Missouri. I have been thinking of this ever since, and cannot but
-think such a notion is utterly foolish. What can you do in Missouri
-better than here? Is the land any richer? Can you there, any more than
-here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work? Will anybody there,
-any more than here, do your work for you? If you intend to go to work,
-there is no better place than right where you are: if you do not intend
-to go to work, you cannot get along anywhere. Squirming and crawling
-about from place to place can do no good. You have raised no crop this
-year; and what you really want is to sell the land, get the money, and
-spend it. Part with the land you have, and, my life upon it, you will
-never after own a spot big enough to bury you in. Half you will get for
-the land you will spend in moving to Missouri, and the other half you
-will eat and drink and wear out, and no foot of land will be bought.
-Now, I feel it is my duty to have no hand in such a piece of foolery.
-I feel that it is so even on your own account, and particularly on
-_mother's_ account. The eastern forty acres I intend to keep for mother
-while she lives: if you _will not cultivate it_, it will rent for enough
-to support her; at least, it will rent for something. Her dower in the
-other two forties she can let you have, and no thanks to me. Now, do not
-misunderstand this letter: I do not write it in any unkindness. I write
-it in order, if possible, to get you to _face_ the truth, which truth
-is, you are destitute because you have idled away all your time. Your
-thousand pretences for not getting along better are all nonsense: they
-deceive nobody but yourself. _Go to work_ is the only cure for your
-case.
-
-A word to mother. Chapman tells me he wants you to go and live with
-him. If I were you, I would try it a while. If you get tired of it (as I
-think you will not), you can return to your own home. Chapman feels
-very kindly to you; and I have no doubt he will make your situation very
-pleasant.
-
-Sincerely your son,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-And again:--
-
-Shelbyville, Nov. 9,1851.
-
-Dear Brother,--When I wrote you before, I had not received your letter.
-I still think as I did; but if the land can be sold so that I get three
-hundred dollars to put to interest for mother, I will not object, if
-she does not. But, before I will make a deed, the money must be had, or
-secured beyond all doubt, at ten per cent.
-
-As to Abram, I do not want him, _on my own account_; but I understand he
-wants to live with me, so that he can go to school, and get a fair start
-in the world, which I very much wish him to have. When I reach home, if
-I can make it convenient to take, I will take him, provided there is no
-mistake between us as to the object and terms of my taking him.
-
-In haste as ever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-On the 1st of July, 1852, Mr. Lincoln was chosen by a public meeting of
-his fellow-citizens at Springfield to deliver in their hearing a eulogy
-upon the life and character of Henry Clay; and on the 16th of the same
-month he complied with their request. Such addresses are usually called
-orations; but this one scarcely deserved the name. He made no effort to
-be eloquent, and in no part of it was he more than ordinarily animated.
-It is true that he bestowed great praise upon Mr. Clay; but it was
-bestowed in cold phrases and a tame style, wholly unlike the bulk of
-his previous compositions. In truth, Mr. Lincoln was never so devoted a
-follower of Mr. Clay as some of his biographers have represented him. He
-was for another man in 1836, most probably for another in 1840, and very
-ardently for another in 1848. Dr. Holland credits him with a visit to
-Mr. Clay at Ashland, and an interview which effectually cooled his ardor
-in behalf of the brilliant statesman. But, in fact, Mr. Lincoln never
-troubled himself to make such a pilgrimage to see or hear any man,--much
-less Mr. Clay. None of his friends--Judge Davis, Mr. Herndon, Mr. Speed,
-or any one else, so far as we are able to ascertain--ever heard of the
-visit. If it had been made at any time after 1838, it could scarcely
-have been concealed from Mr. Speed; and we are compelled to place it
-along with the multitude of groundless stories which have found currency
-with Mr. Lincoln's biographers.
-
-If the address upon Clay is of any historical value at all, it is
-because it discloses Mr. Lincoln's unreserved agreement with Mr. Clay in
-his opinions concerning slavery and the proper method of extinguishing
-it. They both favored gradual emancipation by the voluntary action of
-the people of the Slave States, and the transportation of the whole
-negro population to Africa as rapidly as they should be freed from
-service to their masters: it was a favorite scheme with Mr. Lincoln
-then, as it was long after he became President of the United States.
-"Compensated" and "voluntary emancipation," on the one hand, and
-"colonization" of the freedmen on the other, were essential parts
-of every "plan" which sprung out of his own individual mind. On this
-occasion, after quoting Mr. Clay, he said, "This suggestion of the
-possible ultimate redemption of the African race and African continent
-was made twenty-five years ago. Every succeeding year has added strength
-to the hope of its realization. May it indeed be realized! Pharaoh's
-country was cursed with plagues, and his hosts were drowned in the Red
-Sea, for striving to retain a captive people who had already served them
-more than four hundred years. May like disasters never befall us! If, as
-the friends of colonization hope, the present and coming generations of
-our countrymen shall by any means succeed in freeing our land from the
-dangerous presence of slavery, and at the same time restoring a captive
-people to their long-lost fatherland, with bright prospects for the
-future, and this, too, so gradually that neither races nor individuals
-shall have suffered by the change, it will indeed be a glorious
-consummation. And if to such a consummation the efforts of Mr. Clay
-shall have contributed, it will be what he most ardently wished; and
-none of his labors will have been more valuable to his country and his
-kind."
-
-During the campaign of 1852, Judge Douglas took the stump for Pierce
-"in twenty-eight States out of the thirty-one." His first speech was
-at Richmond, Va. It was published extensively throughout the Union, and
-especially in Illinois. Mr. Lincoln felt an ardent desire to answer it,
-and, according to his own account, got the "permission" of the "Scott
-Club" of Springfield to make the speech under its auspices. It was a
-very poor effort. If it was distinguished by one quality above another,
-it was by its attempts at humor; and all those attempts were strained
-and affected, as well as very coarse. He displayed a jealous and
-petulant temper from the first sentence to the last, wholly beneath the
-dignity of the occasion and the importance of the topic. Considered as
-a whole, it may be said that none of his public performances was more
-unworthy of its really noble author than this one. The reader has
-doubtless observed in the course of this narrative, as he will in
-the future, that Mr. Douglas's great success in obtaining place and
-distinction was a standing offence to Mr. Lincoln's self-love and
-individual ambition. He was intensely jealous of him, and longed to
-pull him down, or outstrip him in the race for popular favor, which
-they united in considering "the chief end of man." Some of the first
-sentences of this speech before the "Scott Club" betray this feeling
-in a most unmistakable and painful manner. "This speech [that of Mr.
-Douglas at Richmond] has been published with high commendations in at
-least one of the Democratic papers in this State, and I suppose it has
-been and will be in most of the others. When I first saw it and read it,
-I was reminded of old times, _when Judge Douglas was not so much greater
-man than all the rest of us, as he is now_,--of the Harrison campaign
-twelve years ago, when I used to hear and try to answer many of his
-speeches; and believing that the Richmond speech, though marked with the
-same species of 'shirks and quirks' as the old ones, was not marked with
-any greater ability, I was seized with a strange inclination to attempt
-an answer to it; and this inclination it was that prompted me to seek
-the privilege of addressing you on this occasion."
-
-In the progress of his remarks, Mr. Lincoln emphatically indorsed Mr.
-Douglas's great speech at Chicago in 1850, in defence of the compromise
-measures, which Mr. Lincoln pronounced the work of no party, but which,
-"for praise or blame," belonged to Whigs and Democrats alike. The rest
-of the address was devoted to a humorous critique upon Mr. Douglas's
-language in the Richmond speech, to ridicule of the campaign biographies
-of Pierce, to a description of Gens. Shields and Pierce wallowing in the
-ditch in the midst of a battle, and to a most remarkable account of a
-militia muster which might have been seen at Springfield a few years
-previous. Mr. Douglas had expressed great confidence in the sober
-judgment of the people, and at the same time had, rather inconsistently
-as well as indecently, declared that Providence had saved us from one
-military administration by the timely removal of Gen. Taylor. To this
-Mr. Lincoln alluded in his closing paragraph, which is given as a fair
-sample of the whole:--
-
-"Let us stand by our candidate as faithfully as he has always stood by
-our country, and I much doubt if we do not perceive a slight abatement
-in Judge Douglas's confidence in Providence, as well as in the people. I
-suspect that confidence is not more firmly fixed with the judge than
-it was with the old woman whose horse ran away with her in a buggy. She
-said she 'trusted in Providence till the britchin' broke, and then she
-didn't know what on airth to do.' The chance is, the judge will see the
-'britchin' broke;' and then he can at his leisure bewail the fate of
-Locofocoism as the victim of misplaced confidence."
-
-On the 4th of January, 1854, Mr. Douglas, Chairman of the Committee
-on Territories, of the Senate of the United States, reported a bill
-to establish a territorial government in Nebraska. This bill contained
-nothing in relation to the Missouri Compromise, which still remained
-upon the statute-book, although the principle on which it was based had
-been violated in the Compromise legislation of 1850. A Whig Senator from
-Kentucky gave notice, that, when the Committee's bill came before the
-Senate, he would move an amendment repealing the Missouri Compromise.
-With this admonition in mind, the Committee instructed Mr. Douglas to
-report a substitute, which he did on the 23d of the same month. The
-substitute made two Territories out of Nebraska, and called one of them
-Kansas. It annulled the Missouri Compromise, forbade its application to
-Kansas, Nebraska, or any other territory, and, as amended and finally
-passed, fixed the following rules:... "It being the true intent and
-meaning of this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or
-State, nor to exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
-perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their
-own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States." Mr.
-Douglas had long since denounced his imprecations upon "the ruthless
-hand" that should disturb that ancient compact of peace between the
-sections; and now he put forth his own ingenious hand to do the deed,
-and to take the curse, in both of which he was eminently successful. Not
-that the Missouri Act may not have been repugnant to the Constitution,
-for no court had ever passed upon it; but it was enacted for a holy
-purpose, was venerable in age, was consecrated in the hearts of the
-people by the unsurpassed eloquence of the patriots of a previous
-generation, and having the authority of law, of reason, and of covenant,
-it had till then preserved the Union, as its authors designed it should;
-and, being in truth a sacred thing, it was not a proper subject for the
-"ruthless" interference of mere politicians, like those who now devoted
-it to destruction. If, upon a regularly heard and decided issue, the
-Supreme Court should declare it unconstitutional, the recision of the
-compact could be attributed to no party,--neither to slavery nor to
-antislavery,--and the peace of the country might still subsist. But
-its repeal by the party that did it--a coalition of Southern Whigs and
-Democrats with Northern Democrats--was evidence of a design to carry
-slavery into the region north of 36 deg. 30'; or the legislation was without
-a purpose at all. It was the first aggression of the South; but be
-it remembered in common justice, that she was tempted to it by the
-treacherous proffers of a restless but powerful Northern leader, who
-asked no recompense but her electoral votes. In due time he opened
-her eyes to the nature of the fraud; and, if he carried through the
-Kansas-Nebraska Act to catch the votes of the South in 1856, it cost him
-no inconvenience to give it a false and startling construction to catch
-the votes of the North in 1860. In the repeal of the Compromise, the
-Northern Democrats submitted with reluctance to the dictation of Douglas
-and the South. It was the great error of the party,--the one disastrous
-error of all its history. The party succeeded in 1856 only by the
-nomination of Mr. Buchanan, who was out of the country when the
-Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, and who was known to have opposed it.
-But the questions which grew out of it, the false and disingenuous
-construction of the act by its author, the slavery agitations in Kansas
-and throughout the country, disrupted the party at Charleston, and made
-possible Mr. Lincoln's election by a minority of the votes cast. And to
-the Whig party, whose Senators and Representatives from the South voted
-for the Douglas Bill in a body, the renewal of the slavery agitation,
-invited and insured by their action, was the signal of actual
-dissolution.
-
-Up to this date, Mr. Lincoln's views of slavery, and how they were
-formed, are as well known to the reader as they can be made known from
-the materials left behind for a history of them. It is clear that his
-_feelings_ on the subject were inspired by individual cases of apparent
-hardship which had come under his observation. John Hanks, on the last
-trip to New Orleans, was struck by Lincoln's peculiarly active sympathy
-for the servile race, and insists, that, upon sight of their wrongs,
-"the iron entered his heart." In a letter to Mr. Speed, which will
-shortly be presented, Mr. Lincoln confesses to a similar experience
-in 1841, and speaks with great bitterness of the pain which the actual
-presence of chained and manacled slaves had given him. Indeed, Mr.
-Lincoln was not an ardent sympathizer with sufferings of any sort,
-which he did not witness with the eye of flesh. His compassion might be
-stirred deeply by an object present, but never by an object absent and
-unseen. In the former case he would most likely extend relief, with
-little inquiry into the merits of the case, because, as he expressed it
-himself, it "took a pain out of his own heart;" and he devoutly believed
-that every such act of charity or mercy sprung from motives purely
-selfish. None of his public acts, either before or after he became
-President, exhibits any special tenderness for the African race, or
-any extraordinary commiseration of their lot. On the contrary, he
-invariably, in words and deeds, postponed the interests of the blacks to
-the interests of the whites, and expressly subordinated the one to the
-other. When he was compelled, by what he deemed an overruling necessity,
-founded on both military and political considerations, to declare the
-freedom of the public enemy's slaves, he did so with avowed reluctance,
-and took pains to have it understood that his resolution was in no wise
-affected by sentiment. He never at any time favored the admission of
-negroes into the body of electors, in his own State or in the States of
-the South. He claimed that those who were incidentally liberated by the
-Federal arms were poor-spirited, lazy, and slothful; that they could be
-made soldiers only by force, and willing laborers not at all; that they
-seemed to have no interest in the cause of their own race, but were as
-docile in the service of the Rebellion as the mules that ploughed the
-fields or drew the baggage-trains; and, as a people, were useful only to
-those who were at the same time their masters and the foes of those who
-sought their good. With such views honestly formed, it is no wonder that
-he longed to see them transported to Hayti, Central America, Africa, or
-anywhere, so that they might in no event, and in no way, participate in
-the government of his country. Accordingly, he was, from the beginning,
-as earnest a colonizationist as Mr. Clay, and, even during his
-Presidency, zealously and persistently devised schemes for the
-deportation of the negroes, which the latter deemed cruel and atrocious
-in the extreme. He believed, with his rival, that this was purely a
-"white man's government;" but he would have been perfectly willing to
-share its blessings with the black man, had he not been very certain
-that the blessings would disappear when divided with such a partner. He
-was no Abolitionist in the popular sense; did not want to break over the
-safeguards of the Constitution to interfere with slavery where it had
-a lawful existence; but, wherever his power rightfully extended, he was
-anxious that the negro should be protected, just as women and
-children and unnaturalized men are protected, in life, limb, property,
-reputation, and every thing that nature or law makes sacred. But this
-was all: he had no notion of extending to the negro the _privilege of
-governing_ him and other white men, by making him an elector. That was a
-political trust, an office to be exercised only by the superior race.
-
-It was therefore as a white man, and in the interests of white men,
-that he threw himself into the struggle to keep the blacks out of the
-Territories. He did not want them there either as slaves or freemen;
-but he wanted them less as slaves than as freemen. He perceived clearly
-enough the motives of the South in repealing the Missouri Compromise. It
-did, in fact, arouse him "like a fire-bell in the night." He felt that a
-great conflict impended; and, although he had as yet no idea that it was
-an "irrepressible conflict between opposing and enduring forces," which
-must end in making all free or all slave, he thought it was serious
-enough to demand his entire mind and heart; and he freely gave them
-both.
-
-Mr. Gillespie gives the substance of a conversation with him, which,
-judging from the context, must have taken place about this time.
-Prefacing with the remark that the slavery question was the only one "on
-which he (Mr. Lincoln) would become excited," he says,--
-
-"I recollect meeting with him once at Shelbyville, when he remarked that
-something must be done, or slavery would overrun the whole country. He
-said there were about six hundred thousand non-slaveholding whites
-in Kentucky to about thirty-three thousand slaveholders; that, in the
-convention then recently held, it was expected that the delegates would
-represent these classes about in proportion to their respective
-numbers; but, when the convention assembled, there was not a single
-representative of the non-slaveholding class: every one was in the
-interest of the slaveholders; 'and,' said he, 'the thing is spreading
-like wildfire over the country. In a few years we will be ready to
-accept the institution in Illinois, and the whole country will adopt
-it.' I asked him to what he attributed the change that was going on in
-public opinion. He said he had put that question to a Kentuckian shortly
-before, who answered by saying, 'You might have any amount of land,
-money in your pocket, or bank-stock, and, while travelling around,
-nobody would be any wiser; but, if you had a darkey trudging at your
-heels, everybody would see him, and know that you owned a slave.' 'It is
-the most glittering, ostentatious, and displaying property in the world;
-and now,' says he, 'if a young man goes courting, the only inquiry
-is, how many negroes he or she owns. The love for slave property was
-swallowing up every other mercenary possession. Its ownership betokened,
-not only the possession of wealth, but indicated the gentleman of
-leisure, who was above and scorned labor.' These things Mr. Lincoln
-regarded as highly seductive to the thoughtless and giddy-headed young
-men who looked upon work as vulgar and ungentlemanly. Mr. Lincoln was
-really excited, and said, with great earnestness, that this spirit
-ought to be met, and, if possible, checked; that slavery was a great
-and crying injustice, an enormous national crime, and that we could not
-expect to escape punishment for it. I asked him how he would proceed in
-his efforts to check the spread of slavery. _He confessed he did not
-see his way clearly. I think he made up his mind from that time that he
-would oppose slavery actively_. I know that Mr. Lincoln always contended
-that no man had any right other than mere brute force gave him to a
-slave. He used to say that it was singular that the courts would hold
-that a man never lost his right to his property that had been stolen
-from him, but that he instantly lost his right to himself if he was
-stolen. Mr. Lincoln always contended that the cheapest way of getting
-rid of slavery was for the nation to buy the slaves, and set them free."
-
-If the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill awakened Lincoln from his
-dream of security regarding the slavery question, which he hoped had
-been put to rest by the compromises of 1820 and 1850, it did the
-same with all likeminded people in the North. From that moment
-the Abolitionists, on the one hand, discerned a hope, not only of
-restricting slavery, but of ultimate emancipation; and the Southern
-Disunionists, on the other, who had lately met with numerous and signal
-defeats in their own section, perceived the means of inflaming
-the popular heart to the point of disunion. A series of agitations
-immediately began,--incessant, acrimonious, and in Kansas murderous and
-bloody,--which destroyed the Whig party at once, and continued until
-they severed the Democratic party at Charleston. All other issues were
-as chaff to this,--slavery or no slavery in the Territories,--while the
-discussion ranged far back of this practical question, and involved the
-much broader one, whether slavery possessed inherent rights under
-the Constitution. The Whigs South having voted for the repeal of the
-compromise, and the Whigs North against it, that party was practically
-no more. Some of its members went into the Know-Nothing lodges; some
-enlisted under the Abolition flag, and others drifted about and together
-until they formed themselves into a new organization, which they called
-Republican. It was a disbanded army; and, released from the authority of
-discipline and party tradition, a great part of the members engaged for
-a while in political operations of a very disreputable character. But
-the better class, having kept themselves unspotted from the pollution
-of Know-Nothingism, gradually but speedily formed the Republican party,
-which in due time drew into its mighty ranks nearly all the elements of
-opposition to the Democracy. Such a Whig was Mr. Lincoln, who lost no
-time in taking his ground. In Illinois the new party was not (in 1854)
-either Abolitionist, Republican, Know-Nothing, Whig, or Democratic, for
-it was composed of odds and ends of all; but simply the Anti-Nebraska
-party, of which Mr. Lincoln soon became the acknowledged leader.
-
-Returning from Washington, Mr. Douglas attempted to speak at Chicago;
-but he was not heard, and, being hissed and hooted by the populace of
-the city, betook himself to more complaisant audiences in the country.
-Early in October, the State Fair being in progress there, he spoke at
-Springfield. His speech was ingenious, and, on the whole, able: but he
-was on the defensive; and the consciousness of the fact, both on his own
-part and that of the audience, made him seem weaker than he really was.
-By common consent the Anti-Nebraska men put up Mr. Lincoln to reply; and
-he did reply with such power as he had never exhibited before. He was
-not the Lincoln who had spoken that tame address over Clay in 1852,
-or he who had deformed his speech before the "Scott Club" with petty
-jealousies and gross vulgarisms, but a new and greater Lincoln, the like
-of whom no one in that vast multitude had ever heard before. He felt
-that he was addressing the people on a living and vital question, not
-merely for the sake of speaking, but to produce conviction, and achieve
-a great practical result. How he succeeded in his object may be gathered
-from the following extracts from a leading editorial in "The Springfield
-Journal," written by Mr. Herndon:--
-
-"This Anti-Nebraska speech of Mr. Lincoln was the profoundest, in our
-opinion, that he has made in his whole life. He felt upon his soul the
-truths burn which he uttered, and all present felt that he was true to
-his own soul. His feelings once or twice swelled within, and came near
-stifling utterance.... He quivered with emotion. The whole house was as
-still as death.
-
-"He attacked the Nebraska Bill with unusual warmth and energy; and all
-felt that a man of strength was its enemy, and that he intended to blast
-it if he could by strong and manly efforts. He was most successful, and
-the house approved the glorious triumph of truth by loud and continued
-huzzas. Women waved their white handkerchiefs in token of woman's silent
-but heartfelt assent. Douglas felt the sting: the animal within was
-roused, because he frequently interrupted Mr. Lincoln. His friends felt
-that he was crushed by Lincoln's powerful argument, manly logic, and
-illustrations from nature around us. The Nebraska Bill was shivered,
-and, like a tree of the forest, was torn and rent asunder by hot bolts
-of truth.... Mr. Lincoln exhibited Douglas in all the attitudes he could
-be placed in a friendly debate. He exhibited the bill in all its aspects
-to show its humbuggery and falsehood; and, when thus torn to rags, cut
-into slips, held up to the gaze of the vast crowd, a kind of scorn and
-mockery was visible upon the face of the crowd and upon the lips of the
-most eloquent speaker.... At the conclusion of this speech, every man,
-woman, and child felt that it was unanswerable.... He took the heart
-captive, and broke like a sun over the understanding."
-
-Mr. Douglas rose to reply. He was excited, angry, imperious in his tone
-and manner, and his voice loud and shrill. Shaking his forefinger at the
-Democratic malcontents with furious energy, and declaiming rather than
-debating, he occupied to little purpose the brief interval remaining
-until the adjournment for supper. Then, promising to resume his address
-in the evening, he went his way; and that audience "saw him no more."
-Evening came, but not the orator. Many fine speeches were made during
-the continuance of that fair upon the one absorbing topic,--speeches by
-the ablest men in Illinois,--Judge Trumbull, Judge Breese, Col. Taylor
-(Democratic recusants), and Stephen A. Douglas and John Calhoun (then
-Surveyor-General of Nebraska). But it is no shame to any one of these,
-that their really impressive speeches were but slightly appreciated,
-nor long remembered, beside Mr. Lincoln's splendid and enduring
-performance,--enduring in the memory of his auditors, although preserved
-upon no written or printed page.
-
-Among those whom the State Fair brought to Springfield for political
-purposes, were some who were neither Whigs, Democrats, Know-Nothings,
-nor yet mere Anti-Nebraska men: there were the restless leaders of the
-then insignificant Abolition faction. Chief among them was Owen Lovejoy;
-and second to him, if second to any, was William H. Herndon. But the
-position of this latter gentleman was one of singular embarrassment.
-According to himself, he was an Abolitionist "sometime before he was
-born," and hitherto he had made his "calling and election sure" by
-every word and act of a life devoted to political philanthropy and
-disinterested political labors. While the two great national parties
-divided the suffrages of the people, North and South, every thing in his
-eyes was "dead." He detested the bargains by which those parties were
-in the habit of composing sectional troubles, and sacrificing the
-"principle of freedom." When the Whig party "paid its breath to time,"
-he looked upon its last agonies as but another instance of divine
-retribution. He had no patience with time-servers, and regarded with
-indignant contempt the "policy" which would postpone the natural rights
-of an enslaved race to the success of parties and politicians. He stood
-by at the sacrifice of the Whig party in Illinois with the spirit of
-Paul when he "held the clothes of them that stoned Stephen." He believed
-it was for the best, and hoped to see a new party rise in its place,
-great in the fervor of its faith, and animated by the spirit of
-Wilberforce, Garrison, and the Lovejoys. He was a fierce zealot, and
-gloried proudly in his title of "fanatic;" for it was his conviction
-that fanatics were at all times the salt of the earth, with power to
-save it from the blight that follows the wickedness of men. He believed
-in a God, but it was the God of nature,--the God of Socrates and Plato,
-as well as the God of Jacob. He believed in a Bible, but it was the open
-scroll of the universe; and in a religion clear and well defined, but it
-was a religion that scorned what he deemed the narrow slavery of verbal
-inspiration. Hot-blooded, impulsive, brave morally and physically,
-careless of consequences when moved by a sense of individual duty, he
-was the very man to receive into his inmost heart the precepts of Mr.
-Seward's "higher law." If he had pledged faith to slavery, no peril of
-life or body could have induced him to violate it. But he held himself
-no party to the compromises of the Constitution, nor to any law which
-recognized the justice of human bondage; and he was therefore free to
-act as his God and nature prompted.
-
-Now, Mr. Herndon had determined to make an Abolitionist out of Mr.
-Lincoln when the proper time should arrive; and that time would be only
-when Mr. Lincoln could change front and "come out" without detriment to
-his personal aspirations. For, although Mr. Herndon was a zealot in the
-cause, he loved his partner too dearly to wish him to espouse it while
-it was unpopular and politically dangerous to belong to it. "I cared
-nothing for the ruin of myself," said he; "but I did not wish to see Mr.
-Lincoln sacrificed." He looked forward to a better day, and, in the
-mean time, was quite willing that Mr. Lincoln should be no more than
-a nominal Whig, or a strong Anti-Nebraska man; being quite sure, that,
-when the auspicious moment arrived, he would be able to present him to
-his brethren as a convert over whom there would surely be great joy.
-Still, there was a bare chance that he might lose him. Mr. Lincoln was
-beset by warm friends and by old coadjutors, and besought to pause in
-his antislavery course while there was yet time. Among these there was
-none more earnest or persuasive than John T. Stuart, who was but the
-type of a class. Tempted on the one side to be a Know-Nothing, and on
-the other side to be an Abolitionist, Mr. Lincoln said, as if in some
-doubt of his real position, "I _think_ I am still a Whig." But Mr.
-Herndon was more than a match for the full array against him. An earnest
-man, instant in season and out of season, he spoke with the eloquence
-of apparent truth and of real personal love. Moreover, Mr. Lincoln's
-preconceptions inclined him to the way in which Mr. Herndon desired him
-to walk; and it is not surprising that in time he was, not only almost,
-but altogether, persuaded by a friend and partner, whose opportunities
-to reach and convince his wavering mind were, daily and countless. "From
-1854 to 1860," says Mr. Herndon, "I kept putting in Lincoln's hands the
-speeches and sermons of Theodore Parker, the speeches of Phillips and
-Beecher. I took 'The Anti-slavery Standard' for years before 1856, 'The
-Chicago Tribune,' and 'The New York Tribune;' kept them in my office,
-kept them purposely on my table, and would read to Lincoln good, sharp,
-and solid things well put. Lincoln was a natural antislavery man, as I
-think, and yet he needed watching,--needed hope, faith, energy; and I
-think I warmed him. Lincoln and I were just the opposite one of
-another. He was cautious and practical; I was spontaneous, ideal, and
-speculative. He arrived at truths by reflection; I, by intuition; he,
-by reason; I, by my soul. He calculated; I went to toil asking no
-questions, never doubting. Lincoln had great faith in my intuitions, and
-I had great faith in his reason."
-
-Of course such a man as we have described Mr. Herndon to be could have
-nothing but loathing and disgust for the secret oaths, the midnight
-lurking, and the proscriptive spirit of Know-Nothingism. "A number of
-gentlemen from Chicago," says he, "among them the editor of 'The Star of
-the West,' an Abolitionist paper published in Chicago, waited on me
-in my office, and asked my advice as to the policy of going into
-Know-Nothing Lodges, and ruling them for freedom. I opposed it as being
-wrong in principle, as well as a fraud on the lodges, and wished to
-fight it out in open daylight. Lincoln was opposed to Know-Nothingism,
-but did not say much in 1854 or 1855 (did afterwards). I told Lincoln
-what was said, and argued the question with him often, insisting that,
-as we were advocating _freedom for the slave in tendency_ under the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill, it was radically wrong to enslave the religious
-ideas and faith of men. The gentlemen who waited on me as before stated
-asked me if I thought that Mr. Lincoln could be trusted for freedom.
-I said to them, 'Can you trust yourselves? If you can, you can trust
-Lincoln forever.'"
-
-[Illustration: John T. Stuart 392]
-
-With this explanation of the political views of Mr. Herndon, and
-his personal relations to Mr. Lincoln, the reader will more easily
-understand what follows.
-
-"This State Fair," continues Mr. Herndon, "called thousands to the city.
-We Abolitionists all assembled here, taking advantage of the fair to
-organize and disseminate our ideas. As soon as Lincoln had finished his
-speech, Lovejoy, who had been in the hall, rushed up to the stand, and
-notified the crowd that there would be a meeting there in the evening:
-subject, _Freedom_. I had been with the Abolitionists that day, and knew
-their intentions: namely, to force Lincoln with our organization, and
-to take broader and deeper and more radical views and ideas than in his
-speech, which was simply _Historic Kansas_.... He (Lincoln) had not
-then announced himself for freedom, only discussed the inexpediency
-of repealing the Missouri Compromise Line. The Abolitionists that day
-determined to make Lincoln take a stand. I determined he should _not at
-that time_, because the time had not yet come when Lincoln should show
-his hand. When Lovejoy announced the Abolition gathering in the evening,
-I rushed to Lincoln, and said, 'Lincoln, go home; take Bob and the
-buggy, and leave the county: go quickly, go right off, and never mind
-the order of your going.' Lincoln took a hint, got his horse and buggy,
-and did leave quickly, not noting the order of his going. He staid away
-till all conventions and fairs were over."
-
-But the speech against the repeal of the Compromise signally impressed
-all parties opposed to Mr. Douglas's late legislation,--Whigs,
-Abolitionists, and Democratic Free-soilers,--who agreed with perfect
-unanimity, that Mr. Lincoln should be pitted against Mr. Douglas
-wherever circumstances admitted of their meeting. As one of the
-evidences of this sentiment, Mr. William Butler drew up a paper
-addressed to Mr. Lincoln, requesting and "urging him to follow Douglas
-up until the election." It was signed by Mr. Butler, William Jayne,
-P. P. Eads, John Cassady, B. F. Irwin, and many others. Accordingly,
-Lincoln "followed" Douglas to Peoria, where the latter had an
-appointment, and again replied to him, in much the same spirit, and with
-the same arguments, as before. The speech was really a great one, almost
-perfectly adapted to produce conviction upon a doubting mind. It ought
-to be carefully read by every one who desires to know Mr. Lincoln's
-power as a debater, after his intellect was matured and ripened by years
-of hard experience. On the general subject of slavery and negroes in the
-Union, he spoke as follows:--
-
-"Before proceeding, let me say, I think I have no prejudice against the
-Southern people: they are just what we would be in their situation. If
-slavery did not now exist among them, they would not introduce it: if
-it did now exist amongst us, we should not instantly give it up. This I
-believe of the masses North and South. Doubtless there are individuals
-on both sides who would not hold slaves under any circumstances, and
-others would gladly introduce slavery anew if it were out of existence.
-We know that some Southern men do free their slaves, go North, and
-become tip-top Abolitionists; while some Northern men go South, and
-become cruel slave-masters.
-
-"When Southern people tell us they are no more responsible for the
-origin of slavery than we, I acknowledge the fact. When it is said that
-the institution exists, and that it is very difficult to get rid of it
-in any satisfactory way, I can understand and appreciate the saying. _I
-surely will not blame them for not doing what I should not know how to
-do myself. If all earthly power were given me, I should not know what
-to do as to the existing institution_. My first impulse would be to free
-all the existing slaves, and send them to Liberia,--to their own native
-land; but a moment's reflection would convince me that whatever of high
-hope (as I think there is) there may be in this, in the long run, its
-sudden execution is impossible. If they were all landed there in a day,
-they would all perish in the next ten days; and there are not surplus
-shipping and surplus money enough in the world to carry them there in
-many times ten days. What then? Free them all, and keep them among us
-as underlings? Is it quite certain that this betters their condition? _I
-think I would not hold_ one in slavery at any rate, yet the point is not
-clear enough to me to denounce people upon. What next? Free them, and
-make them politically and socially our equals? My own feelings will not
-admit of this; and, if mine would, we all know that those of the great
-mass of white people would not. Whether this feeling accords with
-justice and sound judgment is not the sole question, if, indeed, it is
-any part of it. A universal feeling, whether well or ill founded, cannot
-be safely disregarded. _We cannot, then, make them equals_. It does seem
-to me that systems of gradual emancipation might be adopted; but for
-their tardiness in this I will not undertake to judge our brethren
-of the South. When they remind us of their constitutional rights, I
-acknowledge them, not grudgingly, but fully and fairly; _and I would
-give them any legislation for the reclaiming of their fugitives which
-should not in its stringency be more likely to carry a free man into
-slavery than our ordinary criminal laws are to hang an innocent one_.
-
-"But all this, to my judgment, furnishes no more excuse for permitting
-slavery to go into our own free territory than it would for reviving the
-African slave-trade by law. The law which forbids the bringing of slaves
-_from_ Africa, and that which has so long forbidden the taking them _to_
-Nebraska, can hardly be distinguished on any moral principle; and the
-repeal of the former could find quite as plausible excuses as that of
-the latter.
-
-"But Nebraska is urged as a great Union-saving measure. Well, I, too,
-go for saving the Union. Much as I hate slavery, I would consent to the
-extension of it, rather than see the Union dissolved, just as I would
-consent to any great evil to avoid a greater one. But, when I go to
-Union-saving, I must believe, at least, that the means I employ have
-adaptation to the end. To my mind, Nebraska has no such adaptation. 'It
-hath no relish of salvation in it.' It is an aggravation, rather, of the
-only one thing which ever endangers the Union. When it came upon us, all
-was peace and quiet. The nation was looking to the forming of new bonds
-of Union, and a long course of peace and prosperity seemed to lie before
-us. In the whole range of possibility, there scarcely appears to me to
-have been any thing out of which the slavery agitation could have been
-revived, except the project of repealing the Missouri Compromise. Every
-inch of territory we owned already had a definite settlement of the
-slavery question, and by which all parties were pledged to abide.
-Indeed, there was no uninhabited country on the continent which we could
-acquire, if we except some extreme Northern regions, which are wholly
-out of the question. In this state of the case, the Genius of Discord
-himself could scarcely have invented a way of getting us by the ears,
-but by turning back and destroying the peace measures of the past.
-
-"The structure, too, of the Nebraska Bill is very peculiar. The people
-are to decide the question of slavery for themselves; but _when_
-they are to decide, or _how_ they are to decide, or whether, when the
-question is once decided, it is to remain so, or is to be subject to an
-indefinite succession of new trials, the law does not say. Is it to be
-decided by the first dozen settlers who arrive there, or is it to await
-the arrival of a hundred? Is it to be decided by a vote of the people,
-or a vote of the Legislature, or, indeed, on a vote of any sort? To
-these questions the law gives no answer. There is a mystery about this;
-for, when a member proposed to give the Legislature express authority
-to exclude slavery, it was hooted down by the friends of the bill.
-This fact is worth remembering. Some Yankees in the East are sending
-emigrants to Nebraska to exclude slavery from it; and, so far as I can
-judge, they expect the question to be decided by voting in some way
-or other. But the Missourians are awake too. They are within a
-stone's-throw of the contested ground. They hold meetings and pass
-resolutions, in which not the slightest allusion to voting is made. They
-resolve that slavery already exists in the Territory; that more shall go
-there; and that they, remaining in Missouri, will protect it, and
-that Abolitionists shall be hung or driven away. Through all this,
-bowie-knives and six-shooters are seen plainly enough, but never a
-glimpse of the ballot-box. And really, what is the result of this? Each
-party within having numerous and determined backers without, is it not
-probable that the contest will come to blows and bloodshed? Could there
-be a more apt invention to bring about a collision and violence on
-the slavery question than this Nebraska project is? I do not charge or
-believe that such was intended by Congress; but if they had literally
-formed a ring, and placed champions within it to fight out the
-controversy, the fight could be no more likely to come off than it is.
-And, if this fight should begin, is it likely to take a very peaceful,
-Union-saving turn? Will not the first drop of blood so shed be the real
-knell of the Union?"
-
-No one in Mr. Lincoln's audience appreciated the force of this speech
-more justly than did Mr. Douglas himself. He invited the dangerous
-orator to a conference, and frankly proposed a truce. What took place
-between them was explicitly set forth by Mr. Lincoln to a little knot
-of his friends, in the office of Lincoln & Herndon, about two days after
-the election. We quote the statement of B. F. Irwin, explicitly
-indorsed by P. L. Harrison and Isaac Cogdale, all of whom are already
-indifferently well known to the reader. "W. H. Herndon, myself, P. L.
-Harrison, and Isaac Cogdale were present. What Lincoln said was about
-this: that the day after the Peoria debate in 1854, Douglas came to
-him (Lincoln), and flattered him that he (Lincoln) understood the
-Territorial question from the organization of the government better than
-all the opposition in the Senate of the United States; and he did not
-see that he could make any thing by debating it with him; and then
-reminded him (Lincoln) of the trouble they had given him, and remarked
-that Lincoln had given him more trouble than all the opposition in the
-Senate combined; and followed up with the proposition, that he would
-go home, and speak no more during the campaign, if Lincoln would do
-the same: to which proposition Lincoln acceded." This, according to
-Mr. Irwin's view of the thing, was running Douglas "into his hole," and
-making "him holler, Enough."
-
-Handbills and other advertisements announced that Judge Douglas would
-address the people of Lacon the day following the Peoria encounter; and
-the Lacon Anti-Nebraska people sent a committee to Peoria to secure Mr.
-Lincoln for a speech in reply. He readily agreed to go, and on the way
-said not a word of the late agreement to the gentleman who had him
-in charge. Judge Douglas observed the same discreet silence among
-his friends. Whether they had both agreed to go to Lacon before this
-agreement was made, or had mutually contrived this clever mode of
-deception, cannot now be determined. But, when they arrived at Lacon,
-Mr. Douglas said he was too hoarse to speak, although, "a large portion
-of the people of the county assembled to hear him." Mr. Lincoln, with
-unheard-of magnanimity, "informed his friends that he would not like to
-take advantage of the judge's indisposition, and would not address the
-people." His friends could not see the affair in the same light, and
-"pressed him for a speech;" but he persistently and unaccountably
-"refused."
-
-Of course, Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas met no more during the campaign.
-Mr. Douglas did speak at least once more (at Princeton), but Mr. Lincoln
-scrupulously observed the terms of the agreement. He came home, wrote
-out his Peoria speech, and published it in seven consecutive issues of
-"The Illinois Daily Journal;" but he never spoke nor thought of speaking
-again. When his friends insisted upon having a reason for this most
-unexpected conduct, he gave the answer already quoted from Mr. Irwin.
-
-The election took place on the 7th of November. During his absence,
-Mr. Lincoln had been announced as a candidate for the House of
-Representatives of the Illinois Legislature. William Jayne took the
-responsibility of making him a candidate. Mrs. Lincoln, however, "saw
-Francis, the editor, and had Lincoln's name taken out." When Mr. Lincoln
-returned, Jayne (Mrs. Lincoln's old friend "Bill") went to see him. "I
-went to see him," says Jayne, "in order to get his consent to run.
-This was at his house. He was then the saddest man I ever saw,--the
-gloomiest. He walked up and down the floor, almost crying; and to all my
-persuasions to let his name stand in the paper, he said, 'No, I can't.
-You don't know all. I say you don't begin to know one-half, and that's
-enough.' I did, however, go and have his name re-instated; and there
-it stood. He and Logan were elected by about six hundred majority."
-Mr. Jayne had caused originally both Judge Logan and Mr. Lincoln to be
-announced, and they were both elected. But, after all, Mrs. Lincoln
-was right, and Jayne and Lincoln were both wrong. Mr. Lincoln was a
-well-known candidate for the United States Senate, in the place of Mr.
-Shields, the incumbent, who had voted for the Kansas-Nebraska Bill; and,
-when the Legislature met and showed a majority of Anti-Nebraska men,
-he thought it a necessary preliminary of his candidacy that he should
-resign his seat in the House. He did so, and Mr. Jayne makes the
-following acknowledgment: "Mr. Lincoln resigned his seat, finding
-out that the Republicans, the Anti-Nebraska men, had carried the
-Legislature. A. M. Broadwell ran as a Whig Anti-Nebraska man, and was
-badly beaten. The people of Sangamon County was down on Lincoln,--hated
-him." None can doubt that even the shame of taking a woman's advice
-might have been preferable to this!
-
-But Mr. Lincoln "had set his heart on going to the United States
-Senate." Counting in the Free-soil Democrats, who had revolted against
-Mr. Douglas's leadership, and been largely supported the Whigs in the
-late elections, there was now on joint ballot a clear Anti-Nebraska
-majority of two. A Senator was to be chosen to succeed Mr. Shields; and
-Mr. Lincoln had a right to expect the place. He had fairly earned the
-distinction, and nobody in the old Whig party was disposed to withhold
-it. But a few Abolitionists doubted his fidelity to their extreme
-views; and five Anti-Nebraska Senators and Representatives, who had been
-elected as Democrats, preferred to vote for a Senator with antecedents
-like their own. The latter selected Judge Trumbull as their candidate,
-and clung to him manfully through the whole struggle. They were five
-only in number; but in the situation of affairs then existing they
-were the sovereign five. They were men of conceded integrity, of good
-abilities in debate, and extraordinary political sagacity. Their
-names ought to be known to posterity, for their unfriendliness at this
-juncture saved Mr. Lincoln to the Republicans of Illinois, to be brought
-forward at the critical moment as a fresh and original candidate for the
-Presidency. They were Judd of Cook County, Palmer of Macoupin, Cook of
-La Salle, Baker and Allen of Madison. They called themselves Democrats,
-and, with the modesty peculiar to bolters, claimed to be the only
-"Simon-pure." "They could not act with the Democrats from principle,
-and would not act with the Whigs from policy;" but, holding off from the
-caucuses of both parties, they demanded that all Anti-Nebraska should
-come to them, or sacrifice the most important fruits of their late
-victory at the polls. But these were not the only enemies Mr. Lincoln
-could count in the body of his party. The Abolitionists suspected him,
-and were slow to come to his support. Judge Davis went to Springfield,
-and thinks he "got some" of this class "to go for" him; but it is
-probable they were "got" in another way. Mr. Lovejoy was a member, and
-required, as the condition of his support and that of his followers,
-that Mr. Lincoln should pledge himself to favor the exclusion of slavery
-from _all_ the Territories of the United States. This was a long step
-in advance of any that Mr. Lincoln had previously taken. He was, as
-a matter of course, opposed to the introduction of slavery into the
-Territories north of the line of 36 deg. 30'; but he had, up to this time,
-regarded all south of that as being honestly open to slavery. The
-villany of obliterating that line, and the necessity of its immediate
-restoration,--in short, the perfect sanctity of the Missouri
-settlement,--had formed the burden of all his speeches in-the preceding
-canvass. But these opinions by no means suited the Abolitionists, and
-they required him to change them forthwith. He thought it would be
-wise to do so, considering the peculiar circumstances of his case; but,
-before committing himself finally, he sought an understanding with Judge
-Logan. He told the judge what he was disposed to do, and said he would
-act upon the inclination, if the judge would not regard it as "treading
-upon his toes." The judge said he was opposed to the doctrine proposed;
-but, for the sake of the cause in hand, he would cheerfully risk his
-"toes." And so the Abolitionists were accommodated: Mr. Lincoln quietly
-made the pledge, and they voted for him.
-
-On the eighth day of February, 1855, the two Houses met in convention to
-choose a Senator. On the first ballot, Mr. Shields had forty-one votes,
-and three Democratic votes were scattered. Mr. Lincoln had forty-five,
-Mr. Trumbull five, and Mr. Koerner two. On the seventh ballot, the
-Democrats left Shields, and, with two exceptions, voted for Gov.
-Matte-son. In addition to the party strength, Matteson received also the
-votes of two of the anti-Nebraska Democrats. That stout little knot, it
-was apparent, was now breaking up. For many reasons the Whigs detested
-Matteson most heartily, and dreaded nothing so much as his success. But
-of that there now appeared to be great danger; for, unless the Whigs
-abandoned Lincoln and went for Trumbull, the five Anti-Nebraska men
-would unite on Matteson, and elect him. Mr. Gillespie went to Lincoln
-for advice. "He said unhesitatingly, 'You ought to drop me, and go for
-Trumbull: that is the only way you can defeat Matteson.' Judge Logan
-came up about that time, and insisted on running Lincoln still; but the
-latter said, 'If you do, you will lose both Trumbull and myself; and I
-think the cause, in this case, is to be preferred to men.' We adopted
-his suggestion, and turned upon Trumbull, and elected him, although it
-grieved us to the heart to give up Mr. Lincoln. This, I think, shows
-that Mr. Lincoln was capable of sinking himself for the cause in which
-he was engaged." It was with great bitterness of spirit that the Whigs
-accepted this hard alternative. Many of them accused the little squad
-of Anti-Nebraska Democrats of "ungenerous and selfish" motives. One of
-them, "Mr. Waters of McDonough, was especially indignant, and utterly
-refused to vote for Mr. Trumbull at all. On the last ballot he threw
-away his ballot on Mr. Williams."
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was very much disappointed," says Mr. Parks, a member of
-the Legislature, and one of Mr. Lincoln's special friends; "for I think,
-that, at that time, it was the height of his ambition to get into the
-United States Senate. He manifested, however, no bitterness towards Mr.
-Judd, or the other Anti-Nebraska Democrats, by whom politically he was
-beaten, but evidently thought that their motives were right. He told
-me several times afterwards, that the election of Trumbull was the best
-thing that could have happened."
-
-In the great campaign of 1858, Mr. Douglas on various occasions
-insisted, that, in 1854, Mr. Lincoln and Judge Trumbull, being until
-then political enemies, had formed a secret agreement to abolitionize,
-the one the Whig, and the other the Democratic party; and, in order that
-neither might go unrewarded for a service so timely and patriotic,
-Mr. Trumbull had agreed on the one hand that Mr. Lincoln should have
-Shields's seat in the United States Senate (in 1855); and Mr. Lincoln
-had agreed, on the other, that Judge Trumbull should have Douglas's seat
-(in 1859). But Mr. Douglas alleged, that, when the first election
-(in 1854) came on, Judge Trumbull treated his fellow-conspirator with
-shameful duplicity, and cheated himself into the Senate just four years
-in advance of his appointed time; that, Mr. Lincoln's friends being
-greatly incensed thereat, Col. James H. Matheny, Mr. Lincoln's "friend
-and manager for twenty years," exposed the plot and the treachery; that,
-in order to silence and conciliate the injured party, Mr. Lincoln was
-promised the senatorial nomination in 1858, and thus a second time
-became a candidate in pursuance of a bargain more than half corrupt. But
-it is enough to say here, that Mr. Lincoln explicitly and emphatically
-denied the accusation as often as it was made, and bestowed upon the
-character of Judge Trumbull encomiums as lofty and as warm as he ever
-bestowed upon any contemporary. With the exception of Col. Matheny,
-we find none of Mr. Lincoln's peculiar friends complaining of Judge
-Trumbull; but as many of them as have spoken in the records before us
-(and they are numerous and prominent) speak of the purity, devotion,
-and excellence of Judge Trumbull in the most unreserved and unaffected
-manner. In fact and in truth, he did literally nothing to advance his
-own interest: he solicited no vote, and got none which did not come to
-him by reason of the political necessities of the time. His election
-consolidated the Anti-Nebraska party in the State, and, in the language
-of Mr. Parks, his "first encounter with Mr. Douglas in the Senate filled
-the people of Illinois with admiration for his abilities; and the ill
-feeling caused by his election gradually passed away."
-
-But Mr. Douglas had a graver charge to make against Mr. Lincoln than
-that of a simple conspiracy with Trumbull to dispose of a great office.
-He seems to have known nothing of Mr. Lincoln's secret understanding
-with Lovejoy and his associates; but he found, that, on the day previous
-to the election for Senator, Lovejoy had introduced a series of extreme
-antislavery resolutions; and with these he attempted to connect Mr.
-Lincoln, by showing, that, with two exceptions, every member who voted
-for the resolutions on the 7th of February voted also for Mr. Lincoln
-on the 8th. The first of the resolutions favored the restoration of the
-prohibition of slavery north of 36 deg. 30', and also a similar prohibition
-as to "_all_ territory which now belongs to the United States, or which
-may hereafter come under their jurisdiction." The second resolution
-declared against the admission of any Slave State, no matter out of what
-Territory, or in what manner formed; and the third demanded, first, the
-unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law, or, failing that, the
-right of _habeas corpus_ and trial by jury for the person claimed as a
-slave. The first resolution was carried by a strict party vote; while
-the second and third were defeated. But Mr. Douglas asserted that Mr.
-Lincoln was committed in favor of all three, because the members that
-supported them subsequently supported him. Of all this Mr. Lincoln
-took no further notice than to say that Judge Douglas might find the
-Republican platform in the resolutions of the State Convention of that
-party, held at Bloomington in 1856. In fact, he maintained a singular
-reticence about the whole affair, probably dreading to go into it too
-deeply, lest his rival should unearth the private pledge to Lovejoy, of
-which Judge Logan has given us the history. When Judge Douglas produced
-a set of resolutions which he said had been passed by the Abolitionists
-at their Convention at Springfield, during the State Fair (the meeting
-alluded to by Mr. Herndon), and asserted that Mr. Lincoln was one of the
-committee that reported them, the latter replied with great spirit,
-and said what he could say with perfect truth,--that he was not near
-Springfield when that body met, and that his name had been used without
-his consent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-MR. LINCOLN predicted a bloody conflict in Kansas as the immediate
-effect of the repeal of the Missouri restriction. He had not long to
-wait for the fulfilment of his prophecy: it began, in fact, before he
-spoke; and if blood had not actually flowed on the plains of Kansas,
-occurrences were taking place on the Missouri border which could
-not avoid that result. The South invited the struggle by repealing a
-time-honored compromise, in such a manner as to convince the North that
-she no longer felt herself bound by any Congressional restrictions upon
-the institution of slavery; and that she intended, as far as her power
-would permit, to push its existence into all the Territories of the
-Union. The Northern States accepted the challenge promptly. The people
-of the Free States knew how to colonize and settle new Territories. The
-march of their westward settlements had for years assumed a steady
-tread as the population of these States augmented, and the facility for
-emigrating increased. When, therefore, the South threw down the barriers
-which had for thirty years consecrated all the Territories north of 36 deg.
-30' to free labor, and announced her intention of competing therein for
-the establishment of her "peculiar institution," the North responded
-by using the legitimate means at her command to throw into the exposed
-regions settlers who would organize the Territories in the interest of
-free labor. The "irrepressible conflict" was therefore opened in the
-Territories, with the people of the two sections of the country arrayed
-against each other as participants in, as well as spectators of, the
-contest. As participants, each section aided its representatives. The
-struggle opened in Kansas, and in favor of the South. During the passage
-of the bill organizing the Territory, preparations had been extensively
-made along the Missouri border, by "Blue Lodges" and "Social Bands," for
-the purpose of getting control of its Territorial government. The whole
-eastern border of the Territory was open to these marauders; and they
-were not slow to embrace the opportunity of meeting their enemies with
-so man y advantages in their favor. Public meetings were held in many
-of the frontier counties of Missouri, in which the people were not only
-advised to go over and take early possession of the Territory, but to
-hold themselves in readiness to remove all emigrants who should go there
-under the auspices of the Northern Aid Societies. It was with these
-"Border Ruffians," and some volunteers from Alabama and South Carolina,
-with a few vagabond "colonels" and "generals" from the Slave States
-generally, that the South began the struggle. Of course, the North did
-not look with complacency upon such a state of things. If the repeal
-of the Missouri Compromise startled the people of the Free States from
-their sense of security, the manner of applying "popular sovereignty,"
-as indicated at its first introduction, was sufficient to arouse public
-sentiment to an unwonted degree. Kansas became at once a subject of
-universal interest. Societies were formed for throwing into her borders,
-with the utmost expedition, settlers who could be relied upon to mould
-her government in the interest of freedom. At the same time there was
-set in train all the political machinery that could be used to agitate
-the question, until the cry of "Bleeding Kansas" was heard throughout
-the land.
-
-It is not necessary in this connection to set down, in order, the raids,
-assassinations, burnings, robberies, and election frauds which followed.
-Enough if their origin and character be understood. For this present
-purpose, a brief summary only will be given of what occurred during
-the long struggle to make Kansas a Slave State; for upon the practical
-issues which arose during the contest followed the discussions between
-Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas, upon the merits of which the former was
-carried into the Presidential office.
-
-The first Territorial governor appointed under the provisions of
-the Kansas-Nebraska Act was Andrew H. Reeder of Pennsylvania. He was
-appointed by President Pierce. He reached Kansas in the autumn of 1854,
-and proceeded to establish a Territorial Government. The first election
-was for a delegate to Congress. By the aid of the people of Missouri,
-it resulted in favor of the Democrats. The governor then ordered an
-election for a first Territorial Legislature, to be held on the 31st of
-March, 1855. To this election the Missourians came in greater force than
-before; and succeeded in electing proslavery men to both Houses of the
-Legislature, with a single exception in each house. The governor,
-a proslavery man, set aside the returns in six districts, as being
-fraudulent; whereupon new elections were held, which, with one
-exception, resulted in favor of the Free-State men. These parties,
-however, were refused their seats in the Legislature; while the persons
-chosen at the previous election were accepted.
-
-The Legislature thus organized proceeded to enact the most hostile
-measures against the Free-State men. Many of these acts were promptly
-vetoed by the governor. The Legislature then petitioned the President
-for his removal. Their wishes were complied with; and Wilson G. Shannon
-of Ohio was appointed in his stead. In the mean time, the Free-State
-men entirely repudiated the Legislature, and refused to be bound by its
-enactments.
-
-Such was the situation in Kansas when Mr. Lincoln addressed to Mr. Speed
-the following letter:--
-
-Springfield, Aug. 24, 1855.
-
-Dear Speed,--You know what a poor correspondent I am. Ever since I
-received your very agreeable letter of the 22d of May, I have been
-intending to write you an answer to it. You suggest that in political
-action now you and I would differ. I suppose we would; not quite as
-much, however, as you may think. You know I dislike slavery; and you
-fully admit the abstract wrong of it. So far there is no cause of
-difference. But you say, that, sooner than yield your legal right to
-the slave,--especially at the bidding of those who are not themselves
-interested,--you would see the Union dissolved. I am not aware that _any
-one_ is bidding you yield that right: very certainly I am not. I leave
-that matter entirely to yourself. I also acknowledge your rights and my
-obligations under the Constitution in regard to your slaves. I confess I
-hate to see the poor creatures hunted down, and caught and carried
-back to their stripes and unrequited toils; but I bite my lip, and keep
-quiet. In 1841 you and I had together a tedious low-water trip on a
-steamboat from Louisville to St. Louis. You may remember, as I well do,
-that, from Louisville to the mouth of the Ohio, there were on board
-ten or a dozen slaves shackled together with irons. That sight was a
-continued torment to me; and I see something like it every time I touch
-the Ohio, or any other slave border. It is not fair for you to assume
-that I have no interest in a thing which has, and continually exercises,
-the power of making me miserable. You ought rather to appreciate how
-much the great body of the Northern people do crucify their feelings, in
-order to maintain their loyalty to the Constitution and the Union. I
-do oppose the extension of slavery because my judgment and feeling so
-prompt me; and I am under no obligations to the contrary. If for this
-you and I must differ, differ we must. You say, if you were President,
-you would send an army, and hang the leaders of the Missouri outrages
-upon the Kansas elections; still, if Kansas fairly votes herself a Slave
-State, she must be admitted, or the Union must be dissolved. But how if
-she votes herself a Slave State _unfairly_,--that is, by the very means
-for which you say you would hang men? Must she still be admitted, or the
-Union dissolved? That will be the phase of the question when it first
-becomes a practical one. In your assumption that there may be a fair
-decision of the slavery question in Kansas, I plainly see you and I
-would differ about the Nebraska law. I look upon that enactment, _not as
-a law, but a violence_ from the beginning. It was conceived in violence,
-is maintained in violence, and is being executed in violence. I say
-it was conceived in violence, because the destruction of the Missouri
-Compromise, under the circumstances, was nothing less than violence. It
-was passed in violence, because it could not have passed at all but
-for the votes of many members in violence of the known will of their
-constituents. It is maintained in violence, because the elections since
-clearly demand its repeal; and the demand is openly disregarded.
-
-You say men ought to be hung for the way they are executing that law;
-and I say the way it is being executed is quite as good as any of its
-antecedents. It is being executed in the precise way which was intended
-from the first; else why does no Nebraska man express astonishment or
-condemnation? Poor Reeder is the only public man who has been silly
-enough to believe that any thing like fairness was ever intended; and he
-has been bravely undeceived.
-
-That Kansas will form a slave constitution, and with it will ask to be
-admitted into the Union, I take to be already a settled question, and so
-settled by the very means you so pointedly condemn. By every principle
-of law ever held by any court, North or South, every negro taken to
-Kansas is free; yet, in utter disregard of this,--in the spirit of
-violence merely,--that beautiful Legislature gravely passes a law to
-hang any man who shall venture to inform a negro of his legal rights.
-This is the substance and real object of the law. If, like Haman, they
-should hang upon the gallows of their own building, I shall not be among
-the mourners for their fate. In my humble sphere, I shall advocate
-the restoration of the Missouri Compromise so long as Kansas remains a
-Territory; and when, by all these foul means, it seeks to come into the
-Union as a Slave State, I shall oppose it. I am very loath, in any case,
-to withhold my assent to the enjoyment of property acquired or located
-in good faith; but I do not admit that good faith in taking a negro to
-Kansas to be held in slavery is a probability with any man. Any man who
-has sense enough to be the controller of his own property has too much
-sense to misunderstand the outrageous character of the whole Nebraska
-business. But I digress. In my opposition to the admission of Kansas, I
-shall have some company; but we may be beaten. If we are, I shall not,
-on that account, attempt to dissolve the Union. I think it probable,
-however, we shall be beaten. Standing as a unit among yourselves, you
-can, directly and indirectly, bribe enough of our men to carry the day,
-as you could on the open proposition to establish a monarchy. Get hold
-of some man in the North whose position and ability is such that he can
-make the support of your measure, whatever it may be, a Democratic party
-necessity, and the thing is done. Apropos of this, let me tell you an
-anecdote. Douglas introduced the Nebraska Bill in January. In February
-afterwards, there was a called session of the Illinois Legislature. Of
-the one hundred members composing the two branches of that body,
-about seventy were Democrats. These latter held a caucus, in which the
-Nebraska Bill was talked of, if not formally discussed. It was thereby
-discovered that just three, and no more, were in favor of the measure.
-In a day or two Douglas's orders came on to have resolutions passed
-approving the bill; and they were passed by large majorities!!! The
-truth of this is vouched for by a bolting Democratic member. The masses,
-too, Democratic as well as Whig, were even nearer unanimous against it;
-but, as soon as the party necessity of supporting it became apparent,
-the way the Democracy began to see the wisdom and justice of it was
-perfectly astonishing.
-
-You say, that, if Kansas fairly votes herself a Free State, as a
-Christian you will rather rejoice at it. All decent slaveholders talk
-that way; and I do not doubt their candor. But they never vote that way.
-Although in a private letter, or conversation, you will express your
-preference that Kansas shall be free, you would vote for no man for
-Congress who would say the same thing publicly. No such man could be
-elected from any district in a Slave State. You think Stringfellow & Co.
-ought to be hung; and yet, at the next Presidential election, you
-will vote for the exact type and representative of Stringfellow. The
-slave-breeders and slave-traders are a small, odious, and detested class
-among you; and yet in politics they dictate the course of all of you,
-and are as completely your masters as you are the master of your own
-negroes. You inquire where I now stand. That is a disputed point. I
-think I am a Whig; but others say there are no Whigs, and that I am an
-Abolitionist. When I was at Washington, I voted for the Wilmot Proviso
-as good as forty times; and I never heard of any one attempting to un
-whig me for that. I now do no more than oppose the extension of slavery.
-I am not a Know-Nothing: that is certain. How could I be? How can
-any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading
-classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to
-be pretty rapid. As a nation, we began by declaring that"_all men are
-created equal._" We now practically read it "all men are created equal,
-except negroes." When the Know-Nothings get control, it will read "all
-men are created equal, except negroes and foreigners and Catholics."
-When it comes to this, I should prefer emigrating to some country where
-they make no pretence of loving liberty,--to Russia, for instance, where
-despotism can be taken pure, and without the base, alloy of hypocrisy.
-
-Mary will probably pass a day or two in Louisville in October. My
-kindest regards to Mrs. Speed. On the leading subject of this letter, I
-have more of her sympathy than I have of yours; and yet let me say I am
-
-Your friend forever,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-Gov. Shannon arrived in the Territory Sept. 1,1855. On his way thither,
-he declared himself in favor of making Kansas a Slave State. He found
-affairs in a turbulent condition, which his policy by no means tended
-to mitigate or assuage. The Free-State party held a mass-meeting at Big
-Springs in the early part of September, at which they distinctly and
-earnestly repudiated the legislative government, which claimed to
-have been elected in March, as well as all laws passed by it; and they
-decided not to participate in an election for a delegate to Congress,
-which the Legislature had appointed to be held on the 1st of October
-following. They also held a Delegate Convention at Topeka, on the 19th
-of September, and appointed an Executive Committee for the Territory;
-and also an election for a Delegate to Congress, to be held on the
-second Tuesday in October. These two rival elections for a congressional
-delegate took place on different days; at the former of which,
-Whitfield, representing the proslavery party, was elected; while at the
-other, Gov. Reeder, representing the Free-State party, was chosen.
-On the 28d of October, the Free-State party held a constitutional
-Convention at Topeka, and formed a State constitution in their interest,
-under the provisions of which they subsequently acted, and also asked
-for admission into the Union.
-
-While we are upon this phase of the Kansas question, it may not be amiss
-to postpone the relation of some intermediate events, in order to give
-the reader the benefit of an expression of Mr. Lincoln's views, which
-thus far has found place in no printed record.
-
-Sometime in 1856 an association of Abolitionists was formed in Illinois
-to go to Kansas and aid the Free-State men in opposing the Government.
-The object of those engaged in this work was, in their opinion, a very
-laudable one,--no other than the defence of freedom, which they thought
-foully menaced in that far-off region. Among these gentlemen, and one
-of the most courageous and disinterested, was William H. Herndon. He
-says,--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln was informed of our intents by some means. Probably the
-idea of resistance was more known than I now remember. He took the first
-opportunity he could to dissuade us from our partially-formed purpose.
-We spoke of liberty, justice, and God's higher law, and invoked the
-spirit of these as our holiest inspiration. In 1856 he addressed us on
-this very subject, substantially in these words:--
-
-"'Friends, I agree with you in Providence; but I believe in the
-providence of the most men, the largest purse, and the longest cannon.
-You are in the minority,--in a sad minority; and you can't hope to
-succeed, reasoning from all human experience. You would rebel against
-the Government, and redden your hands in the blood of your countrymen.
-If you are in the minority, as you are, you can't succeed. I say again
-and again, against the Government, with a great majority of its best
-citizens backing it, and when they have the most men, the longest purse,
-and the biggest cannon, you can't succeed.
-
-"'If you have the majority, as some of you say you have, you can succeed
-with the ballot, throwing away the bullet. You can peaceably, then,
-redeem the Government, and preserve the liberties of mankind, through
-your votes and voice and moral influence. Let there be peace. In a
-democracy, where the majority rule by the ballot through the forms of
-law, these physical rebellions and bloody resistances are radically
-wrong, unconstitutional, and are treason. Better bear the ills you have
-than fly to those you know not of. Our own Declaration of Independence
-says, that governments long established, for trivial causes should
-not be resisted. Revolutionize through the ballot-box, and restore the
-Government once more to the affections and hearts of men, by making it
-express, as it was intended to do, the highest spirit of justice and
-liberty. Your attempt, if there be such, to resist the laws of Kansas
-by force, is criminal and wicked; and all your feeble attempts will be
-follies, and end in bringing sorrow on your heads, and ruin the cause
-you would freely die to preserve!'
-
-"This little speech," continues Mr. Herndon, "is not in print. It is a
-part of a much longer one, likewise not in print. This speech squelched
-the ideas of physical resistance, and directed our energies through
-other more effective channels, which his wisdom and coolness pointed
-out to us. This little speech, so timely and well made, saved many of
-us from great follies, if not our necks from the halter. The man who
-uttered it is no more; but this little speech, I hope, shall not soon be
-forgotten. Mr. Lincoln himself, after this speech, subscribed money to
-the people of Kansas _under conditions_, which I will relate in other
-ways. He was not alone in his gifts: I signed the same paper, I think,
-for the same amount, most cheerfully; and would do it again, only
-doubling the sum, adding no conditions, only the good people's wise
-discretion."
-
-Early in 1856 it became painfully apparent to Mr. Lincoln that he
-must take a decisive stand upon the questions of the day, and become
-a Know-Nothing, a Democrat, a Republican, or an Abolitionist. Mere
-"Anti-Nebraska" would answer no longer: the members of that ephemeral
-coalition were seeking more permanent organizations. If interrogated
-concerning his position, he would probably have answered still, "I think
-I am a Whig." With the Abolition or Liberty party, he had thus far
-shown not a particle of sympathy. In 1840, 1844, 1848, and 1852, the
-Abolitionists, Liberty-men, or Free-Soilers, ran candidates of their own
-for the Presidency, and made no little noise and stir in the politics of
-the country; but they were as yet too insignificant in number to claim
-the adhesion of a practical man like Mr. Lincoln. In fact, his partner,
-one of the most earnest of them all, had not up to this time desired his
-fellowship. But now Mr. Herndon thought the hour had arrived when his
-hero should declare himself in unmistakable terms. He found, however,
-one little difficulty in the way: he was not precisely certain of his
-hero. Mr. Lincoln might go that way, and he might go the other way: his
-mind was not altogether made up; and there was no telling on which side
-the decision would fall. "He was button-holed by three ideas, and by men
-belonging to each class: first, he was urged to remain a Whig; secondly,
-he was urged to become a Know-Nothing, Say-Nothing, Do-Nothing;
-and, thirdly, he was urged to be baptized in Abolitionism: and in my
-imagination I can see Lincoln strung out three ways. At last two cords
-were snapped, he flying to Freedom."
-
-And this is the way the cords were snapped: Mr. Herndon drew up a
-paper to be signed by men of his class in politics, calling a county
-convention to elect delegates to the State convention at Bloomington.
-"Mr. Lincoln was then backward," says Mr. Herndon, "dodge-y,--so" and
-so. I was determined to make him take a stand, if he would not do
-it willingly, which he might have done, as he was naturally inclined
-Abolitionward. Lincoln was absent when the call was signed, and
-circulated here. I signed Mr. Lincoln's name without authority; had
-it published in "The Journal." John T. Stuart was keeping his eye on
-Lincoln, with the view of keeping him on his side,--the totally-dead
-conservative side. Mr. Stuart saw the published call, and grew mad;
-rushed into my office, seemed mad, horrified, and said to me, 'Sir, did
-Mr. Lincoln sign that Abolition call which is published this morning?' I
-answered, 4 Mr. Lincoln did not sign that call.'--'Did Lincoln authorize
-you to sign it?' said Mr. Stuart. 'No: he never authorized me to sign
-it.'--'Then do you know that you have ruined Mr. Lincoln?'--'I did not
-know that I had ruined Mr. Lincoln; did not intend to do so; thought
-he was a made man by it; that the time had come when conservatism was a
-crime and a blunder.'--'You, then, take the responsibility of your acts;
-do you?'--'I do, most emphatically.'
-
-"However, I instantly sat down and wrote to Mr. Lincoln, who was then
-in Pekin or Tremont,--possibly at court. He received my letter, and
-instantly replied, either by letter or telegraph,--most likely by
-letter,--that he adopted _in toto_ what I had done, and promised to meet
-the radicals--Lovejoy, and suchlike men--among us."
-
-At Bloomington Lincoln was the great figure. Beside him all the
-rest--even the oldest in the faith and the strongest in the work--were
-small. Yet he was universally regarded as a recent convert, although the
-most important one that could be made in the State of Illinois. "We
-met at Bloomington; and it was there," says Mr. Herndon in one of his
-lectures, "that Mr. Lincoln was baptized, and joined our church. He made
-a speech to us. I have heard or read all Mr. Lincoln's great speeches;
-and I give it as my opinion, on my best judgment, that the Bloomington
-speech was the grand effort of his life. Heretofore, and up to this
-moment, he had simply argued the slavery question on grounds of
-policy,--on what are called the statesman's grounds,--never reaching the
-question of the radical and the eternal right. Now he was newly baptized
-and freshly born: he had the fervor of a new convert; the smothered
-flame broke out; enthusiasm unusual to him blazed up; his eyes were
-aglow with an inspiration; he felt justice; his heart was alive to the
-right; his sympathies, remarkably deep for him, burst forth, and he
-stood before the throne of the eternal Right, in presence of his God,
-and then and there unburdened his penitential and fired soul. This
-speech was fresh, new, genuine, odd, original; filled with fervor not
-unmixed with a divine enthusiasm; his head breathing out through his
-tender heart its truths, its sense of right, and its feeling of the good
-and for the good. This speech was full of fire and energy and force:
-it was logic; it was pathos; it was enthusiasm; it was justice, equity,
-truth, right, and the good, set ablaze by the divine fires of a soul
-maddened by the wrong; it was hard, heavy, knotty, gnarly, edged, and
-heated. I attempted for about fifteen minutes, as was usual with me
-then, to take notes; but at the end of that time I threw pen and paper
-to the dogs, and lived only in the inspiration of the hour. If Mr.
-Lincoln was six feet four inches high usually, _at Bloomington_ he was
-seven feet, and inspired at that. From that day to the day of his death,
-he stood firm on the right. He felt his great cross, had his great
-idea, nursed it, kept it, taught it to others, and in his fidelity bore
-witness of it to his death, and finally sealed it with his precious
-blood."
-
-[Illustration: William Herndon 418]
-
-If any thing in the foregoing description by Mr. Herndon seems
-extravagant to the reader, something must be pardoned to the spirit of a
-patient friend and an impatient teacher, who saw in this scene the
-first fruits of his careful husbandry, and the end of his long vigil. He
-appears to have participated even then in the belief which Mr. Lincoln
-himself avowed,--that the latter was designed by the Dispenser of all
-things to occupy a great place in the world's history; and he felt
-that that day's doings had fixed his political character forever. The
-Bloomington Convention was called "Republican," and the Republican party
-of Illinois was there formed: but the most noted Abolitionists were in
-it, the spirit of the Lovejoys was present; and Mr. Herndon had a right
-to say, that, if Mr. Lincoln was not an Abolitionist, he was tending
-"Abolition-ward" so surely that no doubt could be entertained of his
-ultimate destination. But, after all, the resolutions of the convention
-were very "moderate." They merely denounced the administration for
-its course regarding Kansas, stigmatized the repeal of the Missouri
-Compromise as an act of bad faith, and opposed "the extension of slavery
-into Territories heretofore free." It was surely not because Mr. Lincoln
-was present, and aiding at the passage of such resolutions, that Mr.
-Herndon and others thereafter regarded him as a "newborn" Abolitionist.
-It must have been the general warmth of his speech against the
-South,--his manifest detestation of slaveholders and slaveholding, as
-exhibited in his words,--which led them to believe that his feelings at
-least, if not his opinions, were similar to theirs. But the reader will
-see, nevertheless, as we get along in our history, that the Bloomington
-resolutions were the actual standard of Mr. Lincoln's views; that he
-continued to express his determination to maintain the rights of the
-Slave States under the Constitution, and to make conspicuously plain his
-abhorrence of negro suffrage and negro equality. He certainly disliked
-the Southern politicians very much; but even that sentiment, growing
-daily more fierce and ominous in the masses of the new party, was in his
-case counterbalanced by his prejudices or his caution, and he never saw
-the day when he would willingly have clothed the negroes with political
-privileges.
-
-Notwithstanding the conservative character of the resolutions, the
-proceedings of the Bloomington Convention were alarming to a portion of
-the community, and seem to have found little favor with the people of
-Springfield. About five days after its adjournment, Herndon and Lincoln
-bethought them of holding a ratification meeting. Mr. Herndon got out
-huge posters, announcing the event, and employed a band of musicians to
-parade the streets and "drum up a crowd." As the hour of meeting drew
-near, he "lit up the Court House with many blazes," rung the bells, and
-blew a horn. At seven o'clock the meeting should have been called to
-order, but it turned out to be extremely slim. There was nobody present,
-with all those brilliant lights, but A. Lincoln, W. H. Herndon, and John
-Pain. "When Lincoln came into the courtroom," says the bill-poster and
-horn-blower of this great demonstration, "he came with a sadness and a
-sense of the ludicrous on his face. He walked to the stand, mounted
-it in a kind of mockery,--mirth and sadness all combined,--and said,
-'Gentlemen, this meeting is larger than I _knew_ it would be. I knew
-that Herndon and myself would come, but I did not know that any one else
-would be here; and yet another has come,--you, John Pain. These are sad
-times, and seem out of joint. All seems dead, dead, dead: but the age
-is not yet dead; it liveth as sure as our Maker liveth. Under all this
-seeming want of life and motion, the world does move nevertheless. Be
-hopeful. And now let us adjourn, and appeal to the people.'
-
-"This speech is in substance just as he delivered it, and substantially
-in the same sad but determined spirit; and so we did adjourn, did go
-out, and did witness the fact that 'the world was not dead.'"
-
-The Bloomington Convention sent delegates to the general Republican
-Convention, which was to be held at Philadelphia in June. That body was
-to nominate candidates for the Presidency and Vice-Presidency, and high
-hopes were entertained of their success. But much remained to be done
-before such a revolution in sentiment could be expected. The American
-or Know-Nothing party--corrupt, hideous, and delusive, but still
-powerful--had adopted the old Whig platform on the several slavery
-questions, and planted itself decisively against the agitations of the
-Anti-Nebraska men and the Republicans. A "National Council" had taken
-this position for it the year previous, in terms beside which
-the resolutions of the Whigs and Democrats in 1852 were mild and
-inexpressive. Something, therefore, must be done to get this great
-organization out of the way, or to put its machinery under "Republican"
-control. We have seen a party of gentlemen from Chicago proposing to
-go into the lodges, and "rule them for freedom." Mr. Herndon and Mr.
-Lincoln rejected the plot with lofty indignation; but a section of the
-Free-Soil politicians were by no means so fastidious. They were for
-the most part bad, insincere, trading men, with whom the profession of
-principles of any kind was merely a convenient disguise, and who could
-be attached to no party, except from motives of self-interest. As yet,
-they were not quite certain whether it were possible to raise more
-hatred in the Northern mind against foreigners and Catholics than
-against slaveholders; and they prudently determined to be in a situation
-to try either. Accordingly, they went into the lodges, took the oaths,
-swore to stand by the platform of the "National Council" of 1855, and
-were perfectly ready to do that, or to betray the organization to the
-Republicans, as the prospect seemed good or bad. Believing the latter
-scheme to be the best, upon deliberation, they carried it out as far as
-in them lay, and then told the old, grim, honest, antislavery men,
-with whom they again sought association, that they had joined the
-Know-Nothings, and sworn irrevocable oaths to proscribe foreigners and
-Catholics, solely that they might rule the order "for freedom;" and,
-the Republicans standing in much need of aid just then, the excuse was
-considered very good. But it was too shameless a business for Lincoln
-and Herndon; and they most righteously despised it.
-
-In February, 1856, the Republicans held what Mr. Greeley styles their
-"first National. Convention," at Pittsburg; but they made no nominations
-there. At the same time, a Know-Nothing American "National Council" was
-sitting at Philadelphia (to be followed by a nominating convention); and
-the Republicans at Pittsburg had not adjourned before they got news
-by telegraph, that the patriots who had entered the lodges on false
-pretences were achieving a great success: the American party was
-disintegrating, and a great section of it falling away to the
-Republicans. A most wonderful political feat had been performed, and
-the way was now apparently clear for a union of the all-formidable
-anti-Democratic elements in the Presidential canvass.
-
-On the 17th of June the National Republican Convention met at
-Philadelphia, and nominated John C. Fremont for President, and William
-L. Dayton for Vice-President. Mr. Williams, Chairman of the Illinois
-Delegation, presented to the convention the name of Abraham Lincoln for
-the latter office; and it was received with great enthusiasm by some of
-the Western delegates. He received, however, but 110 votes, against
-259 for Mr. Dayton, and 180 scattered; and Mr. Dayton was immediately
-thereafter unanimously declared the nominee.
-
-While this convention was sitting, Mr. Lincoln was attending court at
-Urbana, in Champaign County. When the news reached that place that Mr.
-Dayton had been nominated, and "Lincoln had received 110 votes," some
-of the lawyers insisted that the latter must have been "our [their]
-Lincoln;" but he said, "No, it could not be: it must have been the
-_great_ Lincoln from Massachusetts." He utterly refused to believe in
-the reality of this unexpected distinction until he saw the proceedings
-in full. He was just then in one of his melancholy moods, his spirits
-depressed, and his heart suffering the miseries of a morbid mind.
-
-With an indorsement of the "self-evident truths" and "inalienable
-rights" of the Declaration of Independence, the Republican Convention
-adopted the following as the practical and essential features of its
-platform:--
-
-"Resolved,... That we deny the authority of Congress, of a territorial
-Legislature, of any individual, or association of individuals, to give
-legal existence to slavery in any Territory of the United States while
-the present Constitution shall be maintained.
-
-"Resolved, That the Constitution confers upon Congress sovereign power
-over the Territories of the United States for their government; and
-that, in the exercise of this power, it is both the right and the
-duty of Congress to prohibit in the Territories those twin relics of
-barbarism,--polygamy and slavery."
-
-The National Democratic Convention had already placed in nomination
-Buchanan and Breckenridge. Their platform denounced as sectional the
-principles and purposes of their opponents; re-affirmed "the principles
-contained in the organic laws establishing the Territories of Kansas and
-Nebraska, as embodying the only sound and safe solution of the slavery
-question," and declared further,--
-
-"That by the uniform application of Democratic principles to the
-organization of Territories and the admission of new States, with or
-without slavery as they may elect, the equal rights of all the States
-will be preserved intact, the original compacts of the Constitution
-maintained inviolate, and the perpetuity and expansion of the Union
-insured to its utmost capacity of embracing, in peace and harmony,
-every future American State that may be constituted or annexed with a
-republican form of government."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was again a candidate for the office of Presidential
-elector, and made a thorough and energetic canvass. Some of his speeches
-were very striking; and probably no man in the country discussed
-the main questions in that campaign--Kansas, and slavery in the
-Territories--in a manner more original and persuasive. From first to
-last, he scouted the intimation that the election of Fremont would
-justify a dissolution of the Union, or that it could possibly become
-even the occasion of a dissolution. In his eyes, the apprehensions of
-disunion were a "humbug;" the threat of it mere bluster, and the fear of
-it silly timidity.
-
-In the heat of the canvass, Mr. Lincoln wrote the following perfectly
-characteristic letter,--marked "Confidential:"--
-
-Springfield, Sept. 8, 1856.
-
-Harrison Maltby, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--I understand you are a Fillmore man. Let me prove to you that
-every vote withheld from Fremont and given to Fillmore in this State
-actually lessens Fillmore's chance of being President.
-
-Suppose Buchanan gets all the Slave States and Pennsylvania, and any
-other one State besides; then he is elected, no matter who gets all the
-rest.
-
-But suppose Fillmore gets the two Slave States of Maryland and
-Kentucky; then Buchanan is not elected: Fillmore goes into the House of
-Representatives, and may be made President by a compromise.
-
-But suppose, again, Fillmore's friends throw away a few thousand votes
-on him in Indiana and Illinois: it will inevitably give these States to
-Buchanan, which will more than compensate him for the loss of Maryland
-and Kentucky; will elect him, and leave Fillmore no chance in the H. R.,
-or out of it.
-
-This is as plain as adding up the weights of three small hogs. As Mr.
-Fillmore has no possible chance to carry Illinois for himself, it is
-plainly to his interest to let Fremont take it, and thus keep it out of
-the hands of Buchanan. Be not deceived. Buchanan is the hard horse to
-beat in this race. Let him have Illinois, and nothing can beat him;
-and he will get Illinois if men persist in throwing away votes upon
-Mr. Fillmore. Does some one persuade you that Mr. Fillmore can carry
-Illinois? Nonsense! There are over seventy newspapers in Illinois
-opposing Buchanan, only three or four of which support Mr. Fillmore, all
-the rest going for Fremont. Are not these newspapers a fair index of the
-proportion of the votes? If not, tell me why.
-
-Again, of these three or four Fillmore newspapers, two, at least, are
-supported in part by the Buchanan men, as I understand. Do not they know
-where the shoe pinches? They know the Fillmore movement helps them, and
-therefore they help it.
-
-Do think these things over, and then act according to your judgment.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-(Confidential.)
-
-This letter was discovered by the Buchanan men, printed in their
-newspapers, and pronounced, as its author anticipated, "a mean trick."
-It was a dangerous document to them, and was calculated to undermine the
-very citadel of their strength.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was still in imperfect fellowship--if, indeed, in any
-fellowship at all--with the extreme Abolitionists. He had met
-with Lovejoy and his followers at Bloomington, and was apparently
-co-operating with them for the same party purposes; but the intensity of
-his opposition to their radical views is intimated very strongly in this
-letter to Mr. Whitney:--
-
-SprinGfield, July 9, 1856.
-
-Dear Whitney,--I now expect to go to Chicago on the 15th, and I probably
-shall remain there or thereabout for about two weeks.
-
-It turned me blind when I first heard Swett was beaten and Lovejoy
-nominated; but, after much anxious reflection, I really believe it is
-best to let it stand. This, of course, I wish to be confidential.
-
-Lamon did get your deeds. I went with him to the office, got them, and
-put them in his hands myself.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-In June, 1857, Judge Douglas made a speech at Springfield, in which he
-attempted to vindicate the wisdom and fairness of the law under which
-the people of Kansas were about to choose delegates to a convention to
-be held at Lecompton to frame a State constitution. He declared
-with emphasis, that, if the Free-State party refused to vote at this
-election, they alone would be blamable for the proslavery constitution
-which might be formed. The Free-State men professed to have a vast
-majority,--"three-fourths," "four-fifths," "nine-tenths," of the voters
-of Kansas. If these wilfully staid away from the polls, and allowed the
-minority to choose the delegates and make the constitution, Mr. Douglas
-thought they ought to abide the result, and not oppose the constitution
-adopted. Mr. Douglas's speech indicated clearly that he himself would
-countenance no opposition to the forthcoming Lecompton Convention, and
-that he would hold the Republican politicians responsible if the result
-failed to be satisfactory to them.
-
-Judge Douglas seldom spoke in that region without provoking a reply from
-his constant and vigilant antagonist. Mr. Lincoln heard this speech
-with a critical ear, and then, waiting only for a printed report of it,
-prepared a reply to be delivered a few weeks later. The speeches were
-neither of them of much consequence, except for the fact that Judge
-Douglas seemed to have plainly committed himself in advance to the
-support of the Lecompton Constitution. Mr. Lincoln took that much for
-granted; and, arguing from sundry indications that the election would
-be fraudulently conducted, he insisted that Mr. Douglas himself, as
-the author of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, and the inventor of "popular
-sovereignty," had made this "outrage" possible. He did not believe
-there were any "Free-State Democrats" in Kansas to make it a Free State
-without the aid of the Republicans, whom he held to be a vast majority
-of the population. The latter, he contended, were not all registered;
-and, because all were not registered, he thought none ought to vote.
-But Mr. Lincoln advised no bloodshed, no civil war, no roadside
-assassinations. Even if an incomplete registry might justify a majority
-of the people in an obstinate refusal to participate in the regulation
-of their own affairs, it certainly would not justify them in taking up
-arms to oppose all government in the Territory; and Mr. Lincoln did not
-say so. We have seen already how, in the "little speech" reported by Mr.
-Herndon, he deprecated "all physical rebellions" in this country, and
-applied his views to this case.
-
-Mr. Lincoln also discussed the Dred-Scott Decision at some length; and,
-while doing so, disclosed his firm belief, that, in some respects, such
-as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," the negroes were made
-by the Declaration of Independence the equals of white men. But it
-did not follow from this that he was in favor of political or social
-equality with them. "There is," said he, "a natural disgust in the
-minds of nearly all the white people to the idea of an indiscriminate
-amalgamation of the white and black races; and Judge Douglas evidently
-is basing his chief hope upon the chances of his being able to
-appropriate the benefit of this disgust to himself. If he can, by
-much drumming and repeating, fasten the odium of that idea upon his
-adversaries, he thinks he can struggle through the storm. He therefore
-clings to his hope, as a drowning man to the last plank. He makes
-an occasion for lugging it in from the opposition to the Dred-Scott
-Decision. He finds the Republicans insisting that the Declaration of
-Independence includes all men,--black as well as white; and forthwith
-he boldly denies that it includes negroes at all, and proceeds to argue
-gravely, that all who contend it does, do so only because they want to
-vote, eat, sleep, and marry with negroes. Now, I protest against the
-counterfeit logic which concludes, that, because I do not want a black
-woman for a slave, I must necessarily want her for a wife. I need not
-have her for either. I can just leave her alone. In some respects, she
-certainly is not my equal; but in her natural right to eat the bread she
-earns with her own hands, without asking leave of any one else, she is
-my equal, and the equal of all others."
-
-These speeches were delivered, the one early and the other late, in
-the month of June: they present strongly, yet guardedly, the important
-issues which were to engage Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Douglas in the famous
-campaign of 1858, and leave us no choice but to look into Kansas, and
-observe what had taken place and what was happening there.
-
-Violence still (June, 1857) prevailed throughout the Territory. The
-administration of President Pierce committed itself at the first in
-support of the proslavery party. It acknowledged the Legislature as the
-only legal government in the Territory, and gave it military assistance
-to enforce its enactments. Gov. Shannon, having by his course only
-served to increase the hostility between the parties, was recalled, and
-John W. Geary of Pennsylvania was appointed his successor. Gov. Geary,
-while adopting the policy of the administration, so far as recognizing
-the Legislative party as the only legally organized government, was yet
-disposed to see, that, so far as the two parties could be got to act
-together, each should be fairly protected. This policy, however, soon
-brought him into collision with some of the proslavery leaders in the
-Territory; and, not being sustained by Mr. Buchanan's administration,
-which had in the mean time succeeded the administration of President
-Pierce, he resigned his office. Hon. Robert J. Walker of Mississippi
-was appointed his successor, with Hon. F. P. Stanton of Tennessee as
-secretary. Both were strong Democrats; and both were earnest advocates
-of the policy of the administration, as expressed in the recent
-presidential canvass, and in Mr. Buchanan's inaugural Message,--the
-absolute freedom of the people of the Territories to form such
-governments as they saw fit, subject to the provisions of the
-Constitution. Gov. Walker and his secretary earnestly set themselves to
-work to carry out this policy. The governor, in various addresses to the
-people of the Territory, assured all parties that he would protect
-them in the free expression of their wishes in the election for a new
-Territorial legislature; and he besought the Free-State men to give up
-their separate Territorial organization, under which they had already
-applied for admission into the Union, and by virtue of which they
-claimed still to have an equitable legal existence. The governor was so
-earnest in his policy, and so fair-minded in his purposes, that he
-soon drew upon himself the opposition of the proslavery party of the
-Territory, now in a small minority, as well as the enmity of that party
-in the States. He assured the people they should have a fair election
-for the new Legislature to be chosen in October (1857), and which would
-come into power in January following. The people took him at his word;
-and he kept it. Enormous frauds were discovered in two districts,
-which were promptly set aside. The triumph of the Free-State party was
-complete: they elected a legislature in their interest by a handsome
-majority. And now began another phase of the struggle. The policy of
-the Governor and the Secretary was repudiated at Washington: the former
-resigned, and the latter was removed. Meanwhile, a convention held under
-the auspices of the old Legislature had formed a new constitution, known
-as the Lecompton Constitution, which the old Legislature proposed to
-submit to the people for ratification on the 21st of December. The
-manner of submitting it was singular, to say the least. The people
-were required to vote either for the constitution with slavery, or the
-constitution without slavery. As without slavery the constitution was
-in some of its provisions as objectionable as if it upheld slavery, the
-Free-State men refused to participate in its ratification. The vote
-on its submission, therefore, stood 4,206 for the constitution with
-slavery, and 567 without slavery; and it was this constitution, thus
-submitted and thus adopted, that Mr. Buchanan submitted to Congress on
-the 2d of February, 1858, as the free expression of the wishes of the
-people of Kansas; and its support was at once made an administration
-measure. Meantime the new Legislature elected by the people of the
-Territory in October submitted this same Lecompton Constitution to the
-people again, and in this manner: votes to be given for the constitution
-with slavery and without slavery, and also against the constitution
-entirely. The latter manner prevailed; the vote against the constitution
-in any form being over ten thousand. Thus the proslavery party in the
-Territory was overthrown. Under the auspices of the new Free-State
-Legislature, a constitutional convention was held at Wyandotte, in
-March, 1859. A Free-State constitution was adopted, under which Kansas
-was subsequently admitted into the Union.
-
-Before leaving this Kansas question, there is one phase of the closing
-part of the struggle which it is worth while to note, particularly as it
-has a direct bearing upon the fortunes of Judge Douglas, and indirectly
-to the success of Mr. Lincoln. Douglas always insisted that his plan of
-"popular sovereignty" would give to the people of the Territories the
-utmost freedom in the formation of their local governments. When Mr.
-Buchanan attempted to uphold the Lecompton Constitution as being the
-free choice of the people of Kansas, Judge Douglas at once took issue
-with the administration on this question, and the Democratic party
-was split in twain. Up to the time of the vote of the people of the
-Territory on the constitution, Douglas had been an unswerving supporter
-of the administration policy in Kansas. His speech at Springfield,
-in the June previous, could not be misunderstood. He held all the
-proceedings which led to the Lecompton issue to be in strict accordance,
-not only with the letter, but the spirit, of the Kansas-Nebraska Act,
-and with the faith of the Democratic party as expounded by himself. But
-a few weeks later it became manifest that his opinions had undergone
-a change. Ominous rumors of a breach with the administration began to
-circulate among his friends. It was alleged at length that Mr. Douglas's
-delicate sense of justice had been shocked by the unfairness of certain
-elections in Kansas: it was even intimated that he, too, considered the
-Lecompton affair an "outrage" upon the sovereign people of Kansas, and
-that he would speedily join the Republicans--the special objects of
-his indignation in the June speech--in denouncing and defeating it. The
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill had borne its appropriate fruits,--the fruits all
-along predicted by Mr. Lincoln,--and Mr. Douglas commended them to
-anybody's eating but his own. His desertion was sudden and astonishing;
-but there was method in it, and a reason for it. The next year Illinois
-was to choose a senator to fill the vacancy created by the expiration of
-his own term; and the choice lay between the author of the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill and its most conspicuous opponent in that State.
-The newspapers were not yet done publishing Mr. Lincoln's speech, in
-which occurred the following paragraph:--
-
-"Three years and a half ago Judge Douglas brought forward his famous
-Nebraska Bill. The country was at once in a blaze. He scorned all
-opposition, and carried it through Congress. Since then he has seen
-himself superseded in a Presidential nomination by one indorsing the
-general doctrine of his measure, but at the same time standing clear of
-the odium of its untimely agitation and its gross' breach of national
-faith; and he has seen the successful rival constitutionally elected,
-not by the strength of friends, but by the division of his adversaries,
-being in a popular minority of nearly four hundred thousand votes.
-He has seen his chief aids in his own State, Shields and Richardson,
-politically speaking, successively tried, convicted, and executed for
-an offence not their own, but his. And now he sees his own case standing
-next on the docket for trial."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-ALTHOUGH primarily responsible for all that had taken place in Kansas,
-Mr. Douglas appeared to be suddenly animated by a new and burning zeal
-in behalf of the Free-State party in the Territory. It struck him very
-forcibly, just when he needed most to be struck by a new idea, that
-the Lecompton Constitution was not "the act and deed of the people of
-Kansas."
-
-Accordingly, Mr. Douglas took his stand against Lecompton at the first
-note of the long conflict in Congress. We shall make no analysis of the
-debates, nor set out the votes of senators and representatives which
-marked the intervals of that fierce struggle between sections, parties,
-and factions which followed. It is enough to say here, that Mr. Douglas
-was found speaking and voting with the Republicans upon every phase of
-the question. He had but one or two followers in the Senate, and a mere
-handful in the House; yet these were faithful to his lead until a final
-conference committee and the English Bill afforded an opportunity for
-some of them to escape. For himself he scorned all compromises, voted
-against the English Bill, and returned to Illinois to ask the votes
-of the people upon a winter's record wholly and consistently
-anti-Democratic. The fact is mentioned, not to obscure the fame of the
-statesman, nor to impugn the honesty of the politician, but because it
-had an important influence upon the canvass of the ensuing summer.
-
-During the winter Mr. Douglas held frequent consultations with the
-leaders of the Republican party. Their meetings were secret, and for
-that reason the more significant. By this means, harmony of action was
-secured for the present, and something provided for the future. Mr.
-Douglas covertly announced himself as a convert to the Republicans,
-declared his uncompromising enmity to "the slave power," and said that,
-however he might be distrusted then, he would be seen "fighting their
-battles in 1860;" but for the time he thought it wise to conceal his
-ultimate intentions. He could manage the Democracy more effectually
-by remaining with them until better opportunities should occur. "He
-insisted that he would never be driven from the party, but would remain
-in it until he exposed the administration and the Disunionists; and,
-when he went out, he would go of his own accord. He was in the habit of
-remarking, that it was policy for him to remain in the party, in order
-to hold certain of the rank-and-file; so that, if he went over from the
-Democracy to any other party, he would be able to take the crowd along
-with him; and, when he got them all over, he would cut down the bridges,
-and sink the boats." When asked if he knew precisely where his present
-course was taking him, he answered repeatedly, "I do; and I have checked
-all my baggage, and taken a through ticket."
-
-He was a proselyte not to be despised: his weight might be sufficient
-to turn the scale in the Presidential election. The Republicans were
-naturally pleased with his protestations of friendship, and more than
-pleased with his proffers of active service; but he was not content with
-this alone. He contrived to convince many of his late opponents that the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill itself was actually conceived in the interests
-of antislavery, and that the device was the most cunning of political
-tricks, intended to give back to "freedom" all the vast expanse of
-territory which the Missouri line had dedicated forever to slavery. "Mr.
-Douglas's plan for destroying the Missouri line," said one Republican,
-"and thereby opening the way for the march of freedom beyond the limits
-forever prohibited by that line, and the opening up of Free States in
-territory which it was conceded belonged to the Slave States, and its
-march westward, embracing the whole line of the Pacific from the British
-possessions to Mexico, struck me as the most magnificent scheme
-ever conceived by the human mind. This character of conversation, so
-frequently employed by Mr. Douglas with those with whom he talked, made
-the deepest impression upon their minds, enlisted them in his behalf,
-and changed, in almost every instance, their opinion of the man." In
-support of this view, Mr. Douglas could point to Kansas, where the
-battle under his bill was being fought out. The Free-State men had,
-perhaps from the very beginning, been in a majority, and could take
-possession of the Territory or the new State, as the case might be,
-whenever they could secure a fair vote. The laboring classes of, the
-North were the natural settlers of the western Territories. If these
-failed in numbers, the enormous and increasing European immigration
-was at their back; and, if both together failed, the churches, aid
-societies, and antislavery organizations were at hand to raise, arm,
-and equip great bodies of emigrants, as they would regular forces for a
-public purpose. The South had no such facilities: its social, political,
-and material conditions made a sudden exodus of its voting population
-to new countries a thing impossible. It might send here a man with a few
-negroes, and there another. It might insist vehemently upon its supposed
-rights in the common Territories, and be ready to fight for them; but
-it could never cover the surface of those Territories with cosey
-farmsteads, or crowd them with intelligent and muscular white men; and
-yet these last would inevitably give political character to the
-rising communities. Such clearly were to be the results of "popular
-sovereignty," as Mr. Douglas had up to that time maintained it under the
-Nebraska Bill.
-
-It signified the right of the people of a Territory "to form and
-regulate their domestic institutions in their own way" when, and not
-before, they came to frame a State constitution. The Missouri line, on
-the contrary, had been a sort of convention, which, by common consent,
-gave all north of it to freedom, and all south of it to slavery. But
-popular sovereignty disregarded all previous compacts, all ordinances,
-and all laws. With this doctrine in practice, the North were sure to be
-victors in every serious contest. But when Mr. Douglas changed ground
-again, and popular sovereignty became squatter sovereignty, he had
-reason to boast himself the most efficient, although the wiliest and
-coolest, antislavery agitator on the continent. The new doctrine implied
-the right of a handful of settlers to determine the slavery question in
-their first Legislature. It made no difference whether they did this by
-direct or "unfriendly legislation:" the result was the same.
-
-"Popular sovereignty! popular sovereignty!" said Mr. Lincoln. "Let us
-for a moment inquire into this vast matter of popular sovereignty. What
-is popular sovereignty? We recollect, that, in an early period in
-the history of this struggle, there was another name for the
-same thing,--_squatter sovereignty_. It was not exactly popular
-sovereignty,--squatter sovereignty. What do these terms mean? What do
-those terms mean when used now? And vast credit is taken by our friend,
-the Judge, in regard to his support of it, when he declares the last
-years of his life have been, and all the future years of his life shall
-be, devoted to this matter of popular sovereignty. What is it? Why,
-it is the sovereignty of the people! What was squatter sovereignty?
-I suppose, if it had any significance at all, it was the right of the
-people to govern themselves, to be sovereign in their own affairs while
-they were squatted down in a country not their own, while they had
-squatted on a territory that did not belong to them; in the sense that
-a State belongs to the people who inhabit it, when it belongs to
-the nation. Such right to govern themselves was called 'squatter
-sovereignty.'"
-
-Again, and on another occasion, but still before Mr. Douglas had
-substituted "squatter" for "popular" sovereignty,--a feat which was not
-performed until September, 1859,--Mr. Lincoln said,--
-
-"I suppose almost every one knows, that in this controversy, whatever
-has been said has had reference to negro slavery. We have not been in
-a controversy about the right of the people to govern themselves in the
-ordinary matters of domestic concern in the States and Territories.
-Mr. Buchanan, in one of his late messages (I think when he sent up the
-Lecompton Constitution), urged that the main point to which the public
-attention had been directed was not in regard to the great variety of
-small domestic matters, but it was directed to negro slavery; and he
-asserts, that, if the people had had a fair chance to vote on that
-question, there was no reasonable ground of objection in regard to minor
-questions. Now, while I think that the people had not had given them, or
-offered them, a fair chance upon that slavery question, still, if
-there had been a fair submission to a vote upon that main question, the
-President's proposition would have been true to the uttermost. Hence,
-when hereafter I speak of popular sovereignty, I wish to be understood
-as applying what I say to the question of slavery only, not to other
-minor domestic matters of a Territory or a State.
-
-"Does Judge Douglas, when he says that several of the past years of his
-life have been devoted to the question of popular sovereignty, and that
-all the remainder of his life shall be devoted to it,--does he mean to
-say, that he has been devoting his life to securing to the people of
-the Territories the right to exclude slavery from the Territories? If
-he means so to say, he means to deceive; because he and every one knows
-that the decision of the Supreme Court, which he approves, and makes an
-especial ground of attack upon me for disapproving, forbids the people
-of a Territory to exclude slavery. This covers the whole ground, from
-the settlement of a Territory till it reaches the degree of maturity
-entitling it to form a State constitution. So far as all that ground
-is concerned, the judge is not sustaining popular sovereignty, but
-absolutely opposing it. He sustains the decision which declares that the
-popular will of the Territories has no constitutional power to exclude
-slavery during their territorial existence. This being so, the period of
-time from the first settlement of a territory till it reaches the point
-of forming a State constitution is not the thing that the Judge has
-fought for, or is fighting for; but, on the contrary, he has fought for,
-and is fighting for, the thing that annihilates and crushes out that
-same popular sovereignty."
-
-It is probable, that, in the numerous private conferences held by Mr.
-Douglas with Republican leaders in the winter of 1857-8, he managed
-to convince them that it was, after all, not popular sovereignty,
-but squatter sovereignty, that he meant to advance as his final and
-inevitable deduction from "the great principles" of the Nebraska Bill.
-This he knew, and they were sure, would give antislavery an unbroken
-round of solid victories in all the Territories. The South feared it
-much more than they did the Republican theory: it was, in the language
-of their first orator, "a shortcut to all the ends of Sewardism."
-
-But Mr. Douglas's great difficulty was to produce any belief in his
-sincerity. At home, in Illinois, the Republicans distrusted him almost
-to a man; and at Washington, among his peers in the Senate and the
-House, it seemed necessary for him to repeat his plans and promises
-very often, and to mingle with them bitter and passionate declamations
-against the South. At last, however, he succeeded,--partially, at least.
-Senator Wilson believed him devoutly; Mr. Burlingame said his record
-was "laid up in light;" Mr. Colfax, Mr. Blair, and Mr. Covode were
-convinced; and gentlemen of the press began industriously to prepare
-the way for his entrance into the Republican party. Mr. Greeley was
-thoroughly possessed by the new idea, and went about propagating
-and enforcing it with all his might. Among all the grave counsellors
-employed in furthering Mr. Douglas's defection, it is singular that only
-one man of note steadily resisted his admission to a place of leadership
-in the Republican ranks: Judge Trumbull could not be persuaded; he had
-no faith in the man who proposed to desert, and had some admonitions to
-deliver, based upon the history of recent events. He was willing enough
-to take him "on probation," but wholly opposed to giving him any power.
-Covode was employed to mollify Judge Trumbull; but he met with no
-success, and went away without so much as delivering the message with
-which Mr. Douglas had charged him. The message was a simple proposition
-of alliance with the home Republicans, to the effect, that, if they
-agreed to return him to the Senate in 1858, he would fight their
-Presidential battle in 1860. Judge Trumbull did not even hear it, but he
-was well assured that Mr. Douglas was "an applicant for admission into
-the Republican party." "It was reported to me at that time," said
-he, "that such was the fact; and such appeared to be the universal
-understanding, among the Republicans at Washington. I will state another
-fact,--I almost quarrelled with some of my best Republican friends in
-'regard to this matter. I was willing to receive Judge Douglas into
-the Republican party on probation; but I was not, as these Republican
-friends were, willing to receive him, and place him at the head of our
-ranks."
-
-Toward the latter part of April, 1858, a Democratic State Convention
-met in Illinois, and, besides nominating a ticket for State officers,
-indorsed Mr. Douglas. This placed him in the field for re-election as
-an Anti-Lecompton Democrat; but it by no means shook the faith of his
-recently acquired Republican friends: they thought it very natural,
-under the circumstances, that his ways should be a little devious, and
-his policy somewhat dark. He had always said he could do more for them
-by seeming to remain within the Democratic party; and they looked
-upon this latest proceeding--his practical nomination by a Democratic
-convention--as the foundation for an act of stupendous treason between
-that time and the Presidential election. They continued to press the
-Republicans of Illinois to make no nomination against him,--to vote for
-him, to trust him, to follow him, as a sincere and manifestly a powerful
-antislavery leader. These representations had the effect of seducing
-away, for a brief time, Mr. Wash-burne and a few others among the
-lesser politicians of the State; but, when they found the party at large
-irrevocably opposed to the scheme, they reluctantly acquiesced in what
-they could not prevent,--Mr. Lincoln's nomination. But the plot made a
-profound impression on Mr. Lincoln's mind: it proved the existence
-of personal qualities in Mr. Douglas, which, to a simpler man, were
-unimaginable and inexplicable. A gentleman once inquired of Mr. Lincoln
-what he thought of Douglas's chances at Charleston. "Well," he replied,
-"were it not for certain matters that I know transpired, which I
-regarded at one time among the impossibilities, I would say he stood no
-possible chance. I refer to the fact, that, in the Illinois contest with
-myself, he had the sympathy and support of Greeley, of Burlingame, and
-of Wilson of Massachusetts, and other leading Republicans; that, at
-the same time, he received the support of Wise, and the influence of
-Breckinridge, and other Southern men; that he took direct issue with
-the administration, and secured, against all its power, one hundred and
-twenty-five thousand out of one hundred and thirty thousand Democratic
-votes cast in the State. A man that can bring such influence to bear
-with his own exertions may play the devil at Charleston."
-
-From about the 7th to the 16th of June, 1858, Mr. Lincoln was busily
-engaged writing a speech: he wrote it in scraps,--a sentence now, and
-another again. It was originally scattered over numberless little pieces
-of paper, and was only reduced to consecutive sheets and connected form
-as the hour for its delivery drew near. It was to be spoken on or
-about the 16th, when the Republican State Convention would assemble at
-Springfield, and, as Mr. Lincoln anticipated, would nominate him for
-senator in Congress.
-
-About the 13th of June, Mr. Dubois, the State auditor, entered the
-office of Lincoln & Herndon, and found Mr. Lincoln deeply intent upon
-the speech. "Hello, Lincoln! what _are_ you writing?" said the auditor.
-"Come, tell me."--"I sha'n't tell you," said Lincoln. "_It is none of
-your business_, Mr. Auditor. Come, sit down, and let's be jolly."
-
-On the 16th, the convention, numbering, with delegates and alternates,
-about a thousand men, met, and passed unanimously the following
-resolution:--
-
-"That Hon. Abraham Lincoln is our first and only choice for United
-States senator to fill the vacancy about to be created by the expiration
-of Mr. Douglas's term of office."
-
-That evening Mr. Lincoln came early to his office, along with Mr.
-Herndon. Having carefully locked the door, and put the key in his own
-pocket, he pulled from his bosom the manuscript of his speech, and
-proceeded to read it slowly and distinctly. When he had finished the
-first paragraph, he came to a dead pause, and turned to his astounded
-auditor with the inquiry, "How do you like that? What do you think of
-it?"--"I think," returned Mr. Herndon, "it is true; but is it entirely
-_politic_ to read or speak it as it is written?"
-
---"That makes no difference," Mr. Lincoln said. "That expression is a
-truth of all human experience,--'a house divided against itself cannot
-stand;' and 'he that runs may read.' The proposition is indisputably
-true, and has been true for more than six thousand years; and--I will
-deliver it as written. I want to use some universally known figure,
-expressed in simple language as universally known, that may strike home
-to the minds of men, in order to rouse them to the peril of the times.
-I would rather be _defeated with this expression in_ the speech, and it
-held up and discussed before the people, than _to be victorious without
-it._"
-
-It may be questioned whether Mr. Lincoln had a clear right to indulge in
-such a venture, as a representative party man in a close contest. He
-had other interests than his own in charge: he was bound to respect the
-opinions, and, if possible, secure the success, of the party which had
-made him its leader. He knew that the strange doctrine, so strikingly
-enunciated, would alienate many well-affected voters. Was it his duty
-to cast these away, or to keep them? He was not asked to sacrifice any
-principle of the party, or any opinion of his own previously expressed,
-but merely to forego the trial of an experiment, to withhold the
-announcement of a startling theory, and to leave the creed of the
-party as it came from the hands of its makers, without this individual
-supplement, of which they had never dreamed. It is evident that he
-had not always been insensible to the force of this reasoning. At the
-Bloomington Convention he had uttered the same ideas in almost the same
-words; and their novelty, their tendency, their recognition of a
-state of incipient civil war in a country for the most part profoundly
-peaceful,--these, and the bloody work which might come of their
-acceptance by a great party, had filled the minds of some of his hearers
-with the most painful apprehensions. The theory was equally shocking to
-them, whether as partisans or as patriots. Among them was Hon. T. Lyle
-Dickey, who sought Mr. Lincoln, and begged him to suppress them in
-future. He vindicated his speech as he has just vindicated it in the
-interview with Mr. Herndon; but, after much persuasion, he promised at
-length not to repeat it.
-
-It was now Mr. Herndon's turn to be surprised: the pupil had outstripped
-the teacher. He was intensely anxious for Mr. Lincoln's election:
-he feared the effect of this speech; and yet it was so exactly in
-accordance with his own faith, that he could not advise him to suppress
-it. It might be heresy to many others, but it was orthodoxy to him;
-and he was in the habit of telling the whole truth, without regard
-to consequences. If it cost a single defeat now, he was sure that its
-potency would one day be felt, and the wisdom of its present utterance
-acknowledged. He therefore urged Mr. Lincoln to speak it as he had
-written it, and to treat with the scorn of a prophet those who, having
-ears, would not hear, and, having eyes, would not see. The advice was
-not unacceptable, but Mr. Lincoln thought he owed it to other friends to
-counsel with them also.
-
-About a dozen gentlemen were called to meet in the Library Room in
-the State House. "After seating them at the round table," says John
-Armstrong, one of the number, "he read that clause or section of his
-speech which reads, 'a house divided against itself cannot stand,' &c.
-He read it slowly and cautiously, so as to let each man fully understand
-it. After he had finished the reading, he asked the opinions of his
-friends as to the wisdom or policy of it. Every man among them condemned
-the speech in substance and spirit, and especially that section quoted
-above. They unanimously declared that the whole speech was too far in
-advance of the times; and they all condemned that section or part of his
-speech already quoted, as unwise and impolitic, if not false. William
-H. Herndon sat still while they were giving their respective opinions
-of its unwisdom and impolicy: then he sprang to his feet and said,
-'Lincoln, deliver it just as it reads. If it is in advance of the times,
-let us--you and I, if no one else--lift the people to the level of this
-speech now, higher hereafter. The speech is true, wise, and politic, and
-will succeed now or in the future. Nay, it will aid you, if it will not
-make you President of the United States.'
-
-"Mr. Lincoln sat still a short moment, rose from his chair, walked
-backwards and forwards in the hall, stopped and said, 'Friends, I have
-thought about this matter a great deal, have weighed the question well
-from all corners, and am thoroughly convinced the time has come when it
-should be uttered; and if it must be that I must go down because of this
-speech, then let me go down linked to truth,--die in the advocacy of
-what is right and just. This nation cannot live on injustice,--"a house
-divided against itself cannot stand," I say again and again.' This was
-spoken with some degree of emotion,--the effects of his love of truth,
-and sorrow from the disagreement of his friends with himself."
-
-On the evening of the 17th this celebrated speech--known since as
-"The House-divided-against-itself Speech"--was delivered to an immense
-audience in the hall of the House of Representatives. Mr. Lincoln never
-penned words which had a more prodigious influence upon the public mind,
-or which more directly and powerfully affected his own career. It was as
-follows:--
-
-Gentlemen of the Convention,--If we could first know where we are, and
-whither we are tending, we could then better judge what to do, and
-how to do it. We are now far on into the fifth year since a policy was
-initiated with the avowed object and confident promise of putting an end
-to slavery agitation. Under the operation of that policy, that agitation
-had not only not ceased, but has constantly augmented. In my opinion,
-it will not cease until a crisis shall have been reached and passed. "A
-house divided against itself cannot stand." I believe this Government
-cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect
-the Union to be dissolved,--I do not expect the house to fall; but I do
-expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing, or
-all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest the farther
-spread of it, and place it where the public mind shall rest in the
-belief that it is in course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates
-will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the
-States,--old as well as new, North as well as South.
-
-Have we no tendency to the latter condition? Let any one who doubts
-carefully contemplate that now almost complete legal combination,--piece
-of machinery, so to speak,--compounded of the Nebraska doctrine and the
-Dred-Scott Decision. Let him consider, not only what work the machinery
-is adapted to do, and how well adapted, but also let him study the
-history of its construction, and trace, if he can, or rather fail, if he
-can, to trace, the evidences of design and concert of action among its
-chief master-workers from the beginning.
-
-But so far Congress only had acted; and an indorsement by the people,
-real or apparent, was indispensable, to save the point already gained
-and give chance for more. The New Year of 1854 found slavery excluded
-from more than half the States by State constitutions, and from most
-of the national territory by congressional prohibition. Four days later
-commenced the struggle which ended in repealing that congressional
-prohibition. This opened all the national territory to slavery, and was
-the first point gained.
-
-This necessity had not been overlooked, but had been provided for, as
-well as might be, in the notable argument of "_squatter sovereignty_"
-otherwise called "_sacred right of self-government;_" which latter
-phrase, though expressive of the only rightful basis of any government,
-was so perverted in this attempted use of it as to amount to just this:
-that, if any one man choose to enslave another, no third man shall be
-allowed to object. That argument was incorporated into the Nebraska Bill
-itself, in the language which follows: "It being the true intent and
-meaning of this act not to legislate slavery into any Territory or
-State, nor exclude it therefrom, but to leave the people thereof
-perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their
-own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States."
-
-Then opened the roar of loose declamation in favor of "squatter
-sovereignty" and "sacred right of self-government."
-
-"But," said opposition members, "let us be more specific,--let us amend
-the bill so as to expressly declare that the people of the Territory may
-exclude slavery."--"Not we," said the friends of the measure; and down
-they voted the amendment.
-
-While the Nebraska Bill was passing through Congress, a law-case
-involving the question of a negro's freedom, by reason of his owner
-having voluntarily taken him first into a Free State, and then a
-Territory covered by the congressional prohibition, and held him as a
-slave,--for a long time in each,--was passing through the United-States
-Circuit Court for the District of Missouri; and both the Nebraska Bill
-and lawsuit were brought to a decision in the same month of May, 1854.
-The negro's name was Dred Scott, which name now designates the decision
-finally made in the case.
-
-Before the then next Presidential election, the law-case came to, and
-was argued in, the Supreme Court of the United States; but the decision
-of it was deferred until after the election. Still, before the election,
-Senator Trumbull, on the floor of the Senate, requests the leading
-advocate of the Nebraska Bill to state his opinion whether a people of
-a Territory can constitutionally exclude slavery from their limits; and
-the latter answers, "That is a question for the Supreme Court."
-
-The election came. Mr. Buchanan was elected, and the indorsement, such
-as it was, secured. That was the second point gained. The indorsement,
-however, fell short of a clear popular majority by nearly four hundred
-thousand votes; and so, perhaps, was not overwhelmingly reliable and
-satisfactory. The outgoing President, in his last annual Message, as
-impressively as possible echoed back upon the people the weight and
-authority of the indorsement.
-
-The Supreme Court met again; did not announce their decision, but
-ordered a re-argument. The Presidential inauguration came, and still
-no decision of the court; but the incoming President, in his inaugural
-address, fervently exhorted the people to abide by the forthcoming
-decision, whatever it might he. Then, in a few days, came the decision.
-
-This was the third point gained.
-
-The reputed author of the Nebraska Bill finds an early occasion to
-make a speech at this Capitol indorsing the Dred-Scott Decision, and
-vehemently denouncing all opposition to it. The new President, too,
-seizes the early occasion of the Silliman letter to indorse and strongly
-construe that decision, and to express his astonishment that any
-different view had ever been entertained. At length a squabble springs
-up between the President and the author of the Nebraska Bill, on the
-mere question of fact whether the Lecompton Constitution was, or was
-not, in any just sense, made by the people of Kansas; and, in that
-squabble, the latter declares that all he wants is a fair vote for the
-people, and that he cares not whether slavery be voted down or voted up.
-I do not understand his declaration, that he cares not whether slavery
-be voted down or voted up, to be intended by him other than as an apt
-definition of the policy he would impress upon the public mind,--the
-principle for which he declares he has suffered much, and is ready to
-suffer to the end.
-
-And well may he cling to that principle! If he has any parental feeling,
-well may he cling to it! That principle is the only shred left of his
-original Nebraska doctrine. Under the Dred-Scott Decision, squatter
-sovereignty squatted out of existence,--tumbled down like temporary
-scaffolding; like the mould at the foundery, served through one blast,
-and fell back into loose sand; helped to carry an election, and then
-was kicked to the winds. His late joint struggle with the Republicans
-against the Lecompton Constitution involves nothing of the original
-Nebraska doctrine. That struggle was made on a point--the right of a
-people to make their own constitution--upon which he and the Republicans
-have never differed.
-
-The several points of the Dred-Scott Decision, in connection with
-Senator Douglas's "care-not" policy, constitute the piece of machinery
-in its present state of advancement. The working-points of that
-machinery are,--
-
-First, That no negro slave, imported as such from Africa, and no
-descendant of such, can ever be a citizen of any State, in the sense of
-that term as used in the Constitution of the United States.
-
-This point is made in order to deprive the negro, in every possible
-event, of the benefit of this provision of the United States
-Constitution, which declares that "The citizens of each State shall be
-entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several
-States.
-
-Secondly, That, "subject to the Constitution of the United States,"
-neither Congress nor a Territorial Legislature can exclude slavery from
-any United States Territory.
-
-This point is made in order that individual men may fill up the
-Territories with slaves, without danger of losing them as property, and
-thus to enhance the chances of permanency to the institution through all
-the future.
-
-Thirdly, That whether the holding a negro in actual slavery in a Free
-State makes him free, as against the holder, the United States courts
-will not decide, but will leave it to be decided by the courts of any
-Slave State the negro may be forced into by the master.
-
-This point is made, not to be pressed immediately; but if acquiesced in
-for a while, and apparently indorsed by the people at an election, then
-to sustain the logical conclusion, that, what Dred Scott's master might
-lawfully do with Dred Scott in the free State of Illinois, every other
-master may lawfully do with any other one or one thousand slaves in
-Illinois, or in any other Free State.
-
-Auxiliary to all this, and working hand in hand with it, the Nebraska
-doctrine, or what is left of it, is to educate and mould public opinion,
-at least Northern public opinion, not to care whether slavery is voted
-down or voted up.
-
-This shows exactly where we now are, and partially, also, whither we are
-tending.
-
-It will throw additional light on the latter to go back and run the mind
-over the string of historical facts already stated. Several things
-will now appear less dark and mysterious than they did when they were
-transpiring.
-
-The people were to be left "perfectly free," "subject only to the
-Constitution." What the Constitution had to do with it, outsiders could
-not then see. Plainly enough now, it was an exactly fitted niche for
-the Dred-Scott Decision afterward to come in, and declare that perfect
-freedom of the people to be just no freedom at all.
-
-Why was the amendment expressly declaring the right of the people to
-exclude slavery voted down? Plainly enough now: the adoption of it would
-have spoiled the niche for the Dred-Scott Decision.
-
-Why was the court decision held up? Why even a senator's individual
-opinion withheld till after the Presidential election? Plainly enough
-now: the speaking out then would have damaged the "perfectly free"
-argument upon which the election was to be carried.
-
-Why the outgoing President's felicitation on the indorsement? Why the
-delay of a re-argument? Why the incoming President's advance exhortation
-in favor of the decision? These things look like the cautious patting
-and petting of a spirited horse preparatory to mounting him, when it
-is dreaded that he may give the rider a fall. And why the hasty
-after-indorsements of the decision by the President and others?
-
-We cannot absolutely know that all these exact adaptations are the
-result of preconcert. But when we see a lot of framed timbers, different
-portions of which we know have been gotten out at different times and
-places, and by different workmen,--Stephen, Franklin, Roger, and James,
-for instance,--and when we see these timbers joined together, and see
-they exactly make the frame of a house or a mill, all the tenons and
-mortises, exactly fitting, and all the lengths and proportions of the
-different pieces exactly adapted to their respective places, and not
-a piece too many or too few,--not omitting even scaffolding--or, if
-a single piece be lacking, we can see the place in the frame exactly
-fitted and prepared to yet bring such piece in,--in such a case, we find
-it impossible not to believe that Stephen and Franklin and Roger and
-James all understood one another from the beginning, and all worked upon
-a common plan or draft drawn up before the first blow was struck.
-
-It should not be overlooked, that, by the Nebraska Bill, the people of
-a State as well as Territory were to be left "perfectly free" "subject
-only to the Constitution." Why mention a State? They were legislating
-for Territories, and not for or about States. Certainly the people of
-a State are and ought to be subject to the Constitution of the United
-States; but why is mention of this lugged into this merely territorial
-law? Why are the people of a Territory and the people of a State therein
-lumped together, and their relation to the Constitution therein treated
-as being precisely the same?
-
-While the opinion of the court by Chief-Justice Taney, in the Dred-Scott
-case, and the separate opinions of all the concurring judges, expressly
-declare that the Constitution of the United States neither permits
-Congress nor a Territorial Legislature to exclude slavery from any
-United States
-
-Territory, they all omit to declare whether or not the same Constitution
-permits a State, or the people of a State, to exclude it. Possibly, this
-was a mere omission; but who can be quite sure, if McLean or Curtis had
-sought to get into the opinion a declaration of unlimited power in the
-people of a State to exclude slavery from their limits, just as Chase
-and Mace sought to get such declaration, in behalf of the people of a
-Territory, into the Nebraska Bill,--I ask, who can be quite sure that
-it would not have been voted down in the one case as it had been in the
-other?
-
-The nearest approach to the point of declaring the power of a State over
-slavery is made by Judge Nelson. He approaches it more than once, using
-the precise idea, and almost the language too, of the Nebraska Act. On
-one occasion his exact language is, "Except in cases where the power
-is restrained by the Constitution of the United States, the law of the
-State is supreme over the subject of slavery within its jurisdiction."
-
-In what cases the power of the State is so restrained by the United
-States Constitution is left an open question, precisely as the same
-question, as to the restraint on the power of the Territories, was
-left open in the Nebraska Act. Put that and that together, and we have
-another nice little niche, which we may ere long see filled with another
-Supreme Court decision, declaring that the Constitution of the United
-States does not permit a State to exclude slavery from its limits. And
-this may especially be expected if the doctrine of "care not whether
-slavery be voted down or voted up" shall gain upon the public mind
-sufficiently to give promise that such a decision can be maintained when
-made.
-
-Such a decision is all that slavery now lacks of being alike lawful in
-all the States. Welcome or unwelcome, such decision is probably coming,
-and will soon be upon us, unless the power of the present political
-dynasty shall be met and overthrown. We shall lie down pleasantly
-dreaming that the people of Missouri are on the verge of making their
-State free; and we shall awake to the reality, instead, that the Supreme
-Court has made Illinois a Slave State.
-
-To meet and overthrow the power of that dynasty is the work now before
-all those who would prevent that consummation. That is what we have to
-do. But how can we best do it?
-
-There are those who denounce us openly to their own friends, and yet
-whisper softly, that Senator Douglas is the aptest instrument there is
-with which to effect that object. They do not tell us, nor has he told
-us, that he wishes any such object to be effected. They wish us to infer
-all, from the facts that he now has a little quarrel with the present
-head of the dynasty; and that he has regularly voted with us, on a
-single point, upon which he and we have never differed.
-
-They remind us that he is a very great man, and that the largest of us
-are very small ones. Let this be granted. But "a _living dog_ is better
-than a _dead lion_." Judge Douglas, if not a dead lion for this work,
-is at least a caged and toothless one. How can he oppose the advances
-of slavery? He don't care any thing about it. His avowed mission is
-impressing the "public heart" to care nothing about it.
-
-A leading Douglas Democrat newspaper thinks Douglas's superior talent
-will be needed to resist the revival of the African slave-trade. Does
-Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching? He has
-not said so. Does he really think so? But, if it is, how can he resist
-it? For years he has labored to prove it a sacred right of white men to
-take negro slaves into the new Territories. Can he possibly show that
-it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest?
-And unquestionably they can be bought cheaper in Africa than in
-Virginia.
-
-He has done all in his power to reduce the whole question of slavery
-to one of a mere right of property; and as such, how can he oppose the
-foreign slave-trade,--how can he refuse that trade in that "property"
-shall be "perfectly free,"--unless he does it as a protection to the
-home production? And, as the home producers will probably not ask the
-protection, he will be wholly without a ground of opposition.
-
-Senator Douglas holds, we know, that a man may rightfully be wiser
-to-day than he was yesterday; that he may rightfully change when he
-finds himself wrong. But can we for that reason run ahead, and infer
-that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has
-given no intimation? Can we safely base our action upon any such vague
-inferences?
-
-Now, as ever, I wish not to misrepresent Judge Douglas's position,
-question his motives, or do aught that can be personally offensive to
-him. Whenever, if ever, he and we can come together on principle, so
-that our great cause may have assistance from his great ability, I hope
-to have interposed no adventitious obstacle.
-
-But clearly he, is not now with us; he does not pretend to be; he does
-not promise ever to be. Our cause, then, must be intrusted to, and
-conducted by, its own undoubted friends,--those whose hands are free,
-whose hearts are in the work, who do care for the result.
-
-Two years ago the Republicans of the nation mustered over thirteen
-hundred thousand strong. We did this under the single impulse of
-resistance to a common danger, with every external circumstance against
-us. Of strange, discordant, and even hostile elements, we gathered from
-the four winds, and formed and fought the battle through, under the
-constant hot fire of a disciplined, proud, and pampered enemy. Did we
-brave all then to falter now?--now, when that same enemy is wavering,
-dissevered, and belligerent?
-
-The result is not doubtful. We shall not fail,--if we stand firm, we
-shall not fail. Wise counsels may accelerate or mistakes delay it; but,
-sooner or later, the victory is sure to come.
-
-The speech produced a profound impression upon men of all parties:
-the Democrats rejoiced in it, and reprobated it; the conservative
-Republicans received it coldly, and saw in it the sign of certain
-defeat. In the eyes of the latter it was a disheartening mistake at
-the outset of a momentous campaign,--a fatal error, which no policy or
-exertion could retrieve. Alone of all those directly affected by it, the
-Abolitionists, the compatriots of Mr. Herndon, heard in it the voice of
-a fearless leader, who had the wisdom to comprehend an unwelcome fact,
-and the courage to proclaim it at the moment when the delusion of
-fancied security and peace was most generally and fondly entertained.
-It was the "irrepressible conflict" which Mr. Seward had been preaching,
-and to which the one party had given almost as little credit as the
-other. Except a few ultraists here and there, nobody as yet had actually
-prepared his armor for this imaginary conflict, to which the nation was
-so persistently summoned,--and, indeed, none but those few seriously
-believed in the possibility of its existence. The Republican party had
-heretofore disavowed the doctrine with a unanimity nearly as great as
-that exhibited by the little council of Mr. Lincoln's immediate friends.
-It was therefore to be expected, that, when a slow, cautious, moderate
-man like Mr. Lincoln came forward with it in this startling fashion,
-it would carry dismay to his followers, and a cheering assurance to his
-enemies. But Mr. Lincoln was looking farther than this campaign: he was
-quietly dreaming of the Presidency, and edging himself to a place in
-advance, where he thought the tide might take him up in 1860. He was
-sure that sectional animosities, far from subsiding, would grow deeper
-and stronger with time; and for that reason the next nominee of the
-exclusively Northern party must be a man of radical views. "I think,"
-says Mr. Herndon, "the speech was intended to take the wind out of
-Seward's sails;" and Mr. Herndon is not alone in his opinion.
-
-A day or two after Mr. Lincoln spoke, one Dr. Long came into his office,
-and delivered to him a foretaste of the remarks he was doomed to hear
-for several months. "Well, Lincoln," said he, "that foolish speech of
-yours will kill you,--will defeat you in this contest, and probably for
-all offices for all time to come. I am sorry, sorry,--very sorry: I wish
-it was wiped out of existence. Don't you wish it, now?" Mr. Lincoln had
-been writing during the doctor's lament; but at the end of it he laid
-down his pen, raised his head, lifted his spectacles, and, with a look
-half quizzical, half contemptuous, replied, "Well, doctor, if I had to
-draw a pen across, and erase my whole life from existence, and I had
-one poor gift or choice left, as to what I should save from the wreck, I
-should choose that speech, and leave it to the world unerased."
-
-Leonard Swett, than whom there was no more gifted man, nor a better
-judge of political affairs, in Illinois, is convinced that "the first
-ten lines of that speech defeated him." "The sentiment of the 'house
-divided against itself' seemed wholly inappropriate," says Mr. Swett.
-"It was a speech made at the commencement of a campaign, and apparently
-made for the campaign. Viewing it in this light alone, nothing could
-have been more unfortunate or inappropriate. It was saying first the
-wrong thing; yet he saw that it was an abstract truth, and standing by
-the speech would ultimately find him in the right place. I was inclined
-at the time to believe these words were hastily and inconsiderately
-uttered; but subsequent facts have convinced me they were deliberate and
-had been matured.... In the summer of 1859, when he was dining with
-a party of his intimate friends at Bloomington, the subject of his
-Springfield speech was discussed. We all insisted that it was a great
-mistake; but he justified himself, and finally said, 'Well, gentlemen,
-you may think that speech was a mistake; but I never have believed it
-was, and you will see the day when you will consider it was the wisest
-thing I ever said.'"
-
-John T. Stuart was a family connection of the Todds and Edwardses, and
-thus also of Lincoln. Mr. C. C. Brown married Mr. Stuart's daughter,
-and speaks of Mr. Lincoln as "our relative." This gentleman says, "The
-Todd-Stuart-Edwards family, with preacher and priest, dogs and servants,
-got mad at Mr. Lincoln because he made 'The House-divided-against-itself
-Speech.' He flinched, dodged, said he would explain, and did explain, in
-the Douglas debates."
-
-But it was difficult to explain: explanations of the kind are generally
-more hurtful than the original offence. Accordingly, Mr. Herndon reports
-in his broad, blunt way, that "Mr. Lincoln met with many cold shoulders
-for some time,--nay, during the whole canvass with Douglas." At the
-great public meetings which characterized that campaign, "you could
-hear, from all quarters in the crowd, Republicans saying, 'Damn that
-fool speech! it will be the cause of the death of Lincoln and the
-Republican party. Such folly! such nonsense! Damn it!'"
-
-Since 1840 Lincoln and Douglas had appeared before the people, almost as
-regularly as the elections came round, to discuss, the one against the
-other, the merits of parties, candidates, and principles. Thus far Mr.
-Lincoln had been in a certain sense the pursuer: he had lain in wait
-for Mr. Douglas; he had caught him at unexpected turns and upon sharp
-points; he had mercilessly improved the advantage of Mr. Douglas's long
-record in Congress to pick apart and to criticise, while his own was so
-much more humble and less extensive. But now at last they were
-abreast, candidates for the same office, with a fair field and equal
-opportunities. It was the great crisis in the lives of both. Let us see
-what they thought of each other; and, in the extracts which convey the
-information, we may also get a better idea of the character of each for
-candor, generosity, and truthfulness.
-
-Dr. Holland quotes from one of Mr. Lincoln's unpublished manuscripts as
-follows:--
-
-"Twenty-two 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 so as he. With me the race of
-ambition has been a failure,--a flat failure; with him it has been one
-of splendid success. His name fills the nation, and is not unknown even
-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."
-
-Again, in the pending campaign, Mr. Lincoln said, "There is still
-another disadvantage under which we labor, and to which I will invite
-your attention. It arises out of the relative positions of the two
-persons who stand before the State as candidates for the Senate. Senator
-Douglas is of worldwide renown. All the anxious politicians of his
-party, or who had been of his party for years past, have been looking
-upon him as certainly, at no distant day, to be the President of the
-United States. They have seen, in his round, jolly, fruitful face,
-post-offices, land-offices, marshalships, and cabinet appointments,
-chargeships and foreign missions, bursting and sprouting out in
-wonderful exuberance, ready to be laid hold of by their greedy hands.
-And as they have been gazing upon this attractive picture so long, they
-cannot, in the little distraction that has taken place in the party,
-bring themselves to give up the charming hope; but, with greedier
-anxiety, they rush about him, sustain him, and give him marches,
-triumphal entries, and receptions, beyond what, even in the days of his
-highest prosperity, they could have brought about in his favor. On the
-contrary, nobody has ever expected me to be President. In my poor, lean,
-lank face, nobody has ever seen that any cabbages were sprouting out.
-These are disadvantages, all taken together, that the Republicans
-labor under. We have to fight this battle upon principle, and principle
-alone."
-
-Now hear Mr. Douglas. In their first joint debate at Ottawa, he said,
-"In the remarks I have made on this platform, and the position of Mr.
-Lincoln upon it, I mean nothing personally disrespectful or unkind to
-that gentleman. I have known him for nearly twenty-five years. There
-were many points of sympathy between us when we first got acquainted.
-We were both comparatively boys, and both struggling with poverty in a
-strange land. I was a schoolteacher in the town of Winchester, and he a
-flourishing grocery-keeper in the town of Salem. He was more successful
-in his occupation than I was in mine, and hence more fortunate in this
-world's goods. Lincoln is one of those peculiar men who perform with
-admirable skill every thing which they undertake. I made as good a
-school-teacher as I could; and, when a cabinet-maker, I made a good
-bedstead and tables, although my old boss said I succeeded better with
-bureaus and secretaries than with any thing else; but I believe that
-Lincoln was always more successful in business than I, for his business
-enabled him to get into the Legislature. I met him there, however, and
-had a sympathy with him, because of the up-hill struggle we both had in
-life. He was then just as good at telling an anecdote as now. He could
-beat any of the boys wrestling, or running a foot-race, in pitching
-quoits, or tossing a copper; could ruin more liquor than all of the boys
-of the town together; and the dignity and impartiality with which he
-presided at a horse-race or fist-fight excited the admiration and won
-the praise of everybody that was present and participated. I sympathized
-with him because he was struggling with difficulties; and so was I. Mr.
-Lincoln served with me in the Legislature in 1836, when we both retired,
-and he subsided, or became submerged; and he was lost sight of as
-a public man for some years. In 1846, when Wilmot introduced his
-celebrated proviso, and the abolition tornado swept over the country,
-Lincoln again turned up as a member of Congress from the Sangamon
-district. I was then in the Senate of the United States, and was glad
-to welcome my old friend and companion. Whilst in Congress, he
-distinguished himself by his opposition to the Mexican War, taking the
-side of the common enemy against his own country; and, when he
-returned home, he found that the indignation of the people followed
-him everywhere, and he was again submerged, or obliged to retire into
-private life, forgotten by his former friends. He came up again in 1854,
-just in time to make this abolition or Black Republican platform,
-in company with Giddings, Lovejoy, Chase, and Fred. Douglas, for the
-Republican party to stand upon. Trumbull, too, was one of our own
-contemporaries."
-
-Previous pages of this book present fully enough for our present purpose
-the issues upon which this canvass was made to turn. The principal
-speeches, the joint debates, with five separate and independent speeches
-by Mr. Lincoln, and three by Mr. Douglas, have been collected and
-published under Mr. Lincoln's supervision in a neat and accessible
-volume. It is, therefore, unnecessary, and would be unjust, to reprint
-them here. They obtained at the time a more extensive circulation than
-such productions usually have, and exerted an influence which is very
-surprising to the calm reader of the present day.
-
-Mr. Douglas endeavored to prove, from Mr. Lincoln's Springfield speech,
-that he (Mr. Lincoln) was a self-declared Disunionist, in favor of
-reducing the institutions of all the States "to a dead uniformity," in
-favor of abolishing slavery everywhere,--an old-time abolitionist, a
-negropolist, an amalgamationist. This, with much vaunting of himself
-for his opposition to Lecompton, and a loud proclamation of "popular
-sovereignty," made the bulk of Mr. Douglas's speeches.
-
-Mr. Lincoln denied these accusations; he had no "thought of bringing
-about civil war," nor yet uniformity of institutions: he would not
-interfere with slavery where it had a lawful existence, and was not in
-favor of negro equality or miscegenation. He did, however, believe that
-Congress had the right to exclude slavery from the Territories,
-and ought to exercise it. As to Mr. Douglas's doctrine of popular
-sovereignty, there could be no issue concerning it; for everybody
-agreed that the people of a Territory might, when they formed a State
-constitution, adopt or exclude slavery as they pleased. But that a
-Territorial Legislature possessed exclusive power, or any power at all,
-over the subject, even Mr Douglas could not assert, inasmuch as the
-Dred-Scott Decision was plain and explicit the other way; and Mr.
-Douglas boasted that decision as the rule of his political conduct,
-and sought to impose it upon all parties as a perfect definition of the
-rights and duties of government, local and general.
-
-At Ottawa, Mr. Douglas put to Mr. Lincoln a series of questions,
-which, upon their next meeting (at Freeport), Mr. Lincoln answered as
-follows:--
-
-I have supposed myself, since the organization of the Republican party
-at Bloomington, in May, 1856, bound as a party man by the platforms
-of the party, then and since. If, in any interrogatories which I shall
-answer, I go beyond the scope of what is within these platforms, it will
-be perceived that no one is responsible but myself.
-
-Having said thus much, I will take up the judge's interrogatories as I
-find them printed in "The Chicago Times," and answer them _seriatim_.
-In order that there may be no mistake about it, I have copied the
-interrogatories in writing, and also my answers to them. The first one
-of these interrogatories is in these words:--
-
-Question 1.--"I desire to know whether Lincoln to-day stands, as he
-did in 1854, in favor of the unconditional repeal of the Fugitive-Slave
-Law."
-
-Answer.--I do not now, nor ever did, stand in favor of the unconditional
-repeal of the Fugitive-Slave Law.
-
-Q. 2.--"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to-day, as he
-did in 1854, against the admission of any more Slave States into the
-Union, even if the people want them."
-
-A.--I do not now, nor ever did, stand pledged against the admission of
-any more Slave States into the Union.
-
-Q. 3.--"I want to know whether he stands pledged against the admission
-of a new State into the Union with such a constitution as the people of
-that State may see fit to make."
-
-A.--I do not stand pledged against the admission of a new State into the
-Union, with such a constitution as the people of that State may see fit
-to make.
-
-Q. 4.--"I want to know whether he stands to-day pledged to the abolition
-of slavery in the District of Columbia."
-
-A.--I do not stand to-day pledged to the abolition of slavery in the
-District of Columbia.
-
-Q. 5.--"I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to the
-prohibition of the slave-trade between the different States."
-
-A.--I do not stand pledged to the prohibition of the slave-trade between
-the different States.
-
-Q. 6.--"I desire to know whether he stands pledged to prohibit slavery
-in all the Territories of the United States, north as well as south of
-the Missouri Compromise line."
-
-A.--I am impliedly, if not expressly, pledged to a belief in the right
-and duty of Congress to prohibit slavery in all the United States
-Territories. [Great applause.]
-
-Q 7.--"I desire him to answer whether he is opposed to the acquisition
-of any new territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein."
-
-A.--I am not generally opposed to honest acquisition of territory;
-and, in any given case, I would or would not oppose such acquisition,
-accordingly as I might think such acquisition would or would not agitate
-the slavery question among ourselves.
-
-Now, my friends, it will be perceived, upon an examination of these
-questions and answers, that so far I have only answered that I was
-not pledged to this, that, or the other. The judge has not framed his
-interrogatories to ask me any thing more than this, and I have answered
-in strict accordance with the interrogatories, and have answered truly
-that I am not pledged at all upon any of the points to which I have
-answered. But I am not disposed to hang upon the exact form of his
-interrogatory. I am rather disposed to take up at least some of these
-questions, and state what I really think upon them.
-
-As to the first one, in regard to the Fugitive-Slave Law, I have never
-hesitated to say, and I do not now hesitate to say, that I think, under
-the Constitution of the United States, the people of the Southern States
-are entitled to a congressional slave law. Having said that, I have had
-nothing to say in regard to the existing Fugitive-Slave Law, further
-than that I think it should have been framed so as to be free from some
-of the objections that pertain to it, without lessening its efficiency.
-And inasmuch as we are not now in an agitation in regard to an
-alteration or modification of that law, I would not be the man to
-introduce it as a new subject of agitation upon the general question of
-slavery.
-
-In regard to the other question, of whether I am pledged to the
-admission of any more Slave States into the Union, I state to you very
-frankly, that I would be exceedingly sorry ever to be put in a position
-of having to pass upon that question. I should be exceedingly glad to
-know that there would never be another Slave State admitted into
-the Union; but I must add, that, if slavery shall be kept out of the
-Territories during the Territorial existence of any one given Territory,
-and then the people shall, having a fair chance and a clear field, when
-they come to adopt the constitution, do such an extraordinary thing as
-to adopt a slave constitution, uninfluenced by the actual presence of
-the institution among them, I see no alternative, if we own the country,
-but to admit them into the Union. [Applause.]
-
-The third interrogatory is answered by the answer to the second, it
-being, as I conceive, the same as the second.
-
-The fourth one is in regard to the abolition of slavery in the District
-of Columbia. In relation to that, I have my mind very distinctly
-made up. I should be exceedingly glad to see slavery abolished in
-the District of Columbia. I believe that Congress possesses the
-constitutional power to abolish it. Yet, as a member of Congress, I
-should not, with my present views, be in favor of endeavoring to abolish
-slavery in the District of Columbia, unless it would be upon these
-conditions: First, that the abolition should be gradual; Second, That it
-should be on a vote of the majority of qualified voters in the District;
-and Third, That compensation should be made to unwilling owners. With
-these three conditions, I confess I would be exceedingly glad to see
-Congress abolish slavery in the District of Columbia, and, in the
-language of Henry Clay, "sweep from our capital that foul blot upon our
-nation."
-
-In regard to the fifth interrogatory, I must say here, that as to the
-question of the abolition of the slave-trade between the different
-States, I can truly answer, as I have, that I am pledged to nothing
-about it. It is a subject to which I have not given that mature
-consideration that would make me feel authorized to state a position so
-as to hold myself entirely bound by it. In other words, that question
-has never been prominently enough before me to induce me to investigate
-whether we really have the constitutional power to do it. I could
-investigate it if I had sufficient time to bring myself to a conclusion
-upon that subject; but I have not done so, and I say so frankly to you
-here and to Judge Douglas. I must say, however, that, if I should be of
-opinion that Congress does possess the constitutional power to abolish
-slave-trading among the different States, I should still not be in favor
-of the exercise of that power unless upon some conservative principle as
-I conceive it, akin to what I have said in relation to the abolition of
-slavery in the District of Columbia.
-
-My answer as to whether I desire that slavery should be prohibited in
-all Territories of the United States is full and explicit within itself,
-and cannot be made clearer by any comments of mine. So I suppose, in
-regard to the question whether I am opposed to the acquisition of any
-more territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein, my answer is
-such that I could add nothing by way of illustration, or making myself
-better understood, than the answer which I have placed in writing.
-
-Now, in all this the Judge has me, and he has me on the record. I
-suppose he had flattered himself that I was really entertaining one set
-of opinions for one place, and another set for another place,--that
-I was afraid to say at one place what I uttered at another. What I am
-saying here I suppose I say to a vast audience as strongly tending to
-abolitionism as any audience in the State of Illinois; and I believe
-I am saying that which, if it would be offensive to any persons, and
-render them enemies to myself, would be offensive to persons in this
-audience.
-
-Mr. Douglas had presented his interrogatories on the 21st of August,
-and Mr. Lincoln did not answer them until the 27th. They had no meetings
-between those days; and Mr. Lincoln had ample time to ponder his
-replies, and consult his friends. But he did more: he improved the
-opportunity to prepare a series of insidious questions, which he felt
-sure Mr. Douglas could not possibly answer without utterly ruining
-his political prospects. Mr. Lincoln struggled for a great prize,
-unsuspected by the common mind, but the thought of which was ever
-present to his own. Mr. Douglas was a standing candidate for the
-Presidency; but as yet Mr. Lincoln was a very quiet one, nursing hopes
-which his modesty prevented him from obtruding upon others. He was wise
-enough to keep the fact of their existence to himself, and in the
-mean time to dig pitfalls and lay obstructions in the way of his most
-formidable competitors. His present purpose was not only to defeat Mr.
-Douglas for the Senate, but to "kill him,"--to get him out of the way
-finally and forever. If he could make him evade the Dred-Scott Decision,
-and deny the right of a Southern man to take his negroes into a
-Territory, and keep them there while it was a Territory, he would
-thereby sever him from the body of the Democratic party, and leave him
-the leader of merely a little half-hearted antislavery faction. Under
-such circumstances, Mr. Douglas could never be the candidate of the
-party at large; but he might serve a very useful purpose by running on a
-separate ticket, and dividing the great majority of conservative votes,
-which would inevitably elect a single nominee.
-
-Mr. Lincoln went to Chicago, and there intimated to some of his friends
-what he proposed to do. They attempted to dissuade him, because, as
-they insisted, if Mr. Douglas should answer that the Dred-Scott Decision
-might be evaded by the people of a Territory, and slavery prohibited
-in the face of it, the answer would draw to him the sympathies of the
-antislavery voters, and probably, of itself, defeat Mr. Lincoln. But, so
-long as Mr. Douglas held to the decision in good faith, he had no hope
-of more aid from that quarter than he had already received. It was
-therefore the part of wisdom to let him alone as to that point. Mr.
-Lincoln, on the contrary, looked forward to 1860, and was determined
-that the South should understand the antagonism between Mr. Douglas's
-latest conception of "squatter sovereignty," on the one hand, and the
-Dred-Scott Decision, the Nebraska Bill, and all previous platforms of
-the party, on the other. Mr. Douglas taught strange doctrines and false
-ones; and Mr. Lincoln thought the faithful, far and near, should know
-it. If Mr. Douglas was a schismatic, there ought to be a schism, of
-which the Republicans would reap the benefit; and therefore he insisted
-upon his questions. "That is no business of yours," said his friends.
-"Attend exclusively to your senatorial race, and let the slaveholder and
-Douglas fight out that question among themselves and for themselves. If
-you put the question to him, he will answer that the Dred-Scott Decision
-is simply an abstract rule, having no practical application."--"If he
-answers that way, he's a dead cock in the pit," responded Mr. Lincoln.
-"But that," said they, "is none of your business: you are concerned
-only about the senator-ship."--"No," continued Mr. Lincoln, "not alone
-_exactly_: I am killing larger game. The great battle of 1860 is worth a
-thousand of this senatorial race."
-
-He did accordingly propound the interrogatories as follows:--
-
-1. If the people of Kansas shall, by means entirely unobjectionable in
-all other respects, adopt a State constitution, and ask admission into
-the Union under it, before they have the requisite number of inhabitants
-according to the English Bill,--some ninety-three thousand,--will you
-vote to admit them?
-
-2. Can the people of a United States Territory, in any lawful way,
-against the wish of any citizen of the United States, exclude slavery
-from its limits?
-
-3. If the Supreme Court of the United States shall decide that
-States cannot exclude slavery from their limits, are you in favor of
-acquiescing in, adopting, and following such decision as a rule of
-political action?
-
-4. Are you in favor of acquiring additional territory, in disregard of
-how such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?
-
-The first and fourth questions Mr. Douglas answered substantially in the
-affirmative. To the third he replied, that no judge would ever be guilty
-of the "moral treason" of making such a decision. But to the second--the
-main question, to which all the others were riders and make-weights--he
-answered as he was expected to answer. "It matters not," said he, "what
-way the Supreme Court may hereafter decide as to the abstract
-question whether slavery may or may not go into a Territory under
-the Constitution: the people have the lawful means to introduce it or
-exclude it, as they please, for the reason that slavery cannot exist
-a day or an hour anywhere, unless it is supported by local police
-regulations. Those police regulations can only be established by the
-local Legislature; and, if the people are opposed to slavery, they will
-elect representatives to that body who will, by unfriendly legislation,
-effectually prevent the introduction of it into their midst."
-
-The reply was more than enough for Mr. Lincoln's purpose. It cut Mr.
-Douglas off from his party, and put him in a state of perfect antagonism
-to it. He firmly denied the power of Congress to restrict slavery; and
-he admitted, that, under the Dred-Scott Decision, all Territories were
-open to its entrance. But he held, that, the moment the slaveholder
-passed the boundary of a Territory, he was at the mercy of the
-squatters, a dozen or two of whom might get together in a legislature,
-and rob him of the property which the Constitution, the Supreme Court,
-and Mr. Douglas himself said he had an indefeasible right to take there.
-Mr. Lincoln knew that the Southern people would feel infinitely safer
-in the hands of Congress than in the hands of the squatters. If they
-regarded the Republican mode of excluding slavery as a barefaced
-usurpation, they would consider Mr. Douglas's system of confiscation by
-"unfriendly legislation" mere plain stealing. The Republicans said to
-them, "We will regulate the whole subject by general laws, which you
-participate with us in passing;" but Mr. Douglas offered them,
-as sovereign judges and legislators, the territorial settlers
-themselves,--squatters they might be,--whom the aid societies rushed
-into the new Territories for the very purpose of keeping slavery away.
-The new doctrine was admirably calculated to alarm and incense the
-South; and, following so closely Mr. Douglas's conduct in the Lecompton
-affair, it was very natural that he should now be universally regarded
-by his late followers as a dangerous heretic and a faithless turncoat.
-The result justified Mr. Lincoln's anticipations. Mr. Douglas did not
-fully develop his new theory, nor personally promulgate it as the fixed
-tenet of his faction, until the next year, when he embodied it in the
-famous article contributed by him to "Harper's Magazine." But it did
-its work effectually; and, when parties began to marshal for the great
-struggle of 1860, Mr. Douglas was found to be, not precisely what he had
-promised,--a Republican, "fighting their battles,"--but an independent
-candidate, upon an independent platform, dividing the opposition.
-
-Mr. Lincoln pointed out on the spot the wide difference between Mr.
-Douglas's present views and those he had previously maintained with such
-dogged and dogmatic persistence. "The new state of the case" had induced
-"the Judge to sheer away from his original ground." The new theory was
-false in law, and could have no practical application. The history of
-the country showed it to be a naked humbug, a demagogue's imposture.
-Slavery was established in all this country, without "local police
-regulations" to protect it. Dred Scott himself was held in a Territory,
-not only without "local police regulations" to favor his bondage, but in
-defiance of a general law which prohibited it. A man who believed that
-the Dred-Scott Decision was the true interpretation of the Constitution
-could not refuse to negro slavery whatever protection it needed in the
-Territories without incurring the guilt of perjury. To say that slave
-property might be constitutionally confiscated, destroyed, or driven
-away from a place where it was constitutionally protected, was such an
-absurdity as Mr. Douglas alone in this evil strait was equal to; the
-proposition meaning, as he said on a subsequent occasion, "no less than
-that a thing may lawfully be driven away from a place where it has a
-lawful right to be."
-
-"Of that answer at Freeport," as Mr. Herndon has it, Douglas "instantly
-died. The red-gleaming Southern tomahawk flashed high and keen. Douglas
-was removed out of Lincoln's way. The wind was taken out of Seward's
-sails (by the House-divided Speech), and Lincoln stood out prominent."
-
-The State election took place on the 2d of November, 1858. Mr. Lincoln
-had more than four thousand majority of the votes cast; but this was not
-enough to give him a majority in the Legislature. An old and inequitable
-apportionment law was still in operation; and a majority of the members
-chosen under it were, as it was intended by the law-makers they
-should be, Democrats. In the Senate were fourteen Democrats to
-eleven Republicans; and in the House, forty Democrats to thirty-five
-Republicans. Mr. Douglas was, of course, re-elected, and Mr. Lincoln
-bitterly disappointed. Some one asked Mr. Lincoln how he felt when the
-returns came in. He replied, "that he felt like the boy that stumped his
-toe,--'it hurt too bad to laugh, and he was too big to cry!'"
-
-In this canvass Mr. Lincoln earned a reputation as a popular debater
-second to that of no man in America,--certainly not second to that
-of his famous antagonist. He kept his temper; he was not prone to
-personalities; he indulged in few anecdotes, and those of a decent
-character; he was fair, frank, and manly; and, if the contest had shown
-nothing else, it would have shown, at least, that "Old Abe" could behave
-like a well-bred gentleman under very trying circumstances. His marked
-success in these discussions was probably no surprise to the people of
-the Springfield District, who knew him as well as, or better than, they
-did Mr. Douglas. But in the greater part of the State, and throughout
-the Union the series of brilliant victories successively won by an
-obscure man over an orator of such wide experience and renown was
-received with exclamations of astonishment, alike by listeners and
-readers. It is true that many believed, or pretended to believe, that he
-was privately tutored and "crammed" by politicians of greater note
-than himself; and, when the speeches were at last collected and printed
-together, it was alleged that Mr. Lincoln's had been re-written or
-extensively revised by Mr. Judd, Judge Logan, Judge Davis, or some one
-else of great and conceded abilities.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN the winter of 1858-9, Mr. Lincoln, having no political business on
-hand, appeared before the public in the character of lecturer, having
-prepared himself with much care. His lecture was, or might have been,
-styled, "All Creation is a mine, and every man a miner." He began with
-Adam and Eve, and the invention of the "fig-leaf apron," of which he
-gave a humorous description, and which he said was a "joint operation."
-The invention of letters, writing, printing, of the application of
-steam, of electricity, he classed under the comprehensive head of
-"inventions and discoveries," along with the discovery of America, the
-enactment of patent-laws, and the "invention of negroes, or the present
-mode of using them." Part of the lecture was humorous; a very small part
-of it actually witty; and the rest of it so commonplace that it was a
-genuine mortification to his friends. He delivered it at two or three
-points, and then declined all further invitations. To one of these he
-replied, in March, as follows: "Your note, inviting me to deliver a
-lecture in Gales-burgh, is received. I regret to say I cannot do so now:
-I must stick to the courts a while. I read a sort of a lecture to three
-different audiences during the last month and this; but I did so under
-circumstances which made it a waste of no time whatever."
-
-From the Douglas discussion many of the leaders of the Republican party
-believed, and the reader will agree had some foundation for the belief,
-that Mr. Lincoln was one of the greatest and best men in the party. It
-was natural, therefore, that many eyes should be turned towards him
-for the coming Presidential nomination. He had all the requisites of an
-available candidate: he had not been sufficiently prominent in national
-politics to excite the jealousies of powerful rivals; he was true,
-manly, able; he was pre-eminently a man of the people; he had sprung
-from a low family in the lowest class of society; he had been a
-rail-splitter, a flat-boatman, a grocery-keeper,--every thing that could
-commend him to the "popular heart." His manners, his dress, his stories,
-and his popular name and style of "Honest Old Abe," pointed to him as a
-man beside whose "running qualities" those of Taylor and Harrison were
-of slight comparison. That he knew all this, and thought of it a great
-deal, no one can doubt; and in the late campaign he had most adroitly
-opened the way for the realization of his hopes. But he knew very well
-that a becoming modesty in a "new man" was about as needful as any thing
-else. Accordingly, when a Mr. Pickett wrote him on the subject in March,
-1859, he replied as follows: "Yours of the 2d instant, inviting me to
-deliver my lecture on 'Inventions' in Rock Island, is at hand, and
-I regret to be unable from press of business to comply therewith. In
-regard to the other matter you speak of, I beg that you will not give it
-a further mention. I do not think I am fit for the Presidency."
-
-But in April the project began to be agitated in his own town. On
-the 27th of that month, he was in the office of "The Central Illinois
-Gazette," when the editor suggested his name. Mr. Lincoln, "with
-characteristic modesty, declined." But the editor estimated his "No"
-at its proper value; and he "was brought out in the next issue, May
-4." Thence the movement spread rapidly and strongly. Many Republicans
-welcomed it, and, appreciating the pre-eminent fitness of the
-nomination, saw in it the assurance of certain victory.
-
-The West was rapidly filling with Germans and other inhabitants of
-foreign birth. Dr. Canisius, a German, foreseeing Mr. Lincoln's
-strength in the near future, wrote to inquire what he thought about the
-restrictions upon naturalization recently adopted in Massachusetts, and
-whether he favored the fusion of all the opposition elements in the next
-canvass. He replied, that, as to the restrictions, he was wholly and
-unalterably opposed to them; and as to fusion, he was ready for it
-upon "Republican grounds," but upon no other. He would not lower "the
-Republican standard even by a hair's breadth." The letter undoubtedly
-had a good effect, and brought him valuable support from the foreign
-population.
-
-To a gentleman who desired his views about the tariff question, he
-replied cautiously and discreetly as follows:--
-
-Dr. Edward Wallace.
-
-My dear Sir,--I am here just now attending court. Yesterday, before
-I left Springfield, your brother, Dr. William S. Wallace, showed me a
-letter of yours, in which you kindly mention my name, inquire for my
-tariff-views, and suggest the propriety of my writing a letter upon the
-subject. I was an old Henry-Clay Tariff Whig. In old times I made more
-speeches on that subject than on any other.
-
-I have not since changed my views. I believe yet, if we could have a
-moderate, carefully adjusted, protective tariff, so far acquiesced in as
-not to be a perpetual subject of political strife, squabbles, changes,
-and uncertain, ties, it would be better for us. Still, it is my opinion,
-that, just now, the revival of that question will not _advance the cause
-itself, or the man who revives it._
-
-I have not thought much on the subject recently; but my general
-impression is, that the necessity for a protective tariff will ere long
-force its old opponents to take it up; and then its old friends can join
-in and establish it on a more firm and durable basis. We, the old Whigs,
-have been entirely beaten out on the tariff question; and we shall not
-be able to re-establish the policy until the absence of it shall have
-demonstrated the necessity for it in the minds of men heretofore opposed
-to it. With this view, I should prefer to not now write a public letter
-upon the subject.
-
-I therefore wish this to be considered confidential.
-
-I shall be very glad to receive a letter from you.
-
-In September Mr. Lincoln made a few masterly speeches in Ohio, where Mr.
-Douglas had preceded him on his new hobby of "squatter sovereignty," or
-"unfriendly legislation."
-
-Clinton, Oct. 11,1859.
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-He spoke at Columbus, Cincinnati, and several other points, each
-time devoting the greater part of his address to Mr. Douglas and his
-theories, as if the habit of combating that illustrious chieftain was
-hard to break.
-
-In December he went to Kansas, speaking at Elwood, Don-aphan, Troy,
-Atchison, and twice at Leavenworth. Wherever he went, he was met by
-vast assemblages of people. His speeches were principally repetitions
-of those previously made in Illinois; but they were very fresh and
-captivating to his new audiences. These journeys, which turned out to be
-continuous ovations, spread his name and fame far beyond the limits to
-which they had heretofore been restricted.
-
-During the winter of 1859-60, he saw that his reputation had reached
-such a height, that he might honorably compete with such renowned men as
-Seward, Chase, and Bates, for the Presidential nomination. Mr. Jackson
-Grimshaw of Quincy urged him very strongly on the point. At length Mr.
-Lincoln consented to a conference with Grimshaw and some of his more
-prominent friends. It took place in a committee-room in the State
-House. Mr. Bushnell, Mr. Hatch (the Secretary of State), Mr. Judd
-(Chairman of the Republican State Central Committee), Mr. Peck, and
-Mr. Grimshaw were present,--all of them "intimate friends." They were
-unanimous in opinion as to the expediency and propriety of making him
-a candidate. But "Mr. Lincoln, with his characteristic modesty, doubted
-whether he could get the nomination, even if he wished it, and asked
-until the next morning to answer us.... The next day he authorized us
-to consider him, and work for him, if we pleased, as a candidate for the
-Presidency."
-
-It was in October, 1859, that Mr. Lincoln received an invitation to
-speak in New York. It enchanted him: no event of his life had given
-him more heartfelt pleasure. He went straight to his office, and, Mr.
-Herndon says, "looked pleased, not to say _tickled_. He said to me,
-'Billy, I am invited to deliver a lecture in New York. Shall I go?'--'By
-all means,' I replied; 'and it is a good opening too.'--'If you were in
-my fix, what subject would you choose?' said Lincoln. 'Why, a political
-one: that's your forte,' I answered." Mr. Herndon remembered his
-partner's previous "failure,--utter failure," as a lecturer, and, on
-this occasion, dreaded excessively his choice of a subject. "In the
-absence of a friend's advice, Lincoln would as soon take the Beautiful
-for a subject as any thing else, when he had absolutely no sense of it."
-He wrote in response to the invitation, that he would avail himself
-of it the coming February, provided he might be permitted to make a
-political speech, in case he found it inconvenient to get up one of
-another kind. He had purposely set the day far ahead, that he might
-thoroughly prepare himself; and it may safely be said, that no effort of
-his life cost him so much labor as this one. Some of the party managers
-who were afterwards put to work to verify its statements, and get it out
-as a campaign document, are alleged to have been three weeks in finding
-the historical records consulted by him.
-
-On the 25th of February, 1860, he arrived in New York. It was Saturday,
-and he spent the whole day in revising and retouching his speech. The
-next day he heard Beecher preach, and on Monday wandered about the city
-to see the sights. When the committee under whose auspices he was to
-speak waited upon him, they found him dressed in a sleek and shining
-suit of new black, covered with very apparent creases and wrinkles,
-acquired by being packed too closely and too long in his little valise.
-He felt uneasy in his new clothes and a strange place. His confusion
-was increased when the reporters called to get the printed slips of his
-speech in advance of its delivery. Mr. Lincoln knew nothing of such a
-custom among the orators, and had no slips. He was, in fact, not quite
-sure that the press would desire to publish his speech. When he reached
-the Cooper Institute, and was ushered into the vast hall, he was
-surprised to see the most cultivated men of the city awaiting him on
-the stand, and an immense audience assembled to hear him. Mr. Bryant
-introduced him as "an eminent citizen of the West, hitherto known to you
-only by reputation." Mr. Lincoln then began, in low, monotonous tones,
-which gradually became louder and clearer, the following speech:--
-
-Mr. President and Fellow-Citizens of New York,--The facts with which I
-shall deal this evening are mainly old and familiar; nor is there any
-thing new in the general use I shall make of them. If there shall be
-any novelty, it will be in the mode of presenting the facts, and the
-inferences and observations following that presentation.
-
-In his speech last autumn, at Columbus, Ohio, as reported in "The
-New-York Times," Senator Douglas said,--"Our fathers, when they framed
-the government under which we live, understood this question just as
-well, and even better than we do now."
-
-I fully indorse this, and I adopt it as a text for this discourse. I so
-adopt it, because it furnishes a precise and agreed starting-point for
-the discussion between Republicans and that wing of Democracy headed
-by Senator Douglas. It simply leaves the inquiry, "What was the
-understanding those fathers had of the questions mentioned?"
-
-What is the frame of government under which we live?
-
-The answer must be, "The Constitution of the United States." That
-Constitution consists of the original, framed in 1787 (and under
-which the present Government first went into operation), and twelve
-subsequently framed amendments, the first ten of which were framed in
-1789.
-
-Who were our fathers that framed the Constitution? I suppose the
-"thirty-nine" who signed the original instrument may be fairly called
-our fathers who framed that part of the present Government. It is almost
-exactly true to say they framed it; and it is altogether true to say
-they fairly represented the opinion and sentiment of the whole nation at
-that time. Their names, being familiar to nearly all, and accessible to
-quite all, need not now be repeated.
-
-I take these "thirty-nine," for the present, as being "our fathers, who
-framed the Government under which we live."
-
-What is the question which, according to the text, those fathers
-understood just as well, and even better than we do now?
-
-It is this: Does the proper division of local from Federal authority, or
-any thing in the Constitution, forbid our Federal Government control as
-to slavery in our Federal Territories?
-
-Upon this, Douglas holds the affirmative, and Republicans the negative.
-This affirmative and denial form an issue; and this issue, this
-question, is precisely what the text declares our fathers understood
-better than we.
-
-Let us now inquire whether the "thirty-nine," or any of them, ever acted
-upon this question; and, if they did, how they acted upon it,--how they
-expressed that better understanding.
-
-In 1784,--three years before the Constitution,--the United States then
-owning the North-western Territory, and no other, the Congress of the
-Confederation had before them the question of prohibiting slavery in
-that Territory; and four of the "thirty-nine" who afterward framed
-the Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on that question. Of
-these, Roger Sherman, Thomas Mifflin, and Hugh Williamson voted for
-the prohibition; thus showing, that, in their understanding, no line
-dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing else, properly
-forbade the Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal
-territory. The other of the four, James McHenry, voted against the
-prohibition, showing that, for some cause, he thought it improper to
-vote for it.
-
-In 1787--still before the Constitution, but while the Convention was in
-session framing it, and while the North-western Territory still was
-the only Territory owned by the United States--the same question of
-prohibiting slavery in the Territory again came before the Congress of
-the Confederation; and three more of the "thirty-nine" who afterward
-signed the Constitution were in that Congress, and voted on the
-question. They were William Blount, William Few, and Abraham Baldwin;
-and they all voted for the prohibition, thus showing that, in their
-understanding, no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor any
-thing else, properly forbids the Federal Government to control as to
-slavery in Federal territory. This time the prohibition became a law,
-being part of what is now well known as the Ordinance of '87.
-
-The question of Federal control of slavery in the Territories seems not
-to have been directly before the convention which framed the original
-Constitution; and hence it is not recorded that the "thirty-nine," or
-any of them, while engaged on that instrument, expressed any opinion on
-that precise question.
-
-In 1789, by the First Congress which sat under the Constitution, an act
-was passed to enforce the Ordinance of '87, including the prohibition
-of slavery in the North-western Territory. The bill for this act was
-reported by one of the "thirty-nine,"--Thomas Fitzsimmons, then a member
-of the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. It went through
-all its stages without a word of opposition, and finally passed both
-branches without yeas and nays, which is equivalent to a unanimous
-passage. In this Congress there were sixteen of the "thirty-nine"
-fathers who framed the original Constitution. They were John Langdon,
-Nicholas Gilman, William S. Johnson, Roger Sherman, Robert Morris,
-Thomas Fitzsimmons, William Few, Abraham Baldwin, Rufus King, William
-Patterson, George Clymer, Richard Bassett, George Read, Pierce Butler,
-Daniel Carrol, James Madison.
-
-This shows that, in their understanding, no line dividing local from
-Federal authority, nor any thing in the Constitution, properly forbade
-Congress to prohibit slavery in the Federal territory; else both
-their fidelity to correct principle, and their oath to support the
-Constitution, would have constrained them to oppose the prohibition.
-
-Again, George Washington, another of the "thirty-nine," was then
-President of the United States, and, as such, approved and signed the
-bill, thus completing its validity as a law, and thus showing, that, in
-his understanding, no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor
-any thing in the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control
-as to slavery in Federal territory.
-
-No great while after the adoption of the original Constitution, North
-Carolina ceded to the Federal Government the country now constituting
-the State of Tennessee; and a few years later Georgia ceded that which
-now constitutes the States of Mississippi and Alabama. In both deeds of
-cession it was made a condition by the ceding States that the Federal
-Government should not prohibit slavery in the ceded country. Besides
-this, slavery was then actually in the ceded country. Under these
-circumstances, Congress, on taking charge of these countries, did not
-absolutely prohibit slavery within them. But they did interfere with it,
-take control of it, even there, to a certain extent. In 1798, Congress
-organized the Territory of Mississippi. In the act of organization they
-prohibited the bringing of slaves into the Territory, from any place
-without the United States, by fine, and giving freedom to slaves so
-brought. This act passed both branches of Congress without yeas and
-nays. In that Congress were three of the "thirty-nine" who framed the
-original Constitution: they were John Langdon, George Read, and Abraham
-Baldwin. They all, probably, voted for it. Certainly they would have
-placed their opposition to it upon record, if, in their understanding,
-any line dividing local from Federal authority, or any thing in the
-Constitution, properly forbade the Federal Government to control as to
-slavery in Federal territory.
-
-In 1803 the Federal Government purchased the Louisiana country. Our
-former territorial acquisitions came from certain of our own States;
-but this Louisiana country was acquired from a foreign nation. In 1804
-Congress gave a territorial organization to that part of it which now
-constitutes the State of Louisiana. New Orleans, lying within that part,
-was an old and comparatively large city. There were other considerable
-towns and settlements, and slavery was extensively and thoroughly
-intermingled with the people. Congress did not, in the Territorial Act,
-prohibit slavery; but they did interfere with it, take control of it,
-in a more marked and extensive way than they did in the case of
-Mississippi. The substance of the provision therein made, in relation to
-slaves, was,--
-
-First, That no slave should be imported into the Territory from foreign
-parts.
-
-Second, That no slave should be carried into it who had been imported
-into the United States since the first day of May, 1798.
-
-Third, That no slave should be carried into it, except by the owner, and
-for his own use as a settler; the penalty in all the cases being a fine
-upon the violator of the law, and freedom to the slave.
-
-This act also was passed without yeas and nays. In the Congress which
-passed it there were two of the "thirty-nine:" they were Abraham
-Baldwin and Jonathan Dayton. As stated in the case of Mississippi, it is
-probable they both voted for it. They would not have allowed it to pass
-without recording their opposition to it, if, in their understanding, it
-violated either the line proper dividing local from Federal authority or
-any provision of the Constitution.
-
-In 1819-20 came and passed the Missouri question. Many votes were taken
-by yeas and nays, in both branches of Congress, upon the various phases
-of the general question. Two of the "thirty-nine"--Rufus King and
-Charles Pinckney--were members of that Congress. Mr. King steadily voted
-for slavery prohibition and against all compromises; while Mr.
-Pinckney as steadily voted against slavery prohibition and against all
-compromises. By this Mr. King showed, that, in his understanding,
-no line dividing local from Federal authority, nor any thing in the
-Constitution, was violated by Congress prohibiting slavery in Federal
-territory; while Mr. Pinckney, by his votes, showed, that, in his
-understanding, there was some sufficient reason for opposing such
-prohibition in that case.
-
-The cases I have mentioned are the only acts of the "thirty-nine," or of
-any of them, upon the direct issue, which I have been able to discover.
-
-To enumerate the persons who thus acted as being four in 1784, three
-in 1787, seventeen in 1789, three in 1798, two in 1804, and two in
-1819-20,--there would be thirty-one of them. But this would be counting
-John Lang-don, Roger Sherman, William Few, Rufus King, and George Read
-each twice, and Abraham Baldwin four times. The true number of those
-of the "thirty-nine" whom I have shown to have acted upon the question,
-which, by the text, they understood better than we, is twenty-three,
-leaving sixteen not shown to have acted upon it in any way.
-
-Here, then, we have twenty-three out of our "thirty-nine" fathers, who
-framed the government under which we live, who have, upon their official
-responsibility and their corporal oaths, acted upon the very question
-which the text affirms they "understood just as well, and even better
-than we do now;" and twenty-one of them--a clear majority of the
-"thirty-nine"--so acting upon it as to make them guilty of gross
-political impropriety and wilful perjury if, in their understanding, any
-proper division between local and Federal authority, or any thing in the
-Constitution they had made themselves, and sworn to support, forbade the
-Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories.
-Thus the twenty-one acted; and, as actions speak louder than words, so
-actions under such responsibility speak still louder.
-
-Two of the twenty-three voted against congressional prohibition of
-slavery in the Federal Territories in the instances in which they acted
-upon the question; but for what reasons they so voted is not known. They
-may have done so because they thought a proper division of local from
-Federal authority, or some provision or principle of the Constitution,
-stood in the way; or they may, without any such question, have voted
-against the prohibition, on what appeared to them to be sufficient
-grounds of expediency. No one who has sworn to support the
-Constitution can conscientiously vote for what he understands to be an
-unconstitutional measure, however expedient he may think it; but one may
-and ought to vote against a measure which he deems constitutional if, at
-the same time, he deems it inexpedient. It, therefore, would be unsafe
-to set down even the two who voted against the prohibition as having
-done so because, in their understanding, any proper division of local
-from Federal authority, or any thing in the Constitution, forbade the
-Federal Government to control as to slavery in Federal territory.
-
-The remaining sixteen of the "thirty-nine," so far as I have discovered,
-have left no record of their understanding upon the direct question of
-Federal control of slavery in the Federal Territories. But there is much
-reason to believe that their understanding upon that question would not
-have appeared different from that of their twenty-three compeers, had it
-been manifested at all.
-
-For the purpose of adhering rigidly to the text, I have purposely
-omitted whatever understanding may have been manifested by any person,
-however distinguished, other than the "thirty-nine" fathers who framed
-the original Constitution; and, for the same reason, I have also
-omitted whatever understanding may have been manifested by any of
-the "thirty-nine" even, on any other phase of the general question of
-slavery. If we should look into their acts and declarations on those
-other phases, as the foreign slave-trade, and the morality and policy of
-slavery generally, it would appear to us, that, on the direct question
-of Federal control of slavery in Federal Territories, the sixteen,
-if they had acted at all, would probably have acted just as the
-twenty-three did. Among that sixteen were several of the most noted
-antislavery men of those times,--as Dr. Franklin, Alexander Hamilton,
-and Gouverneur Morris; while there was not one now known to have been
-otherwise, unless it may be John Rutledge of South Carolina.
-
-The sum of the whole is, that of our "thirty-nine" fathers who
-framed the original Constitution, twenty-one--a clear majority of
-the whole--certainly understood that no proper division of local from
-Federal authority, nor any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal
-Government to control slavery in the Federal Territories; while all the
-rest probably had the same understanding. Such, unquestionably, was the
-understanding of our fathers who framed the original Constitution; and
-the text affirms that they understood the question better than we.
-
-But, so far, I have been considering the understanding of the question
-manifested by the framers of the original Constitution. In and by the
-original instrument, a mode was provided for amending it; and, as I
-have already stated, the present frame of government under which we live
-consists of that original, and twelve amendatory articles framed and
-adopted since. Those who now insist that Federal control of slavery in
-Federal Territories violates the Constitution point us to the provisions
-which they suppose it thus violates; and, as I understand, they all fix
-upon provisions in these amendatory articles, and not in the original
-instrument. The Supreme Court, in the Dred-Scott case, plant themselves
-upon the fifth amendment, which provides that "no person shall be
-deprived of property without due process of law;" while Senator Douglas
-and his peculiar adherents plant themselves upon the tenth amendment,
-providing that "the powers not granted by the Constitution are reserved
-to the States respectively and to the people."
-
-Now, it so happens that these amendments were framed by the first
-Congress which sat under the Constitution,--the identical Congress which
-passed the act already mentioned, enforcing the prohibition of slavery
-in the North-western Territory. Not only was it the same Congress, but
-they were the identical, same individual men, who, at the same time
-within the session, had under consideration, and in progress toward
-maturity, these constitutional amendments, and this act prohibiting
-slavery in all the territory the nation then owned. The constitutional
-amendments were introduced before, and passed after, the act enforcing
-the Ordinance of '87; so that, during the whole pendency of the act to
-enforce the Ordinance, the constitutional amendments were also pending.
-
-That Congress, consisting in all of seventy-six members, including
-sixteen of the framers of the original Constitution, as before stated,
-were preeminently our fathers who framed that part of the government
-under which we live, which is now claimed as forbidding the Federal
-Government to control slavery in the Federal Territories.
-
-Is it not a little presumptuous in any one at this day to affirm that
-the two things which that Congress deliberately framed, and earned to
-maturity at the same time, are absolutely inconsistent with each other?
-And does not such affirmation become impudently absurd when coupled with
-the other affirmation, from the same mouth, that those who did the two
-things alleged to be inconsistent understood whether they were really
-inconsistent better than we,--better than he who affirms that they are
-inconsistent?
-
-It is surely safe to assume that the "thirty-nine" framers of the
-original Constitution, and the seventy-six members of the Congress which
-framed the amendments thereto, taken together, do certainly include
-those who may be fairly called "our fathers who framed the government
-under which we live." And so assuming, I defy any man to show that
-any one of them ever, in his whole life, declared, that, in his
-understanding, any proper division of local from Federal authority, or
-any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal Government to control
-as to slavery in the Federal Territories. I go a step farther. I defy
-any one to show that any living man in the whole world ever did, prior
-to the beginning of the present century (and I might almost say prior to
-the beginning of the last half of the present century), declare,
-that, in his understanding, any proper division of local from Federal
-authority, or any part of the Constitution, forbade the Federal
-Government to control as to slavery in the Federal Territories. To
-those who now so declare, I give, not only "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live," but with them all other living men
-within the century in which it was framed, among whom to search, and
-they shall not be able to find the evidence of a single man agreeing
-with them.
-
-Now, and here, let me guard a little against being misunderstood. I
-do not mean to say we are bound to follow implicitly in whatever our
-fathers did. To do so would be to discard all the lights of current
-experience,--to reject all progress,--all improvement. What I do say is,
-that, if we would supplant the opinions and policy of our fathers in
-any case, we should do so upon evidence so conclusive, and argument so
-clear, that even their great authority, fairly considered and weighed,
-cannot stand; and most surely not in a case whereof we ourselves declare
-they understood the question better than we.
-
-If any man, at this day, sincerely believes that a proper division of
-local from Federal authority, or any part of the Constitution,
-forbids the Federal Government to control as to slavery in the Federal
-Territories, he is right to say so, and to enforce his position by all
-truthful evidence and fair argument which he can. But he has no right
-to mislead others, who have less access to history and less leisure
-to study it, into the false belief that "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live," were of the same opinion, thus
-substituting falsehood and deception for truthful evidence and fair
-argument. If any man at this day sincerely believes "our fathers, who
-framed the government under which we live," used and applied principles,
-in other cases, which ought to have led them to understand that a
-proper division of local from Federal authority, or some part of the
-Constitution, forbids the Federal Government to control as to slavery
-in the Federal Territories, he is right to say so. But he should, at the
-same time, brave the responsibility of declaring, that, in his opinion,
-he understands their principles better than they did themselves; and
-especially should he not shirk that responsibility by asserting that
-they "understood the question just as well, and even better than we do
-now."
-
-But enough. Let all who believe that "our fathers, who framed the
-government under which we live, understood this question just as well,
-and even better than we do now," speak as they spoke, and act as they
-acted upon it. This is all Republicans ask, all Republicans desire,
-in relation to slavery. As those fathers marked it, so let it be again
-marked, as an evil not to be extended, but to be tolerated and protected
-only because of and so far as its actual presence among us makes that
-toleration and protection a necessity. Let all the guaranties those
-fathers gave it be, not grudgingly, but fully and fairly maintained. For
-this Republicans contend, and with this, so far as I know or believe,
-they will be content.
-
-And now, if they would listen,--as I suppose they will not,--I would
-address a few words to the Southern people.
-
-I would say to them, You consider yourselves a reasonable and a just
-people; and I consider, that, in the general qualities of reason and
-justice, you are not inferior to any other people. Still, when you speak
-of us Republicans, you do so only to denounce us as reptiles, or, at the
-best, as no better than outlaws. You will grant a hearing to pirates
-or murderers, but nothing like it to "Black Republicans." In all
-your contentions with one another, each of you deems an unconditional
-condemnation of "Black Republicanism" as the first thing to be attended
-to. Indeed, such condemnation of us seems to be an indispensable
-prerequisite--license, so to speak--among you to be admitted or
-permitted to speak at all.
-
-Now can you, or not, be prevailed upon to pause and to consider whether
-this is quite just to us, or even to yourselves?
-
-Bring forward your charges and specifications, and then be patient long
-enough to hear us deny or justify.
-
-You say we are sectional. We deny it. That makes an issue; and the
-burden of proof is upon you. You produce your proof; and what is it?
-Why, that our party has no existence in your section,--gets no votes
-in your section. The fact is substantially true; but does it prove the
-issue? If it does, then in case we should, without change of principle,
-begin to get votes in your section, we should thereby cease to be
-sectional. You cannot escape this conclusion; and yet are you willing to
-abide by it? If you are, you will probably soon find that we have ceased
-to be sectional, for we shall get votes in your section this very year.
-You will then begin to discover, as the truth plainly is, that your
-proof does not touch the issue. The fact that we get no votes in your
-section is a fact of your making, and not of ours. And if there be fault
-in that fact, that fault is primarily yours, and remains so until you
-show that we repel you by some wrong principle or practice. If we do
-repel you by any wrong principle or practice, the fault is ours; but
-this brings us to where you ought to have started,--to a discussion of
-the right or wrong of our principle. If our principle, put in practice,
-would wrong your section for the benefit of ours, or for any other
-object, then our principle, and we with it, are sectional, and are
-justly opposed and denounced as such. Meet us, then, on the question of
-whether our principle, put in practice, would wrong your section; and so
-meet it as if it were possible that something may be said on our side.
-Do you accept the challenge? No? Then you really believe that the
-principle which our fathers, who framed the government under which we
-live, thought so clearly right as to adopt it, and indorse it again and
-again upon their official oaths, is, in fact, so clearly wrong as to
-demand your condemnation without a moment's consideration.
-
-Some of you delight to flaunt in our faces the warning against sectional
-parties given by Washington in his Farewell Address. Less than eight
-years before Washington gave that warning, he had, as President of the
-United States, approved and signed an act of Congress enforcing the
-prohibition of slavery in the North-western Territory, which act
-embodied the policy of the Government upon that subject up to and at the
-very moment he penned that warning; and about one year after he penned
-it he wrote Lafayette that he considered that prohibition a wise
-measure, expressing, in the same connection, his hope that we should
-some time have a confederacy of Free States.
-
-Bearing this in mind, and seeing that sectionalism has since arisen upon
-this same subject, is that warning a weapon in your hands against us, or
-in our hands against you? Could Washington himself speak, would he cast
-the blame of that sectionalism upon us, who sustain his policy, or upon
-you, who repudiate it? We respect that warning of Washington; and we
-commend it to you, together with his example pointing to the right
-application of it.
-
-But you say you are conservative,--eminently conservative; while we
-are revolutionary, destructive, or something of the sort. What is
-conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried against the new
-and untried? We stick to, contend for, the identical old-policy on the
-point in controversy which was adopted by our fathers who framed the
-government under which we live; while you, with one accord, reject
-and scout and spit upon that old policy, and insist upon substituting
-something new. True, you disagree among yourselves as to what that
-substitute shall be. You have considerable variety of new propositions
-and plans; but you are unanimous in rejecting and denouncing the
-old policy of the fathers. Some of you are for reviving the foreign
-slave-trade; some for a Congressional Slave-code for the Territories;
-some for Congress forbidding the Territories to prohibit slavery within
-their limits; some for maintaining slavery in the Territories through
-the judiciary; some for the "gur-reat pur-rinciple" that, "if one man
-would enslave another, no third man should object," fantastically called
-"popular sovereignty;" but never a man among you in favor of Federal
-prohibition of slavery in Federal Territories, according to the practice
-of our fathers, who framed the government under which we live. Not one
-of all your various plans can show a precedent or an advocate in the
-century within which our Government originated. Consider, then,
-whether your claim of conservatism for yourselves, and your charge
-of destructiveness against us, are based on the most clear and stable
-foundations.
-
-Again, you say we have made the slavery question more prominent than
-it formerly was. We deny it. We admit that it is more prominent, but we
-deny that we made it so. It was not we, but you, who discarded the old
-policy of the fathers. We resisted, and still resist, your innovation;
-and thence comes the greater prominence of the question. Would you have
-that question reduced to its former proportions? Go back to that old
-policy. What has been will be again, under the same conditions. If you
-would have the peace of the old times, re-adopt the precepts and policy
-of the old times.
-
-You charge that we stir up insurrections among your slaves. We deny it.
-And what is your proof? Harper's Ferry! John Brown! John Brown was no
-Republican; and you have failed to implicate a single Republican in his
-Harper's Ferry enterprise. If any member of our party is guilty in that
-matter, you know it, or you do not know it. If you do know it, you are
-inexcusable to not designate the man, and prove the fact. If you do not
-know it, you are inexcusable to assert it, and especially to persist
-in the assertion after you have tried and failed to make the proof. You
-need not be told that persisting in a charge which one does not know to
-be true is simply malicious slander.
-
-Some of you admit that no Republican designedly aided or encouraged
-the Harper's-Ferry affair, but still insist that our doctrines and
-declarations necessarily lead to such results. We do not believe it. We
-know we hold to no doctrine, and make no declarations, which were not
-held to and made by our fathers, who framed the government under which
-we live. You never deal fairly by us in relation to this affair. When it
-occurred, some important State elections were near at hand; and you were
-in evident glee with the belief, that, by charging the blame upon us,
-you could get an advantage of us in those elections. The elections came;
-and your expectations were not quite fulfilled. Every Republican man
-knew, that, as to himself at least, your charge was a slander, and he
-was not much inclined by it to cast his vote in your favor. Republican
-doctrines and declarations are accompanied with a continual protest
-against any interference whatever with your slaves, or with you about
-your slaves. Surely this does not encourage them to revolt. True, we
-do, in common with our fathers who framed the government under which we
-live, declare our belief that slavery is wrong; but the slaves do not
-hear us declare even this. For any thing we say or do, the slaves would
-scarcely know there is a Republican party. I believe they would not, in
-fact, generally know it but for your misrepresentations of us in their
-hearing. In your political contest among yourselves, each faction
-charges the other with sympathy with Black Republicanism; and then,
-to give point to the charge, defines Black Republicanism to simply be
-insurrection, blood, and thunder among the slaves.
-
-Slave insurrections are no more common now than they were before
-the Republican party was organized. What induced the Southampton
-Insurrection, twenty-eight years ago, in which, at least, three times as
-many lives were lost as at Harper's Ferry? You can scarcely stretch
-your very elastic fancy to the conclusion that Southampton was got up
-by Black Republicanism. In the present state of things in the United
-States, I do not think a general, or even a very extensive slave
-insurrection, is possible. The indispensable concert of action cannot
-be attained. The slaves have no means of rapid communication; nor can
-incendiary free men, black or white, supply it. The explosive materials
-are everywhere in parcels; but there neither are, nor can be supplied,
-the indispensable connecting trains.
-
-Much is said by Southern people about the affection of slaves for their
-masters and mistresses; and a part of it, at least, is true. A plot
-for an uprising could scarcely be devised and communicated to twenty
-individuals before some one of them, to save the life of a favorite
-master or mistress, would divulge it. This is the rule; and the slave
-revolution in Hayti was not an exception to it, but a case occurring
-under peculiar circumstances. The gunpowder plot of British history,
-though not connected with the slaves, was more in point. In that case,
-only about twenty were admitted to the secret; and yet one of them, in
-his anxiety to save a friend, betrayed the plot to that friend, and,
-by consequence, averted the calamity. Occasional poisoning from the
-kitchen, and open or stealthy assassinations in the field, and local
-revolts extending to a score or so, will continue to occur as the
-natural results of slavery; but no general insurrection of slaves, as I
-think, can happen in this country for a long time. Whoever much fears,
-or much hopes, for such an event will be alike disappointed.
-
-In the language of Mr. Jefferson, uttered many years ago, "It is still
-in our power to direct the process of emancipation and deportation
-peaceably, and in such slow degrees, as that the evil will wear off
-insensibly; and their places be, _pari passu_, filled up by free white
-laborers. If, on the contrary, it is left to force itself on, human
-nature must shudder at the prospect held up."
-
-Mr. Jefferson did not mean to say, nor do I, that the power of
-emancipation is in the Federal Government. He spoke of Virginia; and, as
-to the power of emancipation, I speak of the slaveholding States only.
-
-The Federal Government, however, as we insist, has the power of
-restraining the extension of the institution,--the power to insure that
-a slave insurrection shall never occur on any American soil which is now
-free from slavery.
-
-John Brown's effort was peculiar. It was not a slave insurrection. It
-was an attempt by white men to get up a revolt among slaves, in which
-the slaves refused to participate. In fact, it was so absurd that
-the slaves, with all their ignorance, saw plainly enough it could not
-succeed. 'That affair, in its philosophy, corresponds with the many
-attempts, related in history, at the assassination of kings and
-emperors. An enthusiast broods over the oppression of a people till he
-fancies himself commissioned by Heaven to liberate them. He ventures the
-attempt, which ends in little else than in his own execution. Orsini's
-attempt on Louis Napoleon, and John Brown's attempt at Harper's Ferry,
-were, in their philosophy, precisely the same. The eagerness to cast
-blame on old England in the one case, and on New England in the other,
-does not disprove the sameness of the two things.
-
-And how much would it avail you, if you could, by the use of John Brown,
-Helper's book, and the like, break up the Republican organization?
-Human action can be modified to some extent; but human nature cannot
-be changed. There is a judgment and a feeling against slavery in this
-nation, which cast at least a million and a half of votes. You cannot
-destroy that judgment and feeling, that sentiment, by breaking up the
-political organization which rallies around it. You can scarcely scatter
-and disperse an army which has been formed into order in the face
-of your heaviest fire; but, if you could, how much would you gain by
-forcing the sentiment which created it out of the peaceful channel of
-the ballot-box, into some other channel? What would that other channel
-probably be? Would the number of John Browns be lessened or enlarged by
-the operation?
-
-But you will break up the Union rather than submit to a denial of your
-constitutional rights.
-
-That has a somewhat reckless sound; but it would be palliated, if not
-fully justified, were we proposing by the mere force of numbers to
-deprive you of some right plainly written down in the Constitution. But
-we are proposing no such thing.
-
-When you make these declarations, you have a specific and
-well-under-stood allusion to an assumed constitutional right of yours
-to take slaves into the Federal Territories, and hold them there as
-property; but no such right is specifically written in the Constitution.
-That instrument is literally silent about any such right. We, on the
-contrary, deny that such a right has any existence in the Constitution,
-even by implication.
-
-Your purpose then, plainly stated, is, that you will destroy the
-government, unless you be allowed to construe and enforce the
-Constitution as you please on all points in dispute between you and us.
-You will rule or ruin in all events.
-
-This, plainly stated, is your language to us. Perhaps you will say the
-Supreme Court has decided the disputed constitutional question in your
-favor. Not quite so. But waiving the lawyer's distinction between dictum
-and decision, the courts have decided the question for you in a sort of
-way. The courts have substantially said, it is your constitutional right
-to take slaves into the Federal Territories, and to hold them there as
-property.
-
-When I say the decision was made in a sort of way, I mean it was made
-in a divided court by a bare majority of the judges, and they not quite
-agreeing with one another in the reasons for making it; that it is so
-made as that its avowed supporters disagree with one another about
-its meaning, and that it was mainly based upon a mistaken statement of
-fact,--the statement in the opinion that "the right of property in a
-slave is distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution."
-
-An inspection of the Constitution will show that the right of property
-in a slave is not distinctly and expressly affirmed in it. Bear in
-mind, the judges do not pledge their judicial opinion that such right is
-impliedly affirmed in the Constitution; but they pledge their veracity
-that it is distinctly and expressly affirmed there,--"distinctly," that
-is, not mingled with any thing else; "expressly," that is, in words
-meaning just that, without the aid of any inference, and susceptible of
-no other meaning.
-
-If they had only pledged their judicial opinion that such right is
-affirmed in the instrument by implication, it would be open to others to
-show that neither the word "slave" nor "slavery" is to be found in
-the Constitution, nor the word "property" even, in any connection with
-language alluding to the things slave or slavery, and that, wherever in
-that instrument the slave is alluded to, he is called a "person;" and
-wherever his master's legal right in relation to him is alluded to, it
-is spoken of as "service or labor due,"--as a "debt" payable in service
-or labor. Also it would be open to show, by contemporaneous history,
-that this mode of alluding to slaves and slavery, instead of speaking of
-them, was employed on purpose to exclude from the Constitution the idea
-that there could be property in man.
-
-To show all this is easy and certain.
-
-When this obvious mistake of the judges shall be brought to their
-notice, is it not reasonable to expect that they will withdraw the
-mistaken statement, and reconsider the conclusion based upon it?
-
-And then it is to be remembered that "our fathers, who framed
-the government under which we live,"--the men who made the
-Constitution,--decided this same constitutional question in our favor
-long ago,--decided it without a division among themselves, when making
-the decision; without division among themselves about the meaning of it
-after it was made, and, so far as any evidence is left, without basing
-it upon any mistaken statement of facts.
-
-Under all these circumstances, do you really feel yourselves justified
-to break up this Government, unless such a court decision as yours
-is shall be at once submitted to, as a conclusive and final rule of
-political action?
-
-But you will not abide the election of a Republican President. In that
-supposed event, you say, you will destroy the Union; and then, you say,
-the great crime of having destroyed it will be upon us!
-
-That is cool. A highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through
-his teeth, "Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you; and then you will be
-a murderer!"
-
-To be sure, what the robber demanded of me--my money--was my own; and I
-had a clear right to keep it; but it was no more my own than my vote
-is my own; and threat of death to me to extort my money, and threat
-of destruction to the Union to extort my vote, can scarcely be
-distinguished in principle.
-
-A few words now to Republicans. It is exceedingly desirable that all
-parts of this great Confederacy shall be at peace, and in harmony, one
-with another. Let us Republicans do our part to have it so. Even though
-much provoked, let us do nothing through passion and ill-temper. Even
-though the Southern people will not so much as listen to us, let us
-calmly consider their demands, and yield to them if, in our deliberate
-view of our duty, we possibly can. Judging by all they say and do,
-and by the subject and nature of their controversy with us, let us
-determine, if we can, what will satisfy them.
-
-Will they be satisfied if the Territories be unconditionally surrendered
-to them? We know they will not. In all their present complaints against
-us, the Territories are scarcely mentioned. Invasions and insurrections
-are the rage now. Will it satisfy them if, in the future, we have
-nothing to do with invasions and insurrections? We know it will not. We
-so know because we know we never had any thing to do with invasions and
-insurrections; and yet this total abstaining does not exempt us from the
-charge and the denunciation.
-
-The question recurs, what will satisfy them? Simply this: We must not
-only let them alone, but we must, somehow, convince them that we do let
-them alone. This we know by experience is no easy task. We have been so
-trying to convince them from the very beginning of our organization, but
-with no success. In all our platforms and speeches we have constantly
-protested our purpose to let them alone; but this has had no tendency to
-convince them. Alike unavailing to convince them is the fact that they
-have never detected a man of us in any attempt to disturb them.
-
-These natural, and apparently adequate means all failing, what will
-convince them? This, and this only: cease to call slavery _wrong_, and
-join them in calling it _right_. And this must be done thoroughly,--done
-in _acts_ as well as in _words_. Silence will not be tolerated: we must
-place ourselves avowedly with them. Douglas's new sedition law must
-be enacted and enforced, suppressing all declarations that slavery is
-wrong, whether made in politics, in presses, in pulpits, or in private.
-We must arrest and return their fugitive slaves with greedy pleasure. We
-must pull down our Free-State Constitutions. The whole atmosphere must
-be disinfected from all taint of opposition to slavery, before they will
-cease to believe that all their troubles proceed from us.
-
-I am quite aware they do not state their case precisely in this way.
-Most of them would probably say to us, "Let us alone, do nothing to us,
-and say what you please about slavery." But we do let them alone,
-have never disturbed them; so that, after all, it is what we say which
-dissatisfies them. They will continue to accuse us of doing until we
-cease saying.
-
-I am also aware they have not as yet, in terms, demanded the overthrow
-of our Free-State constitutions. Yet those constitutions declare the
-wrong of slavery with more solemn emphasis than do all other sayings
-against it; and when all these other sayings shall have been silenced,
-the overthrow of these constitutions will be demanded, and nothing be
-left to resist the demand. It is nothing to the contrary, that they do
-not demand the whole of this just now. Demanding what they do, and for
-the reason they do, they can voluntarily stop nowhere short of this
-consummation. Holding, as they do, that slavery is morally right,
-and socially elevating, they cannot cease to demand a full national
-recognition of it, as a legal right and a social blessing.
-
-Nor can we justifiably withhold this on any ground, save our conviction
-that slavery is wrong. If slavery is right, all words, acts, laws, and
-constitutions against it are themselves wrong, and should be silenced
-and swept away. If it is right, we cannot justly object to its
-nationality, its universality; if it is wrong, they cannot justly insist
-upon its extension, its enlargement. All they ask, we could readily
-grant, if we thought slavery right; all we ask, they could as readily
-grant, if they thought it wrong. Their thinking it right, and our
-thinking it wrong, is the precise fact upon which depends the whole
-controversy. Thinking it right, as they do, they are not to blame for
-desiring its full recognition, as being right; but thinking it wrong, as
-we do, can we yield to them? Can we cast our votes with their view,
-and against our own? In view of our moral, social, and political
-responsibilities, can we do this?
-
-Wrong as we think slavery is, we can yet afford to let it alone where
-it is, because that much is due to the necessity arising from its actual
-presence in the nation; but can we, while our votes will prevent it,
-allow it to spread into the national Territories, and to overrun us here
-in these Free States?
-
-If our sense of duty forbids this, then let us stand by our duty
-fearlessly and effectively. Let us be diverted by none of those
-sophistical contrivances wherewith we are so industriously plied and
-belabored,--contrivances such as groping for some middle ground between
-the right and the wrong, vain as the search for a man who should be
-neither a living man nor a dead man,--such as a policy of "don't care"
-on a question about which all true men do care,--such as Union appeals
-beseeching true Union men to yield to Dis-unionists, reversing the
-divine rule, and calling, not the sinners, but the righteous, to
-repentance,--such as invocations to Washington, imploring men to unsay
-what Washington said, and undo what Washington did.
-
-Neither let us be slandered from our duty by false accusations against
-us, nor frightened from it by menaces of destruction to the Government,
-nor of dungeons to ourselves. 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.
-
-The next morning "The Tribune" presented a report of the speech, but,
-in doing so, said, "the tones, the gestures, the kindling eye, and the
-mirth-provoking look defy the reporter's skill.... No man ever before
-made such an impression on his first appeal to a New York audience."
-"The Evening Post" said, "We have made room for Mr. Lincoln's speech,
-notwithstanding the pressure of other matters; and our readers will see
-that it was well worthy of the deep attention with which it was heard."
-For the publication of such arguments the editor was "tempted to wish"
-that his columns "were indefinitely elastic." And these are but fair
-evidences of the general tone of the press.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was much annoyed, after his return home, by the allegation
-that he had sold a "political speech," and had been generally governed
-by mercenary motives in his Eastern trip. Being asked to explain it, he
-answered as follows:--
-
-Springfield, April 6, 1860.
-
-C. F. McNeill, Esq.
-
-Dear Sir,--Reaching home yesterday, I found yours of the 23d March,
-enclosing a slip from "The Middleport Press." It is not true that I ever
-charged any thing for a political speech in my life; but this much is
-true. Last October I was requested by letter to deliver some sort of
-speech in Mr. Beecher's church in Brooklyn,--$200 being offered in the
-first letter. I wrote that I could do it in February, provided they
-would take a political speech if I could find time to get up no other.
-They agreed; and subsequently I informed them the speech would have to
-be a political one. When I reached New York, I, for the first, learned
-that the place was changed to "Cooper Institute." I made the speech, and
-left for New Hampshire, where I have a son at school, neither asking for
-pay nor having any offered me. Three days after, a check for $200 was
-sent to me at N.H.; and I took it, _and did not know it was wrong_. My
-understanding now is, though I knew nothing of it at the time, that they
-did charge for admittance at the Cooper Institute, and that they took in
-more than twice $200.
-
-I have made this explanation to you as a friend; but I wish no
-explanation made to our enemies. What they want is a squabble and a
-fuss: and that they can have if we explain; and they cannot have it if
-we don't.
-
-When I returned through New York from New England, I was told by the
-gentlemen who sent me the check, that a drunken vagabond in the club,
-having learned something about the $200, made the exhibition out of
-which "The Herald" manufactured the article quoted by "The Press" of
-your town.
-
-My judgment is, and therefore my request is, that you give no denial,
-and no explanations.
-
-Thanking you for your kind interest in the matter, I remain
-
-Yours truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-From New York Mr. Lincoln travelled into New England, to visit his
-son Robert, who was a student at Harvard; but he was overwhelmed with
-invitations to address Republican meetings. In Connecticut he spoke at
-Hartford, Norwich, New Haven, Meriden, and Bridgeport; in Rhode Island,
-at Woonsocket; in New Hampshire, at Concord and Manchester. Everywhere
-the people poured out in multitudes, and the press lavished encomiums.
-Upon his speech at Manchester, "The Mirror," a neutral paper, passed the
-following criticisms of his style of oratory,--criticisms familiar
-enough to the people of his own State: "He spoke an hour and a half with
-great fairness, great apparent candor, and with wonderful interest.
-He did not abuse the South, the administration, or the Democrats,
-or indulge in any personalities, with the exception of a few hits at
-Douglas's notions. He is far from prepossessing in personal appearance,
-and his voice is disagreeable; and yet he wins your attention and
-good-will from the start.... He indulges in no flowers of rhetoric, no
-eloquent passages. He is not a wit, a humorist, or a clown; yet so great
-a vein of pleasantry and good-nature pervades what he says, gilding over
-a deep current of practical argument, he keeps his hearers in a smiling
-mood, with their mouths open ready to swallow all he says. His sense of
-the ludicrous is very keen; and an exhibition of that is the clincher
-of all his arguments,--not the ludicrous acts of persons, but ludicrous
-ideas. Hence he is never offensive, and steals away willingly into his
-train of belief persons who were opposed to him. For the first half-hour
-his opponents would agree with every word he uttered; and from that
-point he began to lead them off little by little, until it seemed as
-if he had got them all into his fold. He displays more shrewdness, more
-knowledge of the masses of mankind, than any public speaker we have
-heard since Long Jim Wilson left for California."
-
-On the morning after the Norwich speech, Mr. Lincoln was met, or is
-said to have been met, in the cars by a preacher, one Gulliver,--a
-name suggestive of fictions. Gulliver says he told Mr. Lincoln that
-he thought his speech "the most remarkable one he ever heard." Lincoln
-doubted his sincerity; but Gulliver persisted. "Indeed, sir," said he,
-"I learned more of the art of public speaking last evening than I could
-from a whole course of lectures on rhetoric." Lincoln found he had in
-hand a clerical sycophant, and a little politician at that,--a class of
-beings whom he most heartily despised. Whereupon he began to quiz the
-fellow, and told him, for a most "remarkable circumstance," that the
-professors of Yale College were running all around after him, taking
-notes of his speeches, and lecturing about him to the classes. "Now,"
-continued he, "I should like very much to know what it was in my speech
-which you thought so remarkable, and which interested my friend the
-professor so much?" Gulliver was equal to the occasion, and answered
-with an opinion which Mr. Bunsby might have delivered, and died,
-leaving to the world a reputation perfected by that single saying. "The
-clearness of your statements," said Gulliver, "the unanswerable style
-of your reasoning, and especially your illustrations, which were romance
-and pathos, and fun and logic, all welded together." Gulliver closed the
-interview with the cant peculiar to his kind. "Mr. Lincoln," said he,
-"may I say one thing to you before we separate?"--"Certainly; any thing
-you please," replied the good-natured old Abe. "You have just spoken,"
-preached Gulliver, "of the tendency of political life in Washington
-to debase the moral convictions of our representatives there by
-the admixture of mere political expediency. You have become, by the
-controversy with Mr. Douglas, one of our leaders in this great struggle
-with slavery, which is undoubtedly the struggle of the nation and the
-age. What I would like to say is this, and I say it with a full heart:
-Be true to your principles; and we will be true to you, and God will be
-true to us all." To which modest, pious, and original observation, Mr.
-Lincoln responded, "I say Amen to that! Amen to that!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-IT was not until May 9 and 10 that the Republican State Convention of
-Illinois met at Decatur. Mr. Lincoln was present, and is said to have
-been there as a mere "spectator." He had no special interest in the
-proceedings, and appears to have had no notion that any business
-relating to him was to be transacted that day. It was a very large and
-spirited body, comprising an immense number of delegates, among whom
-were the most brilliant, as well as the shrewdest men in the party. It
-was evident that something of more than usual importance was expected to
-transpire. A few moments after the convention organized, "Old Abe" was
-seen squatting, or sitting on his heels, just within the door of the
-Wigwam. Gov. Oglesby rose and said amid increasing silence, "I am
-informed that a distinguished citizen of Illinois, and one whom Illinois
-will ever delight to honor, is present; and I wish to move that this
-body invite him to a seat on the stand." Here the governor paused, as if
-to tease and dally, and work curiosity up to the highest point; but at
-length he shouted the magic name "_Abraham Lincoln!_" Not a shout, but
-a roar of applause, long and deep, shook every board and joist of the
-Wigwam. The motion was seconded and passed. A rush was made for the hero
-that sat on his heels. He was seized, and jerked to his feet. An effort
-was made to "jam him through the crowd" to his place of honor on
-the stage; but the crowd was too dense, and it failed. Then he was
-"troosted,"--lifted up bodily,--and lay for a few seconds sprawling and
-kicking upon the heads and shoulders of the great throng. In this
-manner he was gradually pushed toward the stand, and finally reached
-it, doubtless to his great relief, "in the arms of some half-dozen
-gentlemen," who set him down in full view of his clamorous admirers.
-"The cheering was like the roar of the sea. Hats were thrown up by the
-Chicago delegation, as if hats were no longer useful." Mr. Lincoln rose,
-bowed, smiled, blushed, and thanked the assembly as well as he could
-in the midst of such a tumult. A gentleman who saw it all says, "I then
-thought him one of the most diffident and worst-plagued men I ever saw."
-
-At another stage of the proceedings, Gov. Oglesby rose again with
-another provoking and mysterious speech. "There was," he said, "an
-old Democrat outside who had something he wished to present to this
-Convention."--"Receive it!" "Receive it!" cried some. "What is it?"
-"What is it?" screamed some of the lower Egyptians, who had an idea the
-old Democrat might want to blow them up with an infernal machine. But
-the party for Oglesby and the old Democrat was the stronger, and carried
-the vote with a tremendous hurrah. The door of the Wigwam opened; and
-a fine, robust old fellow, with an open countenance and bronzed cheeks,
-marched into the midst of the assemblage, bearing on his shoulder
-"two small triangular heart rails," surmounted by a banner with this
-inscription:--
-
-TWO RAILS,
-
-FROM A LOT MADE BY ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND JOHN HANKS, IN THE SANGAMON
-BOTTOM, IN THE YEAR 1830.
-
-[Illustration: Uncle John Hanks 489]
-
-The sturdy bearer was old John Hanks himself, enjoying the great
-field-day of his life. He was met with wild and tumultuous cheers,
-prolonged through several minutes; and it was observed that the Chicago
-and Central-Illinois men put up the loudest and longest. The whole scene
-was for a time simply tempestuous and bewildering. But it ended at
-last; and now the whole body, those in the secret and those out of it,
-clamored like men beside themselves for a speech from Mr. Lincoln, who
-in the mean time "blushed, but seemed to shake with inward laughter." In
-response to the repeated appeals he rose and said,--
-
-"Gentlemen, I suppose you want to know something about those things"
-(pointing to old John and the rails). "Well, the truth is, John Hanks
-and I did make rails in the Sangamon Bottom. I don't know whether we
-made those rails or not; fact is, I don't think they are a credit to the
-makers" (laughing as he spoke). "But I do know this: I made rails then,
-and I think I could make better ones than these now."
-
-By this time the innocent Egyptians began to open their eyes: they saw
-plainly enough now the admirable Presidential scheme unfolded to their
-view. The result of it all was a resolution declaring that "Abraham
-Lincoln _is the first choice of the Republican party of Illinois for the
-Presidency, and instructing the delegates to the Chicago Convention to
-use all honorable means to secure his nomination, and to cast the vote
-of the State as a unit for him_."
-
-The crowd at Decatur, delegates and private citizens, who took part in
-these proceedings, was estimated at five thousand. Neither the numbers
-nor the enthusiasm was a pleasant sight to the divided and demoralized
-Democrats. They disliked to hear so much about "honest Old Abe," "the
-rail-splitter," "the flat-boatman," "the pioneer." These cries had an
-ominous sound in their ears. Leaving Decatur on the cars, an old man out
-of Egypt, devoted to the great principles of Democracy, and excessively
-annoyed by the demonstration in progress, approached Mr. Lincoln and
-said, "So you're Abe Lincoln?"--"That's my name, sir," answered Mr.
-Lincoln. "They say you're a self-made man," said the Democrat. "Well,
-yes," said Mr. Lincoln, "what there is of me is self-made."--"Well, all
-I've got to say," observed the old man, after a careful survey of the
-statesman before him, "is, that it was a d--n bad job."
-
-In the mean time Mr. Lincoln's claims had been attractively presented to
-the politicians of other States. So early as 1858, Mr. Herndon had been
-to Boston partly, if not entirely, on this mission; and latterly
-Judge Davis, Leonard Swett, and others had visited Ohio, Indiana,
-Pennsylvania, and Maryland in his behalf. Illinois was, of course,
-overwhelmingly and vociferously for him.
-
-On the 16th of May, the Republican Convention assembled at Chicago.
-The city was literally crammed with delegates, alternates, "outside
-workers," and spectators. No nominating convention had ever before
-attracted such multitudes to the scene of its deliberations.
-
-The first and second days were spent in securing a permanent
-organization, and the adoption of a platform. The latter set out by
-reciting the Declaration of Independence as to the equality of all men,
-not forgetting the usual quotation about the right to "life, liberty,
-and the pursuit of happiness." The third resolution denounced disunion
-in any possible event; the fourth declared the right of each State to
-"order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own
-judgment exclusively;" the fifth denounced the administration and its
-treatment of Kansas, as well as its general support of the supposed
-rights of the South under the Constitution; the sixth favored "economy;"
-the seventh denied the "new dogma, that the Constitution, of its own
-force, carries slavery into any or all of the Territories of the United
-States;" the eighth denied the "authority of Congress, of a Territorial
-Legislature, or of any individuals, to give legal existence to slavery
-in any Territory of the United States;" the ninth called the African
-slave-trade a "burning shame;" the tenth denounced the governors of
-Kansas and Nebraska for vetoing certain antislavery bills; the
-eleventh favored the admission of Kansas; the twelfth was a high-tariff
-manifesto, and a general stump speech to the mechanics; the thirteenth
-lauded the Homestead policy; the fourteenth opposed any Federal or State
-legislation "by which the rights of citizenship, hitherto accorded to
-immigrants from foreign lands, shall be abridged or impaired," with
-some pretty words, intended as a further bid for the foreign vote;
-the fifteenth declared for "river and harbor improvements," and
-the sixteenth for a "Pacific Railroad." It was a very comprehensive
-"platform;" and, if all classes for whom planks were provided should
-be kind enough to stand upon them, there could be no failure in the
-election.
-
-On the third day the balloting for a candidate was to begin. Up to the
-evening of the second day, Mr. Seward's prospects were far the best. It
-was certain that he would receive the largest vote on the first ballot;
-and outside of the body itself the "crowd" for him was more numerous
-and boisterous than for any other, except Mr. Lincoln. For Mr. Lincoln,
-however, the "pressure" from the multitude, in the Wigwam, in the
-streets, and in the hotels, was tremendous. It is sufficiently accounted
-for by the fact that the "spot" was Chicago, and the State Illinois.
-Besides the vast numbers who came there voluntarily to urge his claims,
-and to cheer for him, as the exigency demanded, his adherents had
-industriously "drummed up" their forces in the city and country, and
-were now able to make infinitely more noise than all the other parties
-put together. There was a large delegation of roughs there for Mr.
-Seward, headed by Tom Hyer, the pugilist. These, and others like them,
-filled the Wigwam toward the evening of the second day in expectation
-that the voting would begin. The Lincoln party found it out, and
-determined to call a check to that game. They spent the whole night in
-mustering and organizing their "loose fellows" from far and near, and
-at daylight the next morning "took charge" of the Wigwam, filling
-every available space, and much that they had no business to fill. As a
-result, the Seward men were unable to get in, and were forced to content
-themselves with curbstone enthusiasm.
-
-Mr. Lincoln seemed to be very sure, all along, that the contest would be
-ultimately between him and Mr. Seward. The "Bates men" were supposed to
-be conservative, that is, not Abolitionists; and the object of the move
-in favor of Mr. Bates was to lower the fanatical tone of the party, and
-save the votes of certain "Union men" who might otherwise be against
-it. But a Seward man had telegraphed to St. Louis, to the friends of Mr.
-Bates, to say that Lincoln was as bad as Seward, and to urge them to go
-for Mr. Seward in case their own favorite should fail. The despatch was
-printed in "The Missouri Democrat," but was not brought to Mr. Lincoln's
-attention until the meeting of the Convention. He immediately caught up
-the paper, and "wrote on its broad margin," "Lincoln agrees with Seward
-in his irrepressible-conflict idea, and in negro equality; but he is
-opposed to Seward's Higher Law." With this he immediately despatched a
-friend to Chicago, who handed it to Judge Davis or Judge Logan.
-
-Simon Cameron of Pennsylvania was nominally a candidate; but, in the
-language of Col. McClure, "it meant nothing:" it was a mere sham, got up
-to enable Cameron to make a bargain with some real candidate, and thus
-secure for himself and his friends the lion's share of the spoils in
-the event of a victory at the polls. The genuine sentiment of the
-Pennsylvania delegation was divided between Judge Bates and Judge
-McLean. But Cameron was in a fine position to trade, and his friends
-were anxious for business. On the evening of the second day, these
-gentlemen were gratified. A deputation of them--Casey, Sanderson,
-Reeder, and perhaps others--were invited to the Lincoln Head-quarters at
-the Tremont House, where they were met by Messrs. Davis, Swett, Logan,
-and Dole, on the part of Mr. Lincoln. An agreement was there made, that,
-if the Cameron men would go for Lincoln, and he should be nominated
-and elected, Cameron should have a seat in his Cabinet, _provided_ the
-Pennsylvania delegation could be got to recommend him. The bargain
-was fulfilled, but not without difficulty. Cameron's strength was
-more apparent than real. There was, however, "a certain class of the
-delegates under his immediate influence;" and these, with the aid of Mr.
-Wilmot and his friends, who were honestly for Lincoln, managed to carry
-the delegation by a very small majority,--"about six."
-
-About the same time a similar bargain was made with the friends of Caleb
-B. Smith of Indiana; and with these two contracts quietly ratified, the
-Lincoln men felt strong and confident on the morning of the third day.
-
-While the candidates were being named, and when the ballotings began,
-every mention of Mr. Lincoln's name was received with thundering shouts
-by the vast mass of his adherents by whom the building had been packed.
-In the phrase of the day, the "outside pressure" was all in his favor.
-On the first ballot, Mr. Seward had 173 1/2 votes; Mr. Lincoln, 102;
-Mr. Cameron, 50 1/2; Mr. Chase, 49; Mr. Bates, 48; Mr. Dayton, 14; Mr.
-McLean, 12; Mr. Collamer, 10; and 6 were scattered. Mr. Cameron's
-name was withdrawn on the second ballot, according to the previous
-understanding; Mr. Seward had 184 1/2; Mr. Lincoln, 181; Mr. Chase,
-42 1/2; Mr. Bates, 35; Mr. Dayton, 10; Mr. McLean, 8; and the rest
-scattered. It was clear that the nomination lay between Mr. Seward and
-Mr. Lincoln, and the latter was receiving great accessions of strength.
-The third ballot came, and Mr. Lincoln ran rapidly up to 231 1/2 votes;
-233 being the number required to nominate. Hundreds of persons were
-keeping the count; and it was well known, without any announcement, that
-Mr. Lincoln lacked but a vote and a half to make him the nominee. At
-this juncture, Mr. Cartter of Ohio rose, and changed four votes from
-Mr. Chase to Mr. Lincoln. He was nominated. The Wigwam shook to its
-foundation with the roaring cheers. The multitude in the streets
-answered the multitude within, and in a moment more all the holiday
-artillery of Chicago helped to swell the grand acclamation. After a
-time, the business of the convention proceeded amid great excitement.
-All the votes that had heretofore been cast against Mr. Lincoln were
-cast for him before this ballot concluded; and, upon motion, the
-nomination was made unanimous. The convention then adjourned for dinner,
-and in the afternoon finished its work by the nomination of Hannibal
-Hamlin of Maine for Vice-President.
-
-All that day and all the day previous Mr. Lincoln was in Springfield,
-trying to behave as usual, but watching the proceedings of the
-Convention, as they were reported by telegraph, with nervous anxiety.
-Mr. Baker, the friend who had taken "The Missouri Democrat" to Chicago
-with Mr. Lincoln's pregnant indorsement upon it, returned on the night
-of the 18th. Early in the morning, he and Mr. Lincoln went to the
-balll-alley to play at "fives;" but the alley was pre-engaged. They went
-to an "excellent and neat beer saloon" to play a game of billiards; but
-the table was occupied. In this strait they contented themselves with a
-glass of beer, and repaired to "The Journal" office for news.
-
-C. P. Brown says that Lincoln played ball a great deal that day,
-notwithstanding the disappointment when he went with Baker; and Mr. Zane
-informs us that he was engaged in the same way the greater part of the
-day previous. It is probable that he took this physical mode of working
-off or keeping down the unnatural excitement that threatened to possess
-him.
-
-About nine o'clock in the morning, Mr. Lincoln came to the office of
-Lincoln & Herndon. Mr. Zane was then conversing with a student, "Well,
-boys," said Mr. Lincoln, "what do you know?"--"Mr. Rosette," answered
-Zane, "who came from Chicago this morning, thinks your chances for the
-nomination are good." Mr. Lincoln wished to know what Mr. Rosette's
-opinion was founded upon; and, while Zane was explaining, Mr. Baker
-entered with a telegram, "which said the names of the candidates for
-nomination had been announced," and that Mr. Lincoln's had been received
-with more applause than any other. Mr. Lincoln lay down on a sofa to
-rest. Soon after, Mr. Brown entered; and Mr. Lincoln said to him, "Well,
-Brown, do you know any thing?" Brown did not know much; and so Mr.
-Lincoln, secretly nervous and impatient, rose and exclaimed, "Let's go
-to the telegraph-office." After waiting some time at the office, the
-result of the first ballot came over the wire. It was apparent to all
-present that Mr. Lincoln thought it very favorable. He believed that if
-Mr. Seward failed to get the nomination, or to "come very near it," on
-the first ballot, he would fail altogether. Presently the news of the
-second ballot arrived, and Mr. Lincoln showed by his manner that he
-considered the contest no longer doubtful. "I've got him," said he. He
-then went over to the office of "The Journal," where other friends were
-awaiting decisive intelligence. The local editor of that paper, Mr.
-Zane, and others, remained behind to receive the expected despatch. In
-due time it came: the operator was intensely excited; at first he threw
-down his pencil, but, seizing it again, wrote off the news that threw
-Springfield into a frenzy of delight. The local editor picked it up, and
-rushed to "The Journal" office. Upon entering the room, he called for
-three cheers for the next President. They were given, and then the
-despatch was read. Mr. Lincoln seemed to be calm, but a close observer
-could detect in his countenance the indications of deep emotion. In the
-mean time cheers for Lincoln swelled up from the streets, and began to
-be heard throughout the town. Some one remarked, "Mr. Lincoln, I suppose
-now we will soon have a book containing your life."--"There is not
-much," he replied, "in my past life about which to write a book, as it
-seems to me." Having received the hearty congratulations of the company
-in the office, he descended to the street, where he was immediately
-surrounded by "Irish and American citizens;" and, so long as he was
-willing to receive it, there was great handshaking and felicitating.
-"Gentlemen," said the great man with a happy twinkle in his eye, "you
-had better come up and shake my hand while you can: honors elevate some
-men, you know." But he soon bethought him of a person who was of more
-importance to him than all this crowd. Looking toward his house, he
-said, "Well, gentlemen, there is a little short woman at our house who
-is probably more interested in this despatch than I am; and, if you will
-excuse me, I will take it up and let her see it."
-
-During the day a hundred guns were fired at Springfield; and in the
-evening a great mass meeting "ratified" the nomination, and, after doing
-so, adjourned to the house of the nominee. Mr. Lincoln appeared, made a
-"model" speech, and invited into his house everybody that could get in.
-To this the immense crowd responded that they would give him a larger
-house the next year, and in the mean time beset the one he had until
-after midnight.
-
-On the following day the Committee of the Convention, with Mr. Ashmun,
-the president, at its head, arrived at Springfield to notify Mr. Lincoln
-of his nomination. Contrary to what might have been expected, he
-seemed sad and dejected. The re-action from excessive joy to deep
-despondency--a process peculiar to his constitution--had already set
-in. To the formal address of the Committee, he responded with admirable
-taste and feeling;--
-
-"Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee,--I tender to you, and
-through you to the Republican National Convention, and all the people
-represented in it, my profoundest thanks for the high honor done me,
-which you now formally announce. Deeply and even painfully sensible of
-the great responsibility which is inseparable from this high honor,--a
-responsibility which I could almost wish had fallen upon some one of the
-far more eminent men and experienced statesmen whose distinguished names
-were before the Convention, I shall, by your leave, consider more
-fully the resolutions of the Convention, denominated the platform,
-and, without unnecessary and unreasonable delay, respond to you, Mr.
-Chairman, in writing, not doubting that the platform will be found
-satisfactory, and the nomination gratefully accepted. And now I will not
-longer defer the pleasure of taking you, and each of you, by the hand."
-
-The Committee handed him a letter containing the official notice,
-accompanied by the resolutions of the Convention; and to this he replied
-on the 23d as follows:--
-
-Springfield, Ill, May 23,1860.
-
-Hon. George Ashmun, President of the Republican National Convention.
-
-Sir,--I accept the nomination tendered me by the Convention over which
-you presided, and of which I am formally apprised in the letter of
-yourself and others, acting as a Committee of the Convention for that
-purpose.
-
-The declaration of principles and sentiments which accompanies your
-letter meets my approval; and it shall be my care not to violate or
-disregard it in any part.
-
-Imploring the assistance of Divine Providence, and with due regard to
-the views and feelings of all who were represented in the Convention; to
-the rights of all the States and Territories, and people of the nation;
-to the inviolability of the Constitution, and the perpetual union,
-harmony, and prosperity of all,--I am most happy to co-operate for the
-practical success of the principles declared by the Convention.
-
-Your obliged friend and fellow-citizen,
-
-Abraham Lincoln.
-
-In the mean time the National Democratic Convention had met at
-Charleston, S.C., and split in twain. The South utterly repudiated Mr.
-Douglas's new heresy; and Mr. Douglas insisted that the whole party
-ought to become heretics with him, and, turning their backs on the
-Dred-Scott Decision and the Cincinnati Platform, give up slavery in
-the Territories to the tender mercies of "squatter sovereignty" and
-"unfriendly legislation." Neither party to the controversy would be
-satisfied with a simple re-affirmation of the Cincinnati Platform; for
-under it Mr. Douglas could go to the North and say that it meant
-"squatter sovereignty," and Mr. Breckinridge could go to the South and
-say that it meant Congressional protection to slavery. In fact, it meant
-neither, and said neither, but declared, in plain English words, that
-Congress had no power to interfere with slavery in the Territories; and
-that, when the Territories were about to become States, they had all
-power to settle the question for themselves. Gen. B. F. Butler of
-Massachusetts proposed to heal the ominous divisions in the Convention
-by the re-adoption of that clear and emphatic provision; but his voice
-was soon drowned in the clamors of the fiercer disputants. The
-differences were irreconcilable. Mr. Douglas's friends had come there
-determined to nominate him at any cost; and, in order to nominate him,
-they dared not concede the platform to the South. A majority of the
-Committee on Resolutions reported the Cincinnati Platform, with the
-Southern interpretation of it; and the minority reported the same
-platform with a recitation concerning the "differences of opinion" "in
-the Democratic party," and a pledge to abide by the decision of the
-Supreme Court "on the questions of constitutional law,"--a pledge
-supposed to be of little value, since those who gave it were that moment
-in the very act of repudiating the only decision the Court had ever
-rendered. The minority report was adopted after a protracted and
-acrimonious debate, by a vote of one hundred and sixty-five to one
-hundred and thirty-eight. Thereupon the Southern delegates, most of them
-under instructions from their State conventions, withdrew, and organized
-themselves into a separate convention. The remaining delegates, called
-"the rump" by their Democratic adversaries, proceeded to ballot for a
-candidate for President, and voted fifty-seven times without effecting a
-nomination. Mr. Douglas, of course, received the highest number of
-votes; but, the old two-thirds rule being in force, he failed of a
-nomination. Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky was his principal competitor; but at
-one time and another Mr. Hunter of Virginia, Gen. Lane of Oregon, and
-Mr. Johnson of Tennessee, received flattering and creditable votes.
-After the fifty-seventh ballot, the Convention adjourned to meet at
-Baltimore on the 18th of June.
-
-The seceders met in another hall, adopted the majority platform, as the
-adhering delegates had adopted the minority platform, and then adjourned
-to meet at Richmond on the second Monday in June. Faint hopes of
-accommodation were still entertained; and, when the seceders met at
-Richmond, they adjourned again to Baltimore, and the 28th of June.
-
-The Douglas Convention, assuming to be the regular one, had invited the
-Southern States to fill up the vacant seats which belonged to them; but,
-when the new delegates appeared, they were met with the apprehension
-that their votes might not be perfectly secure for Mr. Douglas, and were
-therefore, in many instances, lawlessly excluded. This was the signal
-for another secession: the Border States withdrew; Mr. Butler and the
-Massachusetts delegation withdrew; Mr. Cushing deserted the chair, and
-took that of the rival Convention. The "regular" Convention, it was
-said, was now "the rump of a rump."
-
-On the first ballot for a candidate, Mr. Douglas had 173 1/2 votes; Mr.
-Guthrie, 10; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and 3 were scattered. On the second
-ballot, Mr. Douglas had 181 1/2; Mr. Breckinridge, 5; and Mr. Guthrie, 5
-1/2. It was plain that under the two-thirds rule no nomination could be
-made here. Neither Mr. Douglas nor any one else could receive two-thirds
-of a full convention. It was therefore resolved that Mr. Douglas,
-"having received two-thirds of all the votes _given in this
-Convention_," should be declared the nominee. Mr. Fitzpatrick of Alabama
-was nominated for Vice-President, but declined to stand; and Mr. Johnson
-of Georgia was substituted for him by the Douglas "National Committee."
-
-In the seceders' Convention, twenty-one States were represented more
-or less fully. It had no trouble in selecting a candidate. John C.
-Breckinridge of Kentucky and Joseph Lane of Oregon were unanimously
-nominated for the offices of President and Vice-President.
-
-In the mean time another party--the "Constitutional Union party"--had
-met in Baltimore on the 19th of May, and nominated John Bell of
-Tennessee for President, and Edward Everett of Massachusetts for
-Vice-President. Its platform was, in brief, "The Constitution of the
-Country, the Union of the States, and the Enforcement of the Laws."
-This body was composed for the most part of impenitent Know-Nothings and
-respectable old-line Whigs.
-
-The spring elections had given the democracy good reason to hope for
-success in the fall. The commercial classes, the shipping classes, and
-large numbers of the manufacturers, were thoroughly alarmed for the
-safety of the great trade dependent upon a political connection with
-the South. It seemed probable that a great re-action against antislavery
-agitations might take place. But the division at Charleston, the
-permanent organization of the two factions at Baltimore, and their
-mutual and rancorous hostility, completely reversed the delusive
-prospect. A majority of the whole people of the Union looked forward to
-a Republican victory with dread, and a large part with actual terror;
-and yet it was now clear that that majority was fatally bent upon
-wasting its power in the bitter struggles of the factions which composed
-it. Mr. Lincoln's election was assured; and for them there was nothing
-left but to put the house in order for the great convulsion which
-all our political fathers and prophets had predicted as the necessary
-consequence of such an event.
-
-On the 6th of November, Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the
-United States. He received 1,857,610 votes; Mr. Douglas had 1,291,574;
-Mr. Breckinridge, 850,082; Mr. Bell, 646,124. Against Mr. Lincoln there
-was a majority of 980,170 of all the votes cast. Of the electoral
-votes, Mr. Lincoln had 180; Mr. Breckinridge, 72; Mr. Bell, 30; and
-Mr. Douglas, 12. It is more than likely that Mr. Lincoln owed this, his
-crowning triumph, to the skill and adroitness with which he questioned
-Mr. Douglas in the canvass of 1858, and drew out of him those fatal
-opinions about "squatter sovereignty" and "unfriendly legislation" in
-the Territories. But for Mr. Douglas's committal to those opinions, it
-is not likely that. Mr. Lincoln would ever have been President.
-
-The election over, Mr. Lincoln was sorely beset by office-seekers.
-Individuals, deputations, "delegations," from all quarters, pressed
-in upon him in a manner that might have killed a man of less robust
-constitution. The hotels of Springfield were filled with gentlemen who
-came with, light baggage and heavy schemes. The party had never been in
-office: a "clean sweep" of the "ins" was expected; and all the "outs"
-were patriotically anxious to take the vacant places. It was a party
-that had never fed; and it was voraciously hungry. Mr. Lincoln and
-Artemus Ward saw a great deal of fun in it; and in all human probability
-it was the fun alone that enabled Mr. Lincoln to bear it.
-
-Judge Davis says that Mr. Lincoln had determined to appoint "Democrats
-and Republicans alike to office." Many things confirm this statement.
-Mr. Lincoln felt deeply the responsibility of his great trust; and he
-felt still more keenly the supposed impossibility of administering
-the government for the sole benefit of an organization which had no
-existence in one-half of the Union. He was therefore willing, not only
-to appoint Democrats to office, but to appoint them to the very highest
-offices within his gift. At this time he thought very highly of Mr.
-Stephens of Georgia, and would gladly have taken him into his Cabinet
-but for the fear that Georgia might secede, and take Mr. Stephens along
-with her. He did actually authorize his friend, Mr. Speed, to offer the
-Treasury Department to Mr. Guthrie of Kentucky; and Mr. Guthrie, for
-good reasons of his own, declined it. The full significance of this act
-of courageous magnanimity cannot be understood without reference to the
-proceedings of the Charleston Convention, where Mr. Guthrie was one
-of the foremost candidates. He considered the names of various other
-gentlemen from the Border States, each of them with good proslavery
-antecedents. He commissioned Thurlow Weed to place a seat in the Cabinet
-at the disposal of Mr. Gilmore of North Carolina; but Mr. Gilmore,
-finding that his State was likely to secede, was reluctantly compelled
-to decline it. He was, in fact, sincerely and profoundly anxious that
-the South should be honestly represented in his councils by men who had
-an abiding-place in the hearts of her people. To accomplish that high
-purpose, he was forced to go beyond the ranks of his own party; and
-he had the manliness to do it. He felt that his strength lay in
-conciliation at the outset: that was his ruling conviction during all
-those months of preparation for the great task before him. It showed
-itself, not only in the appointments which he sought to make, but in
-those which he did make. Harboring no jealousies, entertaining no fears
-concerning his personal interests in the future, he called around
-him the most powerful of his late rivals,--Seward, Chase, Bates,--and
-unhesitatingly gave into their hands powers which most presidents would
-have shrunk from committing to their equals, and much more to their
-superiors in the conduct of public affairs.
-
-The cases of Cameron and Smith, however, were very distressing. He had
-authorized no one to make such bargains for him as had been made with
-the friends of these men. He would gladly have repudiated the contracts,
-if it could have been done with honor and safety. For Smith he had great
-regard, and believed that he had rendered important services in the late
-elections. But his character was now grossly assailed; and it would have
-saved Mr. Lincoln serious embarrassments if he had been able to put him
-aside altogether, and select Mr. Lane or some other Indiana statesman
-in his place. He wavered long, but finally made up his mind to keep the
-pledge of his friends; and Smith was appointed.
-
-In Cameron's case the contest was fierce and more protracted. At
-Chicago, Cameron's agents had demanded that he should have the Treasury
-Department; but that was too much; and the friends of Mr. Lincoln,
-tried, pushed, and anxious as they were, declined to consider it. They
-would say that he should be appointed to a Cabinet position, but no
-more; and to secure this, he must get a majority of the Pennsylvania
-delegation to recommend him. Mr. Cameron was disposed to exact the
-penalty of his bond, hard as compliance might be on the part of Mr.
-Lincoln. But Cameron had many and formidable enemies, who alleged that
-he was a man notorious for his evil deeds, shameless in his rapacity
-and corruption, and even more shameless in his mean ambition to occupy
-exalted stations, for which he was utterly and hopelessly incompetent;
-that he had never dared to offer himself as a candidate before the
-people of Pennsylvania, but had more than once gotten high offices from
-the Legislature by the worst means ever used by a politician; and that
-it would be a disgrace, a shame, a standing offence to the country, if
-Mr. Lincoln should consent to put him into his Cabinet. On the other
-hand, Mr. Cameron had no lack of devoted friends to deny these charges,
-and to say that his was as "white a soul" as ever yearned for political
-preferment: they came out to Springfield in numbers,--Edgar Cowan, J. K.
-Moorehead, Alexander Cummins, Mr. Sanderson, Mr. Casey, and many
-others, besides Gen. Cameron himself. On the ground, of course, were the
-powerful gentlemen who had made the original contract on the part of
-Mr. Lincoln, and who, from first to last, strenuously insisted upon
-its fulfilment. It required a hard struggle to overcome Mr. Lincoln's
-scruples; and the whole force was necessarily mustered in order to
-accomplish it. "All that I am in the world," said he,--"the Presidency
-and all else,--I owe to that opinion of me which the people express
-when they call me 'honest Old Abe.' Now, what will they think of
-their _honest_ Abe, when he appoints Simon Cameron to be his familiar
-adviser?"
-
-In Pennsylvania it was supposed for a while that Cameron's audacity had
-failed him, and that he would abandon the attempt. But about the 1st
-of January Mr. Swett, one of the contracting parties, appeared at
-Harrisburg, and immediately afterwards Cameron and some of his
-friends took flight to Springfield. This circumstance put the vigilant
-opposition on the alert, and aroused them to a clear sense of the
-impending calamity. The sequel is a painful story; and it is, perhaps,
-better to give it in the words of a distinguished actor,--Col. Alexander
-K. McClure. "I do not know," says he, "that any went there to oppose
-the appointment but myself. When I learned that Cameron had started
-to Springfield, and that his visit related to the Cabinet, I at once
-telegraphed Lincoln that such an appointment would be most unfortunate.
-Until that time, no one outside a small circle of Cameron's friends
-dreamed of Lincoln's calling him to the Cabinet. Lincoln's character for
-honesty was considered a complete guaranty against such a suicidal act.
-No efforts had therefore been made to guard against it.
-
-"In reply to my telegram, Mr. Lincoln answered, requesting me to come to
-Springfield at once. I hastily got letters from Gov. Curtin, Secretary
-Slifer, Mr. Wilmot, Mr. Dayton, Mr. Stevens, and started. I took no
-affidavits with me, nor were any specific charges made against him by
-me, or by any of the letters I bore; but they all sustained me in the
-allegation, that the appointment would disgrace the administration
-and the country, because of the notorious incompetency and public and
-private villany of the candidate. I spent four hours with Mr. Lincoln
-alone; and the matter was discussed very fully and frankly. Although he
-had previously decided to appoint Cameron, he closed our interview by
-a reconsideration of his purpose, and the assurance that within
-twenty-four hours he would write me definitely on the subject. He wrote
-me, as he promised, and stated, that, if I would make specific charges
-against Mr. Cameron, and produce the proof, he would dismiss the
-subject. I answered, declining to do so for reasons I thought should be
-obvious to every one. I believe that affidavits were sent to him, but I
-had no hand in it.
-
-"Subsequently Cameron regarded his appointment as impossible, and he
-proposed to Stevens to join in pressing him. Stevens wrote me of the
-fact; and I procured strong letters from the State administration in his
-favor. A few days after Stevens wrote me a most bitter letter, saying
-that Cameron had deceived him, and was then attempting to enforce his
-own appointment. The bond was demanded of Lincoln; and that decided the
-matter."1
-
-1 As this was one of the few public acts which Mr. Lincoln performed
-with a bad conscience, the reader ought to know the consequences of it;
-and, because it may not be convenient to revert to them in detail at
-another place, we give them here, still retaining the language of the
-eye-witness, Col. McClure:--
-
-"I saw Cameron the night of the day that Lincoln removed him. We met in
-the room of a mutual friend, and he was very violent against Lincoln for
-removing him without consultation or notice. His denunciation against
-the President was extremely bitter, for attempting, as he said, his
-'personal as well as his political destruction.' He exhibited the
-letter, which was all in Mr. Lincoln's handwriting, and was literally as
-follows. I quote from carefully-treasured recollection:--
-
-"'Hon. Simon Cameron, Secretary of War.
-
-"Dear Sir,--I have this day nominated Hon. Edwin M. Stanton to be
-Secretary of War, and you to be Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia.
-
-"I am sure there is no material error in my quotation of the letter.
-
-"Cameron's chief complaint was, that he had no knowledge or intimation
-of the change until Chase delivered the letter. We were then, as ever
-before and since, and as we ever shall be, not in political sympathy,
-but our personal relations were ever kind. Had he been entirely
-collected, he would probably not have said and done what I heard and
-witnessed; but he wept like a child, and appealed to me to aid in
-protecting him against the President's attempt at personal degradation,
-assuring me that under like circumstances he would defend me. In my
-presence the proposition was made and determined upon to ask Lincoln
-to allow a letter of resignation to be antedated, and to write a kind
-acceptance of the same in reply. The effort was made, in which Mr. Chase
-joined, although perhaps ignorant of all the circumstances of the
-case; and it succeeded. The record shows that Mr. Cameron voluntarily
-resigned; while, in point of fact, he was summarily removed without
-notice.
-
-"In many subsequent conversations with Mr. Lincoln, he did not attempt
-to conceal the great misfortune of Cameron's appointment and the painful
-necessity of his removal."
-
-Very truly,
-
-A. LINCOLN.'
-
-As a slight relief to the miseries of his high position, and the doleful
-tales of the office-hunters, who assailed him morning, noon, and night,
-Mr. Lincoln ran off to Chicago, where he met with the same annoyances,
-and a splendid reception besides. Here, however, he enjoyed the great
-satisfaction of a long private conference with his old friend Speed; and
-it was then that he authorized him to invite Mr. Guthrie to the Cabinet.
-
-And now he began to think very tenderly of his friends and relatives in
-Coles County, especially of his good stepmother and her daughters. By
-the first of February, he concluded that he could not leave his home to
-assume the vast responsibilities that awaited him without paying them a
-visit. Accordingly, he left Springfield on the first day of that month,
-and went straight to Charleston, where Col. Chapman and family resided.
-He was accompanied by Mr. Marshall, the State Senator from that
-district, and was entertained at his house. The people crowded by
-hundreds to see him; and he was serenaded by "both the string and
-brass bands of the town, but declined making a speech." Early the next
-morning, he repaired "to his cousin, Dennis Hanks;" and our Jolly old
-friend Dennis had the satisfaction of seeing a grand levee under his own
-roof. It was all very pleasant to Mr. Lincoln to see such multitudes
-of familiar faces smiling upon his wonderful successes. But the chief
-object of his solicitude was not here; Mrs. Lincoln lived in the
-southern part of the county, and he was all impatience to see her. As
-soon, therefore, as he had taken a frugal breakfast with Dennis, he and
-Col. Chapman started off in a "two-horse buggy" toward Farmington, where
-his step-mother was living with her daughter, Mrs. Moore. They had much
-difficulty in crossing "the Kickapoo" River, which was running full of
-ice; but they finally made the dangerous passage, and arrived at
-Farmington in safety. The meeting between him and the old lady was of a
-most affectionate and tender character. She fondled him as her own
-"Abe," and he her as his own mother. It was soon arranged that she
-should return with him to Charleston, so that they might enjoy by the
-way the unrestricted and uninterrupted intercourse which they both
-desired above all things, but which they were not likely to have where
-the people could get at him. Then Mr. Lincoln and Col. Chapman drove to
-the house of John Hall, who lived "on the old Lincoln farm," where Abe
-split the celebrated rails, and fenced in the little clearing in 1830.
-Thence they went to the spot where old Tom Lincoln was buried. The grave
-was unmarked and utterly neglected. Mr. Lincoln said he wanted to "have
-it enclosed, and a suitable tombstone erected." He told Col. Chapman to
-go to a "marble-dealer," ascertain the cost of the work proposed, and
-write him in full. He would then send Dennis Hanks the money, and an
-inscription for the stone; and Dennis would do the rest. (Col. Chapman
-performed his part of the business, but Mr. Lincoln noticed it no
-further; and the grave remains in the same condition to this day.)
-
-"We then returned," says Col. Chapman, "to Farmington, where we found
-a large crowd of citizens--nearly all old acquaintances--waiting to see
-him. His reception was very enthusiastic, and appeared to gratify him
-very much. After taking dinner at his step-sister's (Mrs. Moore), we
-returned to Charleston, his step-mother coming with us.
-
-"Our conversation during the trip was mostly concerning family affairs.
-Mr. Lincoln spoke to me on the way down to Farmington of his step-mother
-in the most affectionate manner; said she had been his best friend in
-the world, and that no son could love a mother more than he loved her.
-He also told me of the condition of his father's family at the time he
-married his step-mother, and of the change she made in the family, and
-of the encouragement he (Abe) received from her.... He spoke of his
-father, and related some amusing incidents of the old man; of the
-bull-dogs' biting the old man on his return from New Orleans; of the
-old man's escape, when a boy, from an Indian who was shot by his uncle
-Mordecai. He spoke of his uncle Mordecai as being a man of very great
-natural gifts, and spoke of his step-brother, John
-
-D. Johnston, who had died a short time previous, in the most
-affectionate manner.
-
-"Arriving at Charleston on our return from Farmington, we proceeded to
-my residence. Again the house was crowded by persons wishing to see him.
-The crowd finally became so great, that he authorized me to announce
-that he would hold a public reception at the Town Hall that evening at
-seven o'clock; but that, until then, he wished to be left with relations
-and friends. After supper he proceeded to the Town Hall, where large
-numbers from the town and surrounding country, irrespective of party,
-called to see him.
-
-"He left this place Wednesday morning at four o'clock to return to
-Springfield.... Mr. Lincoln appeared to enjoy his visit here remarkably
-well. His reception by his old acquaintances appeared to be very
-gratifying to him. They all appeared so glad to see him, irrespective
-of party, and all appeared so anxious that his administration might be
-a success, and that he might have a pleasant and honorable career as
-President."
-
-The parting between Mr. Lincoln and his mother was very touching. She
-embraced him with deep emotion, and said she was sure she would never
-behold him again, for she felt that his enemies would assassinate him.
-He replied, "No, no, mamma: they will not do that. Trust in the Lord,
-and all will be well: we will see each other again." Inexpressibly
-affected by this new evidence of her tender attachment and deep concern
-for his safety, he gradually and reluctantly withdrew himself from the
-arms of the only mother he had ever known, feeling still more oppressed
-by the heavy cares which time and events were rapidly augmenting.
-
-The fear that Mr. Lincoln would be assassinated was not peculiar to his
-step-mother. It was shared by very many of his neighbors at Springfield;
-and the friendly warnings he received were as numerous as they were
-silly and gratuitous. Every conceivable precaution was suggested. Some
-thought the cars might be thrown from the track; some thought he would
-be surrounded and stabbed in some great crowd; others thought he
-might be shot from a house-top as he rode up Pennsylvania Avenue on
-inauguration day; while others still were sure he would be quietly
-poisoned long before the 4th of March. One gentleman insisted that
-he ought, in common prudence, to take his cook with him from
-Springfield,--one from "among his own female friends."
-
-Mingled with the thousands who came to see him were many of his old
-New-Salem and Petersburg friends and constituents; and among these was
-Hannah Armstrong, the wife of Jack and the mother of William. Hannah
-had been to see him once or twice before, and had thought there was
-something mysterious in his conduct. He never invited her to his house,
-or introduced her to his wife; and this circumstance led Hannah to
-suspect that "there was something wrong between him and her." On one
-occasion she attempted a sort of surreptitious entrance to his house
-by the kitchen door; but it ended very ludicrously, and poor Hannah was
-very much discouraged. On this occasion she made no effort to get upon
-an intimate footing with his family, but went straight to the State
-House, where he received the common run of strangers. He talked to her
-as he would have done in the days when he ran for the Legislature, and
-Jack was an "influential citizen." Hannah was perfectly charmed, and
-nearly beside herself with pride and pleasure. She, too, was filled with
-the dread of some fatal termination to all his glory. "Well," says she,
-"I talked to him some time, and was about to bid him good-by; had told
-him that it was the last time I should ever see him: something told me
-that I should never see him; they would kill him. He smiled, and said
-jokingly, 'Hannah, if they do kill me, I shall never die another death.'
-I then bade him good-by."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-IT was now but a few weeks until Mr. Lincoln was to become the
-constitutional ruler of one of the great nations of the earth, and to
-begin to expend appropriations, to wield armies, to apportion patronage,
-powers, offices, and honors, such as few sovereigns have ever had at
-command. The eyes of all mankind were bent upon him to see how he would
-solve a problem in statesmanship to which the philosophy of Burke and
-the magnanimity of Wellington might have been unequal. In the midst of
-a political canvass in his own State but a few years before, impressed
-with the gravity of the great issues which then loomed but just above
-the political horizon, he had been the first to announce, amid the
-objections and protestations of his friends and political associates,
-the great truth, that "a house divided against itself cannot stand;"
-that the perpetuity of the Union depended upon its becoming devoted
-either to the interests of freedom or slavery. And now, by a turn of
-fortune unparalleled in history, he had been chosen to preside over the
-interests of the nation; while, as yet unseen to him, the question that
-perplexed the founders of the government, which ever since had been a
-disturbing element in the national life, and had at last arrayed section
-against section, was destined to reach its final settlement through
-the fierce struggle of civil war. In many respects his situation was
-exceptionally trying. He was the first President of the United States
-elected by a strictly sectional vote. The party which elected him, and
-the parties which had been defeated, were inflamed by the heat of the
-canvass. The former, with faith in their principles, and a natural
-eagerness for the prizes now within their reach, were not disposed to
-compromise their first success by any lowering of their standard or any
-concession to the beaten; while many of the latter saw in the success
-of the triumphant party an attack on their most cherished rights, and
-refused in consequence to abide by the result of the contest. To meet so
-grave an exigency, Mr. Lincoln had neither precedents nor experience
-to guide him, nor could he turn elsewhere for greater wisdom than he
-possessed. The leaders of the new party were as yet untried in the great
-responsibilities which had fallen upon him and them. There were men
-among them who had earned great reputation as leaders of an opposition;
-but their eloquence had been expended upon a single subject of national
-concern. They knew how to depict the wrongs of a subject race, and also
-how to set forth the baleful effects of an institution like slavery on
-national character. But was it certain that they were equally able to
-govern with wisdom and prudence the mighty people whose affairs were now
-given to their keeping?
-
-Until the day of his overthrow at Chicago, Mr. Seward had been the
-recognized chief of the party; had, like Mr. Lincoln, taught the
-existence of an irrepressible conflict between the North and the South,
-and had also inculcated the idea of a law higher than the Constitution,
-which was of more binding force than any human enactment, until many of
-his followers had come to regard the Constitution with little respect.
-It was this Constitution which Mr. Lincoln, having sworn to preserve,
-protect, and defend, was to attempt to administer to the satisfaction
-of the minority which had elected him, and which was alone expected
-to support him. To moderate the passions of his own partisans, to
-conciliate his opponents in the North, and divide and weaken his enemies
-in the South, was a task which no mere politician was likely to perform,
-yet one which none but the most expert of politicians and wisest
-of statesmen was fitted to undertake. It required moral as well as
-intellectual qualities of the highest order. William of Orange, with a
-like duty and similar difficulties, was ready at one time and another
-to give up the effort in despair, although aided by "the divinity that
-hedges round a king." Few men believed that Mr. Lincoln possessed a
-single qualification for his great office. His friends had indicated
-what they considered his chief merit, when they insisted that he was
-a very common, ordinary man, just like the rest of "the people,"--"Old
-Abe," a rail-splitter and a story-teller. They said he was good and
-honest and well-meaning; but they took care not to pretend that he was
-great. He was thoroughly convinced that there was too much truth in this
-view of his character. He felt deeply and keenly his lack of experience
-in the conduct of public affairs. He spoke then and afterwards about the
-duties of the Presidency with much diffidence, and said, with a story
-about a justice of the peace in Illinois, that they constituted his
-"great first case misunderstood." He had never been a ministerial or an
-executive officer. His most intimate friends feared that he possessed
-no administrative ability; and in this opinion he seems to have shared
-himself, at least in his calmer and more melancholy moments.
-
-Having put his house in order, arranged all his private business, made
-over his interest in the practice of Lincoln & Herndon to Mr. Herndon,
-and requested "Billy," as a last favor, to leave his name on the old
-sign for four years at least, Mr. Lincoln was ready for the final
-departure from home and all familiar things. And this period of
-transition from private to public life--a period of waiting and
-preparing for the vast responsibilities that were to bow down his
-shoulders during the years to come--affords us a favorable opportunity
-to turn back and look at him again as his neighbors saw him from 1837 to
-1861.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was about six feet four inches high,--the length of his legs
-being out of all proportion to that of his body. When he sat down on a
-chair, he seemed no taller than an average man, measuring from the chair
-to the crown of his head; but his knees rose high in front, and a marble
-placed on the cap of one of them would roll down a steep descent to
-the hip. He weighed about a hundred and eighty pounds; but he was thin
-through the breast, narrow across the shoulders, and had the general
-appearance of a consumptive subject. Standing up, he stooped slightly
-forward; sitting down, he usually crossed his long legs, or threw them
-over the arms of the chair, as the most convenient mode of disposing of
-them. His "head was long, and tall from the base of the brain and the
-eyebrow;" his forehead high and narrow, but inclining backward as
-it rose. The diameter of his head from ear to ear was six and a half
-inches, and from front to back eight inches. The size of his hat
-was seven and an eighth. His ears were large, standing out almost at
-right-angles from his head; his cheek-bones high and prominent; his
-eyebrows heavy, and jutting forward over small, sunken blue eyes; his
-nose long, large, and blunt, the tip of it rather ruddy, and slightly
-awry toward the right-hand side; his chin, projecting far and sharp,
-curved upward to meet a thick, material, lower lip, which hung downward;
-his cheeks were flabby, and the loose skin fell in wrinkles, or folds;
-there was a large mole on his right cheek, and an uncommonly prominent
-Adam's apple on his throat; his hair was dark brown in color, stiff,
-unkempt, and as yet showing little or no sign of advancing age or
-trouble; his complexion was very dark, his skin yellow, shrivelled,
-and "leathery." In short, to use the language of Mr. Herndon, "he was a
-thin, tall, wiry, sinewy, grizzly, raw-boned man," "looking woe-struck."
-His countenance was haggard and careworn, exhibiting all the marks of
-deep and protracted suffering. Every feature of the man--the hollow
-eyes, with the dark rings beneath; the long, sallow, cadaverous face,
-intersected by those peculiar deep lines; his whole air; his walk; his
-long, silent reveries, broken at long intervals by sudden and startling
-exclamations, as if to confound an observer who might suspect the nature
-of his thoughts--showed he was a man of sorrows,--not sorrows of to-day
-or yesterday, but long-treasured and deep,--bearing with him a continual
-sense of weariness and pain.
-
-He was a plain, homely, sad, weary-looking man, to whom one's heart
-warmed involuntarily, because he seemed at once miserable and kind.
-
-On a winter's morning, this man could be seen wending his way to the
-market, with a basket on his arm, and a little boy at his side, whose
-small feet rattled and pattered over the ice-bound pavement, attempting
-to make up by the number of his short steps for the long strides of his
-father. The little fellow jerked at the bony hand which held his, and
-prattled and questioned, begged and grew petulant, in a vain effort to
-make his father talk to him. But the latter was probably unconscious of
-the other's existence, and stalked on, absorbed in his own reflections.
-He wore on such occasions an old gray shawl, rolled into a coil, and
-wrapped like a rope around his neck. The rest of his clothes were in
-keeping. "He did not walk cunningly,--Indian-like,--but cautiously and
-firmly." His tread was even and strong. He was a little pigeon-toed; and
-this, with another peculiarity, made his walk very singular. He set his
-whole foot flat on the ground, and in turn lifted it all at once,--not
-resting momentarily upon the toe as the foot rose, nor upon the heel as
-it fell. He never wore his shoes out at the heel and the toe more,
-as most men do, than at the middle of the sole; yet his gait was not
-altogether awkward, and there was manifest physical power in his step.
-As he moved along thus silent, abstracted, his thoughts dimly reflected
-in his sharp face, men turned to look after him as an object of sympathy
-as well as curiosity: "his melancholy," in the words of Mr. Herndon,
-"dripped from him as he walked." If, however, he met a friend in the
-street, and was roused by a loud, hearty "Good-morning, Lincoln!" he
-would grasp the friend's hand with one or both of his own, and, with his
-usual expression of "Howdy, howdy," would detain him to hear a story:
-something reminded him of it; it happened in Indiana, and it must be
-told, for it was wonderfully pertinent.
-
-After his breakfast-hour, he would appear at his office, and go about
-the labors of the day with all his might, displaying prodigious industry
-and capacity for continuous application, although he never was a fast
-worker. Sometimes it happened that he came without his breakfast; and
-then he would have in his hands a piece of cheese, or Bologna sausage,
-and a few crackers, bought by the way. At such times he did not speak
-to his partner or his friends, if any happened to be present: the tears
-were, perhaps, struggling into his eyes, while his pride was struggling
-to keep them back. Mr. Herndon knew the whole story at a glance: there
-was no speech between them; but neither wished the visitors to the
-office to witness the scene; and, therefore, Mr. Lincoln retired to the
-back office, while Mr. Herndon locked the front one, and walked away
-with the key in his pocket. In an hour or more the latter would return,
-and perhaps find Mr. Lincoln calm and collected; otherwise he went out
-again, and waited until he was so. Then the office was opened, and every
-thing went on as usual.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln had a speech to write, which happened very often,
-he would put down each thought, as it struck him, on a small strip of
-paper, and, having accumulated a number of these, generally carried them
-in his hat or his pockets until he had the whole speech composed in this
-odd way, when he would sit down at his table, connect the fragments,
-and then write out the whole speech on consecutive sheets in a plain,
-legible handwriting.
-
-His house was an ordinary two-story frame-building, with a stable and a
-yard: it was a bare, cheerless sort of a place. He planted no fruit or
-shade trees, no shrubbery or flowers. He did on one occasion set out a
-few rose-bushes in front of his house; but they speedily perished, or
-became unsightly for want of attention. Mrs. Wallace, Mrs. Lincoln's
-sister, undertook "to hide the nakedness" of the place by planting some
-flowers; but they soon withered and died. He cultivated a small garden
-for a single year, working in it himself; but it did not seem to
-prosper, and that enterprise also was abandoned. He had a horse and a
-cow: the one was fed and curried, and the other fed and milked, by his
-own hand. When at home, he chopped and sawed all the wood that was used
-in his house. Late one night he returned home, after an absence of a
-week or so. His neighbor, Webber, was in bed; but, hearing an axe in use
-at that unusual hour, he rose to see what it meant. The moon was high;
-and by its light he looked down into Lincoln's yard, and there saw him
-in his shirt-sleeves "cutting wood to cook his supper with." Webber
-turned to his watch, and saw that it was one o'clock. Besides this house
-and lot, and a small sum of money, Mr. Lincoln had no property, except
-some wild land in Iowa, entered for him under warrants, received for his
-service in the Black Hawk War.
-
-Mrs. Wallace thinks "Mr. Lincoln was a domestic man by nature." He was
-not fond of other people's children, but was extremely fond of his own:
-he was patient, indulgent, and generous with them to a fault. On Sundays
-he often took those that were large enough, and walked with them into
-the country, and, giving himself up entirely to them, rambled through
-the green fields or the cool woods, amusing and instructing them for a
-whole day at a time. His method of reading is thus quaintly described.
-"He would read, generally aloud (couldn't read otherwise),--would read
-with great warmth, all funny or humorous things; read Shakspeare that
-way. He was a sad man, an abstracted man. He would lean back, his
-head against the top of a rocking-chair; sit abstracted that way for
-minutes,--twenty, thirty minutes,--and all at once would burst out into
-a joke."
-
-Mrs. Col. Chapman, daughter of Dennis Hanks, and therefore a relative
-of Mr. Lincoln, made him a long visit previous to her marriage. "You
-ask me," says she, "how Mr. Lincoln acted at home. I can say, and that
-truly, he was all that a husband, father, and neighbor should be,--kind
-and affectionate to his wife and child ('Bob' being the only one they
-had when I was with them), and very pleasant to all around him. Never
-did I hear him utter an unkind word. For instance: one day he undertook
-to correct his child, and his wife was determined that he should not,
-and attempted to take it from him; but in this she failed. She then
-tried tongue-lashing, but met with the same fate; for Mr. Lincoln
-corrected his child as a father ought to do, in the face of his wife's
-anger, and that, too, without even changing his countenance or making
-any reply to his wife.
-
-"His favorite way of reading, when at home, was lying down on the floor.
-I fancy I see him now, lying full-length in the hall of his old house
-reading. When not engaged reading law-books, he would read literary
-works, and was very fond of reading poetry, and often, when he would
-be, or appear to be, in deep study, commence and repeat aloud some piece
-that he had taken a fancy to, such as the one you already have in print,
-and 'The Burial of Sir John Moore,' and so on. He often told laughable
-jokes and stories when he thought we were looking gloomy."
-
-[Illustration: Mr. Lincoln's Home in Springfield, Ill. 519]
-
-Mr. Lincoln was not supremely happy in his domestic relations: the
-circumstances of his courtship and marriage alone made that impossible.
-His engagement to Miss Todd was one of the great misfortunes of his life
-and of hers. He realized the mistake too late; and when he was brought
-face to face with the lie he was about to enact, and the wrong he was
-about to do, both to himself and an innocent woman, he recoiled with
-horror and remorse. For weeks together, he was sick, deranged, and on
-the verge of suicide,--a heavy care to his friends, and a source of
-bitter mortification to the unfortunate lady, whose good fame depended,
-in a great part, upon his constancy. The wedding garments and the
-marriage feast were prepared, the very hour had come when the solemn
-ceremony was to be performed; and the groom failed to appear! He was
-no longer a free agent: he was restrained, carefully guarded, and soon
-after removed to a distant place, where the exciting causes of his
-disease would be less constant and active in their operation. He
-recovered slowly, and at length returned to Springfield. He spoke out
-his feelings frankly and truly to the one person most interested in
-them. But he had been, from the beginning, except in the case of Ann
-Rutledge, singularly inconstant and unstable in his relations with
-the few refined and cultivated women who had been the objects of his
-attention. He loved Miss Rutledge passionately, and the next year
-importuned Miss Owens to be his wife. Failing in his suit, he wrote an
-unfeeling letter about her, apparently with no earthly object but to
-display his levity and make them both ridiculous. He courted Miss
-Todd, and at the moment of success fell in love with her relative, and,
-between the two, went crazy, and thought of ending all his woes with a
-razor or a pocket-knife. It is not impossible that the feelings of such
-a man might have undergone another and more sudden change. Perhaps they
-did. At all events, he was conscientious and honorable and just. There
-was but one way of repairing the injury he had done Miss Todd, and
-he adopted it. They were married; but they understood each other, and
-suffered the inevitable consequences, as other people do under similar
-circumstances. But such troubles seldom fail to find a tongue; and it is
-not strange, that, in this case, neighbors and friends, and ultimately
-the whole country, came to know the state of things in that house. Mr.
-Lincoln scarcely attempted to conceal it, but talked of it with little
-or no reserve to his wife's relatives, as well as his own friends. Yet
-the gentleness and patience with which he bore this affliction from day
-to day, and from year to year, was enough to move the shade of Socrates.
-It touched his acquaintances deeply, and they gave it the widest
-publicity. They made no pause to inquire, to investigate, and to
-apportion the blame between the parties, according to their deserts.
-Almost ever since Mr. Lincoln's death, a portion of the press has never
-tired of heaping brutal reproaches upon his wife and widow; whilst a
-certain class of his friends thought they were honoring his memory by
-multiplying outrages and indignities upon her, at the very moment when
-she was broken by want and sorrow, defamed, defenceless, in the hands of
-thieves, and at the mercy of spies. If ever a woman grievously expiated
-an offence not her own, this woman did. In the Herndon manuscripts,
-there is a mass of particulars under this head; but Mr. Herndon sums
-them all up in a single sentence, in a letter to one of Mr. Lincoln's
-biographers: "All that I know ennobles both."
-
-It would be very difficult to recite all the causes of Mr. Lincoln's
-melancholy disposition. That it was partly owing to physical causes
-there can be no doubt. Mr. Stuart says, that in some respects he was
-totally unlike other people, and was, in fact, a "mystery." Blue-pills
-were the medicinal remedy which he affected most. But whatever the
-history or the cause,--whether physical reasons, the absence of domestic
-concord, a series of painful recollections of his mother, of his father
-and master, of early sorrows, blows, and hardships, of Ann Rutledge and
-fruitless hopes, or all these combined, Mr. Lincoln was the saddest and
-gloomiest man of his time. "I do not think that he knew what happiness
-was for twenty years," says Mr. Herndon. "Terrible" is the word which
-all his friends use to describe him in the black mood. "It was terrible!
-It was terrible!" says one and another.
-
-His mind was filled with gloomy forebodings and strong apprehensions of
-impending evil, mingled with extravagant visions of personal grandeur
-and power. His imagination painted a scene just beyond the veil of the
-immediate future, gilded with glory yet tarnished with blood. It was his
-"destiny,"--splendid but dreadful, fascinating but terrible. His case
-bore little resemblance to those of religious enthusiasts like Bunyan,
-Cowper, and others. His was more like the delusion of the fatalist,
-conscious of his star. At all events, he never doubted for a moment but
-that he was formed for "some great or miserable end." He talked about
-it frequently and sometimes calmly. Mr. Herndon remembers many of these
-conversations in their office at Springfield, and in their rides around
-the circuit. Mr. Lincoln said the impression had grown in him "all
-his life;" but Mr. Herndon thinks it was about 1840 that it took the
-character of a "religious conviction." He had then suffered much, and,
-considering his opportunities, achieved great things. He was already a
-leader among men, and a most brilliant career had been promised him
-by the prophetic enthusiasm of many friends. Thus encouraged and
-stimulated, and feeling himself growing gradually stronger and stronger,
-in the estimation of "the plain people," whose voice was more potent
-than all the Warwicks, his ambition painted the rainbow of glory in
-the sky, while his morbid melancholy supplied the clouds that were to
-overcast and obliterate it with the wrath and ruin of the tempest. To
-him it was fate, and there was no escape or defence. The presentiment
-never deserted him: it was as clear, as perfect, as certain, as any
-image conveyed by the senses. He had now entertained it so long, that it
-was as much a part of his nature as the consciousness of identity. All
-doubts had faded away, and he submitted humbly to a power which he could
-neither comprehend nor resist. He was to fall,--fall from a lofty place,
-and in the performance of a great work. The star under which he was
-born was at once brilliant and malignant: the horoscope was cast, fixed,
-irreversible; and he had no more power to alter or defeat it in the
-minutest particular than he had to reverse the law of gravitation.
-
-After the election, he conceived that he would not "last" through his
-term of office, but had at length reached the point where the sacrifice
-would take place. All precautions against assassination he considered
-worse than useless. "If they want to kill me," said he, "there is
-nothing to prevent." He complained to Mr. Gillespie of the small
-body-guard which his counsellors had forced upon him, insisting that
-they were a needless encumbrance. When Mr. Gillespie urged the ease and
-impunity with which he might be killed, and the value of his life to
-the country, he said, "What is the use of putting up the _gap_ when the
-fence is down all around?"
-
-"It was just after my election in 1860," said Mr. Lincoln to his
-secretary, John Hay, "when the news had been coming in thick and fast
-all day, and there had been a great 'hurrah boys!' so that I was well
-tired out, and went home to rest, throwing myself upon a lounge in my
-chamber.
-
-"Opposite to where I lay was a bureau with a swinging glass upon it; and,
-in looking in that glass, I saw myself reflected nearly at full length;
-but my face, I noticed, had two separate and distinct images, the tip
-of the nose of one being about three inches from the tip of the other.
-I was a little bothered, perhaps startled, and got up and looked in the
-glass; but the illusion vanished. On lying down again, I saw it a second
-time,--plainer, if possible, than before; and then I noticed that one of
-the faces was a little paler--say five shades--than the other. I got up,
-and the thing melted away; and I went off, and in the excitement of the
-hour forgot all about it,--nearly, but not quite, for the thing would
-once in a while come up, and give me a little pang, as though something
-uncomfortable had happened. When I went home, I told my wife about it:
-and a few days after I tried the experiment again, when, sure enough,
-the thing came back again; but I never succeeded in bringing the ghost
-back after that, though I once tried very industriously to show it to
-my wife, who was worried about it somewhat. She thought it was 'a
-sign' that I was to be elected to a second term of office, and that
-the paleness of one of the faces was an omen that I should not see life
-through the last term."
-
-In this morbid and dreamy state of mind, Mr. Lincoln passed the greater
-part of his life. But his "sadness, despair, gloom," Mr. Herndon says,
-"were not of the kind that leads a badly-balanced mind into misanthropy
-and universal hate and scorn. His humor would assert itself from the
-hell of misanthropy: it would assert its independence every third hour
-or day or week. His abstractedness, his continuity of thought, his
-despair, made him, twice in his life, for two weeks at a time, walk that
-narrow line that divides sanity from insanity.... This peculiarity of
-his nature, his humor, his wit, kept him alive in his mind.... It was
-those good sides of his nature that made, to him, his life bearable. Mr.
-Lincoln was a weak man and a strong man by turns."
-
-Some of Mr. Lincoln's literary tastes indicated strongly his prevailing
-gloominess of mind. He read Byron extensively, especially "Childe
-Harold," "The Dream," and "Don Juan." Burns was one of his earliest
-favorites, although there is no evidence that he appreciated highly the
-best efforts of Burns. On the contrary, "Holy Willie's Prayer" was the
-only one of his poems which Mr. Lincoln took the trouble to memorize. He
-was fond of Shakspeare, especially "King Lear," and "The Merry Wives of
-Windsor." But whatever was suggestive of death, the grave, the sorrows
-of man's days on earth, charmed his disconsolate spirit, and captivated
-his sympathetic heart. Solemn-sounding rhymes, with no merit but the sad
-music of their numbers, were more enchanting to him than the loftiest
-songs of the masters. Of these were, "Why should the Spirit of Mortal be
-Proud?" and a pretty commonplace little piece, entitled "The Inquiry."
-One verse of Holmes's "Last Leaf" he thought was "inexpressibly
-touching." This verse we give the reader:--
-
- "The mossy marbles rest
- On the lips that he has pressed
- In their bloom;
- And the names he loved to hear
- Have been carved for many a year On the tomb."
-
-Mr. Lincoln frequently said that he lived by his humor, and would have
-died without it. His manner of telling a story was irresistibly comical,
-the fun of it dancing in his eyes and playing over every feature. His
-face changed in an instant: the hard lines faded out of it, and the
-mirth seemed to diffuse itself all over him, like a spontaneous tickle.
-You could see it coming long before he opened his mouth, and he began
-to enjoy the "point" before his eager auditors could catch the faintest
-glimpse of it. Telling and hearing ridiculous stories was one of his
-ruling passions. He would go a long way out of his road to tell a grave,
-sedate fellow a broad story, or to propound to him a conundrum that was
-not particularly remarkable for its delicacy. If he happened to hear of
-a man who was known to have something fresh in this line, he would hunt
-him up, and "swap jokes" with him. Nobody remembers the time when
-his fund of anecdotes was not apparently inexhaustible. It was so
-in Indiana; it was so in New Salem, in the Black-Hawk War, in the
-Legislature, in Congress, on the circuit, on the stump,--everywhere.
-The most trifling incident "reminded" him of a story, and that story
-reminded him of another, until everybody marvelled "that one small head
-could carry all he knew." The "good things" he said were repeated at
-second-hand, all over the counties through which he chanced to travel;
-and many, of a questionable flavor, were attributed to him, not because
-they were his in fact, but because they were like his. Judges, lawyers,
-jurors, and suitors carried home with them select budgets of his
-stories, to be retailed to itching ears as "Old Abe's last." When the
-court adjourned from village to village, the taverns and the groceries
-left behind were filled with the sorry echoes of his "best." He
-generally located his little narratives with great precision,--in
-Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois; and if he was not personally "knowing" to
-the facts himself, he was intimately acquainted with a gentleman who
-was.
-
-Mr. Lincoln used his stories variously,--to illustrate or convey
-an argument; to make his opinions clear to another, or conceal them
-altogether; to cut off a disagreeable conversation, or to end an
-unprofitable discussion; to cheer his own heart, or simply to amuse
-his friends. But most frequently he had a practical object in view, and
-employed them simply "as labor-saving contrivances."
-
-It was Judge Davis's opinion, that Mr. Lincoln's hilarity was mainly
-simulated, and that "his stories and jokes were intended to whistle
-off sadness." "The groundwork of his social nature was sad," says Judge
-Scott; "but for the fact that he studiously cultivated the humorous, it
-would have been very sad indeed. His mirth to me always seemed to be
-put on, and did not properly belong there. Like a plant produced in the
-hot-bed, it had an unnatural and luxuriant growth."
-
-Although Mr. Lincoln's walk among men was remarkably pure, the same
-cannot be said of his conversation. He was endowed by nature with a
-keen sense of humor, and he found great delight in indulging it. But his
-humor was not of a delicate quality; it was chiefly exercised in
-hearing and telling stories of the grosser sort. In this tendency he was
-restrained by no presence and no occasion. It was his opinion that the
-finest wit and humor, the best jokes and anecdotes, emanated from the
-lower orders of the country people. It was from this source that he
-had acquired his peculiar tastes and his store of materials. The
-associations which began with the early days of Dennis Hanks continued
-through his life at New Salem and his career at the Illinois Bar,
-and did not desert him when, later in life, he arrived at the highest
-dignities.
-
-Mr. Lincoln indulged in no sensual excesses: he ate moderately, and
-drank temperately when he drank at all. For many years he was an ardent
-agitator against the use of intoxicating beverages, and made speeches,
-far and near, in favor of total abstinence. Some of them were printed;
-and of one he was not a little proud. He abstained himself, not so much
-upon principle, as because of a total lack of appetite. He had no taste
-for spirituous liquors; and, when he took them, it was a punishment to
-him, not an indulgence. But he disliked sumptuary laws, and would
-not prescribe by statute what other men should eat or drink. When the
-temperance men ran to the Legislature to invoke the power of the State,
-his voice--the most eloquent among them--was silent. He did not oppose
-them, but quietly withdrew from the cause, and left others to manage it.
-In 1854 he was induced to join the order called Sons of Temperance, but
-never attended a single meeting after the one at which he was initiated.
-
-Morbid, moody, meditative, thinking much of himself and the things
-pertaining to himself, regarding other men as instruments furnished to
-his hand for the accomplishment of views which he knew were important to
-him, and, therefore, considered important to the public, Mr. Lincoln
-was a man apart from the rest of his kind, unsocial, cold,
-impassive,--neither a "good hater" nor a fond friend. He unbent in the
-society of those who gave him new ideas, who listened to and admired
-him, whose attachment might be useful, or whose conversation amused him.
-He seemed to make boon-companions of the coarsest men on the list of
-his acquaintances,--"low, vulgar, unfortunate creatures;" but, as Judge
-Davis has it, "he used such men as tools,--things to satisfy him, to
-feed his desires." He felt sorry for them, enjoyed them, extracted from
-them whatever service they were capable of rendering, discarded and
-forgot them. If one of them, presuming upon the past, followed him to
-Washington with a view to personal profit, Mr. Lincoln would probably
-take him to his private room, lock the doors, revel in reminiscences
-of Illinois, new stories and old, through an entire evening, and then
-dismiss his enchanted crony with nothing more substantial than his
-blessing. It was said that "he had no heart;" that is, no personal
-attachments warm and strong enough to govern his actions. It was seldom
-that he praised anybody; and, when he did, it was not a rival or an
-equal in the struggle for popularity and power. His encomiums were
-more likely to be satirical than sincere, and sometimes were artfully
-contrived as mere stratagems to catch the applause he pretended to
-bestow, or at least to share it in equal parts. No one knew better how
-to "damn with faint praise," or to divide the glory of another by being
-the first and frankest to acknowledge it. Fully alive to the fact that
-no qualities of a public man are so charming to the people as simplicity
-and candor, he made simplicity and candor the mask of deep feelings
-carefully concealed, and subtle plans studiously veiled from all eyes
-but one. He had no reverence for great men, followed no leader with
-blind devotion, and yielded no opinion to mere authority. He felt that
-he was as great as anybody, and could do what another did. It was,
-however, the supreme desire of his heart to be right, and to do justice
-in all the relations of life. Although some of his strongest passions
-conflicted more or less directly with this desire, he was conscious of
-them, and strove to regulate them by self-imposed restraints. He was
-not avaricious, never appropriated a cent wrongfully, and did not think
-money for its own sake a fit object of any man's ambition. But he knew
-its value, its power, and liked to keep it when he had it. He gave
-occasionally to individual mendicants, or relieved a case of great
-destitution at his very door; but his alms-giving was neither profuse
-nor systematic. He never made donations to be distributed to the poor
-who were not of his acquaintance and very near at hand. There were few
-entertainments at his house. People were seldom asked to dine with him.
-To many he seemed inhospitable; and there was something about his house,
-an indescribable air of exclusiveness, which forbade the entering guest.
-It is not meant to be said that this came from mere economy. It was not
-at home that he wished to see company. He preferred to meet his friends
-abroad,--on a street-corner, in an office, at the Court House, or
-sitting on nail-kegs in a country store.
-
-Mr. Lincoln took no part in the promotion of local enterprises,
-railroads, schools, churches, asylums. The benefits he proposed for his
-fellow-men were to be accomplished by political means alone. Politics
-were his world,--a world filled with hopeful enchantments. Ordinarily
-he disliked to discuss any other subject. "In his office," says Mr.
-Herndon, "he sat down, or spilt himself, on his lounge, read aloud,
-told stories, talked politics,--never science, art, literature, railroad
-gatherings, colleges, asylums, hospitals, commerce, education, progress,
-nothing that interested the world generally," except politics. He seldom
-took an active part in local or minor elections, or wasted his power to
-advance a friend. He did nothing out of mere gratitude, and forgot the
-devotion of his warmest partisans as soon as the occasion for their
-services had passed. What they did for him was quietly appropriated
-as the reward of superior merit, calling for no return in kind. He was
-always ready to do battle for a principle, after a discreet fashion,
-but never permitted himself to be strongly influenced by the claims of
-individual men. When he was a candidate himself, he thought the whole
-canvass and all the preliminaries ought to be conducted with reference
-to his success. He would say to a man, "Your continuance in the field
-injures me" and be quite sure that he had given a perfect reason for his
-withdrawal. He would have no "obstacles" in his way; coveted honors,
-was eager for power, and impatient of any interference that delayed or
-obstructed his progress. He worked hard enough at general elections,
-when he could make speeches, have them printed, and "fill the speaking
-trump of fame" with his achievements; but in the little affairs about
-home, where it was all work and no glory, his zeal was much less
-conspicuous. Intensely secretive and cautious, he shared his secrets
-with no man, and revealed just enough of his plans to allure support,
-and not enough to expose their personal application. After Speed left,
-he had no intimates to whom he opened his whole mind. This is the
-unanimous testimony of all who knew him. Feeling himself perfectly
-competent to manage his own affairs, he listened with deceptive patience
-to the views of others, and then dismissed the advice with the adviser.
-Judge Davis was supposed to have great influence over him; but he
-declares that he had literally none. "Once or twice," says he, "he asked
-my advice about the almighty dollar, but never about any thing else."
-
-Notwithstanding his overweening ambition, and the breathless eagerness
-with which he pursued the objects of it, he had not a particle of
-sympathy with the great mass of his fellow-citizens who were engaged in
-similar scrambles for place. "If ever," said he, "American society and
-the United States Government are demoralized and overthrown, it will
-come from the voracious desire of office,--this wriggle to live without
-toil, work, and labor, from which I am not free myself." Mr. Lincoln was
-not a demagogue or a trimmer. He never deserted a party in disaster, or
-joined one in triumph. Nearly the whole of his public life was spent in
-the service of a party which struggled against hopeless odds, which met
-with many reverses and few victories. It is true, that about the time
-he began as a politician, the Whigs in his immediate locality, at first
-united with the moderate Democrats, and afterwards by themselves, were
-strong enough to help him to the Legislature as often as he chose to go.
-But, if the fact had been otherwise, it is not likely that he would have
-changed sides, or even altered his position in any essential particular,
-to catch the popular favor. Subsequently he suffered many defeats,--for
-Congress, for Commissioner of the Land Office, and twice for Senator;
-but on this account he never faltered in devotion to the general
-principles of the party, or sought to better his fortune by an alliance
-with the common enemy. It cannot be denied, that, when he was first a
-candidate for the Legislature, his views of public policy were a little
-cloudy, and that his addresses to the people were calculated to make
-fair weather with men of various opinions; nor that, when first a
-candidate for United States Senator, he was willing to make a secret
-bargain with the extreme Abolitionists, and, when last a candidate, to
-make some sacrifice of opinion to further his own aspirations for the
-Presidency. The pledge to Lovejoy and the "House-divided Speech" were
-made under the influence of personal considerations, without reference
-to the views or the success of those who had chosen and trusted him as a
-leader for a far different purpose. But this was merely steering between
-sections of his own party, where the differences were slight and easily
-reconciled,--manoeuvring for the strength of one faction today and
-another to-morrow, with intent to unite them and lead them to a victory,
-the benefits of which would inure to all. He was not one to be last in
-the fight and first at the feast, nor yet one to be first in the fight
-and last at the feast. He would do his whole duty in the field, but
-had not the slightest objection to sitting down at the head of the
-table,--an act which he would perform with a modest, homely air, that
-disarmed envy, and silenced the master when he would say, "Friend, go
-down lower." His "master" was the "plain people." To be popular was to
-him the greatest good in life. He had known what it was to be without
-popularity, and he had known what it was to enjoy it. To gain it or
-to keep it, he considered no labor too great, no artifice misused
-or misapplied. His ambition was strong; yet it existed in strict
-subordination to his sense of party fidelity, and could by no chance or
-possibility lure him into downright social or political treasons. His
-path may have been a little devious, winding hither and thither, in
-search of greater convenience of travel, or the security of a larger
-company; but it always went forward in the same general direction, and
-never ran off at right-angles toward a hostile camp. The great body of
-men who acted with him in the beginning acted with him at the last.
-
-On the whole, he was an honest, although a shrewd, and by no means an
-unselfish politician. He
-
- ................."Foresaw
- Which way the world began to draw,"
-
-and instinctively drew with it. He had convictions, but preferred to
-choose his time to speak. He was not so much of a Whig that he could not
-receive the support of the "nominal" Jackson men, until party lines were
-drawn so tight that he was compelled to be one thing or the other. He
-was not so much of a Whig that he could not make a small diversion
-for White in 1836, nor so much of a White man that he could not lead
-Harrison's friends in the Legislature during the same winter. He was a
-firm believer in the good policy of high "protective tariffs;" but, when
-importuned to say so in a public letter, he declined on the ground that
-it would do him no good. He detested Know-Nothingism with all his heart;
-but, when Know-Nothingism swept the country, he was so far from being
-obtrusive with his views, that many believed he belonged to the order.
-He was an anti-slavery man from the beginning of his service in the
-Legislature; but he was so cautious and moderate in the expression of
-his sentiments, that, when the anti-Nebraska party disintegrated, the
-ultra-Republicans were any thing but sure of his adherence; and even
-after the Bloomington Convention he continued to pick his way to the
-front with wary steps, and did not take his place among the boldest of
-the agitators until 1858, when he uttered the "House-divided Speech,"
-just in time to take Mr. Seward's place on the Presidential ticket of
-1860.
-
-Any analysis of Mr. Lincoln's character would be defective that did not
-include his religious opinions. On such matters he thought deeply; and
-his opinions were positive. But perhaps no phase of his character has
-been more persistently misrepresented and variously misunderstood, than
-this of his religious belief. Not that the conclusive testimony of many
-of his intimate associates relative to his frequent expressions on such
-subjects has ever been wanting; but his great prominence in the world's
-history, and his identification with some of the great questions of our
-time, which, by their moral import, were held to be eminently religious
-in their character, have led many good people to trace in his motives
-and actions similar convictions to those held by themselves. His
-extremely general expressions of religious faith called forth by the
-grave exigencies of his public life, or indulged in on occasions of
-private condolence, have too often been distorted out of relation to
-their real significance or meaning to suit the opinions or tickle the
-fancies of individuals or parties.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was never a member of any church, nor did he believe in the
-divinity of Christ, or the inspiration of the Scriptures in the sense
-understood by evangelical Christians. His theological opinions were
-substantially those expounded by Theodore Parker. Overwhelming testimony
-out of many mouths, and none stronger than that out of his own, place
-these facts beyond controversy.
-
-When a boy, he showed no sign of that piety which his many biographers
-ascribe to his manhood. His stepmother--herself a Christian, and longing
-for the least sign of faith in him--could remember no circumstance that
-supported her hope. On the contrary, she recollected very well that he
-never went off into a corner, as has been said, to ponder the sacred
-writings, and to wet the page with his tears of penitence. He was fond
-of music; but Dennis Hanks is clear to the point that it was songs of a
-very questionable character that cheered his lonely pilgrimage through
-the woods of Indiana. When he went to church at all, he went to mock,
-and came away to mimic. Indeed, it is more than probable that the
-sort of "religion" which prevailed among the associates of his boyhood
-impressed him with a very poor opinion of the value of the article. On
-the whole, he thought, perhaps, a person had better be without it.
-
-When he came to New Salem, he consorted with freethinkers, joined with
-them in deriding the gospel history of Jesus, read Volney and Paine,
-and then wrote a deliberate and labored essay, wherein he reached
-conclusions similar to theirs. The essay was burnt, but he never denied
-or regretted its composition. On the contrary, he made it the subject
-of free and frequent conversations with his friends at Springfield, and
-stated, with much particularity and precision, the origin, arguments,
-and objects of the work.
-
-It was not until after Mr. Lincoln's death, that his alleged orthodoxy
-became the principal topic of his eulogists; but since then the effort
-on the part of some political writers and speakers to impress the
-public mind erroneously seems to have been general and systematic. It is
-important that the question should be finally determined; and, in order
-to do so, the names of some of his nearest friends are given below,
-followed by clear and decisive statements, for which they are separately
-responsible. Some of them are gentlemen of distinction, and all of
-them men of high character, who enjoyed the best opportunities to form
-correct opinions.
-
-James H. Matheny says in a letter to Mr. Herndon:--
-
-"I knew Mr. Lincoln as early as 1834-7; know he was an infidel. He and
-W. D. Herndon used to talk infidelity in the clerk's office in this
-city, about the years 1837-40. Lincoln attacked the Bible and the
-New Testament on two grounds: first, from the inherent or apparent
-contradictions under its lids; second, from the grounds of reason.
-Sometimes he ridiculed the Bible and New Testament, sometimes seemed
-to scoff it, though I shall not use that word in its full and literal
-sense. I never heard that Lincoln changed his views, though his personal
-and political friend from 1834 to 1860. Sometimes Lincoln bordered on
-atheism. He went far that way, and often shocked me. I was then a young
-man, and believed what my good mother told me. Stuart & Lincoln's office
-was in what was called Hoffman's Row, on North Fifth Street, near the
-public square. It was in the same building as the clerk's office, and on
-the same floor. Lincoln would come into the clerk's office, where I and
-some young men--Evan Butler, Newton Francis, and others--were writing or
-staying, and would bring the Bible with him; would read a chapter; argue
-against it. Lincoln then had a smattering of geology, if I recollect it.
-Lincoln often, if not wholly, was an atheist; at least, bordered on it.
-Lincoln was enthusiastic in his infidelity. As he grew older, he grew
-more discreet, didn't talk much before strangers about his religion; but
-to friends, close and bosom ones, he was always open and avowed, fair
-and honest; but to strangers, he held them off from policy. Lincoln used
-to quote Burns. Burns helped Lincoln to be an infidel, as I think; at
-least, he found in Burns a like thinker and feeler. Lincoln quoted 'Tam
-O'Skanter.' 'What! send one to heaven, and ten to hell!' &c.
-
-"From what I know of Mr. Lincoln and his views of Christianity, and from
-what I know as honest and well-founded rumor; from what I have heard his
-best friends say and regret for years; from what he never denied when
-accused, and from what Lincoln has hinted and intimated, to say no
-more,--he did write a little book on infidelity at or near New Salem, in
-Menard County, about the year 1834 or 1835. I have, stated these things
-to you often. Judge Logan, John T. Stuart, yourself, know what I know,
-and some of you more.
-
-"Mr. Herndon, you insist on knowing something which you know I possess,
-and got as a secret, and that is, about Lincoln's little book on
-infidelity. Mr. Lincoln did tell me that he did write a little book
-on infidelity. This statement I have avoided heretofore; but, as you
-strongly insist upon it,--probably to defend yourself against charges of
-misrepresentations,--I give it you as I got it from Lincoln's mouth."
-
-From Hon. John T. Stuart:--
-
-"I knew Mr. Lincoln when he first came here, and for years afterwards.
-He was an avowed and open infidel, sometimes bordered on atheism. I
-have often and often heard Lincoln and one W. D. Herndon, who was
-a freethinker, talk over this subject. Lincoln went further against
-Christian beliefs and doctrines and principles than any man I ever
-heard: he shocked me. I don't remember the exact line of his argument:
-suppose it was against the inherent defects, so called, of the Bible,
-and on grounds of reason. Lincoln always denied that Jesus was the
-Christ of God,--denied that Jesus was the Son of God, as understood
-and maintained by the Christian Church. The Rev. Dr. Smith, who wrote
-a letter, tried to convert Lincoln from infidelity so late as 1858, and
-couldn't do it."
-
-William H. Herndon, Esq.:--
-
-"As to Mr. Lincoln's religious views, he was, in short, an infidel,... a
-theist. He did not believe that Jesus was God, nor the Son of God,--was
-a fatalist, denied the freedom of the will. Mr. Lincoln told me a
-thousand times, that he did not believe the Bible was the revelation of
-God, as the Christian world contends. The points that Mr. Lincoln tried
-to demonstrate (in his book) were: First, That the Bible was not God's
-revelation; and, Second, That Jesus was not the Son of God. I assert
-this on my own knowledge, and on my veracity. Judge Logan, John T.
-Stuart, James H. Matheny, and others, will tell you the truth. I say
-they will confirm what I say, with this exception,--they all make it
-blacker than I remember it. Joshua F. Speed of Louisville, I think, will
-tell you the same thing."
-
-Hon. David Davis:--
-
-"I do not know any thing about Lincoln's religion, and do not think
-anybody knew. The idea that Lincoln talked to a stranger about his
-religion or religious views, or made such speeches, remarks, &c., about
-it as are published, is to me absurd. I knew the man so well: he was
-the most reticent, secretive man I ever saw, or expect to see. He had
-no faith, in the Christian sense of the term,--had faith in laws,
-principles, causes, and effects--philosophically: you [Herndon] know
-more about his religion than any man. You ought to know it, of course."
-
-William H. Hannah, Esq.:--
-
-"Since 1856 Mr. Lincoln told me that he was a kind of immortalist; that
-he never could bring himself to believe in eternal punishment; that
-man lived but a little while here; and that, if eternal punishment were
-man's doom, he should spend that little life in vigilant and ceaseless
-preparation by never-ending prayer."
-
-Mrs. Lincoln:--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln had no hope and no faith in the usual acceptance of those
-words."
-
-Dr. C. H. Ray:--
-
-"I do not know how I can aid you. You [Herndon] knew Mr. Lincoln far
-better than I did, though I knew him well; and you have served up his
-leading characteristics in a way that I should despair of doing, if
-I should try. I have only one thing to ask: that you do not give
-Calvinistic theology a chance to claim him as one of its saints and
-martyrs. He went to the Old-School Church; but, in spite of that outward
-assent to the horrible dogmas of the sect, _I have reason from, himself_
-to know that his 'vital purity' if that means belief in the impossible,
-was of a negative sort."
-
-I. W. Keys, Esq.:--
-
-"In my intercourse with Mr. Lincoln, I learned that he believed in a
-Creator of all things, who had neither beginning nor end, and possessing
-all power and wisdom, established a principle, in obedience to which
-worlds move, and are upheld, and animal and vegetable life come into
-existence. A reason he gave for his belief was, that, in view of the
-order and harmony of all nature which we behold, it would have been more
-miraculous to have come about by chance than to have been created and
-arranged by some great thinking power. As to the Christian theory, that
-Christ is God, or equal to the Creator, he said that it had better be
-taken for granted; for, by the test of reason, we might become infidels
-on that subject, for evidence of Christ's divinity came to us in a
-somewhat doubtful shape; but that the system of Christianity was an
-ingenious one at least, and perhaps was calculated to do good."
-
-Mr. Jesse W. Fell of Illinois, who had the best opportunities of knowing
-Mr. Lincoln intimately, makes the following statement of his religious
-opinions, derived from repeated conversations with him on the subject:--
-
-"Though every thing relating to the character and history of this
-extraordinary personage is of interest, and should be fairly stated to
-the world, I enter upon the performance of this duty--for so I regard
-it--with some reluctance, arising from the fact, that, in stating
-my convictions on the subject, I must necessarily place myself in
-opposition to quite a number who have written on this topic before me,
-and whose views largely pre-occupy the public mind. This latter fact,
-whilst contributing to my embarrassment on this subject, is, perhaps,
-the strongest reason, however, why the truth in this matter should be
-fully disclosed; and I therefore yield to your request. If there were
-any traits of character that stood out in bold relief in the person
-of Mr. Lincoln, they were those of truth and candor. He was utterly
-incapable of insincerity, or professing views on this or any other
-subject he did not entertain. Knowing such to be his true character,
-that insincerity, much more duplicity, were traits wholly foreign to his
-nature, many of his old friends were not a little surprised at finding,
-in some of the biographies of this great man, statements concerning his
-religious opinions so utterly at variance with his known sentiments.
-True, he may have changed or modified those sentiments after his removal
-from among us, though this is hardly reconcilable with the history
-of the man, and his entire devotion to public matters during his four
-years' residence at the national capital. It is possible, however, that
-this may be the proper solution of this conflict of opinions; or, it may
-be, that, with no intention on the part of any one to mislead the
-public mind, those who have represented him as believing in the
-popular theological views of the times may have misapprehended him, as
-experience shows to be quite common where no special effort has been
-made to attain critical accuracy on a subject of this nature. This is
-the more probable from the well-known fact, that Mr. Lincoln seldom
-communicated to any one his views on this subject. But, be this as it
-may, I have no hesitation whatever in saying, that, whilst he held many
-opinions in common with the great mass of Christian believers, _he did
-not believe_ in what are regarded as the orthodox or evangelical views
-of Christianity.
-
-"On the innate depravity of man, the character and office of the great
-Head of the Church, the atonement, the infallibility of the written
-revelation, the performance of miracles, the nature and design of
-present and future rewards and punishments (as they are popularly
-called), and many other subjects, he held opinions utterly at variance
-with what are usually taught in the Church. I should say that his
-expressed views on these and kindred topics were such as, in the
-estimation of most believers, would place him entirely outside the
-Christian pale. Yet, to my mind, such was not the true position, since
-his principles and practices and the spirit of his whole life were of
-the very kind we universally agree to call Christian; and I think this
-conclusion is in no wise affected by the circumstance that he never
-attached himself to any religious society whatever.
-
-"His religious views were eminently practical, and are summed up, as
-I think, in these two propositions: 'the Fatherhood of God, and
-the brotherhood of man.' He fully believed in a superintending and
-overruling Providence, that guides and controls the operations of the
-world, but maintained that law and order, and not their violation
-or suspension, are the appointed means by which this providence is
-exercised.
-
-"I will not attempt any specification of either his belief or disbelief
-on various religious topics, as derived from conversations with him
-at different times during a considerable period; but, as conveying a
-general view of his religious or theological opinions, will state
-the following facts. Some eight or ten years prior to his death, in
-conversing with him upon this subject, the writer took occasion to
-refer, in terms of approbation, to the sermons and writings generally of
-Dr. W. E. Channing; and, finding he was considerably interested in the
-statement I made of the opinions held by that author, I proposed to
-present him (Lincoln) a copy of Channing's entire works, which I soon
-after did. Subsequently, the contents of these volumes, together with
-the writings of Theodore Parker, furnished him, as he informed me, by
-his friend and law-partner, Mr. Herndon, became naturally the topics of
-conversation with us; and though far from believing there was an entire
-harmony of views on his part with either of those authors, yet they were
-generally much admired and approved by him.
-
-"No religious views with him seemed to find any favor, except of the
-practical and rationalistic order; and if, from my recollections on
-this subject, I was called upon to designate an author whose views
-most nearly represented Mr. Lincoln's on this subject, I would say that
-author was Theodore Parker.
-
-"As you have asked from me a candid statement of my recollections on
-this topic, I have thus briefly given them, with the hope that they may
-be of some service in rightly settling a question about which--as I have
-good reason to believe--the public mind has been greatly misled.
-
-"Not doubting that they will accord, substantially, with your own
-recollections, and that of his other intimate and confidential friends,
-and with the popular verdict after this matter shall have been properly
-canvassed, I submit them."
-
-John G. Nicolay, his private secretary at the White House:--
-
-"Mr. Lincoln did not, to my knowledge, in any way change his religious
-views, opinions, or beliefs, from the time he left Springfield to the
-day of his death. I do not know just what they were, never having
-heard him explain them in detail; but I am very sure he gave no outward
-indication of his mind having undergone any change in that regard while
-here."
-
-The following letter from Mr. Herndon was, about the time of its date,
-extensively published throughout the United States, and met with no
-contradiction from any responsible source.
-
-Springfield, Feb. 18, 1870.
-
-Mr. Abbott,---Some time since I promised you that I would send a letter
-in relation to Mr. Lincoln's religion. I do so now. Before entering on
-that question, one or two preliminary remarks will help us to understand
-why he disagreed with the Christian world in its principles, as well
-as in its theology. In the first place, Mr. Lincoln's mind was a purely
-logical mind; secondly, Mr. Lincoln was purely a practical man. He
-had no fancy or imagination, and not much emotion. He was a realist
-as opposed to an idealist. As a general rule, it is true that a purely
-logical mind has not much hope, if it ever has _faith in the unseen and
-unknown_. Mr. Lincoln had not much hope and no faith in things that
-lie outside of the domain of demonstration: he was so constituted, so
-organized, that he could believe nothing unless his senses or logic
-could reach it. I have often read to him a law point, a decision, or
-something I fancied: he could not understand it until he took the
-book out of my hand, and read the thing for himself. He was terribly,
-vexatiously sceptical. He could scarcely understand any thing, unless he
-had time and place fixed in his mind.
-
-I became acquainted with Mr. Lincoln in 1834, and I think I knew him
-well to the day of his death. His mind, when a boy in Kentucky, showed a
-certain gloom, an unsocial nature, a peculiar abstractedness, a bold and
-daring scepticism. In Indiana, from 1817 to 1830, it manifested the same
-qualities or attributes as in Kentucky: it only intensified, developed
-itself, along those lines, in Indiana. He came to Illinois in 1830, and,
-after some little roving, settled in New Salem, now in Menard County and
-State of Illinois. This village lies about twenty miles north-west of
-this city. It was here that Mr. Lincoln became acquainted with a class
-of men the world never saw the like of before or since. They were large
-men,--large in body and large in mind; hard to whip, and never to be
-fooled. They were a bold, daring, and reckless sort of men; they were
-men of their own minds,--believed what was demonstrable; were men of
-great common sense. With these men Mr. Lincoln was thrown; with them
-he lived, and with them he moved, and almost had his being. They were
-sceptics all,--scoffers some. These scoffers were good men, and their
-scoffs were protests against theology,--loud protests against the
-follies of Christianity: they had never heard of theism and the
-newer and better religious thoughts of this age. Hence, being natural
-sceptics, and being bold, brave men, they uttered their thoughts freely:
-they declared that Jesus was an illegitimate child.... They were on all
-occasions, when opportunity offered, debating the various questions of
-Christianity among themselves: they took their stand on common sense and
-on their own souls; and, though their arguments were rude and rough, no
-man could overthrow their homely logic. They riddled all divines, and
-not unfrequently made them sceptics,--disbelievers as bad as themselves.
-They were a jovial, healthful, generous, social, true, and manly set of
-people.
-
-It was here, and among these people, that Mr. Lincoln was thrown. About
-the year 1834, he chanced to come across Volney's "Ruins," and some
-of Paine's theological works. He at once seized hold of them, and
-assimilated them into his own being. Volney and Paine became a part of
-Mr. Lincoln from 1834 to the end of his life. In 1835 he wrote out a
-small work on "Infidelity," and intended to have it published. The book
-was an attack upon the whole grounds of Christianity, and especially
-was it an attack upon the idea that Jesus was the Christ, the true and
-only-begotten Son of God, as the Christian world contends. Mr. Lincoln
-was at that time in New Salem, keeping store for Mr. Samuel Hill,
-a merchant and postmaster of that place. Lincoln and Hill were very
-friendly. Hill, I think, was a sceptic at that time. Lincoln, one day
-after the book was finished, read it to Mr. Hill, his good friend. Hill
-tried to persuade him not to make it public, not to publish it. Hill
-at that time saw in Mr. Lincoln a rising man, and wished him success.
-Lincoln refused to destroy it, said it should be published. Hill
-swore it should never see light of day. He had an eye, to Lincoln's
-popularity,--his present and future success; and believing, that if the
-book were published, it would kill Lincoln forever, he snatched it from
-Lincoln's hand, when Lincoln was not expecting it, and ran it into
-an old-fashioned tin-plate stove, heated as hot as a furnace; and so
-Lincoln's book went up to the clouds in smoke. It is confessed by all
-who heard parts of it, that it was at once able and eloquent; and, if I
-may judge of it from Mr. Lincoln's subsequent ideas and opinions, often
-expressed to me and to others in my presence, it was able, strong,
-plain, and fair. His argument was grounded on the internal mistakes of
-the Old and New Testaments, and on reason, and on the experiences and
-observations of men. The criticisms from internal defects were sharp,
-strong, and manly.
-
-Mr. Lincoln moved to this city in 1837, and here became acquainted
-with various men of his own way of thinking. At that time they called
-themselves _free-thinkers, or free-thinking men_. I remember all these
-things distinctly; for I was with them, heard them, and was one of them.
-Mr. Lincoln here found other works,--Hume, Gibbon, and others,--and
-drank them in: he made no secret of his views, no concealment of his
-religion. He boldly avowed himself an infidel. When Mr. Lincoln was a
-candidate for our Legislature, he was accused of being an infidel, and
-of having said that Jesus Christ was an illegitimate child: he never
-denied his opinions, nor flinched from his religious views; he was a
-true man, and yet it may be truthfully said, that in 1837 his religion
-was low indeed. In his moments of gloom he would _doubt, if he did
-not sometimes deny, God_. He made me once erase the name of God from a
-speech which I was about to make in 1854; and he did this in the city
-of Washington to one of his friends. I cannot now name the man, nor the
-place he occupied in Washington: it will be known sometime. I have the
-evidence, and intend to keep it.
-
-Mr. Lincoln ran for Congress, against the Rev. Peter Cartwright, in the
-year 1847 or 1848. In that contest he was accused of being an infidel,
-if not an atheist; he never denied the charge; would not; "_would die
-first_:" in the first place, because he knew it could and would be
-proved on him; and in the second place he was too true to his own
-convictions, to his own soul, to deny it. From what I know of Mr.
-Lincoln, and from what I have heard and verily believe, I can say,
-First, That he _did not believe in a special creation, his idea being
-that all creation was an evolution under law_; Secondly, That he did
-not believe that the Bible was a special revelation from God, as the
-Christian world contends; Thirdly, He did not believe in miracles, as
-understood by the Christian world; Fourthly, He believed in universal
-inspiration and miracles under law; Fifthly, He did not believe that
-Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God, as the Christian world contends;
-Sixthly, He believed that all things, both matter and mind, were
-governed by laws, universal, absolute, and eternal. All his speeches and
-remarks in Washington conclusively prove this. _Law was to Lincoln every
-thing, and special interferences shams and delusions_. I know whereof I
-speak. I used to loan him Theodore Parker's works: I loaned him Emerson
-sometimes, and other writers; and he would sometimes read, and sometimes
-would not, as I suppose,--nay, know.
-
-When Mr. Lincoln left this city for Washington, I know he had undergone
-no change in his religious opinions or views. He held many of the
-Christian ideas in abhorrence, and among them there was this one;
-namely, that God would forgive the sinner for a violation of his laws.
-_Lincoln maintained that God could not forgive; that punishment has to
-follow the sin; that Christianity was wrong in teaching forgiveness_;
-that it tended to make man sin in the hope that God would excuse, and
-so forth. Lincoln contended that the minister should teach that God has
-affixed punishment to sin, and that _no repentance could bribe him to
-remit it_. In one sense of the word, Mr. Lincoln was a Universalist,
-and in another sense he was a Unitarian; but he was a theist, as we now
-understand that word: he was so fully, freely, unequivocally, boldly,
-and openly, when asked for his views. Mr. Lincoln was supposed, by many
-people in this city, to be an atheist; and some still believe it. I can
-put that supposition at rest forever. I hold a letter of Mr. Lincoln in
-my hand, addressed to his step-brother, John D. Johnston, and dated
-the twelfth day of January, 1851. He had heard from Johnston that his
-father, Thomas Lincoln, was sick, and that no hopes of his recovery were
-entertained. Mr. Lincoln wrote back to Mr. Johnston these words:--
-
-"I sincerely hope that father may yet recover his health; but, at all
-events, tell him to remember to call upon and confide in One great
-and good and merciful Maker, who will not turn away from him in any
-extremity. He notes the fall of a sparrow, and numbers the hairs of our
-heads; and he will not forget the dying man who puts his trust in him.
-Say to him, that, if we could meet now, it is doubtful whether it would
-not be more painful than pleasant; but that, if it be his lot to go now,
-he will soon have a joyous meeting with many loved ones gone before,
-and where the rest of us, through the help of God, hope ere long to join
-them.
-
-"A. Lincoln."
-
-So it seems that Mr. Lincoln believed in God and immortality as well as
-heaven,--a place. He believed in no hell and no punishment in the future
-world. It has been said to me that Mr. Lincoln wrote the above letter
-to an old man simply to cheer him up in his last moments, and that the
-writer did not believe what he said. The question is, Was Mr. Lincoln
-an honest and truthful man? If he was, he wrote that letter honestly,
-believing it. It has to me the sound, the ring, of an honest utterance.
-I admit that Mr. Lincoln, in his moments of melancholy and
-terrible gloom, was living on the borderland between theism and
-atheism,--sometimes quite wholly dwelling in atheism. In his happier
-moments he would swing back to theism, and dwell lovingly there. It is
-possible that Mr. Lincoln was not always responsible for what he said
-or thought, so deep, so intense, so terrible, was his melancholy. I send
-you a lecture of mine which will help you to see what I mean. I maintain
-that Mr. Lincoln was a deeply-religious man at all times and places, in
-spite of his transient doubts.
-
-Soon after Mr. Lincoln was assassinated, Mr. Holland came into my
-office, and made some inquiries about him, stating to me his purpose
-of writing his life. I freely told him what he asked, and much more. He
-then asked me what I thought about Mr. Lincoln's religion, meaning
-his views of Christianity. I replied, "The less said, the better."
-Mr. Holland has recorded my expression to him (see Holland's "Life of
-Lincoln," p. 241). I cannot say what Mr. Holland said to me, as that
-was private. It appears that he went and saw Mr. Newton Bateman,
-Superintendent of Public Instruction in this State. It appears that Mr.
-Bateman told Mr. Holland many things, if he is correctly represented in
-Holland's "Life of Lincoln" (pp. 236-241, inclusive). I doubt whether
-Mr. Bateman said in full what is recorded there: I doubt a great deal
-of it. I know the whole story is untrue,--untrue in substance, untrue
-in fact and spirit. As soon as the "Life of Lincoln" was out, on reading
-that part here referred to, I instantly sought Mr. Bateman, and found
-him in his office. I spoke to him politely and kindly, and he spoke to
-me in the same manner. I said substantially to him that Mr. Holland, in
-order to make Mr. Lincoln a technical Christian, made him a hypocrite;
-and so his "Life of Lincoln" quite plainly says. I loved Mr. Lincoln,
-and was mortified, if not angry, to see him made a hypocrite. I cannot
-now detail what Mr. Bateman said, as it was a private conversation, and
-I am forbidden to make use of it in public. If some good gentleman can
-only get the seal of secrecy removed, I can show what was said and done.
-On my word, the world may take it for granted that Holland is wrong,
-that he does not state Mr. Lincoln's views correctly. Mr. Bateman, if
-correctly represented in Holland's "Life of Lincoln," is the only man,
-the sole and only man, who dare say that Mr. Lincoln believed in Jesus
-as the Christ of God, as the Christian world represents. This is not
-a pleasant situation for Mr. Bateman. I have notes and dates of our
-conversation; and the world will sometime know who is truthful, and
-who is otherwise. I doubt whether Bateman is correctly represented
-by Holland. My notes bear date Dec. 3, 12, and 28, 1866. Some of our
-conversations were in the spring of 1866 and the fall of 1865.
-
-I do not remember ever seeing the words Jesus or Christ in print, as
-uttered by Mr. Lincoln. If he has used these words, they can be found.
-He uses the word God but seldom. I never heard him use the name of
-Christ or Jesus but to confute the idea that he was the Christ, the only
-and truly begotten Son of God, as the Christian world understands it.
-The idea that Mr. Lincoln carried the New Testament or Bible in his
-bosom or boots, to draw on his opponent in debate, is ridiculous.
-
-My dear sir, I now have given you my knowledge, speaking from my own
-experience, of Mr. Lincoln's religious views. I speak likewise from the
-evidences, carefully gathered, of his religious opinions. I likewise
-speak from the ears and mouths of many in this city; and, after all
-careful examination, I declare to your numerous readers, that Mr.
-Lincoln is correctly represented here, so far as I know what truth is,
-and how it should be investigated.
-
-If ever there was a moment when Mr. Lincoln might have been expected to
-express his faith in the atonement, his trust in the merits of a living
-Redeemer, it was when he undertook to send a composing and comforting
-message to a dying man. He knew, moreover, that his father had been
-"converted" time and again, and that no exhortation would so effectually
-console his weak spirit in the hour of dismay and dissolution as one
-which depicted, in the strongest terms, the perfect sufficiency of Jesus
-to save the perishing soul. But he omitted it wholly: he did not even
-mention the name of Jesus, or intimate the most distant suspicion of
-the existence of a Christ. On the contrary, he is singularly careful to
-employ the word "One" to qualify the word "Maker." It is the Maker, and
-not the Saviour, to whom he directs the attention of a sinner in the
-agony of death.
-
-While it is very clear that Mr. Lincoln was at all times an infidel in
-the orthodox meaning of the term, it is also very clear that he was not
-at all times equally willing that everybody should know it. He never
-offered to purge or recant; but he was a wily politician, and did not
-disdain to regulate his religious manifestations with some reference to
-his political interests. As he grew older, he grew more cautious; and
-as his New Salem associates, and the aggressive deists with whom he
-originally united at Springfield, gradually dispersed, or fell away from
-his side, he appreciated more and more keenly the violence and extent of
-the religious prejudices which freedom in discussion from his standpoint
-would be sure to arouse against him. He saw the immense and augmenting
-power of the churches, and in times past had practically felt it. The
-imputation of infidelity had seriously injured him in several of his
-earlier political contests; and, sobered by age and experience, he was
-resolved that that same imputation should injure him no more. Aspiring
-to lead religious communities, he foresaw that he must not appear as an
-enemy within their gates; aspiring to public honors under the auspices
-of a political party which persistently summoned religious people to
-assist in the extirpation of that which is denounced as the "nation's
-sin," he foresaw that he could not ask their suffrages whilst aspersing
-their faith. He perceived no reason for changing his convictions, but he
-did perceive many good and cogent reasons for not making them public.
-
-Col. Matheny alleges, that, from 1854 to 1860, Mr. Lincoln "played a
-sharp game" upon the Christians of Springfield, "treading their toes,"
-and saying, "Come and convert me." Mr. Herndon is inclined to coincide
-with Matheny; and both give the obvious explanation of such conduct;
-that is to say, his morbid ambition; coupled with a mortal fear that his
-popularity would suffer by an open avowal of his deistic convictions.
-At any rate, Mr. Lincoln permitted himself to be misunderstood and
-misrepresented by some enthusiastic ministers and exhorters with whom he
-came in contact. Among these was the Rev. Mr. Smith, then pastor of
-the First Presbyterian Church of Springfield, and afterwards Consul at
-Dundee, in Scotland, under Mr. Lincoln's appointment. The abilities of
-this gentleman to discuss such a topic to the edification of a man
-like Mr. Lincoln seem to have been rather slender; but the chance of
-converting so distinguished a person inspired him with a zeal which he
-might not have felt for the salvation of an obscurer soul. Mr. Lincoln
-listened to his exhortations in silence, apparently respectful, and
-occasionally sat out his sermons in church with as much patience as
-other people. Finding these oral appeals unavailing, Mr. Smith composed
-a heavy tract out of his own head to suit the particular case. "The
-preparation of that work," says he, "cost me long and arduous labor;"
-but it does not appear to have been read. Mr. Lincoln took the "work" to
-his office, laid it down without writing his name on it, and never took
-it up again to the knowledge of a man who inhabited that office with
-him, and who saw it lying on the same spot every day for months.
-Subsequently Mr. Smith drew from Mr. Lincoln an acknowledgment that
-his argument was unanswerable,--not a very high compliment under the
-circumstances, but one to which Mr. Smith often referred afterwards
-with great delight. He never asserted, as some have supposed, that Mr.
-Lincoln was converted from the error of his ways; that he abandoned his
-infidel opinions, or that he united himself with any Christian church.
-On the contrary, when specially interrogated on these points by Mr.
-Herndon, he refused to answer, on the ground that Mr. Herndon
-was not a proper person to receive such a communication from
-Mr. Newton Bateman is reported to have said that a few days before the
-Presidential election of 1860, Mr. Lincoln came into his office, closed
-the door against intrusion, and proposed to examine a book which had
-been furnished him, at his own request, "containing a careful canvass of
-the city of Springfield, showing the candidate for whom each citizen
-had declared his intention to vote at the approaching election.
-He ascertained that only three ministers of the gospel, out of
-twenty-three, would vote for him, and that, of the prominent
-church-members, a very large majority were against him." Mr. Bateman
-does not say so directly, but the inference is plain that Mr. Lincoln
-had not previously known what were the sentiments of the Christian
-people who lived with him in Springfield: he had never before taken
-the trouble to inquire whether they were for him or against him. At
-all events, when he made the discovery out of the book, he wept, and
-declared that he "did not understand it at all." He drew from his bosom
-a pocket New Testament, and, "with a trembling voice and his cheeks wet
-with tears," quoted it against his political opponents generally, and
-especially against Douglas. He professed to believe that the opinions
-adopted by him and his party were derived from the teachings of Christ;
-averred that Christ was God; and, speaking of the Testament which
-he carried in his bosom, called it "this rock, on which him
-I stand." When Mr. Bateman expressed surprise, and told him that his
-friends generally were ignorant that he entertained such sentiments,
-he gave this answer quickly: "I know they are: I am obliged to appear
-different to them." Mr. Bateman is a respectable citizen, whose general
-reputation for truth and veracity is not to be impeached; but his story,
-as reported in Holland's Life, is so inconsistent with Mr. Lincoln's
-whole character, that it must be rejected as altogether incredible.
-From the time of the Democratic split in the Baltimore Convention, Mr.
-Lincoln, as well as every other politician of the smallest sagacity,
-knew that his success was as certain as any future event could be. At
-the end of October, most of the States had clearly voted in a way which
-left no lingering doubts of the final result of November. If there ever
-was a time in his life when ambition charmed his whole heart,--if it
-could ever be said of him that "hope elevated and joy brightened his
-crest," it was on the eve of that election which he saw was to lift him
-at last to the high place for which he had sighed and struggled so long.
-It was not then that he would mourn and weep because he was in danger
-of not getting the votes of the ministers and members of the churches he
-had known during many years for his steadfast opponents: he did not need
-them, and had not expected them. Those who understood him best are very
-sure that he never, under any circumstances, could have fallen into
-such weakness--not even when his fortunes were at the lowest point
-of depression--as to play the part of a hypocrite for their support.
-Neither is it possible that he was at any loss about the reasons which
-religious men had for refusing him their support; and, if he said that
-he could not understand it at all, he must have spoken falsely. But the
-worst part of the tale is Mr. Lincoln's acknowledgment that his "friends
-generally were deceived concerning his religious sentiments, and that he
-was obliged to appear different to them."
-
-According to this version, which has had considerable currency, he
-carried a Testament in his bosom, carefully hidden from his intimate
-associates: he believed that Christ was God; yet his friends understood
-him to deny the verity of the gospel: he based his political doctrines
-on the teachings of the Bible; yet before all men, except Mr. Bateman,
-he habitually acted the part of an unbeliever and reprobate, because he
-was "obliged to appear different to them." How obliged? What compulsion
-required him to deny that Christ was God if he really believed him to be
-divine? Or did he put his political necessities above the obligations
-of truth, and oppose Christianity against his convictions, that he
-might win the favor of its enemies? It may be that his mere silence
-was sometimes misunderstood; but he never made an express avowal of
-any religious opinion which he did not entertain. He did not "appear
-different" at one time from what he was at another, and certainly
-he never put on infidelity as a mere mask to conceal his Christian
-character from the world. There is no dealing with Mr. Bateman, except
-by a flat contradiction. Perhaps his memory was treacherous, or his
-imagination led him astray, or, peradventure, he thought a fraud no
-harm if it gratified the strong desire of the public for proofs of Mr.
-Lincoln's orthodoxy. It is nothing to the purpose that Mr. Lincoln said
-once or twice that he thought this or that portion of the Scripture was
-the product of divine inspiration; for he was one of the class who hold
-that all truth is inspired, and that every human being with a mind and a
-conscience is a prophet. He would have agreed much more readily with one
-who taught that Newton's discoveries, or Bacon's philosophy, or one of
-his own speeches, were the works of men divinely inspired above their
-fellows.1
-
- 1 "As we have bodily senses to lay hold on matter, and
- supply bodily wants, through which we obtain, naturally, all
- needed material things; so we have spiritual faculties to
- lay hold on God and supply spiritual wants: through them we
- obtain all needed spiritual things. As we observe the
- conditions of the body, we have nature on our side: as we
- observe the law of the soul, we have God on our side. He
- imparts truth to all men who observe these conditions: we
- have direct access to him through reason, conscience, and
- the religious faculty, just as we have direct access to
- nature through the eye, the ear, or the hand. Through these
- channels, and by means of a law, certain, regular, and
- universal as gravitation, God inspires men, makes revelation
- of truth; for is not truth as much a phenomenon of God as
- motion of matter? Therefore, if God be omnipresent and
- omniactive, this inspiration is no miracle, but a regular
- mode of God's action on conscious spirit, as gravitation on
- unconscious matter. It is not a rare condescension of God,
- but a universal uplifting of man. To obtain a knowledge of
- duty, a man is not sent away, outside of himself, to ancient
- documents: for the only rule of faith and practice, the
- Word, is very nigh him, even in his heart, and by this Word
- he is to try all documents whatsoever. Inspiration, like
- God's omnipresence, is not limited to the few writers
- claimed by the Jews, Christians, or Mohammedans, but is co-
- extensive with the race. As God fills all space, so all
- spirit; as he influences and constrains unconscious and
- necessitated matter, so he inspires and helps free,
- unconscious man.
-
- "This theory does not make God limited, partial, or
- capricious: it exalts man. While it honors the excellence of
- a religious genius of a Moses or a Jesus, it does not
- pronounce their character monstrous, as the supernatural,
- nor fanatical, as the rationalistic theory; but natural,
- human, and beautiful, revealing the possibility of mankind.
- Prayer--whether voluntative or spontaneous, a word or a
- feeling, felt in gratitude, or penitence, or joy, or
- resignation--is not a soliloquy of the man, not a
- physiological function, nor an address to a deceased man,
- but a sally into the infinite spiritual world, whence we
- bring back light and truth. There are windows towards God,
- as towards the world. There is no intercessor, angel,
- mediator, between man and God; for man can speak, and God
- hear, each for himself. He requires no advocate to plead for
- men, who need not pray by attorney. Each man stands close to
- the omnipresent God; may feel his beautiful presence, and
- have familiar access to the All-Father; get truth at first
- hand from its Author. Wisdom, righteousness, and love are
- the Spirit of God in the soul of man: wherever these are,
- and just in proportion to their power, there is inspiration
- from God. Thus God is not the author of confusion, but
- concord. Faith and knowledge and revelation and reason tell
- the same tale, and so legitimate and confirm each one
- another.
-
- "God's action on matter and on man is, perhaps, the same
- thing to him, though it appear differently modified to us.
- But it is plain, from the nature of things, that there can
- be but one kind of inspiration, as of truth, faith, or love:
- it is the direct and intuitive perception of some truth,
- either of thought or of sentiment. There can be but one mode
- of inspiration: it is the action of the Highest within the
- soul, the divine presence imparting light; this presence, as
- truth, justice, holiness, love, infusing itself into the
- soul, giving it new life; the breathing-in of the Deity; the
- in-come of God to the soul, in the form of truth through the
- reason, of right through the conscience, of love and faith
- through the affections and religious element. Is inspiration
- confined to theological matter alone? Most certainly not."--
- --Parker's Discourse pertaining to Religion.
-
-But he never told any one that he accepted Jesus as the Christ, or
-performed a single one of the acts which necessarily follow upon such
-a conviction. At Springfield and at Washington he was beset on the one
-hand by political priests, and on the other by honest and prayerful
-Christians. He despised the former, respected the latter, and had use
-for both. He said with characteristic irreverence, that he would not
-undertake to "run the churches by military authority;" but he was,
-nevertheless, alive to the importance of letting the churches "run"
-themselves in the interest of his party. Indefinite expressions about
-"Divine Providence," the "justice of God," "the favor of the Most High,"
-were easy, and not inconsistent with his religious notions. In this,
-accordingly, he indulged freely; but never in all that time did he let
-fall from his lips or his pen an expression which remotely implied the
-slightest faith in Jesus as the Son of God and the Saviour of men.
-
-The effect of Mr. Lincoln's unbelief did not affect his constitutional
-love of justice. Though he rejected the New Testament as a book of
-divine authority, he accepted the practical part of its precepts as
-binding upon him by virtue of the natural law. The benevolence of his
-impulses served to keep him, for the most part, within the limits to
-which a Christian is confined by the fear of God. It is also true
-beyond doubt that he was greatly influenced by the reflected force of
-Christianity. If he did not believe it, the masses of the "plain people"
-did; and no one ever was more anxious to do "whatsoever was of good
-report among men." To qualify himself as a witness or an officer it was
-frequently necessary that he should take oaths; and he always appealed
-to the Christian's God either by laying his hand upon the Gospels, or
-by some other form of invocation common among believers. Of course the
-ceremony was superfluous, for it imposed no religious obligation upon
-him; but his strong innate sense of right was sufficient to make him
-truthful without that high and awful sanction which faith in divine
-revelation would have carried with it.
-
-Mr. Lincoln was by no means free from a kind of belief in the
-supernatural. While he rejected the great facts of Christianity,
-as wanting the support of authentic evidence, his mind was readily
-impressed with the most absurd superstitions.1 He lived constantly in
-the serious conviction that he was himself the subject of a special
-decree, made by some unknown and mysterious power, for which he had
-no name. The birth and death of Christ, his wonderful works, and his
-resurrection as "the first-fruits of them that slept," Mr. Lincoln
-denied, because they seemed naturally improbable, or inconsistent with
-his "philosophy so called;" but his perverted credulity terrified him
-when he saw two images of himself in a mirror.
-
- 1 "He had great faith in the strong sense of country people;
- and he gave them credit for greater intelligence than most
- men do. If he found an idea prevailing generally amongst
- them, he believed there was something in it, although it
- might not harmonize with science.
-
- "He had great faith in the virtues of the 'mad-stone'
- although he could give no reason for it, and confessed that
- it looked like superstition. But, he said, he found the
- people in the neighborhood of these stones fully impressed
- with a belief in their virtues from actual experiment; and
- that was about as much as we could ever know of the
- properties of medicines."--Gillespie.
-
- "When his son 'Bob' was supposed to have been bitten by a
- rabid dog, Mr. Lincoln took him to Terre Haute, La., where
- there was a mad-stone, with the intention of having it
- applied, and, it is presumed, did so."--Mrs. Wallace.
-
-It is very probable that much of Mr. Lincoln's unhappiness, the
-melancholy that "dripped from him as he walked," was due to his want
-of religious faith. When the black fit was on him, he suffered as
-much mental misery as Bunyan or Cowper in the deepest anguish of their
-conflicts with the evil one. But the unfortunate conviction fastened
-upon him by his early associations, that there was no truth in the
-Bible, made all consolation impossible, and penitence useless. To a
-man of his temperament, predisposed as it was to depression of spirits,
-there could be no chance of happiness, if doomed to live without hope
-and without God in the world. He might force himself to be merry with
-his chosen comrades; he might "banish sadness" in mirthful conversation,
-or find relief in a jest; gratified ambition might elevate his feelings,
-and give him ease for a time: but solid comfort and permanent peace
-could come to him only through "a correspondence fixed with heaven." The
-fatal misfortune of his life, looking at it only as it affected him
-in this world, was the influence at New Salem and Springfield which
-enlisted him on the side of unbelief. He paid the bitter penalty in a
-life of misery.
-
- "It was a grievous sin in Caesar;
- And grievously hath Caesar answered it."
-
-Very truly,
-
-W. H. Herndon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-ON the 11th of February, 1861, the arrangements for Mr. Lincoln's
-departure from Springfield were completed. It was intended to occupy the
-time remaining between that date and the 4th of March with a grand tour
-from State to State and city to city. One Mr. Wood, "recommended by
-Senator Seward," was the chief manager. He provided special trains to be
-preceded by pilot engines all the way through.
-
-It was a gloomy day: heavy clouds floated overhead, and a cold rain was
-falling. Long before eight o'clock, a great mass of people had collected
-at the station of the Great Western Railway to witness the event of the
-day. At precisely five minutes before eight, Mr. Lincoln, preceded by
-Mr. Wood, emerged from a private room in the depot building, and passed
-slowly to the car, the people falling back respectfully on either side,
-and as many as possible shaking his hands. Having finally reached the
-train, he ascended the rear platform, and, facing about to the throng
-which had closed around him, drew himself up to his full height, removed
-his hat, and stood for several seconds in profound silence. His eye
-roved sadly over that sea of upturned faces; and he thought he read in
-them again the sympathy and friendship which he had often tried, and
-which he never needed more than he did then. There was an unusual quiver
-in his lip, and a still more unusual tear on his shrivelled cheek. His
-solemn manner, his long silence, were as full of melancholy eloquence
-as any words he could have uttered. What did he think of? Of the mighty
-changes which had lifted him from the lowest to the highest estate on
-earth? Of the weary road which had brought him to this lofty summit?
-Of his poor mother lying beneath the tangled underbrush in a distant
-forest? Of that other grave in the quiet Concord cemetery? Whatever
-the particular character of his thoughts, it is evident that they were
-retrospective and painful. To those who were anxiously waiting to catch
-words upon which the fate of the nation might hang, it seemed long until
-he had mastered his feelings sufficiently to speak. At length he began
-in a husky tone of voice, and slowly and impressively delivered his
-farewell to his neighbors. Imitating his example, every man in the crowd
-stood with his head uncovered in the fast-falling rain.
-
-"Friends,--No one who has never been placed in a like position can
-understand my feelings at this hour, nor the oppressive sadness I feel
-at this parting. For more than a quarter of a century I have lived among
-you, and during all that time I have received nothing but kindness at
-your hands. Here I have lived from my youth, until now I am an old man.
-Here the most sacred ties of earth were assumed. Here all my children
-were born; and here one of them lies buried. To you, dear friends, I owe
-all that I have, all that I am. All the strange, checkered past seems to
-crowd now upon my mind. To-day I leave you. I go to assume a task more
-difficult than that which devolved upon Washington. Unless the great
-God, who assisted him, shall be with and aid me, I must fail; but if the
-same omniscient mind and almighty arm that directed and protected him
-shall guide and support me, I shall not fail,--I shall succeed. Let us
-all pray that the God of our fathers may not forsake us now. To him I
-commend you all. Permit me to ask, that, with equal security and faith,
-you will invoke his wisdom and guidance for me. With these few words I
-must leave you: for how long I know not. Friends, one and all, I must
-now bid you an affectionate farewell."
-
-"It was a most impressive scene," said the editor of "The Journal." "We
-have known Mr. Lincoln for many years; we have heard him speak upon
-a hundred different occasions; but we never saw him so profoundly
-affected, nor did he ever utter an address which seemed to us so full
-of simple and touching eloquence, so exactly adapted to the occasion, so
-worthy of the man and the hour."
-
-At eight o'clock the train rolled out of Springfield amid the cheers of
-the populace. Four years later a funeral train, covered with the emblems
-of splendid mourning, rolled into the same city, bearing a discolored
-corpse, whose obsequies were being celebrated in every part of the
-civilized world.
-
-Along with Mr. Lincoln's family in the special car were Gov. Yates,
-Ex-Gov. Moore, Dr. Wallace (Mr. Lincoln's brother-in-law), Mr. Judd,
-Mr. Browning, Judge Davis, Col. Ellsworth, Col. Lamon, and private
-secretaries Nicolay and Hay.
-
-It has been asserted that an attempt was made to throw the train off the
-track between Springfield and Indianapolis, and also that a hand-grenade
-was found on board at Cincinnati, but no evidence of the fact is given
-in either case, and none of the Presidential party ever heard of these
-murderous doings until they read of them in some of the more imaginative
-reports of their trip.
-
-Full accounts of this journey were spread broadcast over the country
-at the time, and have been collected and printed in various books. But,
-except for the speeches of the President elect, those accounts possess
-no particular interest at this day; and of the speeches we shall present
-here only such extracts as express his thoughts and feelings about the
-impending civil war.
-
-In the heat of the late canvass, he had written the following private
-letter:--
-
-Springfield, Ill., Aug. 15, 1860.
-
-John B. Fry, Esq.
-
-My dear Sir,--Yours of the 9th, enclosing the letter of Hon. John M.
-Botts, was duly received. The latter is herewith returned, according to
-your request. It contains one of the many assurances I receive from
-the South, that in no probable event will there be any very formidable
-effort to break up the Union. The people of the South have too much of
-good sense and good temper to attempt the ruin of the government, rather
-than see it administered as it was administered by the men who made it.
-At least, so I hope and believe.
-
-I thank you both for your own letter and a sight of that of Mr. Botts.
-
-Yours very truly,
-
-A. Lincoln.
-
-The opinion expressed in the letter as to the probability of war does
-not appear to have undergone any material change or modification during
-the eventful months which had intervened; for he expressed it in much
-stronger terms at almost every stage of his progress to Washington.
-
-At Toledo he said,--
-
-"I am leaving you on an errand of national importance, attended, as you
-are aware, with considerable difficulties. Let us believe, as some poet
-has expressed it, 'Behind the cloud the sun is shining still.'"
-
-At Indianapolis:--
-
-"I am here to thank you for this magnificent welcome, and still more for
-the very generous support given by your State to that political cause,
-which, I think, is the true and just cause of the whole country, and the
-whole world. Solomon says, 'There is a time to keep silence;' and when
-men wrangle by the mouth, with no certainty that they mean the same
-thing while using the same words, it perhaps were as well if they would
-keep silence.
-
-"The words 'coercion' and 'invasion' are much used in these days, and
-often with some temper and hot blood. Let us make sure, if we can, that
-we do not misunderstand the meaning of those who use them. Let us get
-the exact definitions of these words, not from dictionaries, but from
-the men themselves, who certainly deprecate the things they would
-represent by the use of the words.
-
-"What, then, is coercion? What is invasion? Would the marching of an
-army into South Carolina, without the consent of her people, and with
-hostile intent toward them, be invasion? I certainly think it would;
-and it would be coercion also, if the South Carolinians were forced to
-submit. But if the United States should merely hold and retake its
-own forts and other property, and collect the duties on foreign
-importations, or even withhold the mails from places where they were'
-habitually violated, would any or all of these things be invasion or
-coercion? Do our professed lovers of the Union, who spitefully resolve
-that they will resist coercion and invasion, understand that such
-things as these, on the part of the United States, would be coercion or
-invasion of a State? If so, their idea of means to preserve the object
-of their great affection would seem to be exceedingly thin and airy. If
-sick, the little pills of the homoeopathist would be much too large for
-them to swallow. In their view, the Union, as a family relation,
-would seem to be no regular marriage, but rather a sort of 'free-love'
-arrangement, to be maintained on passional attraction."
-
-At Columbus:--
-
-"Allusion has been made to the interest felt in relation to the policy
-of the new administration. In this, I have received from some a degree
-of credit for having kept silence, from others some depreciation. I
-still think I was right. In the varying and repeatedly-shifting scenes
-of the present, _without a precedent which could enable me to judge
-for the past_, it has seemed fitting, that, before speaking upon the
-difficulties of the country, I should have gained a view of the whole
-field. To be sure, after all, I would be at liberty to modify and change
-the course of policy as future events might make a change necessary.
-
-"I have not maintained silence from any want of real anxiety. _It is
-a good thing that there is no more than anxiety, for there is nothing
-going wrong. It is a consoling circumstance, that when we look out there
-is nothing that really hurts anybody. We entertain different views upon
-political questions; but nobody is suffering any thing. This is a most
-consoling circumstance, and from it I judge that all we want is time
-and patience, and a reliance on that God who has never forsaken this
-people_."
-
-At Pittsburg:--
-
-"Notwithstanding the troubles across the river, _there is really no
-crisis springing from any thing in the Government itself. In plain
-words, there is really no crisis, except an artificial one._ What is
-there now to warrant the condition of affairs presented by our friends
-'over the river'? Take even their own view of the questions involved,
-and there is nothing to justify the course which they are pursuing. _I
-repeat it, then, there is no crisis, except such a one as may be gotten
-up at any time by turbulent men, aided by designing politicians_. My
-advice, then, under such circumstances, is _to keep cool. If the great
-American people will only keep their temper on both sides of the line,
-the trouble will come to an end, and the question which now distracts
-the country will be settled just as surely as all other difficulties
-of like character which have originated in this Government have been
-adjusted. Let the people on both sides keep their self-possession, and,
-just as other clouds have cleared away in due time, so will this; and
-this great nation shall continue to prosper as heretofore_."
-
-At Cleveland:--
-
-"Frequent allusion is made to the excitement at present existing in our
-national politics, and it is as well that I should also allude to it
-here. _I think that there is no occasion for any excitement. The crisis,
-as it is called, is altogether an artificial crisis.... As I said
-before, this crisis is all artificial! It has no foundation in fact. It
-was not 'argued up,' as the saying is, and cannot be argued down. Let it
-alone, and it will go down itself_."
-
-Before the Legislature of New York:--
-
-"When the time comes, according to the custom of the Government, I shall
-speak, and speak as well as I am able for the good of the present and of
-the future of this country,--for the good of the North and of the South,
-for the good of one and of the other, and of all sections of it. In the
-mean time, _if we have patience, if we maintain our equanimity, though
-some may allow themselves to run off in a burst of passion_, I still
-have confidence that the Almighty Ruler of the Universe, through the
-instrumentality of this great and intelligent people, can and will bring
-us through this difficulty, as he has heretofore brought us through
-all preceding difficulties of the country. Relying upon this, and
-again thanking you, as I forever shall, in my heart, for this generous
-reception you have given me, I bid you farewell."
-
-In response to the Mayor of New York City, who had said, "To you,
-therefore, chosen under the forms of the Constitution, as the head
-of the Confederacy, we look for a restoration of fraternal relations
-between the States,--only to be accomplished by peaceful and
-conciliatory means, aided by the wisdom of Almighty God," Mr. Lincoln
-said,--
-
-"In regard to the difficulties that confront us at this time, and of
-which you have seen fit to speak so becomingly and so justly, I can only
-say that I agree with the sentiments expressed."
-
-At Trenton:--
-
-"I shall endeavor to take the ground I deem most just to the North, the
-East, the West, the South, and the whole country. I take it, I hope, in
-good temper,--certainly with no malice towards any section. _I shall do
-all that may be in my power to promote a peaceful settlement of all our
-difficulties. The man does not live who is more devoted to peace than
-I am,--none who would do more to preserve it. But it maybe necessary to
-put the foot down firmly_. And if I do my duty, and do right, you
-will sustain me: will you not? Received, as I am, by the members of
-a legislature, the majority of whom do not agree with me in political
-sentiments, I trust that I may have their assistance in piloting the
-Ship of State through this voyage, surrounded by perils as it is; for,
-if it should suffer shipwreck now, there will be no pilot ever needed
-for another voyage."
-
-At Philadelphia:--
-
-"It is true, as your worthy mayor has said, that there is anxiety
-among the citizens of the United States at this time. I deem it a happy
-circumstance that this dissatisfied portion of our fellow-citizens do
-not point us to any thing in which they are being injured, or are about
-to be injured; _for which reason I have felt all the while justified in
-concluding that the crisis, the panic, the anxiety, of the country at
-this time is artificial._ If there be those who differ with me upon
-this subject, they have not pointed out the substantial difficulty
-that exists. I do not mean to say that an artificial panic may not do
-considerable harm: that it has done such I do not deny. The hope that
-has been expressed by your mayor, that I may be able to restore peace,
-harmony, and prosperity to the country, is most worthy of him; and happy
-indeed will I be if I shall be able to verify and fulfil that hope. I
-promise you, in all sincerity, that I bring to the work a sincere heart.
-Whether I will bring a head equal to that heart, will be for future
-times to determine. It were useless for me to speak of details or plans
-now: I shall speak officially next Monday week, if ever. If I should not
-speak then, it were useless for me to do so now."
-
-At Philadelphia again:--
-
-"Now, in my view of the present aspect of affairs, there need be no
-bloodshed or war. _There is no necessity for it. I am not in favor of
-such a course: and I may say, in advance, that there will be no blood
-shed unless it be forced upon the Government; and then it will be
-compelled to act in self-defence._"
-
-At Harrisburg:--
-
-"I recur for a moment but to repeat some words uttered at the hotel
-in regard to what has been said about the military support which the
-General Government may expect from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in a
-proper emergency. _To guard against any possible mistake, do I recur
-to this. It is not with any pleasure that I contemplate the possibility
-that a necessity may arise in this country for the use of the military
-arm_. While I am exceedingly gratified to see the manifestation upon
-your streets of your military force here, and exceedingly gratified at
-your promise here to use that force upon a proper emergency; while I
-make these acknowledgments, I desire to repeat, in order to _preclude
-any possible misconstruction, that I do most sincerely hope that we
-shall have no use for them; that it will never become their duty to
-shed Hood, and most especially never to shed fraternal blood_. I promise
-that, so far as I have wisdom to direct, if so painful a result shall in
-any wise be brought about, it shall be through no fault of mine."
-
-Whilst Mr. Lincoln, in the midst of his suite and attendants, was being
-borne in triumph through the streets of Philadelphia, and a countless
-multitude of people were shouting themselves hoarse, and jostling
-and crushing each other around his carriage-wheels, Mr. Felton, the
-President of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railway, was
-engaged with a private detective discussing the details of an alleged
-conspiracy to murder him at Baltimore. Some months before, Mr. Felton,
-apprehending danger to the bridges along his line, had taken this man
-into his pay, and sent him to Baltimore to spy out and report any plot
-that might be found for their destruction. Taking with him a couple of
-other men and a woman, the detective went about his business with the
-zeal which necessarily marks his peculiar profession. He set up as a
-stock-broker, under an assumed name, opened an office, and became
-a vehement Secessionist. His agents were instructed to act with the
-duplicity which such men generally use, to be rabid on the subject of
-"Southern rights," to suggest all manner of crimes in vindication of
-them; and if, by these arts, corresponding sentiments should be elicited
-from their victims, the "job" might be considered as prospering. Of
-course they readily found out what everybody else knew,--that Maryland
-was in a state of great alarm; that her people were forming military
-associations, and that Gov. Hicks was doing his utmost to furnish them
-with arms, on condition that the arms, in case of need, should be turned
-against the Federal Government. Whether they detected any plan to burn
-bridges or not, the chief detective does not relate; but it appears
-that he soon deserted that inquiry, and got, or pretended to get, upon a
-scent that promised a heavier reward. Being intensely ambitious to
-shine in the professional way, and something of a politician besides,
-it struck him that it would be a particularly fine thing to discover a
-dreadful plot to assassinate the President elect; and he discovered it
-accordingly. It was easy to get that far: to furnish tangible proofs of
-an imaginary conspiracy was a more difficult matter. But Baltimore was
-seething with political excitement; numerous strangers from the far
-South crowded its hotels and boarding-houses; great numbers of mechanics
-and laborers out of employment encumbered its streets; and everywhere
-politicians, merchants, mechanics, laborers, and loafers were engaged
-in heated discussions about the anticipated war, and the probability of
-Northern troops being marched through Maryland to slaughter and pillage
-beyond the Potomac. It would seem like an easy thing to beguile a few
-individuals of this angry and excited multitude into the expression of
-some criminal desire; and the opportunity was not wholly lost, although
-the limited success of the detective under such favorable circumstances
-is absolutely wonderful. He put his "shadows" upon several persons, whom
-it suited his pleasure to suspect; and the "shadows" pursued their work
-with the keen zest and the cool treachery of their kind. They reported
-daily to their chief in writing, as he reported in turn to his employer.
-These documents are neither edifying nor useful: they prove nothing
-but the baseness of the vocation which gave them existence. They were
-furnished to Mr. Herndon in full, under the impression that partisan
-feeling had extinguished in him the love of truth, and the obligations
-of candor, as it had in many writers who preceded him on the same
-subject-matter. They have been carefully and thoroughly read, analyzed,
-examined, and Compared, with an earnest and conscientious desire to
-discover the truth, if, perchance, any trace of truth might be in them.
-The process of investigation began with a strong bias in favor of the
-conclusion at which the detective had arrived. For ten years the author
-implicitly believed in the reality of the atrocious plot which these
-spies were supposed to have detected and thwarted; and for ten years he
-had pleased himself with the reflection that he also had done something
-to defeat the bloody purpose of the assassins. It was a conviction which
-could scarcely have been overthrown by evidence less powerful than the
-detective's weak and contradictory account of his own case. In that
-account there is literally nothing to sustain the accusation, and much
-to rebut it. It is perfectly manifest that there was no conspiracy,--no
-conspiracy of a hundred, of fifty, of twenty, of three; no definite
-purpose in the heart of even one man to murder Mr. Lincoln at Baltimore.
-
-The reports are all in the form of personal narratives, and for the most
-relate when the spies went to bed, when they rose, where they ate, what
-saloons and brothels they visited, and what blackguards they met and
-"drinked" with. One of them "shadowed" a loud-mouthed, drinking fellow,
-named Luckett, and another, a poor scapegrace and braggart, named
-Hilliard. These wretches "drinked" and talked a great deal, hung about
-bars, haunted disreputable houses, were constantly half-drunk, and
-easily excited to use big and threatening words by the faithless
-protestations and cunning management of the spies. Thus Hilliard was
-made to say that he thought a man who should act the part of Brutus in
-these times would deserve well of his country; and Luckett was induced
-to declare that he knew a man who would kill Lincoln. At length the
-great arch-conspirator--the Brutus, the Orsini, of the New World, to
-whom Luckett and Hilliard, the "national volunteers," and all such, were
-as mere puppets--condescended to reveal himself in the most obliging and
-confiding manner. He made no mystery of his cruel and desperate scheme.
-He did not guard it as a dangerous secret, or choose his confidants with
-the circumspection which political criminals, and especially assassins,
-have generally thought proper to observe. Very many persons knew what
-he was about, and levied on their friends for small sums--five, ten, and
-twenty dollars--to further the "captain's" plan. Even Luckett was deep
-enough in the awful plot to raise money for it; and when he took one of
-the spies to a public bar-room, and introduced him to the "captain," the
-latter sat down and talked it all over without the slightest reserve.
-When was there ever before such a loud-mouthed conspirator, such a
-trustful and innocent assassin! His name was Ferrandina, his occupation
-that of a barber, his place of business beneath Barnum's Hotel, where
-the sign of the bloodthirsty villain still invites the unsuspecting
-public to come in for a shave.
-
-"Mr. Luckett," so the spy relates, "said that he was not going home this
-evening; and if I would meet him at Barr's saloon, on South Street, he
-would introduce me to Ferrandina.
-
-"This was unexpected to me; but I determined to take the chances, and
-agreed to meet Mr. Luckett at the place named at 7, p.m. Mr. Luckett
-left about 2.30, p.m.; and I went to dinner.
-
-"I was at the office in the afternoon in hopes that Mr. Felton might
-call, but he did not; and at 6.15, p.m., I went to supper. After
-supper, I went to Barr's saloon, and found Mr. Luckett and several
-other gentlemen there. He asked me to drink, and introduced me to Capt.
-Ferrandina and Capt. Turner. He eulogized me very highly as a neighbor
-of his, and told Ferrandina that I was the gentleman who had given the
-twenty-five dollars he (Luckett) had given to Ferrandina.
-
-"The conversation at once got into politics; and Ferrandina, who is
-a fine-looking, intelligent-appearing person, became very excited.
-He shows the Italian in, I think, a very marked degree; and, although
-excited, yet was cooler than what I had believed was the general
-characteristic of Italians. He has lived South for many years, and is
-thoroughly imbued with the idea that the South must rule; that they
-(Southerners) have been outraged in their rights by the election of
-Lincoln, and freely justified resorting to any means to prevent Lincoln
-from taking his seat; and, as he spoke, his eyes fairly glared and
-glistened, and his whole frame quivered, but he was fully conscious
-of all he was doing. He is a man well calculated for controlling and
-directing the ardent-minded: he is an enthusiast, and believes, that, to
-use his own words, 'murder of any kind is justifiable and right to
-save the rights of the Southern people.' In all his views he was ably
-seconded by Capt. Turner.
-
-"Capt. Turner is an American; but although very much of a gentleman, and
-possessing warm Southern feelings, he is not by any means so dangerous a
-man as Ferrandina, as his ability for exciting others is less powerful;
-but that he is a bold and proud man there is no doubt, as also that he
-is entirely under the control of Ferrandina. In fact, it could not be
-otherwise: for even I myself felt the influence of this man's strange
-power; and, wrong though I knew him to be, I felt strangely unable to
-keep my mind balanced against him.
-
-"Ferrandina said, 'Never, never, shall Lincoln be President. His life
-(Ferrandina's) was of no consequence: he was willing to give it up for
-Lincoln's; he would sell it for that Abolitionist's; and as Orsini had
-given his life for Italy, so was he (Ferrandina) ready to die for his
-country, and the rights of the South; and, said Ferrandina, turning to
-Capt. Turner, 'We shall all die together: we shall show the North that
-we fear them not. Every man, captain,' said he, 'will on that day prove
-himself a hero. The first shot fired, the main traitor (Lincoln) dead,
-and all Maryland will be with us, and the South shall be free; and the
-North must then be ours.'--'Mr. Hutchins,' said Ferrandina, 'if I alone
-must do it, I shall: Lincoln shall die in this city.'
-
-"Whilst we were thus talking, we (Mr. Luckett, Turner, Ferrandina, and
-myself) were alone in one corner of the barroom; and, while talking,
-two strangers had got pretty near us. Mr. Luckett called Ferrandina's
-attention to this, and intimated that they were listening; and we went
-up to the bar, drinked again at my expense, and again retired to another
-part of the room, at Ferrandina's request, to see if the strangers would
-again follow us: whether by accident or design, they again got near
-us; but of course we were not talking of any matter of consequence.
-Ferrandina said he suspected they were spies, and suggested that he had
-to attend a secret meeting, and was apprehensive that the two strangers
-might follow him; and, at Mr. Luckett's request, I remained with him
-(Luckett) to watch the movements of the strangers. I assured Ferrandina,
-that, if they would attempt to follow him, that we would whip them.
-
-"Ferrandina and Turner left to attend the meeting; and, anxious as I was
-to follow them myself, I was obliged to remain with Mr. Luckett to watch
-the strangers, which we did for about fifteen minutes, when Mr. Luckett
-said that he should go to a friend's to stay over night, and I left for
-my hotel, arriving there at about 9, p.m., and soon retired."
-
-It is in a secret communication between hireling spies and paid
-informers that these ferocious sentiments are attributed to the poor
-knight of the soap-pot. No disinterested person would believe the
-story upon such evidence; and it will appear hereafter, that even the
-detective felt that it was too weak to mention among his strong points
-at that decisive moment, when he revealed all he knew to the President
-and his friends. It is probably a mere fiction. If it had had any
-foundation in fact, we are inclined to believe that the sprightly and
-eloquent barber would have dangled at a rope's end long since. He would
-hardly have been left to shave and plot in peace, while the members of
-the Legislature, the police-marshal, and numerous private gentlemen,
-were locked up in Federal prisons. When Mr. Lincoln was actually slain,
-four years later, and the cupidity of the detectives was excited
-by enormous rewards, Ferrandina was totally unmolested. But even if
-Ferrandina really said all that is here imputed to him, he did no more
-than many others around him were doing at the same time. He drank and
-talked, and made swelling speeches; but he never took, nor seriously
-thought of taking, the first step toward the frightful tragedy he is
-said to have contemplated.
-
-The detectives are cautious not to include in the supposed plot to
-murder any person of eminence, power, or influence. Their game is all
-of the smaller sort, and, as they conceived, easily taken,--witless
-vagabonds like Hilliard and Luckett, and a barber, whose calling
-indicates his character and associations. They had no fault to find with
-the governor of the State: he was rather a lively trimmer, to be sure,
-and very anxious to turn up at last on the winning side; but it was
-manifestly impossible that one in such exalted station could meditate
-murder. Yet, if they had pushed their inquiries with an honest desire to
-get at the truth, they might have found much stronger evidence against
-the governor than that which they pretend to have found against the
-barber. In the governor's case the evidence is documentary, written,
-authentic,--over his own hand, clear and conclusive as pen and ink could
-make it. As early as the previous November, Gov. Hicks had written the
-following letter; and, notwithstanding its treasonable and murderous
-import, the writer became conspicuously loyal before spring, and lived
-to reap splendid rewards and high honors under the auspices of the
-Federal Government, as the most patriotic and devoted Union man in
-Maryland. The person to whom the letter was addressed was equally
-fortunate; and, instead of drawing out his comrades in the field to
-"kill Lincoln and his men," he was sent to Congress by power exerted
-from Washington at a time when the administration selected the
-representatives of Maryland, and performed all his duties right loyally
-and acceptably. Shall one be taken, and another left? Shall Hicks go to
-the Senate, and Webster to Congress, while the poor barber is held to
-the silly words which he is alleged to have sputtered out between drinks
-in a low groggery, under the blandishments and encouragements of an
-eager spy, itching for his reward?
-
-State of Maryland, Executive Chamber, Annapolis, Nov. 9, 1860.
-
-Hon. E. H. Webster.
-
-My dear Sir,--I have pleasure in acknowledging receipt of your favor
-introducing a very clever gentleman to my acquaintance (though a
-Demo'). I regret to say that we have, at this time, no arms on hand to
-distribute, but assure you at the earliest possible moment your company
-shall have arms: they have complied with all required on their part. We
-have some delay, in consequence of contracts with Georgia and Alabama,
-ahead of us: we expect at an early day an additional supply, and of
-first received your people shall be furnished. Will they be good men to
-send out to kill Lincoln and his men? if not, suppose the arms would be
-better sent South.
-
-How does late election sit with you? 'Tis too bad. Harford, nothing to
-reproach herself for.
-
-Your obedient servant,
-
-Thos. H. Hicks.
-
-With the Presidential party was Hon. Norman B. Judd: he was supposed
-to exercise unbounded influence over the new President; and with him,
-therefore, the detective opened communications. At various places along
-the route, Mr. Judd was given vague hints of the impending danger,
-accompanied by the usual assurances of the skill and activity of the
-patriots who were perilling their lives in a rebel city to save that of
-the Chief Magistrate. When he reached New York, he was met by the woman
-who had originally gone with the other spies to Baltimore. She had
-urgent messages from her chief,--messages that disturbed Mr. Judd
-exceedingly. The detective was anxious to meet Mr. Judd and the
-President; and a meeting was accordingly arranged to take place at
-Philadelphia.
-
-Mr. Lincoln reached Philadelphia on the afternoon of the 21st. The
-detective had arrived in the morning, and improved the interval to
-impress and enlist Mr. Felton. In the evening he got Mr. Judd and Mr.
-Felton into his room at the St. Louis Hotel, and told them all he
-had learned. He dwelt at large on the fierce temper of the Baltimore
-Secessionists; on the loose talk he had heard about "fire-balls or
-hand-grenades;" on a "privateer" said to be moored somewhere in the
-bay; on the organization called National Volunteers; on the fact, that,
-eaves-dropping at Barnum's Hotel, he had overheard Marshal Kane intimate
-that he would not supply a police-force on some undefined occasion, but
-what the occasion was he did not know. He made much of his miserable
-victim, Hilliard, whom he held up as a perfect type of the class from
-which danger was to be apprehended; but, concerning "Captain" Ferrandina
-and his threats, he said, according to his own account, not a single
-word. He had opened his case, his whole case, and stated it as strongly
-as he could. Mr. Judd was very much startled, and was sure that it would
-be extremely imprudent for Mr. Lincoln to pass through Baltimore in
-open daylight, according to the published programme. But he thought the
-detective ought to see the President himself; and, as it was wearing
-toward nine o'clock, there was no time to lose. It was agreed that the
-part taken by the detective and Mr. Felton should be kept secret from
-every one but the President. Mr. Sanford, President of the American
-Telegraph Company, had also been co-operating in the business; and the
-same stipulation was made with regard to him.
-
-Mr. Judd went to his own room at the Continental, and the detective
-followed. The crowd in the hotel was very dense, and it took some time
-to get a message to Mr. Lincoln. But it finally reached him, and he
-responded in person. Mr. Judd introduced the detective; and the latter
-told his story over again, with a single variation: this time he
-mentioned the name of Ferrandina along with Hilliard's, but gave no more
-prominence to one than to the other.
-
-Mr. Judd and the detective wanted Lincoln to leave for Washington that
-night. This he flatly refused to do. He had engagements with the people,
-he said,--to raise a flag over Independence Hall in the morning, and to
-exhibit himself at Harrisburg in the afternoon; and these engagements
-he would not break in any event. But he would raise the flag, go to
-Harrisburg, "get away quietly" in the evening, and permit himself to be
-carried to Washington in the way they thought best. Even this, however,
-he conceded with great reluctance. He condescended to cross-examine the
-detective on some parts of his narrative, but at no time did he seem in
-the least degree alarmed. He was earnestly requested not to communicate
-the change of plan to any member of his party, except Mr. Judd, nor
-permit even a suspicion of it to cross the mind of another. To this
-he replied, that he would be compelled to tell Mrs. Lincoln; "and he
-thought it likely that she would insist upon W. H. Lamon going with him;
-but, aside from that, no one should know."
-
-In the mean time, Mr. Seward had also discovered the conspiracy. He
-despatched his son to Philadelphia to warn the President elect of the
-terrible plot into whose meshes he was about to run. Mr. Lincoln turned
-him over to Judd, and Judd told him they already knew all about it.
-He went away with just enough information to enable his father to
-anticipate the exact moment of Mr. Lincoln's surreptitious arrival in
-Washington.
-
-Early on the morning of the 22d, Mr. Lincoln raised the flag over
-Independence Hall, and departed for Harrisburg. On the way, Mr. Judd
-"gave him a full and precise detail of the arrangements that had been
-made" the previous night. After the conference with the detective, Mr.
-Sanford, Col. Scott, Mr. Felton, railroad and telegraph officials, had
-been sent for, and came to Mr. Judd's room. They occupied nearly the
-whole of the night in perfecting the plan. It was finally understood
-that about six o'clock the next evening Mr. Lincoln should slip away
-from the Jones Hotel, at Harrisburg, in company with a single member
-of his party. A special car and engine would be provided for him on
-the track outside the depot. All other trains on the road would be
-"sidetracked" until this one had passed. Mr. Sanford would forward
-skilled "telegraph-climbers," and see that all the wires leading out
-of Harrisburg were cut at six o'clock, and kept down until it was known
-that Mr. Lincoln had reached Washington in safety. The detective would
-meet Mr. Lincoln at the West Philadelphia depot with a carriage, and
-conduct him by a circuitous route to the Philadelphia, Wilmington,
-and Baltimore depot. Berths for four would be pre-engaged in the
-sleeping-car attached to the regular midnight train for Baltimore. This
-train Mr. Felton would cause to be detained until the conductor should
-receive a package, containing important "government despatches,"
-addressed to "E. J. Allen, Willard's Hotel, Washington." This package
-was made up of old newspapers, carefully wrapped and sealed, and
-delivered to the detective to be used as soon as Mr. Lincoln was
-lodged in the car. Mr. Lincoln approved of the plan, and signified his
-readiness to acquiesce. Then Mr. Judd, forgetting the secrecy which the
-spy had so impressively enjoined, told Mr. Lincoln that the step he was
-about to take was one of such transcendent importance, that he thought
-"it should be communicated to the other gentlemen of the party." Mr.
-Lincoln said, "You can do as you like about that." Mr. Judd now changed
-his seat; and Mr. Nicolay, whose suspicions seem to have been aroused by
-this mysterious conference, sat down beside him, and said, "Judd,
-there is something up. What is it, if it is proper that I should
-know?"--"George," answered Judd, "there is no necessity for your knowing
-it. One man can keep a matter better than two."
-
-Arrived at Harrisburg, and the public ceremonies and speech-making over,
-Mr. Lincoln retired to a private parlor in the Jones House; and Mr. Judd
-summoned to meet him Judge Davis, Col. Lamon, Col. Sumner, Major Hunter,
-and Capt. Pope. The three latter were officers of the regular army,
-and had joined the party after it had left Springfield. Judd began the
-conference by stating the alleged fact of the Baltimore conspiracy,
-how it was detected, and how it was proposed to thwart it by a midnight
-expedition to Washington by way of Philadelphia. It was a great surprise
-to most of those assembled. Col. Sumner was the first to break silence.
-"That proceeding," said he, "will be a damned piece of cowardice." Mr.
-Judd considered this a "pointed hit," but replied that "that view of
-the case had already been presented to Mr. Lincoln." Then there was a
-general interchange of opinions, which Sumner interrupted by saying,
-"I'll get a squad of cavalry, sir, and _cut_ our way to Washington,
-sir!"--"Probably before that day comes," said Mr. Judd, "the
-inauguration day will have passed. It is important that Mr. Lincoln
-should be in Washington that day." Thus far Judge Davis had expressed no
-opinion, but "had put various questions to test the truthfulness of the
-story." He now turned to Mr. Lincoln, and said, "You personally heard
-the detective's story. You have heard this discussion. What is your
-judgment in the matter?"--"I have listened," answered Mr. Lincoln,
-"to this discussion with interest. I see no reason, no good reason, to
-change the programme; and I am for carrying it out as arranged by Judd."
-There was no longer any dissent as to the plan itself; but one question
-still remained to be disposed of. Who should accompany the President on
-his perilous ride? Mr. Judd again took the lead, declaring that he and
-Mr. Lincoln had previously determined that but one man ought to go, and
-that Col. Lamon had been selected as the proper person. To this Sumner
-violently demurred. "_I_ have undertaken," he exclaimed, "to see Mr.
-Lincoln to Washington."
-
-Mr. Lincoln was hastily dining when a close carriage was brought to the
-side-door of the hotel. He was called, hurried to his room, changed his
-coat and hat, and passed rapidly through the hall and out of the door.
-As he was stepping into the carriage, it became manifest that Sumner was
-determined to get in also. "Hurry with him," whispered Judd to Lamon,
-and at the same time, placing his hand on Sumner's shoulder, said aloud,
-"One moment, colonel!" Sumner turned around; and, in that moment, the
-carriage drove rapidly away. "A madder man," says Mr. Judd, "you never
-saw."
-
-Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon got on board the car without discovery or
-mishap. Besides themselves, there was no one in or about the car but Mr.
-Lewis, general superintendent of the Pennsylvania Central Railroad,
-and Mr. Franciscus, superintendent of the division over which they were
-about to pass. As Mr. Lincoln's dress on this occasion has been much
-discussed, it may be as well to state that he wore a soft, light felt
-hat, drawn down over his face when it seemed necessary or convenient,
-and a shawl thrown over his shoulders, and pulled up to assist in
-disguising his features when passing to and from the carriage. This was
-all there was of the "Scotch cap and cloak," so widely celebrated in the
-political literature of the day.
-
-At ten o'clock they reached Philadelphia, and were met by the detective,
-and one Mr. Kinney, an under-official of the Philadelphia, Wilmington,
-and Baltimore Railroad. Lewis and Franciscus bade Mr. Lincoln adieu. Mr.
-Lincoln, Col. Lamon, and the detective seated themselves in a carriage,
-which stood in waiting, and Mr. Kinney got upon the box with the driver.
-It was a full hour and a half before the Baltimore train was to start;
-and Mr. Kinney found it necessary "to consume the time by driving
-northward in search of some imaginary person."
-
-On the way through Philadelphia, Mr. Lincoln told his companions about
-the message he had received from Mr. Seward. This new discovery was
-infinitely more appalling than the other. Mr. Seward had been informed
-"that about _fifteen thousand men_ were organized to prevent his
-(Lincoln's) passage through Baltimore, and that arrangements were made
-by these parties _to blow up the railroad track, fire the train._" &c.
-In view of these unpleasant circumstances, Mr. Seward recommended a
-change of route. Here was a plot big enough to swallow up the little
-one, which we are to regard as the peculiar property of Mr. Felton's
-detective. Hilliard, Ferrandina, and Luckett disappear among the
-"fifteen thousand;" and their maudlin and impotent twaddle about the
-"abolition tyrant" looks very insignificant beside the bloody massacre,
-conflagration, and explosion now foreshadowed.
-
-As the moment for the departure of the Baltimore train drew near, the
-carriage paused in the dark shadows of the depot building. It was not
-considered prudent to approach the entrance. The spy passed in first,
-and was followed by Mr. Lincoln and Col. Lamon. An agent of the former
-directed them to the sleeping-car, which they entered by the rear door.
-Mr. Kinney ran forward, and delivered to the conductor the "important
-package" prepared for the purpose; and in three minutes the train was
-in motion. The tickets for the whole party had been procured beforehand.
-Their berths were ready, but had only been preserved from invasion
-by the statement, that they were retained for a sick man and his
-attendants. The business had been managed very adroitly by the female
-spy, who had accompanied her employer from Baltimore to Philadelphia to
-assist him in this the most delicate and important affair of his life.
-Mr. Lincoln got into his bed immediately; and the curtains were drawn
-together. When the conductor came around, the detective handed him the
-"sick man's" ticket; and the rest of the party lay down also. None of
-"our party appeared to be sleepy," says the detective; "but we all
-lay quiet, and nothing of importance transpired." "Mr. Lincoln is very
-homely," said the woman in her "report," "and so very tall, that he
-could not lay straight in his berth." During the night Mr. Lincoln
-indulged in a joke or two, in an undertone; but, with that exception,
-the "two sections" occupied by them were perfectly silent. The detective
-said he had men stationed at various places along the road to let
-him know "if all was right;" and he rose and went to the platform
-occasionally to observe their signals, but returned each time with a
-favorable report.
-
-At thirty minutes after three, the train reached Baltimore. One of the
-spy's assistants came on board, and informed him "in a whisper that all
-was right." The woman got out of the car. Mr. Lincoln lay close in his
-berth; and in a few moments the car was being slowly drawn through the
-quiet streets of the city toward the Washington depot. There again there
-was another pause, but no sound more alarming than the noise of shifting
-cars and engines. The passengers, tucked away on their narrow shelves,
-dozed on as peacefully as if Mr. Lincoln had never been born, until
-they were awakened by the loud strokes of a huge club against a
-night-watchman's box, which stood within the depot and close to the
-track. It was an Irishman, trying to arouse a sleepy ticket-agent,
-comfortably ensconced within. For twenty minutes the Irishman pounded
-the box with ever-increasing vigor, and, at each report of his blows,
-shouted at the top of his voice, "Captain! it's four o'clock! it's four
-o'clock!" The Irishman seemed to think that time had ceased to run at
-four o'clock, and, making no allowance for the period consumed by his
-futile exercises, repeated to the last his original statement that it
-was four o'clock. The passengers were intensely amused; and their jokes
-and laughter at the Irishman's expense were not lost upon the occupants
-of the "two sections" in the rear. "Mr. Lincoln," says the detective,
-appeared "to enjoy it very much, and made several witty remarks, showing
-that he was as full of fun as ever."
-
-In due time the train sped out of the suburbs of Baltimore; and the
-apprehensions of the President and his friends diminished with each
-welcome revolution of the wheels. At six o'clock the dome of the Capitol
-came in sight; and a moment later they rolled into the long, unsightly
-building, which forms the Washington depot. They passed out of the car
-unobserved, and pushed along with the living stream of men and women
-toward the outer door. One man alone in the great crowd seemed to watch
-Mr. Lincoln with special attention. Standing a little on one side, he
-"looked very sharp at him," and, as he passed, seized hold of his hand,
-and said in a loud tone of voice, "Abe, you can't play that on me." The
-detective and Col. Lamon were instantly alarmed. One of them raised his
-fist to strike the stranger; but Mr. Lincoln caught his arm, and said,
-"Don't strike him! don't strike him! It is Washburne. Don't you know
-him?" Mr. Seward had given to Mr. Washburne a hint of the information
-received through his son; and Mr. Washburne knew its value as well as
-another. For the present, the detective admonished him to keep quiet;
-and they passed on together. Taking a hack, they drove towards Willard's
-Hotel. Mr. Lincoln, Mr. Washburne, and the detectives got out in the
-street, and approached the ladies' entrance; while Col. Lamon drove on
-to the main entrance, and sent the proprietor to meet his distinguished
-guest at the side door. A few minutes later Mr. Seward arrived, and
-was introduced to the company by Mr. Washburne. He spoke in very strong
-terms of the great danger which Mr. Lincoln had so narrowly escaped, and
-most heartily applauded the wisdom of the "secret passage." "I informed
-Gov. Seward of the nature of the information I had," says the detective,
-"and that I had no information of any large organization in Baltimore;
-but the Governor reiterated that he had conclusive evidence of this."
-
-It soon became apparent that Mr. Lincoln wished to be left alone.
-He said he was "rather tired;" and, upon this intimation, the party
-separated. The detective went to the telegraph-office, and loaded the
-wires with despatches, containing the pleasing intelligence that "Plums"
-had brought "Nuts" through in safety. In the spy's cipher the President
-elect was reduced to the undignified title of "Nuts."
-
-That same day Mr. Lincoln's family and suite passed through Baltimore on
-the special train intended for him. They saw no sign of any disposition
-to burn them alive, or to blow them up with gunpowder, but went their
-way unmolested and very happy.
-
-Mr. Lincoln soon learned to regret the midnight ride. His friends
-reproached him, his enemies taunted him. He was convinced that he
-had committed a grave mistake in yielding to the solicitations of a
-professional spy and of friends too easily alarmed. He saw that he
-had fled from a danger purely imaginary, and felt the shame and
-mortification natural to a brave man under such circumstances. But
-he was not disposed to take all the responsibility to himself, and
-frequently upbraided the writer for having aided and assisted him to
-demean himself at the very moment in all his life when his behavior
-should have exhibited the utmost dignity and composure.
-
-The news of his surreptitious entry into Washington occasioned much and
-varied comment throughout the country; but important events followed it
-in such rapid succession, that its real significance was soon lost sight
-of. Enough that Mr. Lincoln was safely at the capital, and in a few days
-would in all probability assume the power confided to his hands.
-
-If before leaving Springfield he had become weary of the pressure upon
-him for office, he found no respite on his arrival at the focus of
-political intrigue and corruption. The intervening days before his
-inauguration were principally occupied in arranging the construction
-of his Cabinet. He was pretty well determined on this subject before he
-reached Washington; but in the minds of the public, beyond the generally
-accepted fact, that Mr. Seward was to be the Premier of the new
-administration, all was speculation and conjecture. From the
-circumstances of the case, he was compelled to give patient ear to
-the representations which were made him in favor of or against various
-persons or parties, and to hold his final decisions till the last
-moment, in order that he might decide with a full view of the
-requirements of public policy and party fealty.
-
-The close of this volume is not the place to enter into a detailed
-history of the circumstances which attended the inauguration of Mr.
-Lincoln's administration, nor of the events which signalized the close
-of Mr. Buchanan's. The history of the former cannot be understood
-without tracing its relation to that of the latter, and both demand more
-impartial consideration than either has yet received.
-
-The 4th of March, 1861, at last arrived; and at noon on that day the
-administration of James Buchanan was to come to a close, and that of
-Abraham Lincoln was to take its place. Mr. Lincoln's feelings, as the
-hour approached which was to invest him with greater responsibilities
-than had fallen upon any of his predecessors, may readily be imagined by
-the readers of the foregoing pages. If he saw in his elevation another
-step towards the fulfilment of that destiny which at times he believed
-awaited him, the thought served but to tinge with a peculiar, almost
-poetic sadness, the manner in which he addressed himself to the solemn
-duties of the hour.
-
-[Illustration: Norman B. Judd 579]
-
-The morning opened pleasantly. At an early hour he gave his inaugural
-address its final revision. Extensive preparations had been made to
-render the occasion as impressive as possible. By nine o'clock the
-procession had begun to form, and at eleven o'clock it commenced to move
-toward Willard's Hotel. Mr. Buchanan was still at the Capitol, signing
-bills till the official term of his office expired. At half-past twelve
-he called for Mr. Lincoln; and, after a delay of a few moments, both
-descended, and entered the open barouche in waiting for them. Shortly
-after, the procession took up its line of march for the Capitol.
-
-Apprehensions existed, that possibly some attempt might be made to
-assassinate Mr. Lincoln; and accordingly his carriage was carefully
-surrounded by the military and the Committee of Arrangements. By order
-of Gen. Scott, troops were placed at various points about the city,
-as well as on the tops of some of the houses along the route of the
-procession.
-
-The Senate remained in session till twelve o'clock, when Mr.
-Breckinridge, in a few well-chosen words, bade the senators farewell,
-and then conducted his successor, Mr. Hamlin, to the chair. At this
-moment, members and members elect of the House of Representatives, and
-the Diplomatic Corps, entered the chamber. At thirteen minutes to one,
-the Judges of the Supreme Court were announced; and on their entrance,
-headed by the venerable Chief-Justice Taney, all on the floor arose,
-while they moved slowly to the seats assigned them at the right of
-the Vice-President, bowing to that officer as they passed. At fifteen
-minutes past one, the Marshal-in-Chief entered the chamber ushering in
-the President and President elect. Mr. Lincoln looked pale, and wan, and
-anxious. In a few moments, the Marshal led the way to the platform at
-the eastern portico of the Capitol, where preparations had been made
-for the inauguration ceremony; and he was followed by the Judges of
-the Supreme Court, Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, the Committee
-of Arrangements, the President and President elect, Vice-President,
-Secretary of the Senate, Senators, Diplomatic Corps, Heads of
-Departments, and others in the chamber.
-
-On arriving at the platform, Mr. Lincoln was introduced to the assembly,
-by the Hon. E. D. Baker, United States Senator from Oregon. Stepping
-forward, in a manner deliberate and impressive, he read in a clear,
-penetrating voice, the following
-
-
-INAUGURAL ADDRESS.
-
-Fellow-Citizens of the United States:--
-
-In compliance with a custom as old as the Government itself, I appear
-before you to address you briefly, and to take, in your presence, the
-oath prescribed by the Constitution of the United States to be taken by
-the President before he enters on the execution of his office.
-
-I do not consider it necessary, at present, for me to discuss those
-matters of administration about which there is no special anxiety or
-excitement. Apprehension seems to exist among the people of the Southern
-States, that, by the accession of a Republican administration, their
-property and their peace and personal security are to be endangered.
-There has never been any reasonable cause for such apprehension. Indeed,
-the most ample evidence to the contrary has all the while existed, and
-been open to their inspection. It is found in nearly all the published
-speeches of him who now addresses you. I do but quote from one of
-those speeches, when I declare, that "I have no purpose, directly or
-indirectly, to interfere with the institution of slavery in the States
-where it exists." I believe I have no lawful right to do so; and I have
-no inclination to do so. Those who nominated and elected me did so with
-the full knowledge that I had made this and many similar declarations,
-and had never recanted them. And, more than this, they placed in the
-platform, for my acceptance, and as a law to themselves and to me, the
-clear and emphatic resolution which I now read:--
-
-"Resolved, That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the States,
-and especially the right of each State to order and control its own
-domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, is
-essential to that balance of power on which the perfection and endurance
-of our political fabric depend; and we denounce the lawless invasion by
-armed force of the soil of any State or Territory, no matter under what
-pretext, as among the gravest of crimes."
-
-I now reiterate these sentiments; and, in doing so, I only press upon
-the public attention the most conclusive evidence of which the case is
-susceptible, that the property, peace, and security of no section are to
-be in any wise endangered by the now incoming administration.
-
-I add, too, that all the protection which, consistently with the
-Constitution and the laws, can be given, will be cheerfully given to all
-the States, when lawfully demanded, for whatever cause, as cheerfully to
-one section as to another.
-
-There is much controversy about the delivering up of fugitives from
-service or labor. The clause I now read is as plainly written in the
-Constitution as any other of its provisions:--
-
-"No person held to service or labor in one State under the laws thereof,
-escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation
-therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be
-delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be
-due."
-
-It is scarcely questioned that this provision was intended by those
-who made it for the reclaiming of what we call fugitive slaves; and the
-intention of the lawgiver is the law.
-
-All members of Congress swear their support to the whole
-Constitution,--to this provision as well as any other. To the
-proposition, then, that slaves whose cases come within the terms of this
-clause "shall be delivered up," their oaths are unanimous. Now, if they
-would make the effort in good temper, could they not, with nearly equal
-unanimity, frame and pass a law by means of which to keep good that
-unanimous oath?
-
-There is some difference of opinion whether this clause should be
-enforced by national or by State authority; but surely that difference
-is not a very material one. If the slave is to be surrendered, it can be
-of but little consequence to him or to others by which authority it is
-done; and should any one in any case be content that this oath shall go
-unkept on a merely unsubstantial controversy as to how it shall be kept?
-
-Again, in any law upon this subject, ought not all the safeguards of
-liberty known in civilized and humane jurisprudence to be introduced, so
-that a free man be not, in any case, surrendered as a slave? And might
-it not be well at the same time to provide by law for the enforcement of
-that clause in the Constitution which guarantees that "the citizens of
-each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of
-citizens in the several States"?
-
-I take the official oath to-day with no mental reservations, and with no
-purpose to construe the Constitution or laws by any hypercritical rules;
-and, while I do not choose now to specify particular acts of Congress as
-proper to be enforced, I do suggest, that it will be much safer for all,
-both in official and private stations, to conform to and abide by all
-those acts which stand unrepealed, than to violate any of them, trusting
-to find impunity in having them held to be unconstitutional.
-
-It is seventy-two years since the first inauguration of a President
-under our national Constitution. During that period, fifteen different
-and very distinguished citizens have in succession administered the
-executive branch of the government. They have conducted it through many
-perils, and generally with great success. Yet, with all this scope for
-precedent, I now enter upon the same task, for the brief constitutional
-term of four years, under great and peculiar difficulties.
-
-A disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore only menaced, is now
-formidably attempted. I hold, that, in the contemplation of universal
-law and of the Constitution, the Union of these States is perpetual.
-Perpetuity is implied, if not expressed, in the fundamental law of all
-national governments. It is safe to assert that no government proper
-ever had a provision in its organic law for its own termination.
-Continue to execute all the express provisions of our national
-Constitution, and the Union will endure forever; it being impossible
-to destroy it, except by some action not provided for in the instrument
-itself.
-
-Again, if the United States be not a government proper, but an
-association of States in the nature of a contract merely, can it, as a
-contract, be peaceably unmade by less than all the parties who made it?
-One party to a contract may violate it,--break it, so to speak; but does
-it not require all to lawfully rescind it? Descending from these general
-principles, we find the proposition that in legal contemplation the
-Union is perpetual confirmed by the history of the Union itself.
-
-The Union is much older than the Constitution. It was formed, in fact,
-by the Articles of Association in 1774. It was matured and continued in
-the Declaration of Independence in 1776. It was further matured, and
-the faith of all the then thirteen States expressly plighted and engaged
-that it should be perpetual, by the Articles of Confederation, in 1778;
-and, finally, in 1787, one of the declared objects for ordaining and
-establishing the Constitution was to form a more perfect Union. But, if
-the destruction of the Union by one or by a part only of the States
-be lawfully possible, the Union is less than before, the Constitution
-having lost the vital element of perpetuity.
-
-It follows from these views that no State, upon its own mere motion,
-can lawfully get out of the Union; that resolves and ordinances to that
-effect are legally void; and that acts of violence within any State or
-States against the authority of the United States, are insurrectionary
-or revolutionary according to circumstances.
-
-I therefore consider, that, in view of the Constitution and the laws,
-the Union is unbroken; and, to the extent of my ability, I shall take
-care, as the Constitution itself expressly enjoins upon me, that the
-laws of the Union shall be faithfully executed in all the States.
-Doing this, which I deem to be only a simple duty on my part, I shall
-perfectly perform it, so far as is practicable, unless my rightful
-masters, the American people, shall withhold the requisite power, or in
-some authoritative manner direct the contrary.
-
-I trust this will not be regarded as a menace, but only as the declared
-purpose of the Union that it will constitutionally defend and maintain
-itself.
-
-In doing this, there need be no bloodshed or violence; and there shall
-be none unless it is forced upon the national authority.
-
-The power confided to me _will be used to hold, occupy, and possess the
-property and places belonging to the government_, and collect the duties
-and imposts; but, beyond what may be necessary for these objects, there
-will be no invasion, no using of force against or among the people
-anywhere.
-
-Where hostility to the United States shall be so great and so universal
-as to prevent competent resident citizens from holding the Federal
-offices, there will be no attempt to force obnoxious strangers among the
-people for that object. While the strict legal right may exist of the
-Government to enforce the exercise of these offices, the attempt to do
-so would be so irritating, and so nearly impracticable withal, that I
-deem it better to forego for the time the uses of such offices.
-
-The mails, unless repelled, will continue to be furnished in all parts
-of the Union.
-
-So far as possible, the people everywhere shall have that sense of
-perfect security which is most favorable to calm thought and reflection.
-
-The course here indicated will be followed, unless current events and
-experience shall show a modification or change to be proper; and in
-every case and exigency my best discretion will be exercised according
-to the circumstances actually existing, and with a view and hope of
-a peaceful solution of the national troubles, and the restoration of
-fraternal sympathies and affections.
-
-That there are persons, in one section or another, who seek to destroy
-the Union at all events, and are glad of any pretext to do it, I will
-neither affirm nor deny. But, if there be such, I need address no word
-to them.
-
-To those, however, who really love the Union, may I not speak? Before
-entering upon so grave a matter as the destruction of our national
-fabric, with all its benefits, its memories, and its hopes, would it not
-be well to ascertain why we do it? Will you hazard so desperate a step,
-while any portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence? Will
-you, while the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real
-ones you fly from? Will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
-All profess to be content in the Union if all constitutional rights can
-be maintained. Is it true, then, that any right, plainly written in the
-Constitution, has been denied? I think not. Happily the human mind is so
-constituted, that no party can reach to the audacity of doing this.
-
-Think, if you can, of a single instance in which a plainly written
-provision of the Constitution has ever been denied. If, by the mere
-force of numbers, a majority should deprive a minority of any clearly
-written constitutional right, it might, in a moral point of view,
-justify revolution: it certainly would, if such right were a vital one.
-But such is not our case.
-
-All the vital rights of minorities and of individuals are so plainly
-assured to them by affirmations and negations, guaranties and
-prohibitions, in the Constitution, that controversies never arise
-concerning them. But no organic law can ever be framed with a provision
-specifically applicable to every question which may occur in practical
-administration. No foresight can anticipate, nor any document of
-reasonable length contain, express provisions for all possible
-questions. Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by National or by
-State authority? The Constitution does not expressly say. Must Congress
-protect slavery in the Territories? The Constitution does not expressly
-say. From questions of this class spring all our constitutional
-controversies, and we divide upon them into majorities and minorities.
-
-If the minority will not acquiesce, the majority must, or the government
-must cease. There is no alternative for continuing the government but
-acquiescence on the one side or the other. If a minority, in such a
-case, will secede rather than acquiesce, they make a precedent which in
-turn will ruin and divide them; for a minority of their own will secede
-from them, whenever a majority refuses to be controlled by such a
-minority. For instance, why not any portion of a new confederacy, a year
-or two hence, arbitrarily secede again, precisely as portions of the
-present Union now claim to secede from it? All who cherish disunion
-sentiments are now being educated to the exact temper of doing this. Is
-there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose
-a new Union as to produce harmony only, and prevent renewed secession?
-Plainly, the central idea of secession is the essence of anarchy.
-
-A majority held in restraint by constitutional check and limitation, and
-always changing easily with deliberate changes of popular opinions and
-sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people. Whoever rejects
-it does, of necessity, fly to anarchy or to despotism. Unanimity is
-impossible: the rule of a minority, as a permanent arrangement, is
-wholly inadmissible; so that, rejecting the majority principle, anarchy
-or despotism in some form is all that is left.
-
-I do not forget the position assumed by some, that constitutional
-questions are to be decided by the Supreme Court, nor do I deny that
-such decisions must be binding in any case upon the parties to a suit,
-as to the object of that suit; while they are also entitled to very high
-respect and consideration in all parallel cases by all other departments
-of the government; and, while it is obviously possible that such
-decision may be erroneous in any given case, still, the evil effect
-following it, being limited to that particular case, with the chance
-that it may be overruled and never become a precedent for other cases,
-can better be borne than could the evils of a different practice.
-
-At the same time, the candid citizen must confess, that, if the policy
-of the government upon the vital questions affecting the whole people
-is to be irrevocably fixed by the decisions of the Supreme Court the
-instant they are made, as in ordinary litigation between parties in
-personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own masters,
-having to that extent practically resigned their government into the
-hands of that eminent tribunal.
-
-Nor is there in this view any assault upon the court or the judges.
-It is a duty from which they may not shrink, to decide cases properly
-brought before them; and it is no fault of theirs if others seek to
-turn their decisions to political purposes. One section of our country
-believes slavery is right and ought to be extended, while the other
-believes it is wrong and ought not to be extended; and this is the only
-substantial dispute: and the fugitive-slave clause of the Constitution,
-and the law for the suppression of the foreign slave-trade, are each as
-well enforced, perhaps, as any law can ever be in a community where the
-moral sense of the people imperfectly supports the law itself. The great
-body of the people abide by the dry, legal obligation in both cases, and
-a few break over in each. This, I think, cannot be perfectly cured; and
-it would be worse in both cases after the separation of the sections
-than before. The foreign slave-trade, now imperfectly suppressed,
-would be ultimately revived, without restriction, in one section;
-while fugitive slaves, now only partially surrendered, would not be
-surrendered at all by the other.
-
-Physically speaking, we cannot separate: we cannot remove our respective
-sections from each other, nor build an impassable wall between them. A
-husband and wife may be divorced, and go out of the presence and beyond
-the reach of each other; but the different parts of our country cannot
-do this. They cannot but remain face to face; and intercourse, either
-amicable or hostile, must continue between them. Is it possible, then,
-to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after
-separation than before? Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can
-make laws? Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than
-laws can among friends? Suppose you go to war, you cannot fight always;
-and when, after much loss on both sides, and no gain on either, you
-cease fighting, the identical questions as to terms of intercourse are
-again upon you.
-
-This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit
-it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can
-exercise their constitutional right of amending, or their revolutionary
-right to dismember or overthrow it. I cannot be ignorant of the fact,
-that many worthy and patriotic citizens are desirous of having the
-national Constitution amended. While I make no recommendation of
-amendment, I fully recognize the full authority of the people over the
-whole subject, to be exercised in either of the modes prescribed in the
-instrument itself; and I should, under existing circumstances, favor
-rather than oppose a fair opportunity being afforded the people to act
-upon it.
-
-I will venture to add, that to me the convention mode seems preferable,
-in that it allows amendments to originate with the people themselves,
-instead of only permitting them to take or reject propositions
-originated by others not especially chosen for the purpose, and which
-might not be precisely such as they would wish either to accept or
-refuse. I understand that a proposed amendment to the Constitution
-(which amendment, however, I have not seen) has passed Congress, to
-the effect that the Federal Government shall never interfere with the
-domestic institutions of States, including that of persons held to
-service. To avoid misconstruction of what I have said, I depart from my
-purpose not to speak of particular amendments so far as to say, that,
-holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no
-objection to its being made express and irrevocable.
-
-The chief magistrate derives all his authority from the people, and they
-have conferred none upon him to fix the terms for the separation of the
-States. The people themselves, also, can do this if they choose; but the
-Executive, as such, has nothing to do with it. His duty is to administer
-the present government as it came to his hands, and to transmit it
-unimpaired by him to his successor. Why should there not be a patient
-confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? Is there any better
-or equal hope in the world? In our present differences, is either party
-without faith of being in the right? If the Almighty Ruler of nations,
-with his eternal truth and justice, be on your side of the North, or on
-yours of the South, that truth and that justice will surely prevail by
-the judgment of this great tribunal,--the American people. By the frame
-of the government under which we live, this same people have wisely
-given their public servants but little power for mischief, and have with
-equal wisdom provided for the return of that little to their own hands
-at very short intervals. While the people retain their virtue and
-vigilance, no administration, by any extreme wickedness or folly, can
-very seriously injure the Government in the short space of four years.
-
-My countrymen, one and all, think calmly and well upon this whole
-subject. Nothing valuable can be lost by taking time.
-
-If there be an object to hurry any of you, in hot haste, to a step which
-you would never take deliberately, that object will be frustrated by
-taking time; but no good object can be frustrated by it.
-
-Such of you as are now dissatisfied still have the old Constitution
-unimpaired, and, on the sensitive point, the laws of your own framing
-under it; while the new administration will have no immediate power, if
-it would, to change either.
-
-If it were admitted that you who are dissatisfied hold the right side
-in the dispute, there is still no single reason for precipitate action.
-Intelligence, patriotism, Christianity, and a firm reliance on Him who
-has never yet forsaken this favored land, are still competent to adjust,
-in the best way, all our present difficulties.
-
-In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine, is
-the momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you.
-
-You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You
-can have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government; while I
-shall have the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend" it.
-
-I am loah to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be
-enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds
-of affection.
-
-The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and
-patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad
-land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as
-surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.
-
-This address, so characteristic of its author, and so full of the
-best qualities of Mr. Lincoln's nature, was well received by the
-large audience which heard it. Having finished, Mr. Lincoln turned to
-Chief-Justice Taney, who, with much apparent agitation and emotion,
-administered to him the following oath:--
-
-"I, Abraham Lincoln, do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute
-the office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of
-my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United
-States."
-
-The ceremony concluded, Mr. Lincoln, as President of the United States,
-in charge of the Committee of Arrangements, was accompanied by Mr.
-Buchanan back to the Senate- Chamber, and from there to the Executive
-Mansion. Here Mr. Buchanan took leave of him, invoking upon his
-administration a peaceful and happy result; and here for the present we
-leave him. In another volume we shall endeavor to trace his career as
-the nation's Chief Magistrate during the ensuing four years.
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography1 588]
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography2 590]
-
-[Illustration: Facsimile of Autobiography3 592]
-
-THE circumstances under which the original of the accompanying
-_facsimile_ was written are explained in the following letter:--
-
-National Hotel, Washington, D.C., Feb. 19, 1872. Colonel Ward H. Lamon.
-
-Dear Sir,--In compliance with your request, I place in your hands a copy
-of a manuscript in my possession written by Abraham Lincoln, giving
-a brief account of his early history, and the commencement of that
-political career which terminated in his election to the Presidency.
-
-It may not be inappropriate to say, that some time preceding the writing
-of the enclosed, finding, in Pennsylvania and elsewhere, a laudable
-curiosity in the public mind to know more about the early history of
-Mr. Lincoln, and looking, too, to the possibilities of his being
-an available candidate for the Presidency in 1860, I had on several
-occasions requested of him this information, and that it was not without
-some hesitation he placed in my hands even this very modest account of
-himself, which he did in the month of December, 1859.
-
-To this were added, by myself, other facts bearing upon his legislative
-and political history, and the whole forwarded to a friend residing
-in my native county (Chester, Pa.),--the Hon. Joseph J. Lewis, former
-Commissioner of Internal Revenue,--who made them the basis of an
-ably-written and somewhat elaborate memoir of the late President, which
-appeared in the Pennsylvania and other papers of the country in January,
-1860, and which contributed to prepare the way for the subsequent
-nomination at Chicago the following June.
-
-Believing this brief and unpretending narrative, written by himself in
-his own peculiar vein,--and injustice to him I should add, without
-the remotest expectation of its ever appearing in public,--with the
-attending circumstances, may be of interest to the numerous admirers of
-that historic and truly great man, I place it at your disposal.
-
-I am truly yours,
-
-Jesse W. Fell.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Life Of Abraham Lincoln, by Ward H. Lamon
-
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