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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65810 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65810)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Christmas for Tad, by Helen Topping Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Christmas for Tad
- A Story of Mary and Abraham Lincoln
-
-Author: Helen Topping Miller
-
-Release Date: July 9, 2021 [eBook #65810]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital
- Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS FOR TAD ***
-
-
-
-
- CHRISTMAS FOR TAD
- A Story of Mary and Abraham Lincoln
-
-
- BY
- HELEN TOPPING MILLER
-
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK · LONDON · TORONTO
- 1956
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., INC.
- 55 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK 3
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. Ltd.
- 6 & 7 CLIFFORD STREET, LONDON W 1
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
- 20 CRANFIELD ROAD, TORONTO 16
-
- CHRISTMAS FOR TAD
-
- COPYRIGHT · 1956
- BY HELEN TOPPING MILLER
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE THIS BOOK, OR ANY
- PORTION THEREOF, IN ANY FORM
-
- PUBLISHED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA BY
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., TORONTO
-
- FIRST EDITION
-
- LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 56-10108
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- 1
-
-
-The package was very tightly sealed.
-
-There was a heavy cord around it fastened with thick blobs of wax and
-Tad Lincoln, who had been christened Thomas, stood fidgeting while his
-father worked at it patiently, with the old horn-handled knife that
-opened and shut with a sharp click.
-
-Outside was the gloom of late December. That December of 1863, when the
-fortunes of the Federal armies had taken a little swing upward, but when
-war still lay like a poisonous, tragic, and heartbreaking shadow over a
-whole country. But to Tad Lincoln December meant Christmas, and packages
-meant surprises, important to a ten-year-old boy.
-
-Tad stood first on one foot, then the other, impatiently, because Papa
-was so slow in opening this package. A round-faced boy, with his
-mother’s brown eyes and hair, he was a sturdy figure in the miniature
-uniform of a Union colonel that his father had had made for him. The
-coat fitted him jauntily, all the brass buttons fastened up in
-regulation fashion; there were epaulets and braid and long trousers
-lying properly over his toes, so that the copper toes of his boots
-showed. He had a belt and a sword, but he was not wearing them now.
-Swords were for engagements, reviews, and parades, the officers of
-Company K had instructed him. Among friends indoors an officer took off
-his belt and hung it in a safe place.
-
-His father’s fingers were mighty long and bony, Tad was thinking, and
-awkward, too. One thumbnail was thicker and darker than the other nails
-and Tad touched it gently with his forefinger.
-
-“What makes your thumb like that, Papa?” he asked.
-
-The long yellowed hand put down the knife and the deep-set, steel-gray
-eyes of Abraham Lincoln studied the thumb intently as though he had
-never seen it before.
-
-“Once there was an ax, Tad,” he drawled, his heavy eyebrows flicking up
-and down, his long mouth quirked up at one corner. “It didn’t want to go
-where I aimed it, so I said, says I, now who is boss here, Mister Ax,
-you or Abe Lincoln? You chop where I aim for you to chop, Mister Ax. So
-I made it hit where I wanted it to hit but it jumped back and took a
-whack at me just to show me that it could be the boss if it wanted to.”
-
-“It might have cut your hand off,” worried Tad, still rubbing the dark
-nail.
-
-“It might—but it didn’t. It was a well-meaning ax. Just independent,
-like a lot of people.”
-
-“People take whacks at you, don’t they? I hear about it,” Tad said.
-
-“Yes, some of ’em do.” Lincoln picked up the knife again, poked at the
-stubborn seals. “But mostly afterwards they cooperate.”
-
-“Those people in New York didn’t,” insisted Tad. “Mother was scared to
-death when those draft riots were on and people yelled at her in that
-store. The police had to stand all around us with guns and you know
-something? Bob was scared but I wasn’t. Ole Bob was plumb scared green.”
-
-“That was a bad time, son.” A seal came loose at last and fell in
-scarlet fragments to the rug. He attacked a second one, gripping the
-knife, the skin stretched tight over his fleshless knuckles. “It was bad
-because people weren’t mad at you. They were mad at me, not at Bob or
-your mother. They didn’t want to be drafted to fight in this war and I
-said they had to be drafted.”
-
-“Well, golly, you’ve got to have soldiers! General Grant and General
-Rosecrans and everybody are yelling for more troops. You have to get
-’em, you can’t make ’em out of air. Hurry and open it, Papa. Don’t you
-want to see what’s in it?”
-
-“I think I know what’s in it. Yes, Tad,” he went on musingly, as though
-he talked to himself. “I’m supposed to make soldiers out of air; anyway
-the New York newspapers seemed to think so. Make ’em out of air and feed
-’em on air and give ’em air to shoot with.”
-
-“And then if General Lee licks us you’re to blame!” cried Tad. “Oh, I
-know, John Hay and Mr. Nicolay hide the papers but I find ’em. Papa, I
-read where one New York paper called you a gorilla.”
-
-“What do you think, Tad? Don’t I look like one a little?” Lincoln
-dropped the knife, shambled bent across the room, his long arms
-dangling, his hands almost touching the floor. As the boy drew back
-aghast he bared his long teeth and snarled and Tad began to cry
-suddenly.
-
-“No—no! Don’t do it!”
-
-Lincoln laughed loudly, lifted him, setting the lad on his knee, holding
-him close. “For a man wearing the Union uniform, you scare easy,
-Colonel,” he teased. “Remember this, Tad. Names never hurt anybody. And
-the gorilla is one beast that’s never been tamed and only a heavy chain
-can master him.”
-
-“Open the box,” gulped Tad, scrubbing his eyes with the cuff of his blue
-Union coat. “If anybody sent me a Christmas present, I’d want to know
-what it was.”
-
-Lincoln dug the last seal away, cut the cord, and tore off the heavy
-paper. “Now, John Hay would say I’m a fool to open this,” he remarked.
-“He’ll say there could be something in it to blind or cripple me.”
-
-“Maybe you’d better not, Papa,” Tad cried anxiously. “Let me call
-somebody.”
-
-“No, Tad. I trust the man who brought it and I know what’s in it. It
-isn’t a Christmas present exactly. I earned it in a kind of a way.
-Look!” He opened the heavy box and the smaller one inside that was
-covered with gold-colored plush.
-
-“A watch!” exclaimed the boy.
-
-“A solid gold watch.” Lincoln held it out carefully on his big palm.
-“From Mr. James Hoes, Esquire, of Chicago. I won it, Tad. Mr. Hoes
-offered the watch as a prize for the one making the biggest contribution
-of funds to their Sanitary Commission fair. I sent them a copy of the
-Emancipation Proclamation and they auctioned it off for three thousand
-dollars, so I won the watch.”
-
-“You’ve already got a watch, Papa, but I haven’t got one,” said Tad
-eagerly.
-
-Lincoln drew his old watch from his pocket, loosed it from the chain and
-seals. “I don’t have a solid gold watch. This old turnip is sort of
-worn. I guess I timed too many speeches and juries with it. But you’re
-not big enough for a watch, Tad. Not till you can wear a vest and have
-enough stomach to hold up a chain.”
-
-“Willie had a vest and he wasn’t so very much bigger than me,” argued
-Tad.
-
-A shadow of pain ran over his father’s gaunt face and the tears, always
-quick when any emotion stirred him, were bright in his sunken eyes. The
-agony of Willie’s untimely death was still raw and aching in his heart.
-
-“Willie was twelve years old, Tad. When you are twelve you can have a
-vest.”
-
-“And a watch?”
-
-“And a watch. Not this one.” Lincoln clicked the fastening of the bright
-new timepiece and dropped it into his pocket, along with the key that
-wound it. “I guess Bob will have to have this old one. Bob’s a man now
-and a man needs a watch.”
-
-“He thinks he’s a man just because he can shave,” Tad scoffed. He
-studied his father’s face for a moment. “Why did you grow a beard, Papa?
-You didn’t have a beard when I was a little boy.”
-
-“You’re still a little boy, fellow.” Lincoln gave him a poke in ribs.
-“Maybe I raised these whiskers because a little girl in New York asked
-me to. Maybe I just did it to keep my chin warm.”
-
-“All Bob has is little patches in front of his ears. They look silly.”
-
-Lincoln lifted his long body erect and walked to the window.
-
-“You’d better be respectful to your big brother, Tad,” he said dryly.
-“Some of the newspapers that don’t like me are printing that Bob Lincoln
-has made a million dollars out of this war. For a young fellow still in
-Harvard only twenty years old, I’d say he had uncanny perspicacity.”
-
-Tad frowned thoughtfully. “It’s a lie, ain’t it, Papa?” In his agitation
-the boy’s tricky palate betrayed him as it often did. “It’s big, dirty
-_rie_!”
-
-Lincoln’s bony shoulders twitched upward, sagged with resignation. “Son,
-if all the lies that have been printed about the Lincolns were piled up
-in a heap, they’d reach near to the top of that monument out yonder.”
-
-Tad came to stand beside him and looked out of the half-finished shaft
-that would some day honor Washington. Now it was only a beginning, lost
-in a spidery web of scaffolding.
-
-“Be plenty tall,” he observed. “If Bob had all that money, would it
-reach to the top, Papa? He could buy everything he wanted, couldn’t he?
-Horses and carriages and gold watches and everything. Can’t you put
-people in jail for telling such lies? You’re the president.”
-
-Lincoln stood still, looking down on the trampled mall where a herd of
-cattle pastured, beef animals gathered to feed the Army of the Potomac.
-His eyes took on the faraway inscrutable look that so often baffled his
-intimates and infuriated his enemies; the look that lost itself on the
-horizon of a great land torn by hate and drenched in an anguish of blood
-and fire. Gettysburg, Vicksburg, Chickamauga, had deepened that hurt in
-his eyes and cut new lines about his mouth and brooding brows. Three
-years of war, and in the nation there seethed a dozen angry factions.
-Copperheads, only by a miracle defeated in Ohio; furious mobs resisting
-conscription in the cities; even in the Congress, oppositionists,
-critics, outright enemies.
-
-Only a few weeks since, he had stood facing that raw November wind on
-the Gettysburg hill, speaking that little piece that now he was
-embarrassed to remember, the speech that the papers had dismissed as
-insignificant, dedicating the ground where slept more than sixty
-thousand Union and Confederate dead. The dull ache in Abraham Lincoln’s
-heart turned bitter as he thought of his own son, who should be in
-uniform and who was growing restless and unhappy at being the one young
-man of army age who was not permitted to fight for his country. Yet he
-dared not let Robert enlist. The President’s son would be a prime
-hostage should he be captured, and used no doubt to wring concessions
-from his father.
-
-“Let’s go show Mama the watch.” He shook off his dismal musings and
-scrubbed Tad’s brown head with the flat of his palm, straightening the
-collar of the uniform that was Tad’s pride and glory.
-
-Tad looked up confidingly. “You know what Mama is worrying about, Papa?
-She owes an awful lot of money in New York. She’s afraid you’ll find it
-out. She said on the train when we came home that I mustn’t tell you all
-the things she bought because you had troubles enough to kill three
-men.”
-
-Lincoln hunched a shoulder, stretching his lips into a dry smile. “See
-how my back is breaking down, Tad? That’s General Rosecrans. And this
-side is General McClellan and General Meade made it worse when he let
-Lee get away across the river.”
-
-“You cried then, I remember. Men don’t cry.”
-
-Strong men had wept enough tears to put the Potomac in flood these last
-years, Lincoln was thinking. “When will it end?” he said aloud, with a
-groan. John Hay, his faithful secretary, looked up quickly from his desk
-in the outer room.
-
-“When we’ve killed all the Rebs, I reckon,” said Tad complacently. “But
-if we killed ’em all I’d have a lot of uncles killed, wouldn’t I? I had
-one killed at Chickamauga already, my uncle Helm.—He was a general,” he
-told John Hay.
-
-“It’s happened in a good many families, Tad,” Hay said. “That’s because
-we’re all Americans.”
-
-“Well, my mother was Southern to begin with,” declared Tad, “so I’m kind
-of half Southern but I got over it.”
-
-“Southerners are good folks, son,” Lincoln admonished him. “Fine people
-most of them. Just mistaken, that’s all—just mistaken.”
-
-“They fight good,” was Tad’s comment, as they went down the hall.
-
-Abraham Lincoln always stepped carefully and quietly in this big house.
-He had never been at home in the White House. He always had a secret,
-haunting feeling of guilt as though he were a guest and a strange,
-uneasy, even an unworthy, guest. Mary, his wife, had no such
-inhibitions. She loved to sweep down the wide stairway, her widely
-flounced skirts moving elegantly over her hoops, her tight small bosom,
-her round white arms and her round white chin held proudly and
-complacently. All this was her due, her manner said, and her husband’s
-humility and trick of effacing himself occasionally irked and angered
-her.
-
-She was writing a letter at a desk when they entered her sitting room.
-The intent creases in her brow softened as the boy ran to her.
-
-“Look Mama—look at Papa’s new solid gold watch! He got it for the
-’Mancipation Proclamation.”
-
-Lincoln pulled out the watch, grinning boyishly. Mary’s eyes brightened
-as she fingered the handsomely engraved case.
-
-“Why, it must be terribly expensive,” she approved. “What does Tad mean
-about the Proclamation?”
-
-“I sent a copy to Chicago. They auctioned it off.”
-
-“For three thousand dollars,” added Tad.
-
-“My Heaven, you mean they got three thousand dollars just for that piece
-of paper?” exclaimed Mary.
-
-“It was a pretty important paper, Mary, to a million or so poor black
-people anyway. A copy would be a historic memento a hundred years from
-now. Understand—” he fended off the small glint of avidity that so often
-troubled him in Mary Lincoln’s pale gray eyes “—this was a charity
-thing. For their fair out there in Chicago.”
-
-“You only made one copy?” She turned the watch in her small, plumb
-fingers.
-
-He hedged uneasily sensing the trend of her thinking. “I made one or two
-for old friends. No—” he raised a hand “—I’m not making any more, so put
-that idea out of your mind.”
-
-She flared. “Why do you always accuse me of things I’m not even
-thinking?” she cried angrily.
-
-“Maybe because I know you better than you know yourself, my dear,” he
-said gently. “You were thinking that this is a nice watch but that three
-thousand dollars is three thousand dollars.”
-
-“Well, it is a nice watch but it never cost that much money,” she
-admitted grudgingly.
-
-“Mary, this watch was a prize. It was competition. Anybody else could
-have won it, anybody who contributed more to their fair than I did.” He
-took the watch from her hands and slid it back to his pocket. “Here—” he
-handed her the old one—“put this away. You can give it to Bob when he
-comes home. Run along now, Tad, I’ve got work to do.”
-
-Tad slipped out of the room a bit disconcerted. Mama ought not to have
-got mad. She was trying not to get mad so often, his father assured him.
-They had to help her, be careful not to provoke her. Tad skittered down
-the long stairs almost colliding with a workman who carried a
-stepladder, with a long wreath of greenery hung over his shoulder.
-
-“What’s that for?” the boy demanded.
-
-“For the Christmas receptions and things. Decorations. Don’t know how
-I’ll get it hung. Can’t drive no nails in this wall. Hard as rock. Nails
-just bends double.”
-
-“You could glue it,” suggested Tad helpfully.
-
-“Yah!” scorned the workman. “Get along out of my way, boy.”
-
-“My father is the President!” stated Tad, sternly, drawing himself up in
-his uniform.
-
-“He is that, but you ain’t—nor no colonel either.”
-
-“I am so. I’m an honorary colonel.”
-
-“Call it ornery and I’ll agree. Now quit bothering me. I’ve got to
-figure where to put up two Christmas trees.”
-
-“Two?” Tad’s eyes widened.
-
-“One down here and one up yonder—private, for you I reckon. So everybody
-wants to get a favor out of your Pa can send you a present.”
-
-“All I want,” sighed Tad, backing off to watch the man ascend the
-ladder, “is my nanny goat back.”
-
-“Your nanny goat has likely been made into stew by this time. You won’t
-be driving a goat team through this house any more, busting up things
-and ruinin’ the floors.”
-
-“I bet I get her back,” bragged Tad. “All Company K is helping me look
-for her.”
-
-“Soldiers have got more important things to do than hunt goats,” stated
-the man from his perch. “They got to find out who put that bullet
-through your old man’s hat.”
-
-Tad was galvanized with excitement. “Hey! He never told me.” He tore
-back up the stairs.
-
-Mr. Stanton, the Secretary of War, was just coming out of his father’s
-office. Tad backed off and flattened himself against the wall. Mr.
-Stanton was running the war; he was tall and grim with a long gray beard
-but no mustache to soften a stern mouth, and his eyes could look very
-hard and coldly at a boy through his round spectacles. Behind Stanton
-marched Senator Sumner and Tad knew him too. Senator Sumner was always
-mad about something and now, as he strode past the boy, Tad heard him
-mutter angrily, “Amnesty! Amnesty! I’d give North Carolina amnesty at
-the end of a rope!”
-
-Tad wriggled behind the visitor and slipped in before anyone closed the
-door. He marched straight to the desk where John Hay was putting papers
-in envelopes and licking the flaps.
-
-“Who shot a bullet through my father’s hat?” he demanded.
-
-Hay pressed down the flap with a fist. “Who told you that, Colonel
-Thomas Lincoln?” he inquired with careful unconcern.
-
-“You never told me,” stormed Tad, “nor my father—nor Mama.”
-
-“Your mother doesn’t know about it. We hope she’ll never know. Also we
-hope your father won’t ride alone out there at the Soldier’s Home any
-more.”
-
-“Cavalry ride with him. With drawn sabers.”
-
-“Now they do. But he rode alone out there and somebody shot a bullet
-through the top of his high silk hat. He doesn’t want his family or
-anybody worried about it, so I wouldn’t mention it if I were you,
-Colonel.”
-
-“I won’t.” Tad was flattered by being addressed as colonel, and he liked
-his father’s grave secretary. He obeyed John Hay more readily than any
-one else. “But I want to see the hat.”
-
-“We burned the hat. Too bad—it was a good eight-dollar hat.” Hay folded
-another sheet after verifying the scrawled signature: _A. Lincoln_. “We
-burned it by order of the President.”
-
-Tad looked a trifle shaken. He came close and leaned on the desk. “Why
-do people want to kill my father, Mr. Hay? They do. I know. That’s why
-we have Company K here in the house and all over the yard.”
-
-John Hay shook his head. “This is war, Tad. You could ask, why is there
-a war? Why are there millions of people over there across the river
-who’d liked to blow up this town and kill everybody in it? Everybody who
-stands for the Union. Give me an answer to that and I’ll answer your
-why. It’s a black cloud of hate, Colonel, smothering everything decent
-in the country. Maybe it will lift some day. Meanwhile there’s not much
-sense to it.”
-
-“Maybe some of those mean Secesh over there stole my nanny goat! I have
-to go out and see if the boys have heard anything about her. She was a
-nice goat. She liked me; she licked my fingers. She wouldn’t just run
-off like Papa said.”
-
-“Maybe,” remarked Hay, “she went over to see why General Meade let Lee’s
-army get away from him. Go hunt your goat and don’t bother your father.
-He’s had people swarming in there for the last hour.”
-
-“All the women,” observed Tad, wise beyond his years, “have got a boy
-they want to be a colonel or a captain. And all the men want to know why
-Papa doesn’t take Richmond.”
-
-“Get on out of here, Tad, or I won’t give you any Christmas present.”
-
-“You know what I want,” stated Tad at the door. “My nanny goat back.”
-
-
-
-
- 2
-
-
-The man in the armchair across the desk looked formidable and expensive.
-Abraham Lincoln looked down at his own long, dusty, and wrinkled black
-breeches and unconsciously gave a hitch to his sagging coat, to his
-crooked black satin tie that had a perverse tendency to sidle around
-under his ear.
-
-The visitor’s swallow-tailed coat was pressed and elegant; his shirt was
-crisp with ruffles, his heavy watch chain held a jeweled seal. He rested
-plump white hands, covered with yellow gloves, on the gold head of a
-cane. His homely face was cold-eyed and stern. He had refused to state
-his errand to the people in the outer office and Lincoln knew how
-thoroughly they deplored his stubborn insistence on seeing as many who
-called as possible.
-
-“Some day,” prophesied Nicolay gloomily, “you’re going to admit the man
-with the little derringer hid inside a boot, Mr. President.”
-
-“With the fences down all around, Nicolay, why put a bar over the one
-door,” Lincoln had argued calmly. “If they want to kill me they will
-unless you bolt me inside an iron box. I’m the people’s hired man. They
-put me here. I must listen to what they want to say.”
-
-But obviously the portly stranger in the flamboyant apparel had little
-to say. He remarked about the weather, the unfinished Capitol dome, and
-the trampled mall where army beef grazed. His chilly visage did not
-soften or show animation or interest. Momentarily Lincoln expected him
-to announce icily, as had happened before, “Mr. Lincoln, your wife owes
-me a large account on which no payment has been made for some time.”
-
-If this visitor’s errand was financial he made no mention of it. He
-stated that he was a friend of Secretary Seward and that he had attended
-the Convention at which Lincoln had been nominated.
-
-“But I did not vote for you, sir,” he added.
-
-“Your privilege and right, sir.” Lincoln filled a little following
-silence by pulling out the gold watch. “A gift I had today. From the
-Chicago Fair. Sort of a Christmas gift, I guess you’d call it.” He felt
-as young as Tad under those coldly scrutinizing eyes, and as naïve and
-awkward.
-
-“Very fitting and well deserved, Mr. President. Now I must tell you that
-I have no business here whatsoever. I merely came here to tell you that
-I believe you are doing all for the good of the country that it is in
-the power of man to do. And I want to say to you, Mr. President—go
-ahead, do as you darned well please and I will support you.”
-
-Lincoln’s rare laughter whooped. He sprang up and pumped the hand of the
-startled stranger. John Hay put an inquiring head in at the door.
-
-“This man,” chortled the President, “came here deliberately and on
-purpose to tell me that I was running this country right—and all the
-while I thought he’d come to tell me how to take Richmond. Sit down,
-sir, sit down! I have not seen enough of you.”
-
-“My dear Mr. President,” protested the visitor, “are words of approval
-so rare and exciting to the President of the United States?”
-
-“Rare?” Lincoln dropped back to his chair, his face collapsing into a
-sudden, melancholy mask. “John, show this man that copy of the New York
-_Herald_—the one where they call me a fiend and a disgrace to humanity
-because I set human beings free from slavery.”
-
-“I destroyed it, Mr. President,” Hay said. “I was afraid that the
-infamous thing might be seen by some of your family.”
-
-“Useless precaution, Johnny. I have a son in Boston, and I suspect that
-he keeps his mother supplied with interesting clippings. My friend, if
-to be the big boss of Hell is as tough as what I have to undergo here, I
-can feel mighty sorry for Satan. Come along and have lunch with me, if
-you will, sir. I reckon they’ve put the big pot in the little one by
-this time. John, will you see if Mrs. Lincoln is ready for lunch?”
-
-“I believe Mrs. Lincoln went out, Mr. President. Mr. Nicolay ordered out
-the carriage and the black team.”
-
-“And an escort?”
-
-“Oh, yes, sir—the lieutenant arranged an escort.”
-
-Mary would like that, Abraham Lincoln was thinking as they went down the
-chilly stairs. Fires burned in all the rooms but the ceilings were high
-and the walls cold and this was a bleak day with the lowering chill of
-late December. A few snowflakes timidly rode down the icy air, but Mary
-would wrap herself in rich furs, her round pink face nestled in a deep
-collar, a stylish bonnet perched on her smooth dark hair.
-
-With white-gloved hands—smooth now, but once they had known a time of
-rough domestic toil—she would wave brief salutes to the people in the
-street. He hoped she wouldn’t be haughty about it. He knew her shyness
-and uncertainty, her feeling of insecurity in a high place for which she
-had had so little training, and that too often she hid this uncertainty
-behind a too glib, too tart attitude of arrogance. To Abraham Lincoln’s
-eyes, to his sensitive insight, it was like seeing a nervous little hen
-strut and bridle surrounded by the cold angry eyes of foxes and the
-sharp talons of hawks. There were, unhappily, too many people who
-misunderstood Mary Todd Lincoln.
-
-Even John Hay had little sympathy for the President’s wife. There had
-been a scrap of paper that Lincoln had found once, part of a letter Hay
-had begun and discarded calling Mary a “Hellcat” and adding dryly that
-she was lately more “hellcatical” than usual.
-
-Too bad Mary occasionally indulged in temper tantrums in the executive
-offices. Her small explosions, her husband knew, were a form of relief
-for the eternally seething doubts of herself that tormented her. She
-adored her husband and the two boys that had been spared to them, but
-this love was fiercely jealous and possessive and not always wise or
-controlled.
-
-Christmas would be a sad time for Mary. Last year Willie had been here,
-the gentle, quiet brown-haired boy who spent so many hours curled up in
-a chair with a book. Willie had known every railroad line, every station
-on every line. He had learned timetables by heart and drawn up schedules
-of his own. It had been just such a raw, dreary day as this last
-February when Willie had gone riding out on his pony. He had come home
-soaked and chilled and the nightmare of those next days would haunt
-Abraham Lincoln as long as he lived—Willie, burning with fever, babbling
-incoherencies; Mary sobbing and moaning, pacing the floor, her hands in
-taut, agonized fists, her smooth hair wild over her tear-streaked
-cheeks; and that ghastly night of the White House ball, with the Marine
-Band playing, he himself having to shake hands endlessly at the door of
-the East Room while Willie fought for breath upstairs.
-
-After that, the end. The blue eyes closed and sunken, fading flowers
-pressed by Mary into the small cold hands, senators, generals, foreign
-ministers, pressing the numb hand of the President of the United States,
-while upstairs on her bed Mary writhed and wailed in uncontrolled grief.
-
-Now Christmas would bring it all back. He was glad that Mary could
-forget for a little while, shopping, buying gifts for Tad who had too
-much already, who was in a fair way to be badly spoiled.
-
-Deeply, poignantly, Abraham Lincoln dreaded Christmas. All over the
-land, north and south, would lie a load of sorrow like a grim hand
-pressing the heart of America, the heart of this tall grave man in the
-White House. He felt that burden as he walked into the small dining
-room. Mary had not returned. Tad slid in late and was sent out again to
-wash himself. The stranger waxed garrulous.
-
-“I understand, Mr. President, that you have a plan to widen the breach
-between Governor Vance of North Carolina and Jefferson Davis, president
-of this so-called Confederacy?”
-
-“That,” said Lincoln, “turned out not too well. Gilmore, of the New York
-_Tribune_, wrote too much and prematurely. Those fellows across the
-river got riled up and a Georgia regiment started a riot in Raleigh in
-September and burned the Raleigh _Standard_. So the citizens of Raleigh
-who didn’t have faith in Jeff Davis rose up and burned the Confederate
-newspaper, the _State Journal_. That widened the breach and Vance has
-already told Jeff Davis that he would welcome reunion with the Union
-states and any peace compatible with honor.”
-
-He caught John Hay’s warning look then and said no more. He would not
-reveal that his agents has just brought in a letter sent by the Governor
-of North Carolina to Jefferson Davis—a bold and open plea for
-negotiation with the enemy.
-
-“If North Carolina would make the break it would be a long step toward
-peace,” said his guest.
-
-“It could also mean anarchy, outrages, and destruction in that state,
-calling for more Union troops,” Hay reminded them. “So far we have
-pushed back the borders of this rebellion, opened the Mississippi, and
-our Navy has tightened the blockade of all the Southern ports.”
-
-“You will not, even under pressure, revoke the Emancipation
-Proclamation, Mr. President?” The visitor was anxious.
-
-“I shall never revoke that Proclamation, sir.”
-
-When the meal ended and the guest had taken an obsequious departure,
-Lincoln stopped at Hay’s desk.
-
-“What was that fellow sent here to find out, Johnny? Was he sent by
-Sumner, you think, to put in a word against my idea of amnesty for any
-Southern state that wants to come back into the Union? Sumner wants ’em
-all hung down there and he has some powerful newspapers behind him. Some
-of ’em are saying I’m having my salary raised to a hundred thousand
-dollars a year, that I’m drawing it in gold while the Army gets paid in
-greenbacks, and that I’ve cooked up a scheme to have Congress declare me
-perpetual president for the rest of my life.”
-
-“Why do you let such fantastic rumors disturb you, Mr. Lincoln?” Hay
-protested. “That New York _World_ editorial saying you’ve done a fine
-job and that your death would only prolong the war has been reprinted
-all over the country.”
-
-“If my death would end this war, John, I’d give my life gladly,” Lincoln
-declared solemnly. “That would be a fine Christmas gift for this
-country.”
-
-
-
-
- 3
-
-
-The soldiers of Company K One Hundred and Fiftieth Pennsylvania
-Volunteers had become practically a part of the White House family.
-Abraham Lincoln treated them as though they were his own sons, called
-most of them by their first names, personally arranged for their passes
-and furloughs.
-
-So when Mary Todd Lincoln had all her shopping purchases carried up to
-the family sitting room and displayed, Lincoln’s face wore a sober look
-of disappointment. Mary was tired and on edge but she excitedly showed
-him, one after another, the toys she had bought for Tad, the gifts for
-Robert, and a few items for members of the household staff.
-
-“Look, Abraham, this gun—it fires like a real cannon! With smoke.”
-
-“Nothing for the boys?” he asked, rubbing his long hands over his knees,
-a characteristic nervous gesture.
-
-“Why, I’ve just showed you—the wallet and cuff buttons for Bob and all
-these—”
-
-“I mean _my_ boys. The Company K boys.”
-
-Mary stared incredulously. “Good Heavens—you can’t give Christmas
-presents to a whole company of soldiers! There must be a hundred of
-them.”
-
-“I wish there were,” he said heavily. “I wish every company in our army
-was full strength but unfortunately they’re far short in numbers. There
-are less than forty of those boys and they’re far from home and
-Christmas is a bad time to be homesick.”
-
-“They could be worse off,” she snapped. “They could be out there along
-the Rappahannock or down in those marshes of Mississippi. Pennsylvania’s
-not so far. Lord knows you’re always fixing up furloughs for them so
-they can go home. Why, it would cost a fortune to give gifts to all that
-company—and anyway, what can you give a soldier?”
-
-“Some warm socks might come in good. That ground’s frozen out there and
-it’s likely to snow hard any day now.”
-
-“The commissary should keep them in socks.” She was testy as always in
-the face of criticism. “Don’t I do enough—going out to those horrid
-hospitals twice a week—carrying things—this house is practically
-stripped of bed linen, all torn up for bandages.” She fluttered about
-her purchases, flushed and breathless, her hands making little snatching
-gestures, picking up things, putting them down again, twisting string
-around her fingers.
-
-“Very noble of you, indeed,” he approved. “I’m proud of what you do but
-I’m still thinking about Joe and Nate and those other boys. They curry
-horses and clean harness and saddles; they look after Tad and his
-goat—and of course they’re always on guard for fear I’ll get shot,
-though I can’t figure any place where I could be where nobody could get
-at me, unless they buried me.”
-
-“That man, that one-eyed man, you’re crazy to let him come here!” Mary
-cried. “Mr. Nicolay says so.”
-
-“Gurowski? I know.” He smiled patiently. “If anybody does the Democrats
-a favor by putting a bullet in my head it might very well be Gurowski.
-He croaks that the country is marching to it’s tomb and that Seward and
-McClellan and I are the gravediggers.”
-
-“They’ll be digging your grave if you don’t have a care for yourself!”
-Her volatile mood had shifted; she was almost in tears. “That horrible
-creature with those old green goggles, that silly red vest and that big
-hat and cape—he looks like Satan himself, yet you listen to him!”
-
-“I’m his hired man, Mary,” Lincoln repeated. “The bald-headed old
-buzzard is smart enough. He had a good job working under Horace Greeley
-on the _Tribune_, but they had to let him go because he couldn’t
-distinguish truth from slander. Then Seward put him in the State
-Department as a translator but he published so many slurs about Seward
-and me that they dismissed him from that job. He started as a
-revolutionary in Europe; now he thinks he can save this nation. Maybe by
-eliminating me. He’s written down now as a dangerous character. He won’t
-be allowed in here again, so don’t worry.”
-
-Mary would never worry long, he knew. She was too mercurial, too easily
-diverted by trifles. What troubled Lincoln most was her impulsive
-inclination to meddle. She took a hand in decisions, was always writing
-indiscreet letters to newspaper editors, discussing national affairs too
-brashly; she interfered in decisions over post offices and appointments
-to military academies. When New York papers printed long items about her
-travels, her clothes, her bonnets and baggage, she was flattered and
-excited, unaware that her husband was unhappily reading into some of
-these accounts an amused note of criticism and contempt. She was as much
-a child as Tad, he told himself often, but unlike Tad she could not be
-controlled.
-
-All through the evening she busied herself happily over her gifts,
-wrapping them in white paper, fetching bits of ribbon from her dozens of
-bandboxes for bows and decorations. Abraham Lincoln slipped off his
-elastic-sided shoes and stretched his bony feet to the fire. He dozed a
-little and had to be warned sharply by Mary when his gray wool socks
-began to smoke a little.
-
-“I declare, Abraham, you’d burn yourself to a cinder if I didn’t look
-after you! You’ve even scorched your pantaloons. Yes, you have. I can
-see where the broadcloth is singed on that right leg. It’s like putting
-ribbons on a pig to try to dress you up decently. Sometimes I despair of
-ever making you into a real gentleman!”
-
-Lincoln smacked absently at the hot fabric of his breeches. “In this
-town, Mary, gentlemen are as thick as fleas in a dog pound. Take credit
-for making me into a man but let the fashionable aspect go.”
-
-“People can’t see how much you know,” she argued. “All they see is how
-you look. No wonder that New York paper called you a ‘pathetic,
-disheveled figure’ when you made that speech at Gettysburg. I suppose
-your cravat was crooked and your socks falling down.”
-
-“They’ve called me worse things. Names don’t stick unless your hide is
-soft. I got toughened up back yonder.”
-
-“I notice you act kind of flattered when they call you a
-railsplitter—and a yokel.”
-
-“Well, I know I was a good railsplitter. If they called me a sorry
-railsplitter I’d resent it.” He was unperturbed. “What is a yokel? A
-fellow from the country. So I must be a yokel for I sprung from about as
-deep in the country as you can get air to breathe, so deep there wasn’t
-even a road there, just an old trace that meandered up the bed of the
-crick part of the way. America’s made of yokels. Our side, anyway. Your
-friends down South have got a few stylish gentlemen but a lot of them
-lost their sashes and their plumes up at Gettysburg and they got buried
-right alongside the yokels. Humiliating to them, I reckon.”
-
-She had to laugh. “You’re hopeless, Abe Lincoln.”
-
-“Well, I know you’d admire me a heap more if I could go around like Jim
-Buchanan. Long-tailed coat and white vest and my head cocked to one side
-like a tom turkey admiring all the gals. He brought plenty of elegance
-to this office but if he’d had a little yokel grit in his gizzard the
-country wouldn’t be in this mess, maybe. One thing I know, you wouldn’t
-want me sashaying around the gals like Buchanan. You’d spit fire if I
-commenced that. Go on and fuss at me, Mary; it don’t bother me and I can
-still lick salt off the top of your head.”
-
-She pulled the cord of the little toy cannon and aimed it at him. The
-cork that was fired from it hit him in the stomach and he bent over,
-pretending to be mortally wounded, uttering grotesque groans. She
-clutched at him abruptly, holding both his arms.
-
-“Don’t do that!” she wailed. “It’s like my dream.”
-
-He put his arms around her, pressed her head against his chest. “You
-having dreams again? I thought you’d quit that foolishness.”
-
-“I’ve had the same one, over and over. I can’t see you but I can hear
-you groaning—like that. And I wake up in a cold sweat feeling something
-warm on my hands—like blood!” she moaned shuddering.
-
-He patted her head soberly. “You eat too many cakes at parties. Too much
-syllabub. Getting fat, too.” He pinched her playfully. “Me now, I’m one
-of Pharaoh’s lean kine. More bones than a shad and they all poke out and
-rattle. You should have married a pretty little feller, somebody like
-Steve Douglas.”
-
-“I didn’t want him. I wanted you.”
-
-“Well, you got me, Mary, not anything extra of a bargain but I did set
-you up so high you couldn’t go higher unless you got made queen of some
-place. You’re a queen now, queen of a torn and divided country all
-drowned in sorrow and hate and woe. But it won’t always be like that.—I
-wish to the Lord I knew what to do about that little man, Ulysses S.
-Grant! I reckon I’ll just have to give him command of the army.” He put
-her gently aside, letting care return to possess him.
-
-“He may be a fine soldier but he’s a dirty, drunken little man,” sniffed
-Mary, “and I don’t like his wife either.”
-
-“He fights better, dirty and drunk, than a lot of elegant fellers I’ve
-got in commands. If he can win battles he can go dirty as a hog and it
-won’t degrade him any in my estimation,” Lincoln declared. “As for his
-wife, you’ve got a bad habit of not liking wives, Mary.”
-
-“That’s not true. I like some of their wives—when they’re not cold and
-distant and look down their noses. It’s because I know how to buy pretty
-clothes and my bonnets become me. I do look nice when I’m dressed up,
-Abe Lincoln. And I know how to behave in company. After all there is a
-little respect due to my position,” she stated, complacently.
-
-He gave her a comradely pat and went back to his chair and the stack of
-papers he had put aside. “All right, Mama, you do the peacocking for
-this office and I’ll try to win the war,” he said, withdrawing into that
-remoteness that always baffled her.
-
-
-
-
- 4
-
-
-Desperately she wanted to be liked and admired. She did not even know
-that this desire tormented her like a hidden thorn. It was lost under
-the surface imperiousness that she had put on defensively, as a child
-might dress up in a trailing robe and play at being queen. She had no
-talent for adjustment or reconciliation and her husband’s propensity for
-seeing the best in people, even his bitterest enemies, puzzled and
-irritated her. In her mind she put this down as weakness. When she
-disliked anyone, it was done with vigor and she made no secret of it.
-When she was displeased she let the whole world know, yet she could not
-understand why it was that she felt always alone.
-
-The Christmas party at the White House had to be important, if not gay.
-State Department people, Supreme Court people, senators, generals and
-their wives, would not expect hilarity. Not with Lee’s menacing army so
-near, the carnage of Chickamauga so recent, all the factional strife in
-New York and Missouri and Ohio only temporarily lulled, and definitely,
-Mary suspected, not defeated.
-
-She had two dresses spread out on her bed, and Elizabeth Heckley, the
-mulatto seamstress, pinned bits of lace and ribbon bows here and there
-over the voluminous folds of coral-colored satin and purple velvet. The
-satin had wide bands of heavy embroidery touched with gold around the
-skirt and the folds that draped low over the shoulders. Elizabeth
-fastened a garland of roses at the bosom of that dress and let it trail
-down the side of the skirt.
-
-“Needs a gold breastpin right there,” she indicated the fastening place
-of the flowers. “What Mrs. President goin’ to wear on her head?”
-
-“A turban, Lizzie, of this same satin with some pale blue feathers in
-front and the roses hanging down over my chignon. This dress will have
-to be for the Christmas party and I know it’s too gay and likely I’ll be
-criticized for putting off my mourning for poor little Willie. Good
-gracious, down home where I was raised, I’d wear black for three solid
-years for a child and for a husband it was forever. But I look awful in
-black and I know it. It makes me dumpy and sallow and I do owe something
-to the people. There’s too much crepe already in Washington. It
-depresses people and hurts the war.”
-
-“This other one would look mighty fine on you, Mrs. President.” The
-seamstress lovingly stroked the folds of violet velvet. “This dress look
-like it was made for a queen.” There were bands of embroidery on this
-gown too, but the embroidery was all gold cord and beads and there was a
-light overskirt of draped tulle in shades of lilac, lavender, and
-purple, caught up with little knots of gold leaves.
-
-A queen! Abraham had called her a queen. Mary could see herself trailing
-a long robe of crimson with a border of gold and ermine. Too bad
-democracies did not favor such ornate display by their rulers—but the
-purple velvet did have a regal look. She would wear plumes in her
-headdress, three of them in the three shades of the overskirt.
-
-“I’ll wear this at the New Years’ reception, though it is a pity to
-waste anything so handsome on a company of just anybody. See about some
-feathers and gold trimmings for my headdress, Lizzie, and plenty of
-white gloves. Last year I ruined four pairs.”
-
-She must see to it that Abraham had plenty of gloves, too. He hated
-them; he was always pulling them off and stuffing them untidily into a
-pocket. He was always bursting them, too, and she kept spare pairs
-handy. His hands had a tendency to swell from prolonged handshaking and
-inevitably the buttons popped off or the seams split. A pair would be
-soiled in half an hour too from all those hands, some calloused, some
-grimy, some too hot and eager.
-
-The New Year’s reception was a great nuisance in Mary’s book—those
-tramping feet scuffing the floors and the carpets and almost invariably
-it snowed. And in spite of the vigilance of the guards she knew there
-was danger. Lately danger had become a haunting oppression to Mary Todd
-Lincoln.
-
-The election of 1864 was coming up and even in the Union states there
-was radical opposition so bold it verged on treason, not to overlook the
-vicious attacks of the newspapers to the South. On those pages Abraham
-Lincoln was called everything from a degraded idiot to Mephistopheles
-reincarnate. The South, as Southern-bred Mary Lincoln knew well, was
-full of impetuous hotheads ready to dare or to do anything for their
-sacred Cause. There was that O’Neale Greenhow woman, arrested right here
-in sight of the White House—and even the Mayor of Washington temporarily
-lodged in jail. And they said that people right in the Provost Office
-had supplied the Greenhow woman with information that had brought on so
-many Union defeats at Manassas and other battles. Mary remembered having
-once met Rose O’Neale Greenhow at a tea somewhere. A handsome and
-arrogant woman, too friendly with men. She was banished South of the
-lines now, but women like that always had impetuous friends.
-
-“Get me out something plain, Lizzie,” she ordered now. “I have to shop
-again this afternoon. The President thinks every soldier in Company K
-must have a Christmas gift, and where I’ll find things the Lord only
-knows! ‘Socks,’ he said, ‘Wool socks.’ I doubt if any can be found, and
-they’d be two dollars a pair if there are any. Anyway, cakes and candy
-and tobacco—and all those getting harder and harder to get. The crowds
-in the streets are getting so rough, too, with all these soldiers coming
-in.”
-
-“I could go, Mrs. Lincoln,” offered Elizabeth, “if you’d tell me what to
-buy and give me an order to have it charged—and send somebody to help
-carry.”
-
-“Would you, Lizzie?” Mary was eager with relief. “I’ll send you in a
-carriage and a boy with you. I have to make a list. I think we’ll forget
-the socks—there might not be any and anyway their mothers ought to knit
-socks for them. We wouldn’t know sizes anyway.” Mary fluttered, hunting
-pen and paper, sending a maid to order the carriage, getting out a heavy
-cape of her own to keep the sewing woman warm. “You go down to the
-market, Lizzie, away down on D Street. Things will be cheaper there.
-There are thirty-three of those men. Just so each one had some little
-remembrance the President will be satisfied.”
-
-She was grateful not to have to brave again the streets of Washington
-that were becoming more horrible every day. Deep mud, which Army wagons
-were churning up, caissons pounding by, cavalry splashing everybody, and
-soldiers crowding everywhere. The shops were always crowded with the
-impatient, pushing military and Negroes, and more colored people were
-thronging into the capital every day, homeless and bewildered. Some of
-the Negro men were being integrated into the Army but most were a
-problem that the provosts and police were coping with in desperate
-confusion.
-
-It all made for discomfort and danger. No real indignity had as yet been
-offered to her personally since those grim days in New York in July,
-when she had been hooted in the streets and followed into a shop by a
-jeering mob of ruffians. Here in Washington her greatest cross was the
-thinly veiled contempt of the women, formerly socially important, the
-women the President called “those Secesh dames.” Very boldly they let it
-be known that their sympathies were with the South.
-
-Washington, Mr. Seward said, and Mr. Stanton agreed with him, was a nest
-of spies. In spite of imprisonment, grim guards, and ceaseless
-precautions, messages still went through the lines to Robert E. Lee and
-Jefferson Davis. It was said that Fontaine Maury, the Confederate
-admiral, had a direct pipeline into the very heart of the Capitol.
-Suspicion and distrust were rampant, and Mary harbored a constant,
-nervous fear that either she or Tad might be kidnapped by the Rebels and
-held as hostages.
-
-She had wondered sometimes in moments of private bitterness just how
-much Abraham Lincoln would surrender to get his wife back, but Tad was
-the key to his heart. Lately Company K had had orders to keep close
-surveillance over the boy but Tad was quick and mobile as a flea. Less
-than a month before he had been brought back, shouting protests and
-struggling, from climbing the scaffolding of the half-finished
-Washington Monument.
-
-She must go out and appear at the receptions and teas planned by wives
-of officials, but with Christmas at hand now there would be a hiatus in
-festivities until after the New Year reception at the White House. There
-was that tiresome affair to plan for, then this Christmas party; it was
-all hard work and expensive too, and that aspect practical Mary Lincoln
-always considered seriously. She never saw an elaborate collation spread
-without secretly adding up in her mind how many bonnets, bracelets, and
-yards of silk could have been bought with the money.
-
-The Christmas tree in the private sitting room upstairs had been set up
-and Tad put to work stringing popcorn and bits of bright metal for
-decorations. A corporal had brought in a sackful of scraps of brass
-discarded by a cartridge manufacturer and these Tad was tying to lengths
-of his mother’s red wool. He insisted on doing all this in his father’s
-office, stepped over by the endless streams of officials and callers,
-and Mary found him there, squatting behind Lincoln’s desk, surrounded by
-the litter of his festive preparations.
-
-She entered as usual without knocking, made a brief stiff bow to Noah
-Brooks, the correspondent from the West Coast, and puckered her brows at
-the small woman with curling grayish hair and unfashionable bonnet who
-occupied the one comfortable chair in the room.
-
-The President unlimbered his long legs and jumped up, as did Brooks.
-
-“Come in, come in, my dear!” he greeted his wife. “You know Mr.
-Brooks—and Mary, this is Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, the little woman
-who wrote the book that started a big war.”
-
-Mrs. Stowe held out a gloved hand. “I am happy to be privileged to meet
-Mrs. Lincoln.”
-
-“I read your book, Ma’am.” Mary was gracious. “I cried over it, some
-parts—but part of it made me mad, too. My family owned slaves, Mrs.
-Stowe, but they never did beat them or set dogs on them—never!”
-
-“One must emphasize the wrong sometimes, Mrs. Lincoln, to bring about
-what is right,” said Mrs. Stowe. “Undoubtedly your family were Christian
-people, and exceptional.”
-
-“Mama!” wailed Tad. “You’re standing on my yarn!”
-
-“I only came,” Mary was flustered, “to report to my husband that I have
-arranged Christmas gifts for his soldiers—as he requested,” she added.
-
-“Sit here, Mrs. Lincoln,” Brooks offered his chair.
-
-“No—no, you have business here. Happy to have met you, Ma’am. You must
-stay and have dinner with us.” Mary bowed again and hoped she had made a
-graceful exit as became a queen.
-
-She wondered, as she went down the hall, why women with brains always
-looked a little frumpy. That dress—homemade, probably, and it didn’t fit
-anywhere! It was, she decided, safe to leave a woman of as few charms as
-Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe in the office, especially chaperoned by Noah
-Brooks. But Mary Lincoln knew well that if Mrs. Stowe had been young and
-pretty she herself would never have walked out of that office.
-
-
-
-
- 5
-
-
-The boy who jumped out of the dark shadow of the bushes slapped his
-rifle hard, brought it to port sharply.
-
-“Mr. President,” he gasped, “if I had been an assassin you’d be dead by
-now!”
-
-Abraham Lincoln stopped, shifted his high hat. A few thin flakes of snow
-lay white against the silk.
-
-“And what would you have been doing, Joe, while an assassin was making a
-corpse out of me?” he asked amiably.
-
-“I’d have done the best I could to protect you, Mr. President, but it’s
-powerful dark out here,” stammered the flustered soldier.
-
-“I knew you were here, Joe, or I wouldn’t be out here,” Lincoln said.
-“Cold out here. Have you got some warm gloves?”
-
-“Can’t handle a gun with gloves, Mr. President. But I get relieved in an
-hour.”
-
-Lincoln looked at the sky. “Some mean weather making up, I’m afraid. Bad
-for Christmas. You boys keeping warm in those tents?”
-
-“Well, the way I figure, sir, we’re just as warm as those men of General
-Meade’s over across the river. And there ain’t nobody shooting at us,
-sir—I mean, Mr. President. The lieutenant ain’t going to like it, Mr.
-President, you walking out here alone. You want to walk, you need a
-couple of us boys along.”
-
-“I make a good mark, don’t I, Joe? I sort of rear up on the skyline like
-a steeple. Good thing it’s too dark for them to spot me. I look at it
-this way. If the good Lord wants me to stay on this job He’ll look after
-me. God and Company K. You see Tad anywhere?”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mr. President.” Joe stalked beside the tall figure, weapon
-alerted. “Tad’s down yonder to the corporal’s tent. He’s got his billy
-goat down there. Some of the boys fixed up an army cap for that goat and
-the corporal’s riveting a chin strap on it.” Joe trotted a little to
-keep up with the long stride of Lincoln.
-
-“Better anchor it tight or the goat will eat his headgear,” remarked
-Lincoln. “Mrs. Lincoln sent Tad to bed so she could fix up his Christmas
-presents. Tad always sleeps with me but when I went to my room he wasn’t
-there, so I decided he’d slipped down here.”
-
-“That goat sure means a lot to Tad, Mr. President. Tad treats him like
-he was folks. Nobody ever has found out what happened to the she-goat,
-sir. Last pass you give me I went all over that skinny town back yonder
-where the trash and niggers live but I never seen a sign of any
-goat—hide neither.”
-
-“Tad misses his brother. Christmas will be a sad time for all of us, but
-we’ll try to make it happy for Tad.”
-
-“Just about a year ago you lost your boy, wasn’t it, Mr. President?”
-
-“Last February. Lung fever. He got wet and took a cold. Mrs. Lincoln
-hasn’t gotten over it at all. She idolized her sons. We lost another
-one, you know, in Springfield. Little Eddie. But we have company, Joe. A
-great sorrowful company of people who have lost their sons.”
-
-Lincoln sighed heavily as he strode up to the lighted tent where a group
-of men hunkered down around Tad and his goat.
-
-The corporal dropped his awl and leather and jumped up, eyes bulging.
-
-“Attention!” he barked.
-
-Every man sprang up to stand stiffly. Tad threw his arms around the
-goat, yelling desperately. “Help me hold him! He’ll get away.”
-
-“At ease, boys,” Lincoln said “Grab that goat, some of you.”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mr. President, sir,” gulped the corporal. “Get him, Bullitt.
-You, Joe—you’re on post!”
-
-“Joe,” Lincoln said, “has been escorting me and protecting me from
-assassins, my orders. Very capably too. Tad, you’d better come along to
-bed. Tomorrow is Christmas and your brother will be here on an early
-train.”
-
-“Yes, sir, Mr. President.” The corporal flicked a salute importantly.
-“Lieutenant detailed me and three of the boys to meet that train. We was
-just helping the boy here to pretty up his goat, sir, asking your pardon
-and meaning no offense.”
-
-“No offense taken, Corporal. I appreciate your taking care of my boys.”
-
-“Look, Papa,” shrilled Tad, “lookit Billy’s horns.” The animal’s rough
-pointed horns had been painted a bright scarlet and tipped with circles
-of brass. He shook them impatiently while Tad clung to his neck.
-
-“Mighty pretty,” approved his father, “but you’re getting paint on your
-uniform jacket. Your mama will have something to say about that.”
-
-“She’ll have a duck fit,” stated Tad disrespectfully; then his voice
-sank to a whimper. “Billy’s pretty but he’s not as pretty as a nanny
-goat, Papa. I want my nanny goat back.” He began to cry thinly, and the
-corporal looked anxious.
-
-“I sure wish we could get his nanny goat back, Mr. President. That paint
-will dry by morning, sir. We’ll tie Billy out where he can’t rub it off
-on anything. You, Bullitt and Gibson, escort the President and young Mr.
-Lincoln back to the house, and lemme see them rifles first. Half the
-time,” he explained unhappily, “they ain’t got no load ready and a man
-might as well carry a broomstick. All right. About face, March!”
-
-Tad clung to his father’s hand and Lincoln felt his palm sticky with
-undried paint. Behind them the goat blatted forlornly.
-
-“He wants me,” mourned Tad. “I feed him biscuits and all the boys have
-got is hardtack.”
-
-“Maybe we can find some biscuits,” suggested Lincoln. “Mr. Bullitt and
-Mr. Gibson can carry them back to him. Come along in, boys, and report
-back to your corporal that I’m much obliged for everything.”
-
-He had never set foot in the White House kitchen. Now Abraham Lincoln
-walked timidly there as though he were an intruder who might be ordered
-out indignantly at any moment.
-
-The long room, still odorous with baking bread and roasting meat, was
-warm, the huge ranges clinking as they cooled, water dripping from the
-spout of a pump. The cooks’ white aprons and caps hung from pegs on the
-wall and one long table was covered with trays spread over with white
-cloths. Lincoln lifted a corner of a covering. Beneath was a great array
-of small colored cakes obviously baked for the Christmas party.
-
-“Have one, boys.” He took a pink dainty himself and bit into it. “Pretty
-good.”
-
-Tad wolfed down two and the privates nervously accepted one each.
-
-“Wonder where they keep the biscuits?” Tad began to explore.
-
-“You ought to know,” said his father. “You snoop everywhere.”
-
-Tad scurried about, opening ovens and cupboards, lifting lids of boxes
-and the great copper pots.
-
-“Bread,” he uncovered a stack of loaves, “but no biscuits.”
-
-“Your billy will eat bread, sir,” suggested Private Bullitt. “He eats
-hardtack. He’ll eat anything, Mr. President. He ate Sergeant Whipple’s
-box from home. Had a cake in it. Et box and all, sir.”
-
-“Well have to see to it that Sergeant Whipple gets another cake.”
-Lincoln took down a long knife from a rack on the wall and whacked off
-the end of a loaf of fresh bread. “Good bread.” He tasted a crumb. “Go
-good if we had some jam to put on it.”
-
-“There’s jampots up there, Papa.” Tad pointed to a high shelf.
-
-“So there are.” Lincoln reached a long arm, slit the paper that covered
-the top of a jar, dipped in a knife. “Blackberry.” He sliced off a hunk
-of bread, spread it thickly with jam, handed it to Private Bullitt.
-“Have some, boys.” He spread another slice for Gibson and one for Tad
-and himself. Perched on the edge of a table he ate, wiped his beard and
-fingers on a handy towel, passed the towel around. “Some drizzled on
-your jacket, Tad. Wipe it off. Now, I reckon somebody will get blamed
-for this piece of larceny, so I’d better take care of that.”
-
-The cooks’ pad and pencil lay on a shelf and Lincoln tore off a sheet
-and wrote rapidly: _All provisions missing from this kitchen
-requisitioned by order of the undersigned. A. Lincoln._
-
-“That will fix it. You boys take this bread back to that billy goat and
-tell your sergeant I’ll see that he’s recompensed for his lost cake,” he
-said. “Now Tad, you come along to bed.”
-
-The wreaths of greenery were in place in the hall and up the stairs, and
-in the East Room a tall spruce tree awaited the lighting of the candles.
-Festival! And out there on the cold ground boys like Robert, boys like
-Tad would soon grow to be, kept warm in flimsy tents with little fires,
-slept on straw with blankets far too thin, and there were men he knew in
-the field, in grim military prisons, who likely had no blankets at all.
-
-The great bed in his room with its huge, soft bolster and tufted
-counterpane, its enormous headboard shutting off drafts and elaborately
-carved and scrolled, suddenly wore the aspect of sinful luxury. He would
-gladly have taken a blanket and gone out to join his men, but he knew
-sadly that that would not do. He had known the ground for a bed many
-times—in the Black Hawk War and on expeditions into the wilds—but now he
-was growing old and he had to uphold the dignity of high office.
-
-He pulled off Tad’s clothes, buttoned him into a long nightshirt, and
-tucked him into the big bed. Almost instantly the boy was asleep.
-Lincoln was struggling with his own boots when the door opened and Mary
-came in, buttoned into a vast blue wrapper, a ruffled cap on her head.
-
-“Forevermore!” she exclaimed. “Where have you been? I looked for you to
-help me with the Christmas things and couldn’t find a hair of you or Tad
-either. Has that child been out in this cold wind?”
-
-“We were having a little Christmas party with some of the boys, Mary.
-Tad’s all right. Don’t start scolding tonight; it’s already Christmas
-morning now.”
-
-“You know how delicate he is. It will be just like Willie all over again
-and I can’t bear any more sorrow, Abraham. I’ll lose my mind if I have
-another grief to live through,” she cried.
-
-“Tad’s tough, Mama. Not frail like Willie. We were in the kitchen
-anyway,” he evaded. “It was warm down there.”
-
-“You didn’t eat up my cakes?” she demanded. “I had trouble enough
-getting them baked. The cook says the blockade is to blame for making
-sugar so scarce and high. They ought to know we have to have sugar.
-There’s no coconut either, nor nutmegs nor cinnamon.”
-
-“It’s war, Mary. Some good people haven’t even got bread,” he reminded
-her.
-
-She began to whimper, perching on the edge of the bed.
-
-“Maybe I won’t need any cakes for my party. I’ve had at least a dozen
-regrets already. An invitation from the wife of the President should be
-like a command from the queen,” she declared, grimly. “I’m saving all
-those insulting notes and I think the people who wrote them should be
-properly dealt with.”
-
-Lincoln sighed as he hung up his coat and untied his lumpy satin cravat.
-The starched collar rasped his neck. He was glad to be rid of it. “Don’t
-you cry now for Christmas, Mary,” he pleaded. “We have to keep things
-happy for the boys. Bob will be here in the morning.”
-
-She dried her eyes on the ruffle of her sleeve. “I can’t help
-remembering that I’ve lost my son.”
-
-“You’re one of a vast company, Mary. If all the tears that will be shed
-by bereaved mothers tomorrow were drained into one river we could float
-a gunboat on it. If only I could see a way so there would be no more—no
-more killing, no more graves, no more sorrowing women!” he cried,
-desolately.
-
-It was a cry of anguish and Mary Lincoln felt a surge of terrible
-compassion for this gaunt, lonely man who was her love. She put her arms
-around him, standing on tiptoe, her cheek pressing the buttons of his
-shirt.
-
-“You didn’t make this war. You’re doing all any man could do to end it!”
-she cried. “We could have ignored the country—we could have stayed in
-Springfield where nobody hated us. Here they all hate us. The ones who
-come to our party tomorrow will smirk and fawn to our faces and then
-sneer at our backs.”
-
-“Not all, Mary. There are plenty of good folks, loyal folks, who believe
-I’m doing right. Plenty of people we can call our friends. A sight of
-them voted for me, remember.”
-
-“They want something!” she argued. “Every last one of them wants
-something. That General Grant is even being puffed up to run against you
-for president next year. Even the Illinois newspapers are for him.”
-
-“Well, he might make a good president,” admitted Lincoln, “though no
-soldier ever has made a good president since George Washington. And if
-I’m beat, we can always go home to Springfield.”
-
-“Slink home like beaten dogs!” she exclaimed, her mercurial mood
-shifting again. “Well, we’ll not do it. They’re not going to get us
-down, Abraham Lincoln! Democrats nor Black Republicans either. And
-they’d better show up at my party if they want any more favors from
-you!”
-
-“You tear up those regrets, Mary,” he said soberly. “Tear up every
-single one of ’em. And forget the names of the people who wrote them.
-That,” he added very solemnly, “is an order from the President.”
-
-
-
-
- 6
-
-
-Robert Todd Lincoln was a young man trying sincerely not to be a snob,
-not to be blasé or obviously aware that his father was President of the
-United States. A medium tall, erect lad, Robert’s dark hair was sleeked
-down over a head rounded like his mother’s, but his long arms and still
-growing legs and feet he had from his father.
-
-That long-tailed coat with braided collar was too old for Bob, Abraham
-Lincoln was thinking. So was his manner too old, a boyish kind of
-gravity that obviously he strove to keep from being condescending. His
-mother fluttered about him adoringly as they sat at the family breakfast
-table. She was continually straightening his cravat, feeling his brow
-anxiously, smoothing his hair. Lincoln, shrewdly sensitive, could see
-that his older son was a trifle annoyed by his mother’s solicitous
-attentions.
-
-“Bob hasn’t got a fever, Mama,” he interposed cheerfully. “He’s the
-healthiest human being I’ve seen in a long time. Why don’t we all go and
-see what Tad got for Christmas?” He pushed back his chair.
-
-“Robert must get some sleep,” argued his mother. “He says he didn’t get
-a wink on that train.”
-
-“The cars were cold and smelly and they were jammed with soldiers, all
-of them cold and miserable,” stated Robert. “Most of them coming South
-to join Pope’s army and all sulky because they had to be away from home
-for Christmas. One chap sat with me—couldn’t have been any older than I
-am and he had been home to Rhode Island to bury his wife. They all
-talked and they were plenty bitter against the bounty boys—those fellows
-who bought their way out of the draft for three hundred dollars.”
-
-“That was a compromise and an evil one, I fear,” said his father.
-“Everything about war is evil. You can only contrive and pray for ways
-to make it a little less evil.”
-
-Robert stood up. His face was very white. “Pa—and Mama—I told lies
-coming down on that train. I told them I was coming home to enlist. I’ve
-got to get into the Army—I’ve got to! Those men on that train, they were
-dirty and shabby and some hadn’t shaved or washed in a long time, and
-most of them were rough and some ignorant but every one of them was a
-better man than I was! I could feel them looking at me—with contempt at
-first. It was in every man’s mind that I was a bounty boy. A shirker.
-Hiding behind a screen of cash! I was thankful nobody knew my name.”
-
-“You could have told them your name,” insisted his mother. “You could
-have made them respect you as the son of the President.”
-
-“No, Mary—no, no!” protested Lincoln. “Bob couldn’t do that.”
-
-“I don’t know why not? Certainly your family are entitled to respect,
-Abraham Lincoln!”
-
-“You don’t understand, Mama,” said Robert unhappily. “I was thankful I’d
-been able to duck away from those soldiers Mr. Stanton had detailed in
-New York. I didn’t want to be Robert Lincoln. I wanted to be nobody.
-Then when I got off here in Washington, there was that escort! Troops to
-guard me, as though I were a crown prince or something. A coward of a
-prince!”
-
-“No, no!” Mary upset her cup in her agitation. “I still say you must
-finish your education. You must graduate from Harvard. You’ll be much
-more valuable to the country as an educated man than just another
-private in the army. Even if your father gave you a commission—”
-
-“I don’t want a commission. Not if it has to be given to me,” Robert
-cried. “I’d deserve all the contempt I saw in some of those men’s faces
-if I took a commission I hadn’t earned.”
-
-Lincoln’s face relaxed in a slow smile. There were times when his older
-son troubled him, but now a quiet pride warmed his spirit. But his heart
-sank again when he saw the stony set of Mary’s mouth, the flush that
-always heated her face when she was angry and determined to carry her
-point. She would not change. Her attitude was the same as that with
-which she had faced down General Sickles and Senator Harris not too long
-ago. They had inquired, coldly, why Robert was not in the service. The
-boy should, declared the General, have been in uniform long since. Mary
-had talked them down then, firmly, just as she would talk down all
-Robert’s arguments now. But it was a joy to Lincoln that Robert did have
-pride and perhaps a mind of his own.
-
-Mary’s eyes were already glittering behind their pale lashes. Now the
-shine was exasperation but in a moment, after her fashion, it would melt
-into tears. Robert’s chin was jutting and his hands trembled on the back
-of his chair. Lincoln interposed quickly trying to ease the tension,
-gain a postponement of a crisis.
-
-“Let’s talk this over later,” he suggested. “Let’s not spoil Christmas
-morning with an argument. Did Tad eat any breakfast, Mama?”
-
-“No, he didn’t.” Mary got her control back with a gusty breath. “He
-wouldn’t even take time to drink his milk. He took it with him and
-likely he’s upset the glass all over the carpet by this time.”
-
-“Well, let’s go and see what he found under the Christmas tree.”
-
-Robert followed them, silently, up the stairs to the sitting room,
-strewn now with paper wrappings and a confusion of toys. Tad was
-standing in the middle of the floor buckling on a wide military belt
-trimmed with metal. Hanging from it was a small sword. Tad worked
-awkwardly because his hands were lost in great white gauntlet gloves
-that reached almost to his elbows.
-
-“From Mr. Stanton,” he grinned, patting the belt. “I thought he didn’t
-like me. I thought he didn’t like boys.”
-
-“He likes being Secretary of War,” said Robert dryly. He reached for a
-small package. “This is for you, Mama. The man said these things were
-real jade from China.”
-
-Mary took the parcel eagerly, kissed Robert, undid the wrapping,
-exclaimed over the necklace, pin, and earbobs.
-
-“Oh, Bob, they’re so pretty! I can wear them with my green taffeta.”
-
-She was a child for trinkets, Lincoln was thinking indulgently. He was
-glad that he had given her the big white muff. She would love carrying
-it to parties and on their carriage drives, nestling her two little
-round chins into the delicate fur. He thanked Robert for a pair of gold
-cuff links and there was laughter when they discovered that his gift to
-Robert had been an almost identical pair.
-
-“At least,” said Robert, “I shall have the distinction of imitating the
-President of the United States.”
-
-“Well, they’ll fasten your shirt sleeves anyway,” drawled Lincoln.
-“That’s all a man can ask of them.”
-
-Tad strutted around the room flourishing his sword. He gulped the last
-of his milk hastily at his mother’s command, put on his uniform cap, and
-swished a shine on the toes of his boots with his cuff.
-
-“Now I have to show these to the boys,” he announced.
-
-“But son,” protested his mother, “aren’t you going to play with all your
-pretty toys? Look—this little cannon. It shoots!”
-
-“Yeh—shoots a cork!” Tad dismissed the weapon indifferently, “A ole
-Rebel would sure laugh if you shot him with that. Papa, I want a real
-gun. One with bullets in it.”
-
-“My Heaven, Tad, you’re too little to have a gun,” declared Mary.
-
-“If I had a gun I could ride with Papa and perteck him,” argued Tad.
-“Then nobody would dare shoot holes in his hat.”
-
-Lincoln caught the startled look on Mary’s face, got his son hastily by
-the elbow. “Come along, Tad. Go show off your finery. And I’ve got work
-to do.” He hustled the boy down the hall. “Who told you somebody shot a
-hole in my hat?” he demanded, when they were out of earshot.
-
-Tad grinned. “Oh, I get information,” he said blandly, “but if I had
-been along with a good ole gun nobody would have dared do it.”
-
-“Don’t mention it again in front of your mother, you hear?” Lincoln
-seldom spoke sharply to the boy and Tad looked scared briefly.
-
-“No, sir—no, sir, I won’t,” he stammered, his palate tripping him again.
-
-“Mind now! And get along with you!” His father gave him a little shove,
-as he entered the office door.
-
-Even on a holiday he was not free from intrusion, of being faced with
-the woeful problems of the people. A lad of about seventeen, in the
-faded uniform of a private, was standing, twisting thin hands together,
-his face scared and anxious.
-
-“Sit down, son,” ordered Lincoln, closing the door. “How did you get in
-here and what did you want to see me about?”
-
-The boy dropped on the edge of a chair, twisted his legs about each
-other nervously.
-
-“Nobody let me in, sir,” he stammered. “I just told the man downstairs
-that I had to see the President and he searched me, and I didn’t have no
-gun or nothing so he told me to come on up here and wait. And what I
-wanted to see you about, Mr. President—I want to be a captain.”
-
-Lincoln’s long lips drew back and quirked up a little at one corner. “I
-see. And what military organization did you want to be captain of?”
-
-“No organization, Mr. President, but I been a private in the Sixty-third
-Ohio a long time, sir—”
-
-“How long a time?”
-
-“Four months, Mr. President.”
-
-“And you have a company organized, maybe, that you want me to make you
-captain of?”
-
-“No, sir—I haven’t got any company organized. But I just want to be a
-captain. My mother says I should be a captain. She told me to see you
-about it.”
-
-Lincoln clasped his bony hands around a knee. “What’s your name,
-soldier?”
-
-“Milo, sir. Milo Potter.”
-
-“Milo, did you ever hear the story about the farmer out in Illinois,
-where I was raised? Well, this fellow he was a good farmer and a dutiful
-son to his mother but he got up towards forty years old and he’d never
-married a wife. So his mother fretted at him, said she was getting too
-old to churn and milk and he ought to fetch a wife home to take some of
-the work off of her. So this farmer, call him Jim, he goes down to the
-church and hunts up the preacher. ‘Preacher’, says Jim ‘I got to get
-married. Mammy says so.’ ‘All right, Jim,’ agrees the preacher, ‘I’ll be
-proud to marry you. You go get your license and bring the woman here
-with you and I’ll give you a real good marrying.’ ‘But I haven’t got any
-woman, Preacher,’ Jim argues kind of dashed. ‘Well, you can’t get
-married without a woman, Jim’, the preacher tells him. That’s your
-problem, Milo. You want to be a captain and you haven’t got any
-organization to captain. What made you think you could be a captain,
-anyway?”
-
-“Well, Mr. President,” the boy flushed unhappily, “it was that captain
-we got in B Company. That last battle—he made us retreat. And right
-there in front of us there was a hole in that Rebel line I could have
-drove four wagons through. There wasn’t no sense in that retreat, Mr.
-President. All of us boys said so. All of us was mad. So I thought I can
-be a better captain than that.”
-
-“Maybe you can, Milo. You go on back to B Company and be a good soldier
-and likely you’ll make captain before this war is over.”
-
-“Mr. President, I can’t do it! I run off. They’ll put me in the
-guardhouse!”
-
-Lincoln scratched his chin. “That was very unwise of you, soldier. But
-you can’t dodge your military responsibility. I reckon you’ll just have
-to go to the guardhouse. If you should try to hedge out of it you’d be
-as poor a soldier as that captain of B Company you complain about. It
-won’t be too bad. Good luck to you, son.”
-
-The boy said, “Thank you, sir,” and backed out, twisting his cap in his
-hands.
-
-“Stand up straight, look the captain in the eye, and admit you ran off,
-son,” advised Lincoln. “You needn’t tell him you came here to get his
-job away from him.”
-
-“No, sir, I sure won’t.”
-
-John Hay came in when the young trooper had gone. “I shouldn’t have let
-him in perhaps, Mr. President,” he explained, “but he said he had an
-important message for you.”
-
-“It was important. To Milo Potter,” smiled Lincoln. “No harm done,
-Johnny.”
-
-“Your son is waiting, sir. Shall I send him in?”
-
-“Must be Bob. Tad would have already been in.”
-
-Robert came in, took a chair, and folded his hands, his young mouth
-sober. “I had to know, sir,” he began, “have they been making attempts
-to kill you?”
-
-“Bob, there are several million people who think that the man who kills
-me should wear a hero’s crown. And there are a lot of people who yearn
-to be heroes,” Lincoln said calmly.
-
-“You should be better protected. You shouldn’t take risks!”
-
-“They’re trying to protect me now, Bob, till I can’t hardly draw my own
-breath.”
-
-“That fellow who just went out. Did you even know him?” persisted the
-boy.
-
-“He was harmless. I reckon Johnny even took his jackknife away from him.
-I have to see ’em, son. I have to hear their story. That’s why they put
-me here,” declared his father.
-
-“About the Army, Papa—I’m deadly serious.”
-
-“The trouble is, Bob, that your mother is deadly serious, too. She’s
-lost two boys,” Lincoln reminded him.
-
-“So have other women.”
-
-“I know. Give her a little more time, Bob. Till the end of this year
-anyway. The war isn’t going to end before New Years’ Day.”
-
-“I shan’t wait much longer, I promise you,” threatened Robert, standing
-tall.
-
-“Just promise me to the end of this school year. Then we’ll talk about
-it again.”
-
-“And you’ll talk to Mama? Make her see that it’s something I have to
-do?”
-
-“I’ll talk to Mama,” agreed Abraham Lincoln. “I’ll do my best, son.”
-
-But when, he was thinking wearily after the boy had gone, had his best
-ever been good enough to prevail against Mary’s ready tears?
-
-
-
-
- 7
-
-
-“Bob,” Abraham Lincoln said, when he went back to the family rooms, “I
-need some help. Your mother has very graciously provided some little
-Christmas cheer for those boys out there of Company K. The things are
-all here in this big box. I’ll need you to help pass ’em out.”
-
-He bent and shouldered the heavy box that Mary had packed with small,
-paper-wrapped bundles.
-
-“Oh, Papa, let me call somebody! You shouldn’t carry that,” protested
-Robert.
-
-“Little enough to do for those boys.” Lincoln bent under the burden. “It
-will mean more to them if I fetch it to them personally.”
-
-“Ridiculous!” fumed Mary. “It’s beneath your dignity to lug that heavy
-box.”
-
-“Put my hat on, Mary, and put it on tight so I won’t knock it off.” He
-ignored her protest calmly.
-
-She jammed the high hat down over his rough hair, the bony knobs of his
-head. “You—the President of the United States!” she exploded. “With a
-house full of help and you lug that heavy thing!”
-
-“He who would be greatest among you, let him seek out the lowest place,”
-quoted Lincoln, solemnly and a bit inaccurately. “Not near so heavy as a
-good stout oak rail and I’ve shouldered many of them in my day. Come
-along, Bob.”
-
-“At least let me help carry, sir,” argued Robert as they went down the
-stairs.
-
-“Don’t touch it or you’ll get it unbalanced and spill all Company K’s
-Christmas. Little enough, but I had John Hay fetch me a roll of
-greenbacks. I’ll give every man a dollar. A dollar is a right
-substantial present, Bob, when you’re marching and fighting for thirteen
-dollars a month and what you can eat, when you get a chance to eat.”
-
-“I would do it gladly,” insisted Robert. “All I ask is a chance.”
-
-“I know, son. Maybe we can talk your mother around by spring. I did some
-better in the Black Hawk War.” Lincoln went on, stepping heavily down
-the outer steps and across the rutted yard. “They paid me eighty-five
-dollars for ninety days fighting in that war but part of the time I
-ranked a captain. We had to shoot hogs to eat, though, and then fight
-the farmers that owned ’em. Swampy country, too. Like Grant’s army
-fought over around Vicksburg.”
-
-“But you captured Black Hawk.”
-
-“The regular Army said they did that. I got put in the guardhouse for
-two days for firing a pistol in camp and they made me carry a wooden
-sword after that. Discipline. You couldn’t make any worse record in the
-army, Bob, than your father did before you.”
-
-“You couldn’t call that a real war, Papa,” Robert said.
-
-“It was real enough to the men who got their scalps peeled off. I helped
-bury twelve of them. Now, look at that lieutenant! Sending an escort up
-here on the double and putting all those boys in line at attention, when
-I just came out here on a friendly visit.”
-
-“Even Tad!” laughed Robert. “Even the confounded goat!”
-
-The goat wore his military hat and Tad was holding him grimly into line
-by his horns. Lincoln let the two soldiers who came trotting up help him
-ease the box down to the ground.
-
-“At ease, men,” he ordered. “This is old Father Christmas, not the
-commander in chief. File by, one at a time, and get your Christmas
-cheer.”
-
-Robert passed out the packages one by one while Lincoln stood thumbing
-bills off a roll of money, stopping to wet his thumb occasionally,
-saying, “Here, son, spend this on some foolishness next time you get a
-pass into town.”
-
-There were yells of thanks and a lined-up cheer for the President, the
-goat blatting an obligato. But Tad, who had straggled at the end of the
-line and received nothing, glared down into the empty box, whimpering.
-
-“I’m a soldier. I didn’t get any present,” he complained.
-
-“You got plenty of presents at the house, Tad,” said his father. “You’ve
-got candy there, too. Don’t you go bumming off these boys now. You have
-more Christmas than any of them.”
-
-“But I want a soldier Christmas,” persisted Tad, “and I want my nanny
-goat back!”
-
-“You’ve got a goat,” scolded Robert, “a blamed nuisance of a goat.
-You’re getting so you even smell like him.”
-
-“He’s clean,” fumed Tad. “Joe washed him and curried him and the
-corporal even put hair oil on his whiskers. Can I take Billy in the
-house, Papa? Can I? I want him to have some candy.”
-
-“No, Tad, no more goats in the house. That’s your mother’s order. Last
-time,” Lincoln explained to Robert, “Tad drove two of them, hitched to a
-chair, right through the middle of one of your mother’s social shindigs.
-Upset a couple of ladies and spilled claret punch on their dresses.
-Disgraced the whole Lincoln family and busted some good crockery too.”
-
-“It’s cold out here! Billy’s cold.” Tad hung to his father’s coattail
-but refused to let go the goat. “Billy will catch cold.”
-
-“Private Bullitt,” ordered Lincoln, “will you tie up this goat in a
-sheltered place? Tad, you come along inside. You’ll get the sniffles and
-your mother will scold all of us. Corporal, if you must provide escort
-for this family to their door, line ’em up. We’re ready to march.”
-Lincoln took a military stance, between two privates, who were very
-rigid with importance. Tad pulled back till Robert gave him a gentle,
-brotherly cuff.
-
-“You act more like a baby than a colonel,” he said. “If you want to cry,
-hand over that sword. You’ll disgrace the army, bawling on the march.”
-
-“Let loose of me!” shrilled Tad, jerking away. Turning he ran pelting
-back to the circle of tents, dove into one and vanished.
-
-“You’d better go after him, Bob,” worried the President. “Your Mama will
-worry if he’s out in this cold too long.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said Robert, unenthusiastically, “but If I may make a
-suggestion, sir, that boy needs discipline. He’s getting out of hand.”
-
-“Yes, sir, I stand reproved, sir,” said Lincoln meekly. “Just fetch him
-along in. I’ll wait here,” he told the escorting privates. “Stand at
-ease.”
-
-“Mr. President, I hope Tad don’t run off again,” worried one soldier.
-“We try not to take our eyes off him when he’s out here with us. Could
-be some Rebel sympathizers hangin’ round that would think it was a smart
-move to catch up Tad and hold him. Know you’d be mighty near be willing
-to surrender Washington to get that boy back, your pardon, sir, for
-speaking so bold.”
-
-Panic stiffened Abraham Lincoln’s long body. He broke into a long-legged
-trot back toward the tents, the escort panting after him. Robert
-emerged, pale-faced, from one tent and, with a dozen soldiers charging
-after him, hurried into another. He came out again, his hands outspread,
-helplessly.
-
-“He’s hiding somewhere, Papa,” he said. “We can’t find him.”
-
-“Spread out, men!” shouted the lieutenant. “Comb the area. Six of you
-guard the President. Corporal Barnes, form a guard detail.”
-
-The corporal hustled Robert into the middle of the protecting group, who
-faced outward bayonets alerted. Robert was angry and full of
-expostulations.
-
-“I don’t have to be guarded like a prisoner,” he protested. “I want to
-go and help search for Tad.”
-
-“Private Bullitt, here, has just made a rather startling suggestion,
-Bob,” said Lincoln worriedly. “He thinks that if some Rebel sympathizer
-should catch up Tad and hold him I might be pressured into surrendering
-Washington to get the boy back. And it might be,” he added sadly, “that
-I would be weak enough to do it!”
-
-“You never would! You couldn’t—with honor!” explained Robert. “But it
-would be a mighty tough decision, sir. Is that,” he asked sharply, “why
-you won’t let me go into the Army? For fear I might be captured and held
-as a hostage to force some concessions out of you? I want to tell you,
-sir, that if I can get into the Army—and no matter how I’m treated there
-or what happens to me, I’ll be a United States soldier, Mr. Lincoln—you
-can forget that I ever was your son.”
-
-“Very nobly said, son,” Lincoln patted his shoulder. “I’ll try to abide
-by your decision if the occasion ever arises. But Tad is my son. A
-little helpless boy. A boy I’m mighty fond of, and they know it!”
-
-“If I may speak plainly again, sir,” said Robert, “he needs his breeches
-tanned. And you are the one who ought to do it.”
-
-“He couldn’t have gone far,” fretted Lincoln. “It’s beginning to snow
-again.” He moved across the yard, his escort keeping rigidly in
-formation on either side. “Tad!” he shouted. “You, Tad—come back here!”
-
-“He wanted to be a soldier, Mr. President,” put in one of the soldiers.
-“Tad was bound he was a soldier.”
-
-“All my boys,” said Lincoln, “wanting to be soldiers!”
-
-There was a shout presently from beyond the fenced in confines of the
-yard. Men started running.
-
-“They’ve seen him,” cried Robert relieved. “The ornery little devil!” He
-began to run himself, and Lincoln trotted too, almost outstripping his
-guards.
-
-“There he is!” exclaimed a soldier. “Up on that scaffolding again!”
-
-“They’re going after him. They’ll get him down.” Lincoln almost forgot
-to breathe. The little figure looked so small against the loom of that
-great half-finished monument—a tiny, struggling shape swarmed over by
-half a dozen men in blue who clung precariously to the spidery trestles,
-caught him and passed him down slowly, kicking and fighting, from one to
-another.
-
-They brought him up in a few minutes, a pathetic, disheveled sight,
-tear-stained, dragging his feet, still kicking at the shins of the men
-who restrained him. His military cap was over one eye, his belt half
-off, the toy sword dragging.
-
-“Fetch him here!” sternly ordered the President of the United States.
-
-Tad stumbled close, held tight by the elbows by two privates. His chin
-was shaking, sobs shook him.
-
-“Oh, Papa—Oh, Papa—” he gasped, trying to fling himself at the tall man
-with the suddenly grim and forbidding face.
-
-But Lincoln was unrelenting. “Thomas Lincoln! Give me that sword!” he
-ordered in a terrible voice.
-
-Trembling Tad jerked the sword loose, handed it over.
-
-“Present the hilt, in proper military order!” snapped his father.
-
-Tad reversed the sword, his hand shaking so that almost it fell to the
-ground.
-
-“Yes, sir!” His voice was very thin and small.
-
-Solemnly Lincoln broke the sword over his knee, tossed it to one side.
-
-“You are now reduced to the rank of private, Thomas Lincoln,” he stated,
-“until such time as you can conduct yourself in the proper manner and
-discipline of an officer of the Army of the United States. Strip off his
-epaulets, Corporal.”
-
-The corporal obeyed, looking unhappy and ill at ease, handing the
-gold-fringed boards into the hands of the commander in chief.
-
-“Private Thomas Lincoln, you will now escort the President of the United
-States back to the White House,” ordered Abraham Lincoln. “Forward
-march!”
-
-Every man of Company K fell in, marched in grave formation, eyes
-straight ahead, chins set, weapons held ready, to the side door of the
-house. Lincoln entered first, turned on the doorstep, and soberly
-saluted the ranks.
-
-“My deepest gratitude, men of Company K,” he said, “for labor beyond the
-call of duty.”
-
-Tad marched in stiffly; then, with a frightened look backward at this
-stranger who had been his adored and indulgent father, flew through the
-hall and up the stairs. His mother came hurrying out of the sitting room
-but he ignored her, flying past her to the room with the great
-high-topped bed. There Private Thomas Lincoln dived under the bed.
-
-When the dinner gong sounded, he refused to come out, even at his
-father’s stern order.
-
-“All right,” dismissed Abraham Lincoln. “Since you’re such a craven and
-a coward, Private Lincoln, you may remain in durance there. I can eat
-two drumsticks.”
-
-Tad rolled out, swiftly, covered with dust and lint.
-
-“I am not a coward!” he sobbed. “I climbed most to the top of that silly
-ole monument!”
-
-“You are still a disgrace to the uniform,” declared his father. “A
-soldier who ran away. Now go and wash yourself before your mother comes
-in here and scolds both of us.”
-
-“Yes, Papa dear!” whimpered Tad, hugging the long legs and snuffling.
-“And you can have both drumsticks.”
-
-
-
-
- 8
-
-
-The Christmas party was in full swing. Abraham Lincoln had shaken hands
-till his knuckles ached. Mary Todd Lincoln’s coral-colored satin and
-turbaned headdress with jaunty flowers and feathers had swished and
-bowed and rustled, and her round face was all aglow with pleasure and
-excitement. She was always vivacious at parties, and, if at times she
-was a bit too garrulous, Lincoln overlooked that indulgently. He had not
-given Mary much of happiness, and she had had her share of frustration
-and sorrow. Now, if she could find pleasure in the dull round of an
-official affair, he was content.
-
-Some of the senators and other officials had had a few too many parties
-already. One judge was already asleep on a padded sofa in the hall, his
-gaited ankles sprawling, his mouth open. The musicians from the Marine
-Band played on doggedly and quietly in the screened corner of the East
-Room. Here and there stood men of Company K and White House guards,
-stony-faced, rigidly alerted. Abraham Lincoln felt his legs begin to sag
-a bit under him, found himself wishing wearily that this company would
-all go home. But at least Mary was enjoying herself.
-
-It was nearly midnight when an aide came through the crowd, and touched
-the arm of the President.
-
-“Some men of Company K at the rear door, Mr. President,” he said in a
-low voice. “They insist on seeing you. An officer is with them. They say
-they have brought a Christmas present for your son, Thomas.”
-
-Lincoln looked about him. Mary was the animated center of a group.
-Servants were collecting empty glasses and picking up shattered remnants
-of flowers from the carpet. Secretary Seward stood in the midst of a
-dozen men who were arguing a trifle too loudly the question of amnesty
-for North Carolina. The band was playing slowly, with a few sour notes
-indicating that the musicians were wearying after five hours of patient
-tootling.
-
-“Dismiss those Marine players,” ordered Lincoln. “They’re tired. I’ll
-see what those boys at the back door want.”
-
-“Not alone, Mr. President!” protested the aide.
-
-“Company K won’t let anything happen to me,” argued Lincoln. “How many
-are out there?”
-
-“Quite a number, sir. A lieutenant is with them.”
-
-“I’ll fetch Tad. If they’ve brought something for him it will sort of
-make up for this sorry Christmas he had.” Lincoln strode off up the
-stairs. All day since disciplining Tad his heart had ached in dull,
-heavy fashion. It was not easy, he was thinking, to be the son of a
-president. It was not even easy to be a president. He thought again
-wistfully of that white house in Springfield, of turkey wishbones hung
-to dry there above the kitchen stove when Tad and Willie were small.
-Honors came dear. Almost, he decided, a man could pay too much for them.
-
-Tad was still awake, lying hunched down in the middle of the huge, high
-bed. A candle burned on a stand, and the flickering light made his eyes
-enormous and somehow lost in the round paleness of his face.
-
-“I couldn’t get to sleep, Papa,” he explained, scrabbling into his
-father’s lap when Lincoln sat on the edge of the bed. “It was the drum.
-I could hear it all the time—bum, bum. When it stopped I waited for it
-to start again.”
-
-“It’s stopped now, Tad. For good. And the boys are downstairs. Our boys.
-They brought you something. Come on, I’ll carry you down. Put this
-wrapper around you so you won’t take cold.”
-
-“Maybe a new sword. Would you let me wear it, Papa?” asked Tad eagerly.
-
-“I’ll see—we’ll see how you behave.”
-
-They went down the rear stairway stealthily, through a chilly hall to
-the back door. But even here was an aide who sprang to open the door and
-two soldiers appeared out of nowhere, one desperately swallowing some
-thing he had been chewing on.
-
-On the steps outside huddled a crowd of blue-clad men. Snow sifted
-thinly over their bent shoulders, their drawn-down caps. Every face came
-up, but to a man they seemed to be holding something, holding tight to a
-bulk that struggled a little, something that was hairy and odorous and
-staccato of feet and alive.
-
-“Mr. President,” the lieutenant jerked erect, saluted anxiously, “we
-brought this—for Private Thomas Lincoln—for his Christmas, sir. It’s not
-the same one. Some of the boys chipped in and bought it off a Negro,
-sir—but we thought might be it would do—for the boy for his Christmas.”
-
-Like a fish Tad was out of his father’s arms, nightshirt flying, bare
-feet oblivious of the cold stone step.
-
-“A nanny goat!” he shrieked in delight. “Papa, it’s a nanny goat! My
-very own nanny goat!”
-
-“Mr. President, your pardon sir, it’s kind of dirty, sir, but we’ll wash
-it good in the morning. And though it ain’t the same one,” pleaded the
-corporal, “we thought maybe it would do—for Christmas.”
-
-“She licked my hand. She likes me!” Tad squirmed in ecstasy. “Most of
-anything I wanted me a nanny goat!”
-
-“It appears,” stated Abraham Lincoln, “to be a very superior goat. Thank
-the boys, Tad, and let them take your nanny down to the stables and feed
-her. She looks a bit gaunt to me. See that she gets a good feed,
-Corporal, if you please. Now, back to bed, Private Lincoln. Your nanny
-will still be here, all cleaned up and beautiful for you, in the
-morning.”
-
-Very reluctantly, with many farewell pats and hand lickings, Tad was at
-last persuaded to mount the stairs again in his father’s arms.
-
-Down below, the drums had ceased but Abraham Lincoln thought wearily of
-all the hands he must shake again before he could lie down to rest in
-this wide bed.
-
-He tucked the covers tenderly over the happy child. Tad’s eyes were
-starry. No more tears. All sadness forgotten. Wonderful, to be a child.
-Abraham Lincoln sighed as he closed the door.
-
-“Papa!” called Tad.
-
-Lincoln opened the door again. “Yes, son.”
-
-“It’s the nicest Christmas I ever had!” stated young Thomas Lincoln.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS FOR TAD ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Christmas for Tad, by Helen Topping Miller</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Christmas for Tad</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0;'>A Story of Mary and Abraham Lincoln</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Helen Topping Miller</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 9, 2021 [eBook #65810]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Tim Lindell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHRISTMAS FOR TAD ***</div>
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Christmas for Tad: A Story of Mary and Abraham Lincoln" width="676" height="1000" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>CHRISTMAS FOR TAD
-<br /><span class="smallest">A Story of Mary and Abraham Lincoln</span></h1>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">BY</span>
-<br />HELEN TOPPING MILLER</p>
-<p class="tbcenter">LONGMANS, GREEN AND COMPANY
-<br /><span class="smaller">NEW YORK &middot; LONDON &middot; TORONTO</span>
-<br />1956</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center smaller">LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., INC.
-<br /><span class="small">55 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK 3</span></p>
-<p class="center smaller">LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. <span class="sc">Ltd.</span>
-<br /><span class="small">6 &amp; 7 CLIFFORD STREET, LONDON W 1</span></p>
-<p class="center smaller">LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
-<br /><span class="small">20 CRANFIELD ROAD, TORONTO 16</span></p>
-<p class="center smallest">CHRISTMAS FOR TAD</p>
-<p class="center smallest">COPYRIGHT &middot; 1956
-<br />BY HELEN TOPPING MILLER
-<br />ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE THIS BOOK, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, IN ANY FORM</p>
-<p class="center smallest">PUBLISHED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA BY
-<br />LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., TORONTO</p>
-<p class="center smallest">FIRST EDITION</p>
-<p class="center smallest">LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 56-10108</p>
-<p class="center smaller">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">1</span></h2>
-<p>The package was very tightly sealed.</p>
-<p>There was a heavy cord around it fastened
-with thick blobs of wax and Tad Lincoln, who
-had been christened Thomas, stood fidgeting
-while his father worked at it patiently, with
-the old horn-handled knife that opened and
-shut with a sharp click.</p>
-<p>Outside was the gloom of late December.
-That December of 1863, when the fortunes of
-the Federal armies had taken a little swing upward,
-but when war still lay like a poisonous,
-tragic, and heartbreaking shadow over a whole
-country. But to Tad Lincoln December meant
-Christmas, and packages meant surprises, important
-to a ten-year-old boy.</p>
-<p>Tad stood first on one foot, then the other,
-impatiently, because Papa was so slow in opening
-<span class="pb" id="Page_2">2</span>
-this package. A round-faced boy, with his
-mother&rsquo;s brown eyes and hair, he was a sturdy
-figure in the miniature uniform of a Union
-colonel that his father had had made for him.
-The coat fitted him jauntily, all the brass buttons
-fastened up in regulation fashion; there
-were epaulets and braid and long trousers lying
-properly over his toes, so that the copper toes
-of his boots showed. He had a belt and a sword,
-but he was not wearing them now. Swords were
-for engagements, reviews, and parades, the
-officers of Company K had instructed him.
-Among friends indoors an officer took off his
-belt and hung it in a safe place.</p>
-<p>His father&rsquo;s fingers were mighty long and
-bony, Tad was thinking, and awkward, too.
-One thumbnail was thicker and darker than
-the other nails and Tad touched it gently with
-his forefinger.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What makes your thumb like that, Papa?&rdquo;
-he asked.</p>
-<p>The long yellowed hand put down the knife
-and the deep-set, steel-gray eyes of Abraham
-Lincoln studied the thumb intently as though
-he had never seen it before.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Once there was an ax, Tad,&rdquo; he drawled, his
-<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
-heavy eyebrows flicking up and down, his long
-mouth quirked up at one corner. &ldquo;It didn&rsquo;t want
-to go where I aimed it, so I said, says I, now
-who is boss here, Mister Ax, you or Abe Lincoln?
-You chop where I aim for you to chop,
-Mister Ax. So I made it hit where I wanted it to
-hit but it jumped back and took a whack at me
-just to show me that it could be the boss if it
-wanted to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It might have cut your hand off,&rdquo; worried
-Tad, still rubbing the dark nail.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It might&mdash;but it didn&rsquo;t. It was a well-meaning
-ax. Just independent, like a lot of people.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;People take whacks at you, don&rsquo;t they? I
-hear about it,&rdquo; Tad said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, some of &rsquo;em do.&rdquo; Lincoln picked up the
-knife again, poked at the stubborn seals. &ldquo;But
-mostly afterwards they cooperate.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those people in New York didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; insisted
-Tad. &ldquo;Mother was scared to death when those
-draft riots were on and people yelled at her
-in that store. The police had to stand all around
-us with guns and you know something? Bob
-was scared but I wasn&rsquo;t. Ole Bob was plumb
-scared green.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That was a bad time, son.&rdquo; A seal came
-loose at last and fell in scarlet fragments to the
-rug. He attacked a second one, gripping the
-knife, the skin stretched tight over his fleshless
-knuckles. &ldquo;It was bad because people weren&rsquo;t
-mad at you. They were mad at me, not at Bob
-or your mother. They didn&rsquo;t want to be drafted
-to fight in this war and I said they had to be
-drafted.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, golly, you&rsquo;ve got to have soldiers!
-General Grant and General Rosecrans and
-everybody are yelling for more troops. You
-have to get &rsquo;em, you can&rsquo;t make &rsquo;em out of air.
-Hurry and open it, Papa. Don&rsquo;t you want to see
-what&rsquo;s in it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I know what&rsquo;s in it. Yes, Tad,&rdquo; he
-went on musingly, as though he talked to himself.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m supposed to make soldiers out of air;
-anyway the New York newspapers seemed to
-think so. Make &rsquo;em out of air and feed &rsquo;em on
-air and give &rsquo;em air to shoot with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And then if General Lee licks us you&rsquo;re to
-blame!&rdquo; cried Tad. &ldquo;Oh, I know, John Hay and
-Mr. Nicolay hide the papers but I find &rsquo;em.
-Papa, I read where one New York paper called
-you a gorilla.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you think, Tad? Don&rsquo;t I look like
-one a little?&rdquo; Lincoln dropped the knife,
-shambled bent across the room, his long arms
-dangling, his hands almost touching the floor.
-As the boy drew back aghast he bared his long
-teeth and snarled and Tad began to cry suddenly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no! Don&rsquo;t do it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln laughed loudly, lifted him, setting
-the lad on his knee, holding him close. &ldquo;For a
-man wearing the Union uniform, you scare
-easy, Colonel,&rdquo; he teased. &ldquo;Remember this,
-Tad. Names never hurt anybody. And the
-gorilla is one beast that&rsquo;s never been tamed and
-only a heavy chain can master him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Open the box,&rdquo; gulped Tad, scrubbing his
-eyes with the cuff of his blue Union coat. &ldquo;If
-anybody sent me a Christmas present, I&rsquo;d want
-to know what it was.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln dug the last seal away, cut the cord,
-and tore off the heavy paper. &ldquo;Now, John Hay
-would say I&rsquo;m a fool to open this,&rdquo; he remarked.
-&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll say there could be something
-in it to blind or cripple me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you&rsquo;d better not, Papa,&rdquo; Tad cried
-anxiously. &ldquo;Let me call somebody.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Tad. I trust the man who brought it and
-I know what&rsquo;s in it. It isn&rsquo;t a Christmas present
-exactly. I earned it in a kind of a way.
-Look!&rdquo; He opened the heavy box and the
-smaller one inside that was covered with gold-colored
-plush.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A watch!&rdquo; exclaimed the boy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A solid gold watch.&rdquo; Lincoln held it out
-carefully on his big palm. &ldquo;From Mr. James
-Hoes, Esquire, of Chicago. I won it, Tad. Mr.
-Hoes offered the watch as a prize for the one
-making the biggest contribution of funds to
-their Sanitary Commission fair. I sent them a
-copy of the Emancipation Proclamation and
-they auctioned it off for three thousand dollars,
-so I won the watch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve already got a watch, Papa, but I
-haven&rsquo;t got one,&rdquo; said Tad eagerly.</p>
-<p>Lincoln drew his old watch from his pocket,
-loosed it from the chain and seals. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t have
-a solid gold watch. This old turnip is sort of
-worn. I guess I timed too many speeches
-and juries with it. But you&rsquo;re not big enough
-for a watch, Tad. Not till you can wear a
-vest and have enough stomach to hold up a
-chain.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Willie had a vest and he wasn&rsquo;t so very
-much bigger than me,&rdquo; argued Tad.</p>
-<p>A shadow of pain ran over his father&rsquo;s gaunt
-face and the tears, always quick when any emotion
-stirred him, were bright in his sunken eyes.
-The agony of Willie&rsquo;s untimely death was still
-raw and aching in his heart.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Willie was twelve years old, Tad. When you
-are twelve you can have a vest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And a watch?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And a watch. Not this one.&rdquo; Lincoln clicked
-the fastening of the bright new timepiece and
-dropped it into his pocket, along with the key
-that wound it. &ldquo;I guess Bob will have to have
-this old one. Bob&rsquo;s a man now and a man needs
-a watch.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He thinks he&rsquo;s a man just because he can
-shave,&rdquo; Tad scoffed. He studied his father&rsquo;s
-face for a moment. &ldquo;Why did you grow a beard,
-Papa? You didn&rsquo;t have a beard when I was a
-little boy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re still a little boy, fellow.&rdquo; Lincoln gave
-him a poke in ribs. &ldquo;Maybe I raised these
-whiskers because a little girl in New York asked
-me to. Maybe I just did it to keep my chin
-warm.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All Bob has is little patches in front of his
-ears. They look silly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln lifted his long body erect and walked
-to the window.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better be respectful to your big
-brother, Tad,&rdquo; he said dryly. &ldquo;Some of the
-newspapers that don&rsquo;t like me are printing that
-Bob Lincoln has made a million dollars out of
-this war. For a young fellow still in Harvard
-only twenty years old, I&rsquo;d say he had uncanny
-perspicacity.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad frowned thoughtfully. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a lie, ain&rsquo;t it,
-Papa?&rdquo; In his agitation the boy&rsquo;s tricky palate
-betrayed him as it often did. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s big, dirty
-<i>rie</i>!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln&rsquo;s bony shoulders twitched upward,
-sagged with resignation. &ldquo;Son, if all the lies
-that have been printed about the Lincolns were
-piled up in a heap, they&rsquo;d reach near to the top
-of that monument out yonder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad came to stand beside him and looked
-out of the half-finished shaft that would some
-day honor Washington. Now it was only a
-beginning, lost in a spidery web of scaffolding.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Be plenty tall,&rdquo; he observed. &ldquo;If Bob had all
-that money, would it reach to the top, Papa? He
-<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span>
-could buy everything he wanted, couldn&rsquo;t he?
-Horses and carriages and gold watches and
-everything. Can&rsquo;t you put people in jail for telling
-such lies? You&rsquo;re the president.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln stood still, looking down on the
-trampled mall where a herd of cattle pastured,
-beef animals gathered to feed the Army of the
-Potomac. His eyes took on the faraway inscrutable
-look that so often baffled his intimates
-and infuriated his enemies; the look that lost
-itself on the horizon of a great land torn by hate
-and drenched in an anguish of blood and fire.
-Gettysburg, Vicksburg, Chickamauga, had
-deepened that hurt in his eyes and cut new
-lines about his mouth and brooding brows.
-Three years of war, and in the nation there
-seethed a dozen angry factions. Copperheads,
-only by a miracle defeated in Ohio; furious
-mobs resisting conscription in the cities; even
-in the Congress, oppositionists, critics, outright
-enemies.</p>
-<p>Only a few weeks since, he had stood facing
-that raw November wind on the Gettysburg
-hill, speaking that little piece that now he was
-embarrassed to remember, the speech that the
-papers had dismissed as insignificant, dedicating
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-the ground where slept more than sixty thousand
-Union and Confederate dead. The dull
-ache in Abraham Lincoln&rsquo;s heart turned bitter
-as he thought of his own son, who should be in
-uniform and who was growing restless and unhappy
-at being the one young man of army age
-who was not permitted to fight for his country.
-Yet he dared not let Robert enlist. The President&rsquo;s
-son would be a prime hostage should he
-be captured, and used no doubt to wring concessions
-from his father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s go show Mama the watch.&rdquo; He shook
-off his dismal musings and scrubbed Tad&rsquo;s
-brown head with the flat of his palm, straightening
-the collar of the uniform that was Tad&rsquo;s
-pride and glory.</p>
-<p>Tad looked up confidingly. &ldquo;You know what
-Mama is worrying about, Papa? She owes an
-awful lot of money in New York. She&rsquo;s afraid
-you&rsquo;ll find it out. She said on the train when we
-came home that I mustn&rsquo;t tell you all the things
-she bought because you had troubles enough
-to kill three men.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln hunched a shoulder, stretching his
-lips into a dry smile. &ldquo;See how my back is
-breaking down, Tad? That&rsquo;s General Rosecrans.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
-And this side is General McClellan and General
-Meade made it worse when he let Lee get
-away across the river.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You cried then, I remember. Men don&rsquo;t
-cry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Strong men had wept enough tears to put
-the Potomac in flood these last years, Lincoln
-was thinking. &ldquo;When will it end?&rdquo; he said aloud,
-with a groan. John Hay, his faithful secretary,
-looked up quickly from his desk in the outer
-room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When we&rsquo;ve killed all the Rebs, I reckon,&rdquo;
-said Tad complacently. &ldquo;But if we killed &rsquo;em all
-I&rsquo;d have a lot of uncles killed, wouldn&rsquo;t I? I
-had one killed at Chickamauga already, my
-uncle Helm.&mdash;He was a general,&rdquo; he told John
-Hay.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s happened in a good many families,
-Tad,&rdquo; Hay said. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s because we&rsquo;re all
-Americans.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, my mother was Southern to begin
-with,&rdquo; declared Tad, &ldquo;so I&rsquo;m kind of half Southern
-but I got over it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Southerners are good folks, son,&rdquo; Lincoln
-admonished him. &ldquo;Fine people most of them.
-Just mistaken, that&rsquo;s all&mdash;just mistaken.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>&ldquo;They fight good,&rdquo; was Tad&rsquo;s comment, as
-they went down the hall.</p>
-<p>Abraham Lincoln always stepped carefully
-and quietly in this big house. He had never
-been at home in the White House. He always
-had a secret, haunting feeling of guilt as though
-he were a guest and a strange, uneasy, even an
-unworthy, guest. Mary, his wife, had no such
-inhibitions. She loved to sweep down the wide
-stairway, her widely flounced skirts moving
-elegantly over her hoops, her tight small bosom,
-her round white arms and her round white
-chin held proudly and complacently. All this
-was her due, her manner said, and her husband&rsquo;s
-humility and trick of effacing himself
-occasionally irked and angered her.</p>
-<p>She was writing a letter at a desk when they
-entered her sitting room. The intent creases in
-her brow softened as the boy ran to her.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look Mama&mdash;look at Papa&rsquo;s new solid gold
-watch! He got it for the &rsquo;Mancipation Proclamation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln pulled out the watch, grinning boyishly.
-Mary&rsquo;s eyes brightened as she fingered
-the handsomely engraved case.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, it must be terribly expensive,&rdquo; she approved.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-&ldquo;What does Tad mean about the Proclamation?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I sent a copy to Chicago. They auctioned
-it off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For three thousand dollars,&rdquo; added Tad.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My Heaven, you mean they got three thousand
-dollars just for that piece of paper?&rdquo; exclaimed
-Mary.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was a pretty important paper, Mary, to a
-million or so poor black people anyway. A copy
-would be a historic memento a hundred years
-from now. Understand&mdash;&rdquo; he fended off the
-small glint of avidity that so often troubled
-him in Mary Lincoln&rsquo;s pale gray eyes &ldquo;&mdash;this was
-a charity thing. For their fair out there in
-Chicago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You only made one copy?&rdquo; She turned the
-watch in her small, plumb fingers.</p>
-<p>He hedged uneasily sensing the trend of her
-thinking. &ldquo;I made one or two for old friends.
-No&mdash;&rdquo; he raised a hand &ldquo;&mdash;I&rsquo;m not making any
-more, so put that idea out of your mind.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She flared. &ldquo;Why do you always accuse me
-of things I&rsquo;m not even thinking?&rdquo; she cried angrily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe because I know you better than you
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-know yourself, my dear,&rdquo; he said gently. &ldquo;You
-were thinking that this is a nice watch but that
-three thousand dollars is three thousand dollars.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, it is a nice watch but it never cost that
-much money,&rdquo; she admitted grudgingly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mary, this watch was a prize. It was competition.
-Anybody else could have won it, anybody
-who contributed more to their fair than I
-did.&rdquo; He took the watch from her hands and
-slid it back to his pocket. &ldquo;Here&mdash;&rdquo; he handed
-her the old one&mdash;&ldquo;put this away. You can give
-it to Bob when he comes home. Run along now,
-Tad, I&rsquo;ve got work to do.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad slipped out of the room a bit disconcerted.
-Mama ought not to have got mad. She
-was trying not to get mad so often, his father
-assured him. They had to help her, be careful
-not to provoke her. Tad skittered down the long
-stairs almost colliding with a workman who
-carried a stepladder, with a long wreath of
-greenery hung over his shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that for?&rdquo; the boy demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;For the Christmas receptions and things.
-Decorations. Don&rsquo;t know how I&rsquo;ll get it hung.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-Can&rsquo;t drive no nails in this wall. Hard as rock.
-Nails just bends double.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You could glue it,&rdquo; suggested Tad helpfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yah!&rdquo; scorned the workman. &ldquo;Get along out
-of my way, boy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My father is the President!&rdquo; stated Tad,
-sternly, drawing himself up in his uniform.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He is that, but you ain&rsquo;t&mdash;nor no colonel
-either.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am so. I&rsquo;m an honorary colonel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Call it ornery and I&rsquo;ll agree. Now quit
-bothering me. I&rsquo;ve got to figure where to put up
-two Christmas trees.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Two?&rdquo; Tad&rsquo;s eyes widened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One down here and one up yonder&mdash;private,
-for you I reckon. So everybody wants to get a
-favor out of your Pa can send you a present.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All I want,&rdquo; sighed Tad, backing off to
-watch the man ascend the ladder, &ldquo;is my nanny
-goat back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your nanny goat has likely been made into
-stew by this time. You won&rsquo;t be driving a goat
-team through this house any more, busting up
-things and ruinin&rsquo; the floors.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I bet I get her back,&rdquo; bragged Tad. &ldquo;All
-Company K is helping me look for her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Soldiers have got more important things to
-do than hunt goats,&rdquo; stated the man from his
-perch. &ldquo;They got to find out who put that bullet
-through your old man&rsquo;s hat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad was galvanized with excitement. &ldquo;Hey!
-He never told me.&rdquo; He tore back up the stairs.</p>
-<p>Mr. Stanton, the Secretary of War, was just
-coming out of his father&rsquo;s office. Tad backed
-off and flattened himself against the wall. Mr.
-Stanton was running the war; he was tall and
-grim with a long gray beard but no mustache
-to soften a stern mouth, and his eyes could look
-very hard and coldly at a boy through his round
-spectacles. Behind Stanton marched Senator
-Sumner and Tad knew him too. Senator Sumner
-was always mad about something and now, as
-he strode past the boy, Tad heard him mutter
-angrily, &ldquo;Amnesty! Amnesty! I&rsquo;d give North
-Carolina amnesty at the end of a rope!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad wriggled behind the visitor and slipped
-in before anyone closed the door. He marched
-straight to the desk where John Hay was
-putting papers in envelopes and licking the
-flaps.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Who shot a bullet through my father&rsquo;s hat?&rdquo;
-he demanded.</p>
-<p>Hay pressed down the flap with a fist. &ldquo;Who
-told you that, Colonel Thomas Lincoln?&rdquo; he
-inquired with careful unconcern.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You never told me,&rdquo; stormed Tad, &ldquo;nor my
-father&mdash;nor Mama.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your mother doesn&rsquo;t know about it. We
-hope she&rsquo;ll never know. Also we hope your
-father won&rsquo;t ride alone out there at the Soldier&rsquo;s
-Home any more.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavalry ride with him. With drawn sabers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now they do. But he rode alone out there
-and somebody shot a bullet through the top of
-his high silk hat. He doesn&rsquo;t want his family or
-anybody worried about it, so I wouldn&rsquo;t mention
-it if I were you, Colonel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t.&rdquo; Tad was flattered by being addressed
-as colonel, and he liked his father&rsquo;s
-grave secretary. He obeyed John Hay more
-readily than any one else. &ldquo;But I want to see the
-hat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We burned the hat. Too bad&mdash;it was a good
-eight-dollar hat.&rdquo; Hay folded another sheet after
-verifying the scrawled signature: <i>A. Lincoln</i>.
-&ldquo;We burned it by order of the President.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>Tad looked a trifle shaken. He came close
-and leaned on the desk. &ldquo;Why do people want
-to kill my father, Mr. Hay? They do. I know.
-That&rsquo;s why we have Company K here in the
-house and all over the yard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>John Hay shook his head. &ldquo;This is war, Tad.
-You could ask, why is there a war? Why are
-there millions of people over there across the
-river who&rsquo;d liked to blow up this town and kill
-everybody in it? Everybody who stands for the
-Union. Give me an answer to that and I&rsquo;ll answer
-your why. It&rsquo;s a black cloud of hate, Colonel,
-smothering everything decent in the
-country. Maybe it will lift some day. Meanwhile
-there&rsquo;s not much sense to it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe some of those mean Secesh over
-there stole my nanny goat! I have to go out and
-see if the boys have heard anything about her.
-She was a nice goat. She liked me; she licked
-my fingers. She wouldn&rsquo;t just run off like Papa
-said.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; remarked Hay, &ldquo;she went over to
-see why General Meade let Lee&rsquo;s army get
-away from him. Go hunt your goat and don&rsquo;t
-bother your father. He&rsquo;s had people swarming
-in there for the last hour.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All the women,&rdquo; observed Tad, wise beyond
-his years, &ldquo;have got a boy they want to be a
-colonel or a captain. And all the men want to
-know why Papa doesn&rsquo;t take Richmond.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get on out of here, Tad, or I won&rsquo;t give you
-any Christmas present.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know what I want,&rdquo; stated Tad at the
-door. &ldquo;My nanny goat back.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small">2</span></h2>
-<p>The man in the armchair across the desk
-looked formidable and expensive. Abraham
-Lincoln looked down at his own long, dusty,
-and wrinkled black breeches and unconsciously
-gave a hitch to his sagging coat, to his crooked
-black satin tie that had a perverse tendency to
-sidle around under his ear.</p>
-<p>The visitor&rsquo;s swallow-tailed coat was pressed
-and elegant; his shirt was crisp with ruffles, his
-heavy watch chain held a jeweled seal. He
-rested plump white hands, covered with yellow
-gloves, on the gold head of a cane. His homely
-face was cold-eyed and stern. He had refused
-to state his errand to the people in the outer
-office and Lincoln knew how thoroughly they
-deplored his stubborn insistence on seeing as
-many who called as possible.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Some day,&rdquo; prophesied Nicolay gloomily,
-&ldquo;you&rsquo;re going to admit the man with the little
-derringer hid inside a boot, Mr. President.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With the fences down all around, Nicolay,
-why put a bar over the one door,&rdquo; Lincoln had
-argued calmly. &ldquo;If they want to kill me they
-will unless you bolt me inside an iron box. I&rsquo;m
-the people&rsquo;s hired man. They put me here. I
-must listen to what they want to say.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But obviously the portly stranger in the flamboyant
-apparel had little to say. He remarked
-about the weather, the unfinished Capitol
-dome, and the trampled mall where army beef
-grazed. His chilly visage did not soften or show
-animation or interest. Momentarily Lincoln expected
-him to announce icily, as had happened
-before, &ldquo;Mr. Lincoln, your wife owes me a large
-account on which no payment has been made
-for some time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>If this visitor&rsquo;s errand was financial he made
-no mention of it. He stated that he was a friend
-of Secretary Seward and that he had attended
-the Convention at which Lincoln had been
-nominated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I did not vote for you, sir,&rdquo; he added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your privilege and right, sir.&rdquo; Lincoln filled
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-a little following silence by pulling out the gold
-watch. &ldquo;A gift I had today. From the Chicago
-Fair. Sort of a Christmas gift, I guess you&rsquo;d call
-it.&rdquo; He felt as young as Tad under those coldly
-scrutinizing eyes, and as na&iuml;ve and awkward.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very fitting and well deserved, Mr. President.
-Now I must tell you that I have no business
-here whatsoever. I merely came here to
-tell you that I believe you are doing all for the
-good of the country that it is in the power of
-man to do. And I want to say to you, Mr. President&mdash;go
-ahead, do as you darned well please
-and I will support you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln&rsquo;s rare laughter whooped. He sprang
-up and pumped the hand of the startled
-stranger. John Hay put an inquiring head in at
-the door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This man,&rdquo; chortled the President, &ldquo;came
-here deliberately and on purpose to tell me that
-I was running this country right&mdash;and all the
-while I thought he&rsquo;d come to tell me how to
-take Richmond. Sit down, sir, sit down! I have
-not seen enough of you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My dear Mr. President,&rdquo; protested the visitor,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-&ldquo;are words of approval so rare and exciting
-to the President of the United States?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Rare?&rdquo; Lincoln dropped back to his chair,
-his face collapsing into a sudden, melancholy
-mask. &ldquo;John, show this man that copy of the
-New York <i>Herald</i>&mdash;the one where they call me
-a fiend and a disgrace to humanity because I
-set human beings free from slavery.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I destroyed it, Mr. President,&rdquo; Hay said. &ldquo;I
-was afraid that the infamous thing might be
-seen by some of your family.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Useless precaution, Johnny. I have a son
-in Boston, and I suspect that he keeps his
-mother supplied with interesting clippings. My
-friend, if to be the big boss of Hell is as tough
-as what I have to undergo here, I can feel
-mighty sorry for Satan. Come along and have
-lunch with me, if you will, sir. I reckon they&rsquo;ve
-put the big pot in the little one by this time.
-John, will you see if Mrs. Lincoln is ready for
-lunch?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I believe Mrs. Lincoln went out, Mr. President.
-Mr. Nicolay ordered out the carriage and
-the black team.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And an escort?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, sir&mdash;the lieutenant arranged an escort.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mary would like that, Abraham Lincoln was
-thinking as they went down the chilly stairs.
-Fires burned in all the rooms but the ceilings
-were high and the walls cold and this was a
-bleak day with the lowering chill of late December.
-A few snowflakes timidly rode down the
-icy air, but Mary would wrap herself in rich
-furs, her round pink face nestled in a deep collar,
-a stylish bonnet perched on her smooth
-dark hair.</p>
-<p>With white-gloved hands&mdash;smooth now, but
-once they had known a time of rough domestic
-toil&mdash;she would wave brief salutes to the people
-in the street. He hoped she wouldn&rsquo;t be
-haughty about it. He knew her shyness and uncertainty,
-her feeling of insecurity in a high
-place for which she had had so little training,
-and that too often she hid this uncertainty behind
-a too glib, too tart attitude of arrogance.
-To Abraham Lincoln&rsquo;s eyes, to his sensitive
-insight, it was like seeing a nervous little hen
-strut and bridle surrounded by the cold angry
-eyes of foxes and the sharp talons of hawks.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-There were, unhappily, too many people who
-misunderstood Mary Todd Lincoln.</p>
-<p>Even John Hay had little sympathy for the
-President&rsquo;s wife. There had been a scrap of
-paper that Lincoln had found once, part of a
-letter Hay had begun and discarded calling
-Mary a &ldquo;Hellcat&rdquo; and adding dryly that she was
-lately more &ldquo;hellcatical&rdquo; than usual.</p>
-<p>Too bad Mary occasionally indulged in temper
-tantrums in the executive offices. Her small
-explosions, her husband knew, were a form of
-relief for the eternally seething doubts of herself
-that tormented her. She adored her husband
-and the two boys that had been spared to
-them, but this love was fiercely jealous and
-possessive and not always wise or controlled.</p>
-<p>Christmas would be a sad time for Mary.
-Last year Willie had been here, the gentle,
-quiet brown-haired boy who spent so many
-hours curled up in a chair with a book. Willie
-had known every railroad line, every station on
-every line. He had learned timetables by heart
-and drawn up schedules of his own. It had been
-just such a raw, dreary day as this last February
-when Willie had gone riding out on his pony.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-He had come home soaked and chilled and the
-nightmare of those next days would haunt
-Abraham Lincoln as long as he lived&mdash;Willie,
-burning with fever, babbling incoherencies;
-Mary sobbing and moaning, pacing the floor,
-her hands in taut, agonized fists, her smooth
-hair wild over her tear-streaked cheeks; and
-that ghastly night of the White House ball, with
-the Marine Band playing, he himself having to
-shake hands endlessly at the door of the East
-Room while Willie fought for breath upstairs.</p>
-<p>After that, the end. The blue eyes closed and
-sunken, fading flowers pressed by Mary into
-the small cold hands, senators, generals, foreign
-ministers, pressing the numb hand of the
-President of the United States, while upstairs
-on her bed Mary writhed and wailed in uncontrolled
-grief.</p>
-<p>Now Christmas would bring it all back. He
-was glad that Mary could forget for a little
-while, shopping, buying gifts for Tad who had
-too much already, who was in a fair way to be
-badly spoiled.</p>
-<p>Deeply, poignantly, Abraham Lincoln
-dreaded Christmas. All over the land, north
-and south, would lie a load of sorrow like a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-grim hand pressing the heart of America, the
-heart of this tall grave man in the White House.
-He felt that burden as he walked into the small
-dining room. Mary had not returned. Tad slid
-in late and was sent out again to wash himself.
-The stranger waxed garrulous.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I understand, Mr. President, that you have
-a plan to widen the breach between Governor
-Vance of North Carolina and Jefferson Davis,
-president of this so-called Confederacy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Lincoln, &ldquo;turned out not too
-well. Gilmore, of the New York <i>Tribune</i>, wrote
-too much and prematurely. Those fellows across
-the river got riled up and a Georgia regiment
-started a riot in Raleigh in September and
-burned the Raleigh <i>Standard</i>. So the citizens
-of Raleigh who didn&rsquo;t have faith in Jeff Davis
-rose up and burned the Confederate newspaper,
-the <i>State Journal</i>. That widened the breach
-and Vance has already told Jeff Davis that he
-would welcome reunion with the Union states
-and any peace compatible with honor.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He caught John Hay&rsquo;s warning look then and
-said no more. He would not reveal that his
-agents has just brought in a letter sent by the
-Governor of North Carolina to Jefferson Davis&mdash;a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-bold and open plea for negotiation with the
-enemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If North Carolina would make the break it
-would be a long step toward peace,&rdquo; said his
-guest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It could also mean anarchy, outrages, and
-destruction in that state, calling for more Union
-troops,&rdquo; Hay reminded them. &ldquo;So far we have
-pushed back the borders of this rebellion,
-opened the Mississippi, and our Navy has
-tightened the blockade of all the Southern
-ports.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You will not, even under pressure, revoke
-the Emancipation Proclamation, Mr. President?&rdquo;
-The visitor was anxious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I shall never revoke that Proclamation, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the meal ended and the guest had
-taken an obsequious departure, Lincoln
-stopped at Hay&rsquo;s desk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What was that fellow sent here to find out,
-Johnny? Was he sent by Sumner, you think, to
-put in a word against my idea of amnesty for
-any Southern state that wants to come back into
-the Union? Sumner wants &rsquo;em all hung down
-there and he has some powerful newspapers
-behind him. Some of &rsquo;em are saying I&rsquo;m having
-<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
-my salary raised to a hundred thousand dollars
-a year, that I&rsquo;m drawing it in gold while the
-Army gets paid in greenbacks, and that I&rsquo;ve
-cooked up a scheme to have Congress declare
-me perpetual president for the rest of my life.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you let such fantastic rumors disturb
-you, Mr. Lincoln?&rdquo; Hay protested. &ldquo;That
-New York <i>World</i> editorial saying you&rsquo;ve done
-a fine job and that your death would only
-prolong the war has been reprinted all over the
-country.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If my death would end this war, John, I&rsquo;d
-give my life gladly,&rdquo; Lincoln declared solemnly.
-&ldquo;That would be a fine Christmas gift for
-this country.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">3</span></h2>
-<p>The soldiers of Company K One Hundred
-and Fiftieth Pennsylvania Volunteers had become
-practically a part of the White House
-family. Abraham Lincoln treated them as
-though they were his own sons, called most of
-them by their first names, personally arranged
-for their passes and furloughs.</p>
-<p>So when Mary Todd Lincoln had all her
-shopping purchases carried up to the family
-sitting room and displayed, Lincoln&rsquo;s face wore
-a sober look of disappointment. Mary was tired
-and on edge but she excitedly showed him, one
-after another, the toys she had bought for Tad,
-the gifts for Robert, and a few items for members
-of the household staff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look, Abraham, this gun&mdash;it fires like a real
-cannon! With smoke.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing for the boys?&rdquo; he asked, rubbing
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-his long hands over his knees, a characteristic
-nervous gesture.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I&rsquo;ve just showed you&mdash;the wallet and
-cuff buttons for Bob and all these&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I mean <i>my</i> boys. The Company K boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mary stared incredulously. &ldquo;Good Heavens&mdash;you
-can&rsquo;t give Christmas presents to a whole
-company of soldiers! There must be a hundred
-of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wish there were,&rdquo; he said heavily. &ldquo;I wish
-every company in our army was full strength
-but unfortunately they&rsquo;re far short in numbers.
-There are less than forty of those boys and
-they&rsquo;re far from home and Christmas is a bad
-time to be homesick.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They could be worse off,&rdquo; she snapped.
-&ldquo;They could be out there along the Rappahannock
-or down in those marshes of Mississippi.
-Pennsylvania&rsquo;s not so far. Lord knows you&rsquo;re
-always fixing up furloughs for them so they can
-go home. Why, it would cost a fortune to give
-gifts to all that company&mdash;and anyway, what
-can you give a soldier?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some warm socks might come in good. That
-ground&rsquo;s frozen out there and it&rsquo;s likely to
-snow hard any day now.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The commissary should keep them in socks.&rdquo;
-She was testy as always in the face of criticism.
-&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t I do enough&mdash;going out to those horrid
-hospitals twice a week&mdash;carrying things&mdash;this
-house is practically stripped of bed linen, all
-torn up for bandages.&rdquo; She fluttered about her
-purchases, flushed and breathless, her hands
-making little snatching gestures, picking up
-things, putting them down again, twisting
-string around her fingers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very noble of you, indeed,&rdquo; he approved.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m proud of what you do but I&rsquo;m still thinking
-about Joe and Nate and those other boys. They
-curry horses and clean harness and saddles;
-they look after Tad and his goat&mdash;and of course
-they&rsquo;re always on guard for fear I&rsquo;ll get shot,
-though I can&rsquo;t figure any place where I could
-be where nobody could get at me, unless they
-buried me.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That man, that one-eyed man, you&rsquo;re crazy
-to let him come here!&rdquo; Mary cried. &ldquo;Mr. Nicolay
-says so.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gurowski? I know.&rdquo; He smiled patiently. &ldquo;If
-anybody does the Democrats a favor by putting
-a bullet in my head it might very well be Gurowski.
-He croaks that the country is marching
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-to it&rsquo;s tomb and that Seward and McClellan
-and I are the gravediggers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be digging your grave if you don&rsquo;t
-have a care for yourself!&rdquo; Her volatile mood
-had shifted; she was almost in tears. &ldquo;That horrible
-creature with those old green goggles, that
-silly red vest and that big hat and cape&mdash;he
-looks like Satan himself, yet you listen to him!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m his hired man, Mary,&rdquo; Lincoln repeated.
-&ldquo;The bald-headed old buzzard is smart
-enough. He had a good job working under
-Horace Greeley on the <i>Tribune</i>, but they had to
-let him go because he couldn&rsquo;t distinguish
-truth from slander. Then Seward put him in the
-State Department as a translator but he published
-so many slurs about Seward and me that
-they dismissed him from that job. He started
-as a revolutionary in Europe; now he thinks he
-can save this nation. Maybe by eliminating me.
-He&rsquo;s written down now as a dangerous character.
-He won&rsquo;t be allowed in here again, so don&rsquo;t
-worry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mary would never worry long, he knew. She
-was too mercurial, too easily diverted by trifles.
-What troubled Lincoln most was her impulsive
-inclination to meddle. She took a hand in decisions,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-was always writing indiscreet letters to
-newspaper editors, discussing national affairs
-too brashly; she interfered in decisions over
-post offices and appointments to military academies.
-When New York papers printed long
-items about her travels, her clothes, her bonnets
-and baggage, she was flattered and excited, unaware
-that her husband was unhappily reading
-into some of these accounts an amused note of
-criticism and contempt. She was as much a
-child as Tad, he told himself often, but unlike
-Tad she could not be controlled.</p>
-<p>All through the evening she busied herself
-happily over her gifts, wrapping them in white
-paper, fetching bits of ribbon from her dozens
-of bandboxes for bows and decorations. Abraham
-Lincoln slipped off his elastic-sided shoes
-and stretched his bony feet to the fire. He dozed
-a little and had to be warned sharply by Mary
-when his gray wool socks began to smoke a
-little.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I declare, Abraham, you&rsquo;d burn yourself to
-a cinder if I didn&rsquo;t look after you! You&rsquo;ve even
-scorched your pantaloons. Yes, you have. I can
-see where the broadcloth is singed on that right
-leg. It&rsquo;s like putting ribbons on a pig to try to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-dress you up decently. Sometimes I despair of
-ever making you into a real gentleman!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln smacked absently at the hot fabric
-of his breeches. &ldquo;In this town, Mary, gentlemen
-are as thick as fleas in a dog pound. Take credit
-for making me into a man but let the fashionable
-aspect go.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;People can&rsquo;t see how much you know,&rdquo; she
-argued. &ldquo;All they see is how you look. No wonder
-that New York paper called you a &lsquo;pathetic,
-disheveled figure&rsquo; when you made that speech
-at Gettysburg. I suppose your cravat was
-crooked and your socks falling down.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve called me worse things. Names
-don&rsquo;t stick unless your hide is soft. I got toughened
-up back yonder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I notice you act kind of flattered when they
-call you a railsplitter&mdash;and a yokel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I know I was a good railsplitter. If
-they called me a sorry railsplitter I&rsquo;d resent it.&rdquo;
-He was unperturbed. &ldquo;What is a yokel? A fellow
-from the country. So I must be a yokel for I
-sprung from about as deep in the country as you
-can get air to breathe, so deep there wasn&rsquo;t even
-a road there, just an old trace that meandered
-up the bed of the crick part of the way. America&rsquo;s
-<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
-made of yokels. Our side, anyway. Your
-friends down South have got a few stylish gentlemen
-but a lot of them lost their sashes and
-their plumes up at Gettysburg and they got
-buried right alongside the yokels. Humiliating
-to them, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She had to laugh. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re hopeless, Abe Lincoln.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I know you&rsquo;d admire me a heap more if
-I could go around like Jim Buchanan. Long-tailed
-coat and white vest and my head cocked
-to one side like a tom turkey admiring all the
-gals. He brought plenty of elegance to this office
-but if he&rsquo;d had a little yokel grit in his gizzard
-the country wouldn&rsquo;t be in this mess, maybe.
-One thing I know, you wouldn&rsquo;t want me sashaying
-around the gals like Buchanan. You&rsquo;d
-spit fire if I commenced that. Go on and fuss at
-me, Mary; it don&rsquo;t bother me and I can still lick
-salt off the top of your head.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She pulled the cord of the little toy cannon
-and aimed it at him. The cork that was fired
-from it hit him in the stomach and he bent over,
-pretending to be mortally wounded, uttering
-grotesque groans. She clutched at him abruptly,
-holding both his arms.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t do that!&rdquo; she wailed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s like my
-dream.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He put his arms around her, pressed her head
-against his chest. &ldquo;You having dreams again? I
-thought you&rsquo;d quit that foolishness.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had the same one, over and over. I can&rsquo;t
-see you but I can hear you groaning&mdash;like that.
-And I wake up in a cold sweat feeling something
-warm on my hands&mdash;like blood!&rdquo; she moaned
-shuddering.</p>
-<p>He patted her head soberly. &ldquo;You eat too
-many cakes at parties. Too much syllabub.
-Getting fat, too.&rdquo; He pinched her playfully.
-&ldquo;Me now, I&rsquo;m one of Pharaoh&rsquo;s lean kine. More
-bones than a shad and they all poke out and rattle.
-You should have married a pretty little
-feller, somebody like Steve Douglas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t want him. I wanted you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you got me, Mary, not anything extra
-of a bargain but I did set you up so high you
-couldn&rsquo;t go higher unless you got made queen
-of some place. You&rsquo;re a queen now, queen of a
-torn and divided country all drowned in sorrow
-and hate and woe. But it won&rsquo;t always be like
-that.&mdash;I wish to the Lord I knew what to do
-about that little man, Ulysses S. Grant! I reckon
-<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
-I&rsquo;ll just have to give him command of the
-army.&rdquo; He put her gently aside, letting care
-return to possess him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He may be a fine soldier but he&rsquo;s a dirty,
-drunken little man,&rdquo; sniffed Mary, &ldquo;and I don&rsquo;t
-like his wife either.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He fights better, dirty and drunk, than a lot
-of elegant fellers I&rsquo;ve got in commands. If he
-can win battles he can go dirty as a hog and it
-won&rsquo;t degrade him any in my estimation,&rdquo; Lincoln
-declared. &ldquo;As for his wife, you&rsquo;ve got a bad
-habit of not liking wives, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not true. I like some of their wives&mdash;when
-they&rsquo;re not cold and distant and look
-down their noses. It&rsquo;s because I know how to
-buy pretty clothes and my bonnets become me.
-I do look nice when I&rsquo;m dressed up, Abe Lincoln.
-And I know how to behave in company.
-After all there is a little respect due to my position,&rdquo;
-she stated, complacently.</p>
-<p>He gave her a comradely pat and went back
-to his chair and the stack of papers he had put
-aside. &ldquo;All right, Mama, you do the peacocking
-for this office and I&rsquo;ll try to win the war,&rdquo; he
-said, withdrawing into that remoteness that
-always baffled her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">4</span></h2>
-<p>Desperately she wanted to be liked
-and admired. She did not even know that this
-desire tormented her like a hidden thorn. It
-was lost under the surface imperiousness that
-she had put on defensively, as a child might
-dress up in a trailing robe and play at being
-queen. She had no talent for adjustment or reconciliation
-and her husband&rsquo;s propensity for
-seeing the best in people, even his bitterest enemies,
-puzzled and irritated her. In her mind she
-put this down as weakness. When she disliked
-anyone, it was done with vigor and she made
-no secret of it. When she was displeased she let
-the whole world know, yet she could not understand
-why it was that she felt always alone.</p>
-<p>The Christmas party at the White House had
-to be important, if not gay. State Department
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-people, Supreme Court people, senators, generals
-and their wives, would not expect hilarity.
-Not with Lee&rsquo;s menacing army so near, the
-carnage of Chickamauga so recent, all the factional
-strife in New York and Missouri and
-Ohio only temporarily lulled, and definitely,
-Mary suspected, not defeated.</p>
-<p>She had two dresses spread out on her bed,
-and Elizabeth Heckley, the mulatto seamstress,
-pinned bits of lace and ribbon bows here and
-there over the voluminous folds of coral-colored
-satin and purple velvet. The satin had
-wide bands of heavy embroidery touched with
-gold around the skirt and the folds that draped
-low over the shoulders. Elizabeth fastened a
-garland of roses at the bosom of that dress and
-let it trail down the side of the skirt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Needs a gold breastpin right there,&rdquo; she indicated
-the fastening place of the flowers.
-&ldquo;What Mrs. President goin&rsquo; to wear on her
-head?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A turban, Lizzie, of this same satin with
-some pale blue feathers in front and the roses
-hanging down over my chignon. This dress will
-have to be for the Christmas party and I know
-it&rsquo;s too gay and likely I&rsquo;ll be criticized for putting
-<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
-off my mourning for poor little Willie.
-Good gracious, down home where I was raised,
-I&rsquo;d wear black for three solid years for a child
-and for a husband it was forever. But I look
-awful in black and I know it. It makes me
-dumpy and sallow and I do owe something to
-the people. There&rsquo;s too much crepe already in
-Washington. It depresses people and hurts the
-war.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This other one would look mighty fine on
-you, Mrs. President.&rdquo; The seamstress lovingly
-stroked the folds of violet velvet. &ldquo;This dress
-look like it was made for a queen.&rdquo; There were
-bands of embroidery on this gown too, but the
-embroidery was all gold cord and beads and
-there was a light overskirt of draped tulle in
-shades of lilac, lavender, and purple, caught up
-with little knots of gold leaves.</p>
-<p>A queen! Abraham had called her a queen.
-Mary could see herself trailing a long robe of
-crimson with a border of gold and ermine. Too
-bad democracies did not favor such ornate display
-by their rulers&mdash;but the purple velvet did
-have a regal look. She would wear plumes in
-her headdress, three of them in the three shades
-of the overskirt.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll wear this at the New Years&rsquo; reception,
-though it is a pity to waste anything so handsome
-on a company of just anybody. See about
-some feathers and gold trimmings for my headdress,
-Lizzie, and plenty of white gloves. Last
-year I ruined four pairs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She must see to it that Abraham had plenty
-of gloves, too. He hated them; he was always
-pulling them off and stuffing them untidily into
-a pocket. He was always bursting them, too,
-and she kept spare pairs handy. His hands had
-a tendency to swell from prolonged handshaking
-and inevitably the buttons popped off or the
-seams split. A pair would be soiled in half an
-hour too from all those hands, some calloused,
-some grimy, some too hot and eager.</p>
-<p>The New Year&rsquo;s reception was a great nuisance
-in Mary&rsquo;s book&mdash;those tramping feet scuffing
-the floors and the carpets and almost invariably
-it snowed. And in spite of the vigilance
-of the guards she knew there was danger.
-Lately danger had become a haunting oppression
-to Mary Todd Lincoln.</p>
-<p>The election of 1864 was coming up and even
-in the Union states there was radical opposition
-so bold it verged on treason, not to overlook
-<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
-the vicious attacks of the newspapers to the
-South. On those pages Abraham Lincoln was
-called everything from a degraded idiot to
-Mephistopheles reincarnate. The South, as
-Southern-bred Mary Lincoln knew well, was
-full of impetuous hotheads ready to dare or to
-do anything for their sacred Cause. There was
-that O&rsquo;Neale Greenhow woman, arrested right
-here in sight of the White House&mdash;and even the
-Mayor of Washington temporarily lodged in
-jail. And they said that people right in the
-Provost Office had supplied the Greenhow
-woman with information that had brought on
-so many Union defeats at Manassas and other
-battles. Mary remembered having once met
-Rose O&rsquo;Neale Greenhow at a tea somewhere.
-A handsome and arrogant woman, too friendly
-with men. She was banished South of the lines
-now, but women like that always had impetuous
-friends.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get me out something plain, Lizzie,&rdquo; she
-ordered now. &ldquo;I have to shop again this afternoon.
-The President thinks every soldier in
-Company K must have a Christmas gift, and
-where I&rsquo;ll find things the Lord only knows!
-&lsquo;Socks,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;Wool socks.&rsquo; I doubt if any can
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-be found, and they&rsquo;d be two dollars a pair if
-there are any. Anyway, cakes and candy and
-tobacco&mdash;and all those getting harder and
-harder to get. The crowds in the streets are getting
-so rough, too, with all these soldiers coming
-in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I could go, Mrs. Lincoln,&rdquo; offered Elizabeth,
-&ldquo;if you&rsquo;d tell me what to buy and give me
-an order to have it charged&mdash;and send somebody
-to help carry.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Would you, Lizzie?&rdquo; Mary was eager with
-relief. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll send you in a carriage and a boy
-with you. I have to make a list. I think we&rsquo;ll
-forget the socks&mdash;there might not be any and
-anyway their mothers ought to knit socks for
-them. We wouldn&rsquo;t know sizes anyway.&rdquo; Mary
-fluttered, hunting pen and paper, sending a
-maid to order the carriage, getting out a heavy
-cape of her own to keep the sewing woman
-warm. &ldquo;You go down to the market, Lizzie,
-away down on D Street. Things will be cheaper
-there. There are thirty-three of those men. Just
-so each one had some little remembrance the
-President will be satisfied.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She was grateful not to have to brave again
-the streets of Washington that were becoming
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-more horrible every day. Deep mud, which
-Army wagons were churning up, caissons
-pounding by, cavalry splashing everybody, and
-soldiers crowding everywhere. The shops were
-always crowded with the impatient, pushing
-military and Negroes, and more colored people
-were thronging into the capital every day,
-homeless and bewildered. Some of the Negro
-men were being integrated into the Army but
-most were a problem that the provosts and
-police were coping with in desperate confusion.</p>
-<p>It all made for discomfort and danger. No
-real indignity had as yet been offered to her
-personally since those grim days in New York
-in July, when she had been hooted in the
-streets and followed into a shop by a jeering
-mob of ruffians. Here in Washington her greatest
-cross was the thinly veiled contempt of the
-women, formerly socially important, the women
-the President called &ldquo;those Secesh dames.&rdquo;
-Very boldly they let it be known that their
-sympathies were with the South.</p>
-<p>Washington, Mr. Seward said, and Mr. Stanton
-agreed with him, was a nest of spies. In
-spite of imprisonment, grim guards, and ceaseless
-precautions, messages still went through
-<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
-the lines to Robert E. Lee and Jefferson Davis.
-It was said that Fontaine Maury, the Confederate
-admiral, had a direct pipeline into the
-very heart of the Capitol. Suspicion and distrust
-were rampant, and Mary harbored a constant,
-nervous fear that either she or Tad might
-be kidnapped by the Rebels and held as hostages.</p>
-<p>She had wondered sometimes in moments of
-private bitterness just how much Abraham Lincoln
-would surrender to get his wife back, but
-Tad was the key to his heart. Lately Company
-K had had orders to keep close surveillance
-over the boy but Tad was quick and mobile as
-a flea. Less than a month before he had been
-brought back, shouting protests and struggling,
-from climbing the scaffolding of the half-finished
-Washington Monument.</p>
-<p>She must go out and appear at the receptions
-and teas planned by wives of officials, but with
-Christmas at hand now there would be a hiatus
-in festivities until after the New Year reception
-at the White House. There was that tiresome
-affair to plan for, then this Christmas party; it
-was all hard work and expensive too, and that
-aspect practical Mary Lincoln always considered
-<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
-seriously. She never saw an elaborate collation
-spread without secretly adding up in her
-mind how many bonnets, bracelets, and yards
-of silk could have been bought with the money.</p>
-<p>The Christmas tree in the private sitting
-room upstairs had been set up and Tad put to
-work stringing popcorn and bits of bright metal
-for decorations. A corporal had brought in a
-sackful of scraps of brass discarded by a cartridge
-manufacturer and these Tad was tying
-to lengths of his mother&rsquo;s red wool. He insisted
-on doing all this in his father&rsquo;s office, stepped
-over by the endless streams of officials and callers,
-and Mary found him there, squatting behind
-Lincoln&rsquo;s desk, surrounded by the litter of
-his festive preparations.</p>
-<p>She entered as usual without knocking, made
-a brief stiff bow to Noah Brooks, the correspondent
-from the West Coast, and puckered
-her brows at the small woman with curling
-grayish hair and unfashionable bonnet who occupied
-the one comfortable chair in the room.</p>
-<p>The President unlimbered his long legs and
-jumped up, as did Brooks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come in, come in, my dear!&rdquo; he greeted his
-wife. &ldquo;You know Mr. Brooks&mdash;and Mary, this is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
-Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, the little woman
-who wrote the book that started a big war.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mrs. Stowe held out a gloved hand. &ldquo;I am
-happy to be privileged to meet Mrs. Lincoln.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I read your book, Ma&rsquo;am.&rdquo; Mary was gracious.
-&ldquo;I cried over it, some parts&mdash;but part of
-it made me mad, too. My family owned slaves,
-Mrs. Stowe, but they never did beat them or
-set dogs on them&mdash;never!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One must emphasize the wrong sometimes,
-Mrs. Lincoln, to bring about what is right,&rdquo;
-said Mrs. Stowe. &ldquo;Undoubtedly your family
-were Christian people, and exceptional.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mama!&rdquo; wailed Tad. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re standing on
-my yarn!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I only came,&rdquo; Mary was flustered, &ldquo;to report
-to my husband that I have arranged Christmas
-gifts for his soldiers&mdash;as he requested,&rdquo; she
-added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sit here, Mrs. Lincoln,&rdquo; Brooks offered his
-chair.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no, you have business here. Happy to
-have met you, Ma&rsquo;am. You must stay and have
-dinner with us.&rdquo; Mary bowed again and hoped
-she had made a graceful exit as became a queen.</p>
-<p>She wondered, as she went down the hall,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
-why women with brains always looked a little
-frumpy. That dress&mdash;homemade, probably, and
-it didn&rsquo;t fit anywhere! It was, she decided, safe
-to leave a woman of as few charms as Mrs.
-Harriet Beecher Stowe in the office, especially
-chaperoned by Noah Brooks. But Mary Lincoln
-knew well that if Mrs. Stowe had been
-young and pretty she herself would never have
-walked out of that office.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">5</span></h2>
-<p>The boy who jumped out of the dark
-shadow of the bushes slapped his rifle hard,
-brought it to port sharply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. President,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;if I had been
-an assassin you&rsquo;d be dead by now!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Abraham Lincoln stopped, shifted his high
-hat. A few thin flakes of snow lay white against
-the silk.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And what would you have been doing, Joe,
-while an assassin was making a corpse out of
-me?&rdquo; he asked amiably.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have done the best I could to protect
-you, Mr. President, but it&rsquo;s powerful dark out
-here,&rdquo; stammered the flustered soldier.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I knew you were here, Joe, or I wouldn&rsquo;t be
-out here,&rdquo; Lincoln said. &ldquo;Cold out here. Have
-you got some warm gloves?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t handle a gun with gloves, Mr. President.
-But I get relieved in an hour.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln looked at the sky. &ldquo;Some mean
-weather making up, I&rsquo;m afraid. Bad for
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-Christmas. You boys keeping warm in those
-tents?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, the way I figure, sir, we&rsquo;re just as
-warm as those men of General Meade&rsquo;s over
-across the river. And there ain&rsquo;t nobody shooting
-at us, sir&mdash;I mean, Mr. President. The lieutenant
-ain&rsquo;t going to like it, Mr. President, you
-walking out here alone. You want to walk, you
-need a couple of us boys along.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I make a good mark, don&rsquo;t I, Joe? I sort of
-rear up on the skyline like a steeple. Good thing
-it&rsquo;s too dark for them to spot me. I look at it
-this way. If the good Lord wants me to stay on
-this job He&rsquo;ll look after me. God and Company
-K. You see Tad anywhere?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir, Mr. President.&rdquo; Joe stalked beside
-the tall figure, weapon alerted. &ldquo;Tad&rsquo;s down
-yonder to the corporal&rsquo;s tent. He&rsquo;s got his billy
-goat down there. Some of the boys fixed up an
-army cap for that goat and the corporal&rsquo;s riveting
-a chin strap on it.&rdquo; Joe trotted a little to
-keep up with the long stride of Lincoln.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Better anchor it tight or the goat will eat his
-headgear,&rdquo; remarked Lincoln. &ldquo;Mrs. Lincoln
-sent Tad to bed so she could fix up his Christmas
-presents. Tad always sleeps with me but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
-when I went to my room he wasn&rsquo;t there, so I
-decided he&rsquo;d slipped down here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That goat sure means a lot to Tad, Mr. President.
-Tad treats him like he was folks. Nobody
-ever has found out what happened to the she-goat,
-sir. Last pass you give me I went all over
-that skinny town back yonder where the trash
-and niggers live but I never seen a sign of any
-goat&mdash;hide neither.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tad misses his brother. Christmas will be a
-sad time for all of us, but we&rsquo;ll try to make it
-happy for Tad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just about a year ago you lost your boy,
-wasn&rsquo;t it, Mr. President?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Last February. Lung fever. He got wet and
-took a cold. Mrs. Lincoln hasn&rsquo;t gotten over it
-at all. She idolized her sons. We lost another
-one, you know, in Springfield. Little Eddie.
-But we have company, Joe. A great sorrowful
-company of people who have lost their sons.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln sighed heavily as he strode up to the
-lighted tent where a group of men hunkered
-down around Tad and his goat.</p>
-<p>The corporal dropped his awl and leather
-and jumped up, eyes bulging.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Attention!&rdquo; he barked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<p>Every man sprang up to stand stiffly. Tad
-threw his arms around the goat, yelling desperately.
-&ldquo;Help me hold him! He&rsquo;ll get away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At ease, boys,&rdquo; Lincoln said &ldquo;Grab that
-goat, some of you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir, Mr. President, sir,&rdquo; gulped the corporal.
-&ldquo;Get him, Bullitt. You, Joe&mdash;you&rsquo;re on
-post!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Joe,&rdquo; Lincoln said, &ldquo;has been escorting me
-and protecting me from assassins, my orders.
-Very capably too. Tad, you&rsquo;d better come along
-to bed. Tomorrow is Christmas and your
-brother will be here on an early train.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir, Mr. President.&rdquo; The corporal flicked
-a salute importantly. &ldquo;Lieutenant detailed me
-and three of the boys to meet that train. We
-was just helping the boy here to pretty up his
-goat, sir, asking your pardon and meaning no
-offense.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No offense taken, Corporal. I appreciate
-your taking care of my boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look, Papa,&rdquo; shrilled Tad, &ldquo;lookit Billy&rsquo;s
-horns.&rdquo; The animal&rsquo;s rough pointed horns had
-been painted a bright scarlet and tipped with
-circles of brass. He shook them impatiently
-while Tad clung to his neck.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Mighty pretty,&rdquo; approved his father, &ldquo;but
-you&rsquo;re getting paint on your uniform jacket.
-Your mama will have something to say about
-that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have a duck fit,&rdquo; stated Tad disrespectfully;
-then his voice sank to a whimper.
-&ldquo;Billy&rsquo;s pretty but he&rsquo;s not as pretty as a nanny
-goat, Papa. I want my nanny goat back.&rdquo; He
-began to cry thinly, and the corporal looked
-anxious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I sure wish we could get his nanny goat
-back, Mr. President. That paint will dry by
-morning, sir. We&rsquo;ll tie Billy out where he can&rsquo;t
-rub it off on anything. You, Bullitt and Gibson,
-escort the President and young Mr. Lincoln
-back to the house, and lemme see them rifles
-first. Half the time,&rdquo; he explained unhappily,
-&ldquo;they ain&rsquo;t got no load ready and a man might
-as well carry a broomstick. All right. About
-face, March!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad clung to his father&rsquo;s hand and Lincoln
-felt his palm sticky with undried paint. Behind
-them the goat blatted forlornly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He wants me,&rdquo; mourned Tad. &ldquo;I feed him
-biscuits and all the boys have got is hardtack.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe we can find some biscuits,&rdquo; suggested
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-Lincoln. &ldquo;Mr. Bullitt and Mr. Gibson
-can carry them back to him. Come along in,
-boys, and report back to your corporal that I&rsquo;m
-much obliged for everything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He had never set foot in the White House
-kitchen. Now Abraham Lincoln walked timidly
-there as though he were an intruder who might
-be ordered out indignantly at any moment.</p>
-<p>The long room, still odorous with baking
-bread and roasting meat, was warm, the huge
-ranges clinking as they cooled, water dripping
-from the spout of a pump. The cooks&rsquo; white
-aprons and caps hung from pegs on the wall
-and one long table was covered with trays
-spread over with white cloths. Lincoln lifted
-a corner of a covering. Beneath was a great
-array of small colored cakes obviously baked
-for the Christmas party.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Have one, boys.&rdquo; He took a pink dainty himself
-and bit into it. &ldquo;Pretty good.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad wolfed down two and the privates nervously
-accepted one each.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wonder where they keep the biscuits?&rdquo; Tad
-began to explore.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to know,&rdquo; said his father. &ldquo;You
-snoop everywhere.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<p>Tad scurried about, opening ovens and cupboards,
-lifting lids of boxes and the great copper
-pots.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bread,&rdquo; he uncovered a stack of loaves, &ldquo;but
-no biscuits.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your billy will eat bread, sir,&rdquo; suggested
-Private Bullitt. &ldquo;He eats hardtack. He&rsquo;ll eat
-anything, Mr. President. He ate Sergeant
-Whipple&rsquo;s box from home. Had a cake in it. Et
-box and all, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well have to see to it that Sergeant Whipple
-gets another cake.&rdquo; Lincoln took down a
-long knife from a rack on the wall and whacked
-off the end of a loaf of fresh bread. &ldquo;Good
-bread.&rdquo; He tasted a crumb. &ldquo;Go good if we had
-some jam to put on it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s jampots up there, Papa.&rdquo; Tad
-pointed to a high shelf.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So there are.&rdquo; Lincoln reached a long arm,
-slit the paper that covered the top of a jar,
-dipped in a knife. &ldquo;Blackberry.&rdquo; He sliced off a
-hunk of bread, spread it thickly with jam,
-handed it to Private Bullitt. &ldquo;Have some, boys.&rdquo;
-He spread another slice for Gibson and one for
-Tad and himself. Perched on the edge of a table
-he ate, wiped his beard and fingers on a handy
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-towel, passed the towel around. &ldquo;Some drizzled
-on your jacket, Tad. Wipe it off. Now, I reckon
-somebody will get blamed for this piece of
-larceny, so I&rsquo;d better take care of that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The cooks&rsquo; pad and pencil lay on a shelf and
-Lincoln tore off a sheet and wrote rapidly: <i>All
-provisions missing from this kitchen requisitioned
-by order of the undersigned. A. Lincoln.</i></p>
-<p>&ldquo;That will fix it. You boys take this bread
-back to that billy goat and tell your sergeant I&rsquo;ll
-see that he&rsquo;s recompensed for his lost cake,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;Now Tad, you come along to bed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The wreaths of greenery were in place in the
-hall and up the stairs, and in the East Room
-a tall spruce tree awaited the lighting of the
-candles. Festival! And out there on the cold
-ground boys like Robert, boys like Tad would
-soon grow to be, kept warm in flimsy tents with
-little fires, slept on straw with blankets far too
-thin, and there were men he knew in the field,
-in grim military prisons, who likely had no
-blankets at all.</p>
-<p>The great bed in his room with its huge, soft
-bolster and tufted counterpane, its enormous
-headboard shutting off drafts and elaborately
-carved and scrolled, suddenly wore the aspect
-<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
-of sinful luxury. He would gladly have taken
-a blanket and gone out to join his men, but he
-knew sadly that that would not do. He had
-known the ground for a bed many times&mdash;in the
-Black Hawk War and on expeditions into the
-wilds&mdash;but now he was growing old and he had
-to uphold the dignity of high office.</p>
-<p>He pulled off Tad&rsquo;s clothes, buttoned him
-into a long nightshirt, and tucked him into the
-big bed. Almost instantly the boy was asleep.
-Lincoln was struggling with his own boots
-when the door opened and Mary came in, buttoned
-into a vast blue wrapper, a ruffled cap on
-her head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forevermore!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;Where have
-you been? I looked for you to help me with the
-Christmas things and couldn&rsquo;t find a hair of you
-or Tad either. Has that child been out in this
-cold wind?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We were having a little Christmas party
-with some of the boys, Mary. Tad&rsquo;s all right.
-Don&rsquo;t start scolding tonight; it&rsquo;s already Christmas
-morning now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know how delicate he is. It will be just
-like Willie all over again and I can&rsquo;t bear any
-more sorrow, Abraham. I&rsquo;ll lose my mind if I
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-have another grief to live through,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tad&rsquo;s tough, Mama. Not frail like Willie.
-We were in the kitchen anyway,&rdquo; he evaded.
-&ldquo;It was warm down there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t eat up my cakes?&rdquo; she demanded.
-&ldquo;I had trouble enough getting them
-baked. The cook says the blockade is to blame
-for making sugar so scarce and high. They
-ought to know we have to have sugar. There&rsquo;s
-no coconut either, nor nutmegs nor cinnamon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s war, Mary. Some good people haven&rsquo;t
-even got bread,&rdquo; he reminded her.</p>
-<p>She began to whimper, perching on the edge
-of the bed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe I won&rsquo;t need any cakes for my party.
-I&rsquo;ve had at least a dozen regrets already. An
-invitation from the wife of the President
-should be like a command from the queen,&rdquo;
-she declared, grimly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m saving all those insulting
-notes and I think the people who wrote
-them should be properly dealt with.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln sighed as he hung up his coat and
-untied his lumpy satin cravat. The starched
-collar rasped his neck. He was glad to be rid of
-it. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you cry now for Christmas, Mary,&rdquo;
-<span class="pb" id="Page_60">60</span>
-he pleaded. &ldquo;We have to keep things happy for
-the boys. Bob will be here in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She dried her eyes on the ruffle of her sleeve.
-&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help remembering that I&rsquo;ve lost my
-son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re one of a vast company, Mary. If all
-the tears that will be shed by bereaved mothers
-tomorrow were drained into one river we could
-float a gunboat on it. If only I could see a way
-so there would be no more&mdash;no more killing, no
-more graves, no more sorrowing women!&rdquo; he
-cried, desolately.</p>
-<p>It was a cry of anguish and Mary Lincoln felt
-a surge of terrible compassion for this gaunt,
-lonely man who was her love. She put her arms
-around him, standing on tiptoe, her cheek
-pressing the buttons of his shirt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t make this war. You&rsquo;re doing all
-any man could do to end it!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;We
-could have ignored the country&mdash;we could have
-stayed in Springfield where nobody hated us.
-Here they all hate us. The ones who come to
-our party tomorrow will smirk and fawn to our
-faces and then sneer at our backs.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not all, Mary. There are plenty of good
-folks, loyal folks, who believe I&rsquo;m doing right.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_61">61</span>
-Plenty of people we can call our friends. A
-sight of them voted for me, remember.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They want something!&rdquo; she argued. &ldquo;Every
-last one of them wants something. That General
-Grant is even being puffed up to run
-against you for president next year. Even the
-Illinois newspapers are for him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, he might make a good president,&rdquo; admitted
-Lincoln, &ldquo;though no soldier ever has
-made a good president since George Washington.
-And if I&rsquo;m beat, we can always go home to
-Springfield.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Slink home like beaten dogs!&rdquo; she exclaimed,
-her mercurial mood shifting again.
-&ldquo;Well, we&rsquo;ll not do it. They&rsquo;re not going to get
-us down, Abraham Lincoln! Democrats nor
-Black Republicans either. And they&rsquo;d better
-show up at my party if they want any more
-favors from you!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You tear up those regrets, Mary,&rdquo; he said
-soberly. &ldquo;Tear up every single one of &rsquo;em. And
-forget the names of the people who wrote them.
-That,&rdquo; he added very solemnly, &ldquo;is an order
-from the President.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">6</span></h2>
-<p>Robert Todd Lincoln was a young
-man trying sincerely not to be a snob, not to be
-blas&eacute; or obviously aware that his father was
-President of the United States. A medium tall,
-erect lad, Robert&rsquo;s dark hair was sleeked down
-over a head rounded like his mother&rsquo;s, but his
-long arms and still growing legs and feet he had
-from his father.</p>
-<p>That long-tailed coat with braided collar was
-too old for Bob, Abraham Lincoln was thinking.
-So was his manner too old, a boyish kind of
-gravity that obviously he strove to keep from
-being condescending. His mother fluttered
-about him adoringly as they sat at the family
-breakfast table. She was continually straightening
-his cravat, feeling his brow anxiously,
-smoothing his hair. Lincoln, shrewdly sensitive,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_63">63</span>
-could see that his older son was a trifle annoyed
-by his mother&rsquo;s solicitous attentions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob hasn&rsquo;t got a fever, Mama,&rdquo; he interposed
-cheerfully. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s the healthiest human
-being I&rsquo;ve seen in a long time. Why don&rsquo;t we
-all go and see what Tad got for Christmas?&rdquo;
-He pushed back his chair.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Robert must get some sleep,&rdquo; argued his
-mother. &ldquo;He says he didn&rsquo;t get a wink on that
-train.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The cars were cold and smelly and they
-were jammed with soldiers, all of them cold
-and miserable,&rdquo; stated Robert. &ldquo;Most of them
-coming South to join Pope&rsquo;s army and all sulky
-because they had to be away from home for
-Christmas. One chap sat with me&mdash;couldn&rsquo;t
-have been any older than I am and he had been
-home to Rhode Island to bury his wife. They all
-talked and they were plenty bitter against the
-bounty boys&mdash;those fellows who bought their
-way out of the draft for three hundred dollars.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was a compromise and an evil one, I
-fear,&rdquo; said his father. &ldquo;Everything about war is
-evil. You can only contrive and pray for ways
-to make it a little less evil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Robert stood up. His face was very white.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
-&ldquo;Pa&mdash;and Mama&mdash;I told lies coming down on
-that train. I told them I was coming home to
-enlist. I&rsquo;ve got to get into the Army&mdash;I&rsquo;ve got
-to! Those men on that train, they were dirty
-and shabby and some hadn&rsquo;t shaved or washed
-in a long time, and most of them were rough
-and some ignorant but every one of them was
-a better man than I was! I could feel them looking
-at me&mdash;with contempt at first. It was in
-every man&rsquo;s mind that I was a bounty boy. A
-shirker. Hiding behind a screen of cash! I was
-thankful nobody knew my name.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You could have told them your name,&rdquo; insisted
-his mother. &ldquo;You could have made them
-respect you as the son of the President.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Mary&mdash;no, no!&rdquo; protested Lincoln. &ldquo;Bob
-couldn&rsquo;t do that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know why not? Certainly your family
-are entitled to respect, Abraham Lincoln!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t understand, Mama,&rdquo; said Robert
-unhappily. &ldquo;I was thankful I&rsquo;d been able to
-duck away from those soldiers Mr. Stanton had
-detailed in New York. I didn&rsquo;t want to be
-Robert Lincoln. I wanted to be nobody. Then
-when I got off here in Washington, there was
-that escort! Troops to guard me, as though I
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-were a crown prince or something. A coward
-of a prince!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; Mary upset her cup in her agitation.
-&ldquo;I still say you must finish your education.
-You must graduate from Harvard. You&rsquo;ll be
-much more valuable to the country as an educated
-man than just another private in the
-army. Even if your father gave you a commission&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want a commission. Not if it has to
-be given to me,&rdquo; Robert cried. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d deserve all
-the contempt I saw in some of those men&rsquo;s
-faces if I took a commission I hadn&rsquo;t earned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln&rsquo;s face relaxed in a slow smile. There
-were times when his older son troubled him,
-but now a quiet pride warmed his spirit. But
-his heart sank again when he saw the stony set
-of Mary&rsquo;s mouth, the flush that always heated
-her face when she was angry and determined
-to carry her point. She would not change. Her
-attitude was the same as that with which she
-had faced down General Sickles and Senator
-Harris not too long ago. They had inquired,
-coldly, why Robert was not in the service. The
-boy should, declared the General, have been
-in uniform long since. Mary had talked them
-<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
-down then, firmly, just as she would talk down
-all Robert&rsquo;s arguments now. But it was a joy to
-Lincoln that Robert did have pride and perhaps
-a mind of his own.</p>
-<p>Mary&rsquo;s eyes were already glittering behind
-their pale lashes. Now the shine was exasperation
-but in a moment, after her fashion, it
-would melt into tears. Robert&rsquo;s chin was jutting
-and his hands trembled on the back of his chair.
-Lincoln interposed quickly trying to ease the
-tension, gain a postponement of a crisis.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s talk this over later,&rdquo; he suggested.
-&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s not spoil Christmas morning with
-an argument. Did Tad eat any breakfast,
-Mama?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, he didn&rsquo;t.&rdquo; Mary got her control back
-with a gusty breath. &ldquo;He wouldn&rsquo;t even take
-time to drink his milk. He took it with him and
-likely he&rsquo;s upset the glass all over the carpet by
-this time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s go and see what he found under
-the Christmas tree.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Robert followed them, silently, up the stairs
-to the sitting room, strewn now with paper
-wrappings and a confusion of toys. Tad was
-standing in the middle of the floor buckling on
-<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
-a wide military belt trimmed with metal. Hanging
-from it was a small sword. Tad worked
-awkwardly because his hands were lost in great
-white gauntlet gloves that reached almost to
-his elbows.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;From Mr. Stanton,&rdquo; he grinned, patting the
-belt. &ldquo;I thought he didn&rsquo;t like me. I thought he
-didn&rsquo;t like boys.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He likes being Secretary of War,&rdquo; said
-Robert dryly. He reached for a small package.
-&ldquo;This is for you, Mama. The man said these
-things were real jade from China.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Mary took the parcel eagerly, kissed Robert,
-undid the wrapping, exclaimed over the necklace,
-pin, and earbobs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Bob, they&rsquo;re so pretty! I can wear them
-with my green taffeta.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She was a child for trinkets, Lincoln was
-thinking indulgently. He was glad that he had
-given her the big white muff. She would love
-carrying it to parties and on their carriage
-drives, nestling her two little round chins into
-the delicate fur. He thanked Robert for a pair
-of gold cuff links and there was laughter when
-they discovered that his gift to Robert had been
-an almost identical pair.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p>&ldquo;At least,&rdquo; said Robert, &ldquo;I shall have the distinction
-of imitating the President of the United
-States.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, they&rsquo;ll fasten your shirt sleeves anyway,&rdquo;
-drawled Lincoln. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s all a man can
-ask of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad strutted around the room flourishing his
-sword. He gulped the last of his milk hastily
-at his mother&rsquo;s command, put on his uniform
-cap, and swished a shine on the toes of his boots
-with his cuff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now I have to show these to the boys,&rdquo; he
-announced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But son,&rdquo; protested his mother, &ldquo;aren&rsquo;t you
-going to play with all your pretty toys? Look&mdash;this
-little cannon. It shoots!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeh&mdash;shoots a cork!&rdquo; Tad dismissed the
-weapon indifferently, &ldquo;A ole Rebel would sure
-laugh if you shot him with that. Papa, I want
-a real gun. One with bullets in it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My Heaven, Tad, you&rsquo;re too little to have a
-gun,&rdquo; declared Mary.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I had a gun I could ride with Papa and
-perteck him,&rdquo; argued Tad. &ldquo;Then nobody
-would dare shoot holes in his hat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln caught the startled look on Mary&rsquo;s
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-face, got his son hastily by the elbow. &ldquo;Come
-along, Tad. Go show off your finery. And I&rsquo;ve
-got work to do.&rdquo; He hustled the boy down the
-hall. &ldquo;Who told you somebody shot a hole in my
-hat?&rdquo; he demanded, when they were out of earshot.</p>
-<p>Tad grinned. &ldquo;Oh, I get information,&rdquo; he
-said blandly, &ldquo;but if I had been along with a
-good ole gun nobody would have dared do
-it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t mention it again in front of your
-mother, you hear?&rdquo; Lincoln seldom spoke
-sharply to the boy and Tad looked scared
-briefly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, sir&mdash;no, sir, I won&rsquo;t,&rdquo; he stammered, his
-palate tripping him again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mind now! And get along with you!&rdquo; His
-father gave him a little shove, as he entered the
-office door.</p>
-<p>Even on a holiday he was not free from intrusion,
-of being faced with the woeful problems
-of the people. A lad of about seventeen,
-in the faded uniform of a private, was standing,
-twisting thin hands together, his face scared
-and anxious.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sit down, son,&rdquo; ordered Lincoln, closing the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-door. &ldquo;How did you get in here and what did
-you want to see me about?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boy dropped on the edge of a chair,
-twisted his legs about each other nervously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody let me in, sir,&rdquo; he stammered. &ldquo;I
-just told the man downstairs that I had to see
-the President and he searched me, and I didn&rsquo;t
-have no gun or nothing so he told me to come
-on up here and wait. And what I wanted to see
-you about, Mr. President&mdash;I want to be a captain.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln&rsquo;s long lips drew back and quirked
-up a little at one corner. &ldquo;I see. And what military
-organization did you want to be captain
-of?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No organization, Mr. President, but I been
-a private in the Sixty-third Ohio a long time,
-sir&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How long a time?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Four months, Mr. President.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you have a company organized, maybe,
-that you want me to make you captain of?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, sir&mdash;I haven&rsquo;t got any company organized.
-But I just want to be a captain. My mother
-says I should be a captain. She told me to see
-you about it.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>Lincoln clasped his bony hands around a
-knee. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s your name, soldier?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Milo, sir. Milo Potter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Milo, did you ever hear the story about the
-farmer out in Illinois, where I was raised? Well,
-this fellow he was a good farmer and a dutiful
-son to his mother but he got up towards forty
-years old and he&rsquo;d never married a wife. So his
-mother fretted at him, said she was getting too
-old to churn and milk and he ought to fetch a
-wife home to take some of the work off of her.
-So this farmer, call him Jim, he goes down to
-the church and hunts up the preacher.
-&lsquo;Preacher&rsquo;, says Jim &lsquo;I got to get married.
-Mammy says so.&rsquo; &lsquo;All right, Jim,&rsquo; agrees the
-preacher, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll be proud to marry you. You go
-get your license and bring the woman here with
-you and I&rsquo;ll give you a real good marrying.&rsquo;
-&lsquo;But I haven&rsquo;t got any woman, Preacher,&rsquo; Jim
-argues kind of dashed. &lsquo;Well, you can&rsquo;t get married
-without a woman, Jim&rsquo;, the preacher tells
-him. That&rsquo;s your problem, Milo. You want to
-be a captain and you haven&rsquo;t got any organization
-to captain. What made you think you
-could be a captain, anyway?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Mr. President,&rdquo; the boy flushed unhappily,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
-&ldquo;it was that captain we got in B Company.
-That last battle&mdash;he made us retreat. And
-right there in front of us there was a hole in
-that Rebel line I could have drove four wagons
-through. There wasn&rsquo;t no sense in that retreat,
-Mr. President. All of us boys said so. All of
-us was mad. So I thought I can be a better
-captain than that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe you can, Milo. You go on back to B
-Company and be a good soldier and likely
-you&rsquo;ll make captain before this war is over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. President, I can&rsquo;t do it! I run off. They&rsquo;ll
-put me in the guardhouse!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln scratched his chin. &ldquo;That was very
-unwise of you, soldier. But you can&rsquo;t dodge
-your military responsibility. I reckon you&rsquo;ll just
-have to go to the guardhouse. If you should try
-to hedge out of it you&rsquo;d be as poor a soldier as
-that captain of B Company you complain about.
-It won&rsquo;t be too bad. Good luck to you, son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boy said, &ldquo;Thank you, sir,&rdquo; and backed
-out, twisting his cap in his hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stand up straight, look the captain in the
-eye, and admit you ran off, son,&rdquo; advised Lincoln.
-&ldquo;You needn&rsquo;t tell him you came here to get
-his job away from him.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No, sir, I sure won&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>John Hay came in when the young trooper
-had gone. &ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t have let him in perhaps,
-Mr. President,&rdquo; he explained, &ldquo;but he said he
-had an important message for you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was important. To Milo Potter,&rdquo; smiled
-Lincoln. &ldquo;No harm done, Johnny.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your son is waiting, sir. Shall I send him
-in?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Must be Bob. Tad would have already been
-in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Robert came in, took a chair, and folded his
-hands, his young mouth sober. &ldquo;I had to know,
-sir,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;have they been making attempts
-to kill you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob, there are several million people who
-think that the man who kills me should wear a
-hero&rsquo;s crown. And there are a lot of people who
-yearn to be heroes,&rdquo; Lincoln said calmly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You should be better protected. You
-shouldn&rsquo;t take risks!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re trying to protect me now, Bob, till
-I can&rsquo;t hardly draw my own breath.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That fellow who just went out. Did you even
-know him?&rdquo; persisted the boy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He was harmless. I reckon Johnny even took
-<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
-his jackknife away from him. I have to see &rsquo;em,
-son. I have to hear their story. That&rsquo;s why they
-put me here,&rdquo; declared his father.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About the Army, Papa&mdash;I&rsquo;m deadly serious.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The trouble is, Bob, that your mother is
-deadly serious, too. She&rsquo;s lost two boys,&rdquo; Lincoln
-reminded him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So have other women.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know. Give her a little more time, Bob.
-Till the end of this year anyway. The war isn&rsquo;t
-going to end before New Years&rsquo; Day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I shan&rsquo;t wait much longer, I promise you,&rdquo;
-threatened Robert, standing tall.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just promise me to the end of this school
-year. Then we&rsquo;ll talk about it again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ll talk to Mama? Make her see that
-it&rsquo;s something I have to do?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll talk to Mama,&rdquo; agreed Abraham Lincoln.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do my best, son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But when, he was thinking wearily after the
-boy had gone, had his best ever been good
-enough to prevail against Mary&rsquo;s ready tears?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">7</span></h2>
-<p>&ldquo;Bob,&rdquo; Abraham Lincoln said, when he
-went back to the family rooms, &ldquo;I need some
-help. Your mother has very graciously provided
-some little Christmas cheer for those boys out
-there of Company K. The things are all here in
-this big box. I&rsquo;ll need you to help pass &rsquo;em out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He bent and shouldered the heavy box that
-Mary had packed with small, paper-wrapped
-bundles.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Papa, let me call somebody! You
-shouldn&rsquo;t carry that,&rdquo; protested Robert.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Little enough to do for those boys.&rdquo; Lincoln
-bent under the burden. &ldquo;It will mean more to
-them if I fetch it to them personally.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ridiculous!&rdquo; fumed Mary. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s beneath
-your dignity to lug that heavy box.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Put my hat on, Mary, and put it on tight so
-I won&rsquo;t knock it off.&rdquo; He ignored her protest
-calmly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>She jammed the high hat down over his
-rough hair, the bony knobs of his head. &ldquo;You&mdash;the
-President of the United States!&rdquo; she exploded.
-&ldquo;With a house full of help and you lug
-that heavy thing!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He who would be greatest among you, let
-him seek out the lowest place,&rdquo; quoted Lincoln,
-solemnly and a bit inaccurately. &ldquo;Not near so
-heavy as a good stout oak rail and I&rsquo;ve shouldered
-many of them in my day. Come along,
-Bob.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At least let me help carry, sir,&rdquo; argued Robert
-as they went down the stairs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t touch it or you&rsquo;ll get it unbalanced
-and spill all Company K&rsquo;s Christmas. Little
-enough, but I had John Hay fetch me a roll of
-greenbacks. I&rsquo;ll give every man a dollar. A dollar
-is a right substantial present, Bob, when
-you&rsquo;re marching and fighting for thirteen dollars
-a month and what you can eat, when you
-get a chance to eat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I would do it gladly,&rdquo; insisted Robert. &ldquo;All
-I ask is a chance.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know, son. Maybe we can talk your mother
-around by spring. I did some better in the
-Black Hawk War.&rdquo; Lincoln went on, stepping
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-heavily down the outer steps and across the
-rutted yard. &ldquo;They paid me eighty-five dollars
-for ninety days fighting in that war but part of
-the time I ranked a captain. We had to shoot
-hogs to eat, though, and then fight the farmers
-that owned &rsquo;em. Swampy country, too.
-Like Grant&rsquo;s army fought over around Vicksburg.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you captured Black Hawk.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The regular Army said they did that. I got
-put in the guardhouse for two days for firing a
-pistol in camp and they made me carry a
-wooden sword after that. Discipline. You
-couldn&rsquo;t make any worse record in the army,
-Bob, than your father did before you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t call that a real war, Papa,&rdquo;
-Robert said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was real enough to the men who got their
-scalps peeled off. I helped bury twelve of them.
-Now, look at that lieutenant! Sending an escort
-up here on the double and putting all those
-boys in line at attention, when I just came out
-here on a friendly visit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Even Tad!&rdquo; laughed Robert. &ldquo;Even the confounded
-goat!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The goat wore his military hat and Tad was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_78">78</span>
-holding him grimly into line by his horns. Lincoln
-let the two soldiers who came trotting up
-help him ease the box down to the ground.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;At ease, men,&rdquo; he ordered. &ldquo;This is old
-Father Christmas, not the commander in chief.
-File by, one at a time, and get your Christmas
-cheer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Robert passed out the packages one by one
-while Lincoln stood thumbing bills off a roll of
-money, stopping to wet his thumb occasionally,
-saying, &ldquo;Here, son, spend this on some foolishness
-next time you get a pass into town.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There were yells of thanks and a lined-up
-cheer for the President, the goat blatting an
-obligato. But Tad, who had straggled at the
-end of the line and received nothing, glared
-down into the empty box, whimpering.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a soldier. I didn&rsquo;t get any present,&rdquo; he
-complained.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You got plenty of presents at the house,
-Tad,&rdquo; said his father. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got candy there,
-too. Don&rsquo;t you go bumming off these boys now.
-You have more Christmas than any of them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I want a soldier Christmas,&rdquo; persisted
-Tad, &ldquo;and I want my nanny goat back!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got a goat,&rdquo; scolded Robert, &ldquo;a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
-blamed nuisance of a goat. You&rsquo;re getting so
-you even smell like him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s clean,&rdquo; fumed Tad. &ldquo;Joe washed him
-and curried him and the corporal even put hair
-oil on his whiskers. Can I take Billy in the
-house, Papa? Can I? I want him to have some
-candy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, Tad, no more goats in the house. That&rsquo;s
-your mother&rsquo;s order. Last time,&rdquo; Lincoln explained
-to Robert, &ldquo;Tad drove two of them,
-hitched to a chair, right through the middle of
-one of your mother&rsquo;s social shindigs. Upset a
-couple of ladies and spilled claret punch on
-their dresses. Disgraced the whole Lincoln family
-and busted some good crockery too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s cold out here! Billy&rsquo;s cold.&rdquo; Tad hung to
-his father&rsquo;s coattail but refused to let go the
-goat. &ldquo;Billy will catch cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Private Bullitt,&rdquo; ordered Lincoln, &ldquo;will you
-tie up this goat in a sheltered place? Tad, you
-come along inside. You&rsquo;ll get the sniffles and
-your mother will scold all of us. Corporal, if you
-must provide escort for this family to their door,
-line &rsquo;em up. We&rsquo;re ready to march.&rdquo; Lincoln
-took a military stance, between two privates,
-who were very rigid with importance. Tad
-<span class="pb" id="Page_80">80</span>
-pulled back till Robert gave him a gentle,
-brotherly cuff.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You act more like a baby than a colonel,&rdquo; he
-said. &ldquo;If you want to cry, hand over that sword.
-You&rsquo;ll disgrace the army, bawling on the
-march.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Let loose of me!&rdquo; shrilled Tad, jerking away.
-Turning he ran pelting back to the circle of
-tents, dove into one and vanished.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d better go after him, Bob,&rdquo; worried the
-President. &ldquo;Your Mama will worry if he&rsquo;s out in
-this cold too long.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; said Robert, unenthusiastically,
-&ldquo;but If I may make a suggestion, sir, that
-boy needs discipline. He&rsquo;s getting out of
-hand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir, I stand reproved, sir,&rdquo; said Lincoln
-meekly. &ldquo;Just fetch him along in. I&rsquo;ll wait here,&rdquo;
-he told the escorting privates. &ldquo;Stand at
-ease.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. President, I hope Tad don&rsquo;t run off
-again,&rdquo; worried one soldier. &ldquo;We try not to take
-our eyes off him when he&rsquo;s out here with us.
-Could be some Rebel sympathizers hangin&rsquo;
-round that would think it was a smart move to
-catch up Tad and hold him. Know you&rsquo;d be
-<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
-mighty near be willing to surrender Washington
-to get that boy back, your pardon, sir, for
-speaking so bold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Panic stiffened Abraham Lincoln&rsquo;s long body.
-He broke into a long-legged trot back toward
-the tents, the escort panting after him. Robert
-emerged, pale-faced, from one tent and, with a
-dozen soldiers charging after him, hurried into
-another. He came out again, his hands outspread,
-helplessly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s hiding somewhere, Papa,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We
-can&rsquo;t find him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Spread out, men!&rdquo; shouted the lieutenant.
-&ldquo;Comb the area. Six of you guard the President.
-Corporal Barnes, form a guard detail.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The corporal hustled Robert into the middle
-of the protecting group, who faced outward
-bayonets alerted. Robert was angry and full of
-expostulations.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t have to be guarded like a prisoner,&rdquo;
-he protested. &ldquo;I want to go and help search for
-Tad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Private Bullitt, here, has just made a rather
-startling suggestion, Bob,&rdquo; said Lincoln worriedly.
-&ldquo;He thinks that if some Rebel sympathizer
-should catch up Tad and hold him I
-<span class="pb" id="Page_82">82</span>
-might be pressured into surrendering Washington
-to get the boy back. And it might be,&rdquo;
-he added sadly, &ldquo;that I would be weak enough
-to do it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You never would! You couldn&rsquo;t&mdash;with
-honor!&rdquo; explained Robert. &ldquo;But it would be a
-mighty tough decision, sir. Is that,&rdquo; he asked
-sharply, &ldquo;why you won&rsquo;t let me go into the
-Army? For fear I might be captured and held
-as a hostage to force some concessions out of
-you? I want to tell you, sir, that if I can get into
-the Army&mdash;and no matter how I&rsquo;m treated there
-or what happens to me, I&rsquo;ll be a United States
-soldier, Mr. Lincoln&mdash;you can forget that I ever
-was your son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very nobly said, son,&rdquo; Lincoln patted his
-shoulder. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to abide by your decision if
-the occasion ever arises. But Tad is my son. A
-little helpless boy. A boy I&rsquo;m mighty fond of,
-and they know it!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I may speak plainly again, sir,&rdquo; said Robert,
-&ldquo;he needs his breeches tanned. And you are
-the one who ought to do it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He couldn&rsquo;t have gone far,&rdquo; fretted Lincoln.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s beginning to snow again.&rdquo; He moved
-across the yard, his escort keeping rigidly in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
-formation on either side. &ldquo;Tad!&rdquo; he shouted.
-&ldquo;You, Tad&mdash;come back here!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He wanted to be a soldier, Mr. President,&rdquo;
-put in one of the soldiers. &ldquo;Tad was bound he
-was a soldier.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All my boys,&rdquo; said Lincoln, &ldquo;wanting to be
-soldiers!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a shout presently from beyond the
-fenced in confines of the yard. Men started running.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve seen him,&rdquo; cried Robert relieved.
-&ldquo;The ornery little devil!&rdquo; He began to run himself,
-and Lincoln trotted too, almost outstripping
-his guards.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There he is!&rdquo; exclaimed a soldier. &ldquo;Up on
-that scaffolding again!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re going after him. They&rsquo;ll get him
-down.&rdquo; Lincoln almost forgot to breathe. The
-little figure looked so small against the loom of
-that great half-finished monument&mdash;a tiny,
-struggling shape swarmed over by half a dozen
-men in blue who clung precariously to the
-spidery trestles, caught him and passed him
-down slowly, kicking and fighting, from one to
-another.</p>
-<p>They brought him up in a few minutes, a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
-pathetic, disheveled sight, tear-stained, dragging
-his feet, still kicking at the shins of the
-men who restrained him. His military cap was
-over one eye, his belt half off, the toy sword
-dragging.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fetch him here!&rdquo; sternly ordered the President
-of the United States.</p>
-<p>Tad stumbled close, held tight by the elbows
-by two privates. His chin was shaking, sobs
-shook him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, Papa&mdash;Oh, Papa&mdash;&rdquo; he gasped, trying to
-fling himself at the tall man with the suddenly
-grim and forbidding face.</p>
-<p>But Lincoln was unrelenting. &ldquo;Thomas Lincoln!
-Give me that sword!&rdquo; he ordered in a terrible
-voice.</p>
-<p>Trembling Tad jerked the sword loose,
-handed it over.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Present the hilt, in proper military order!&rdquo;
-snapped his father.</p>
-<p>Tad reversed the sword, his hand shaking so
-that almost it fell to the ground.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir!&rdquo; His voice was very thin and small.</p>
-<p>Solemnly Lincoln broke the sword over his
-knee, tossed it to one side.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are now reduced to the rank of private,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
-Thomas Lincoln,&rdquo; he stated, &ldquo;until such time
-as you can conduct yourself in the proper manner
-and discipline of an officer of the Army of
-the United States. Strip off his epaulets, Corporal.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The corporal obeyed, looking unhappy and
-ill at ease, handing the gold-fringed boards into
-the hands of the commander in chief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Private Thomas Lincoln, you will now escort
-the President of the United States back to
-the White House,&rdquo; ordered Abraham Lincoln.
-&ldquo;Forward march!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Every man of Company K fell in, marched
-in grave formation, eyes straight ahead, chins
-set, weapons held ready, to the side door of the
-house. Lincoln entered first, turned on the doorstep,
-and soberly saluted the ranks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My deepest gratitude, men of Company
-K,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for labor beyond the call of
-duty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad marched in stiffly; then, with a frightened
-look backward at this stranger who had
-been his adored and indulgent father, flew
-through the hall and up the stairs. His mother
-came hurrying out of the sitting room but he
-ignored her, flying past her to the room with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_86">86</span>
-the great high-topped bed. There Private
-Thomas Lincoln dived under the bed.</p>
-<p>When the dinner gong sounded, he refused
-to come out, even at his father&rsquo;s stern order.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; dismissed Abraham Lincoln.
-&ldquo;Since you&rsquo;re such a craven and a coward, Private
-Lincoln, you may remain in durance there.
-I can eat two drumsticks.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Tad rolled out, swiftly, covered with dust
-and lint.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am not a coward!&rdquo; he sobbed. &ldquo;I climbed
-most to the top of that silly ole monument!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are still a disgrace to the uniform,&rdquo; declared
-his father. &ldquo;A soldier who ran away. Now
-go and wash yourself before your mother comes
-in here and scolds both of us.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Papa dear!&rdquo; whimpered Tad, hugging
-the long legs and snuffling. &ldquo;And you can have
-both drumsticks.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">8</span></h2>
-<p>The Christmas party was in full swing.
-Abraham Lincoln had shaken hands till his
-knuckles ached. Mary Todd Lincoln&rsquo;s coral-colored
-satin and turbaned headdress with
-jaunty flowers and feathers had swished and
-bowed and rustled, and her round face was all
-aglow with pleasure and excitement. She was
-always vivacious at parties, and, if at times she
-was a bit too garrulous, Lincoln overlooked
-that indulgently. He had not given Mary much
-of happiness, and she had had her share of
-frustration and sorrow. Now, if she could find
-pleasure in the dull round of an official affair,
-he was content.</p>
-<p>Some of the senators and other officials had
-had a few too many parties already. One judge
-was already asleep on a padded sofa in the hall,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_88">88</span>
-his gaited ankles sprawling, his mouth open.
-The musicians from the Marine Band played on
-doggedly and quietly in the screened corner of
-the East Room. Here and there stood men of
-Company K and White House guards, stony-faced,
-rigidly alerted. Abraham Lincoln felt his
-legs begin to sag a bit under him, found himself
-wishing wearily that this company would all
-go home. But at least Mary was enjoying herself.</p>
-<p>It was nearly midnight when an aide came
-through the crowd, and touched the arm of the
-President.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Some men of Company K at the rear door,
-Mr. President,&rdquo; he said in a low voice. &ldquo;They
-insist on seeing you. An officer is with them.
-They say they have brought a Christmas present
-for your son, Thomas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lincoln looked about him. Mary was the animated
-center of a group. Servants were collecting
-empty glasses and picking up shattered
-remnants of flowers from the carpet. Secretary
-Seward stood in the midst of a dozen men who
-were arguing a trifle too loudly the question of
-amnesty for North Carolina. The band was
-playing slowly, with a few sour notes indicating
-<span class="pb" id="Page_89">89</span>
-that the musicians were wearying after five
-hours of patient tootling.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dismiss those Marine players,&rdquo; ordered Lincoln.
-&ldquo;They&rsquo;re tired. I&rsquo;ll see what those boys at
-the back door want.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not alone, Mr. President!&rdquo; protested the
-aide.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Company K won&rsquo;t let anything happen to
-me,&rdquo; argued Lincoln. &ldquo;How many are out
-there?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quite a number, sir. A lieutenant is with
-them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll fetch Tad. If they&rsquo;ve brought something
-for him it will sort of make up for this sorry
-Christmas he had.&rdquo; Lincoln strode off up the
-stairs. All day since disciplining Tad his heart
-had ached in dull, heavy fashion. It was not
-easy, he was thinking, to be the son of a president.
-It was not even easy to be a president.
-He thought again wistfully of that white house
-in Springfield, of turkey wishbones hung to dry
-there above the kitchen stove when Tad and
-Willie were small. Honors came dear. Almost,
-he decided, a man could pay too much for
-them.</p>
-<p>Tad was still awake, lying hunched down in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_90">90</span>
-the middle of the huge, high bed. A candle
-burned on a stand, and the flickering light made
-his eyes enormous and somehow lost in the
-round paleness of his face.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t get to sleep, Papa,&rdquo; he explained,
-scrabbling into his father&rsquo;s lap when Lincoln
-sat on the edge of the bed. &ldquo;It was the drum.
-I could hear it all the time&mdash;bum, bum. When
-it stopped I waited for it to start again.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s stopped now, Tad. For good. And the
-boys are downstairs. Our boys. They brought
-you something. Come on, I&rsquo;ll carry you down.
-Put this wrapper around you so you won&rsquo;t take
-cold.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe a new sword. Would you let me
-wear it, Papa?&rdquo; asked Tad eagerly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see&mdash;we&rsquo;ll see how you behave.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They went down the rear stairway stealthily,
-through a chilly hall to the back door. But even
-here was an aide who sprang to open the door
-and two soldiers appeared out of nowhere, one
-desperately swallowing some thing he had been
-chewing on.</p>
-<p>On the steps outside huddled a crowd of
-blue-clad men. Snow sifted thinly over their
-bent shoulders, their drawn-down caps. Every
-<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
-face came up, but to a man they seemed to be
-holding something, holding tight to a bulk that
-struggled a little, something that was hairy and
-odorous and staccato of feet and alive.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. President,&rdquo; the lieutenant jerked erect,
-saluted anxiously, &ldquo;we brought this&mdash;for Private
-Thomas Lincoln&mdash;for his Christmas, sir.
-It&rsquo;s not the same one. Some of the boys chipped
-in and bought it off a Negro, sir&mdash;but we thought
-might be it would do&mdash;for the boy for his Christmas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Like a fish Tad was out of his father&rsquo;s arms,
-nightshirt flying, bare feet oblivious of the cold
-stone step.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A nanny goat!&rdquo; he shrieked in delight.
-&ldquo;Papa, it&rsquo;s a nanny goat! My very own nanny
-goat!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. President, your pardon sir, it&rsquo;s kind of
-dirty, sir, but we&rsquo;ll wash it good in the morning.
-And though it ain&rsquo;t the same one,&rdquo; pleaded
-the corporal, &ldquo;we thought maybe it would do&mdash;for
-Christmas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She licked my hand. She likes me!&rdquo; Tad
-squirmed in ecstasy. &ldquo;Most of anything I
-wanted me a nanny goat!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It appears,&rdquo; stated Abraham Lincoln, &ldquo;to be
-<span class="pb" id="Page_92">92</span>
-a very superior goat. Thank the boys, Tad, and
-let them take your nanny down to the stables
-and feed her. She looks a bit gaunt to me. See
-that she gets a good feed, Corporal, if you
-please. Now, back to bed, Private Lincoln.
-Your nanny will still be here, all cleaned up
-and beautiful for you, in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Very reluctantly, with many farewell pats
-and hand lickings, Tad was at last persuaded
-to mount the stairs again in his father&rsquo;s arms.</p>
-<p>Down below, the drums had ceased but
-Abraham Lincoln thought wearily of all the
-hands he must shake again before he could lie
-down to rest in this wide bed.</p>
-<p>He tucked the covers tenderly over the
-happy child. Tad&rsquo;s eyes were starry. No more
-tears. All sadness forgotten. Wonderful, to be
-a child. Abraham Lincoln sighed as he closed
-the door.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Papa!&rdquo; called Tad.</p>
-<p>Lincoln opened the door again. &ldquo;Yes, son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the nicest Christmas I ever had!&rdquo; stated
-young Thomas Lincoln.</p>
-<h2 id="trnotes">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
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