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| The Place
of Abraham Lincoln in History |
| [Originally published
in The Atlantic, 1865] |
The funeral procession of the late President of the United States has
passed through the land from Washington to his final resting place in
the heart of the prairies. Along the line of more than fifteen hundred
miles his remains were borne, as it were through continued lines of the
people; and the number of mourners and the sincerity and unanimity of
grief were such as never before attended the obsequies of a human being;
so that the terrible catastrophe of his end hardly struck more awe than
the majestic sorrow of the people. The thought of the individual was
effaced; and men's minds were drawn to the station which he filled, to
his public career, to the principles he represented, to his martyrdom.
Why has the President been struck down, and why do the people mourn? We
think we pay the best tribute to his memory, and the most fitting
respect to his name, if we ask after the relation in which he stands to
the history of his country and his fellow men.
Buchanan, who took the presidential chair in 1857, had no traditional
party against him; he owed his nomination to confidence in his
moderation and supposed love of Union. He might have united the whole
North and secured a good part of the South. Constitutionally timid, on
taking the oath of office he betrayed his own weakness and foreshadowed
the forthcoming decision of the Supreme Court. Under the wing of the
Executive, Chief Justice Taney gave his famed disquisition. The delivery
of that opinion was an act of revolution. The truth of history was
scorned; the voice of passion was put forward as the rule of law;
doctrines were laid down which, if they are just, give a full sanction
to the rebellion which ensued. The country was stung to the quick by the
reckless conduct of a body which it needed to trust and which now was
leading the way to the overthrow of the Constitution and the
dismemberment of the Republic.
At the same time Buchanan, in selecting the members of his cabinet,
chose four of the seven from among those who were prepared to sacrifice
the country to the interests of slavery. In time of peace the finances
were willfully ill-administered, and in the midst of wealth and credit
the country was saved from bankruptcy only by the patriotism of the city
of New York, against the treacherous intention of the Secretary of the
Treasury. Cannon and muskets and military stores were sent in numbers
where they could most surely fall into the hands of the coming
rebellion; troops of the United States were placed under disloyal
officers and put out of the way; the navy was scattered abroad. And
then, that nothing might be wanting to increase the agony of the
country, an attempt to force the institution of slavery on the people of
Kansas, who refused it, received the encouragement and aid of Buchanan.
The position of Abraham Lincoln, on the day of his inauguration, was
apparently one of helpless debility. A hark canoe in a tempest on
mid-ocean seemed hardly less safe. The vital tradition of the country on
slavery no l6nger had its adequate expression in either of the two great
political parties, and the Supreme Court had uprooted the old landmarks
and guides. The men who had chosen him President did not constitute a
consolidated party and did not profess to represent either of the
historic parties which had been engaged in the struggles of three
quarters of a century. They were a heterogeneous body of men, of the
most various political attachments in former years, and on many
questions of economy held the most discordant opinions. Scarcely knowing
each other, they did not form a numerical majority of the whole country,
were in a minority in each branch of Congress except from the willful
absence of members, and could not be sure of their own continuance as an
organized body. They did not know their own position and were startled
by the consequences of their success.
The new President himself was, according to his own description, a man
of defective education, a lawyer by profession, knowing nothing of
administration beyond having been master of a very small post office,
knowing nothing of war but as a captain of volunteers in a raid against
an Indian chief, repeatedly a member of the Illinois legislature, once a
member of Congress. He spoke with ease and clearness, but not with
eloquence. He wrote concisely and to the point, but was unskilled in the
use of the pen. He had no accurate knowledge of the public defenses of
the country, no exact conception of its foreign relations, no
comprehensive perception of his duties. The qualities of his nature were
not suited to hardy action. His temper was soft and gentle and yielding,
reluctant to refuse anything that presented itself to him as an act of
kindness, loving to please and willing to confide, not trained to
confine acts of good will within the stern limits of duty. He was of the
temperament called melancholic, scarcely concealed by an exterior of
lightness of humor, having a deep and fixed seriousness, jesting lips,
and wanness of heart. And this man was summoned to stand up directly
against a power with which Henry Clay had never directly grappled,
before which Webster at last had quailed, which no President had
offended and yet successfully administered the government, to which each
great political party had made concessions, to which in various measures
of compromise the country had repeatedly capitulated, and with which he
must now venture a struggle for the life or death of the nation.
The credit of the country had not fully recovered from the shock it had
treacherously received in the former Administration. A part of the navy
yards were intrusted to incompetent agents or enemies. The social spirit
of the city of Washington was against him, and spies and enemies
abounded in the circles of fashion. Every executive department swarmed
with men of treasonable inclinations, so that it was uncertain where to
rest for support. The army officers had been trained in unsound
political principles. The chief of staff of the highest general
officers, wearing the mask of loyalty, was a traitor at heart.
The country was ungenerous toward the Negro, who in truth was not in
the least to blame, who was impatient that such a strife should have
grown out of his condition and wished that he were far away. On the side
of prompt decision the advantage was with the Rebels; the Presitlent
sought how to avoid war without compromising his duty; and the Rebels,
who knew their own purpose, won incalculable advantages by the start
which they thus gained. The country stood aghast, and would not believe
in the full extent of the conspiracy to shatter it in pieces; men were
uncertain if there would be a great uprising of the people. The
President and his cabinet were in the midst of an enemy's country and in
personal danger, and at one time their connections with the North and
West were cut off; and that very moment was chosen by the trusted chief
of staff of the lieutenant general to go over to the enemy.
Everyone remembers how this state of suspense was terminated by the
uprising of a people who now showed strength and virtues which they were
hardly conscious of possessing.
In some respects Abraham Lincoln was peculiarly fitted for his task in
connection with the movement of his countrymen. He was of the Northwest;
and this time it was the Mississippi River, the needed outlet for the
wealth of the Northwest, that did its part in asserting the necessity of
Union. He was one of the mass of the people; he represented them,
because he was of them; and the mass of the people, the class that lives
and thrives by self-imposed labor, felt that the work which was to be
done was a work of their own: the assertion of equality against the
pride of oligarchy, of free labor against the lordship over slaves, of
the great industrial people against all the expiring aristocracies of
which any remnants had tided down from the Middle Ages. He was of a
religious turn of mind, without superstition, and the unbroken faith of
the mass was like his own. As he went along through his difficult
journey, sounding his way, he held fast by the hand of the people and "tracked
its footsteps with even feet." "His pulse's beat twinned with
their pulses." He committed faults, but the people were resolutely
generous, magnanimous, and forgiving; and he in his turn was willing to
take instructions from their wisdom.
The measure by which Abraham Lincoln takes his place, not in American
history only, but in universal history, is his Proclamation of January
1, 1863, emancipating all slaves within the insurgent states. It was
indeed a military necessity, and it decided the result of the war. It
took from the public enemy one or two million bondmen and placed between
one and two hundred thousand brave and gallant troops in arms on the
side of the Union. A great deal has been said in time past of the
wonderful results of the toil of the enslaved Negro in the creation of
wealth by the culture of cotton; and now it is in part to the aid of the
Negro in freedom that the country owes its success in its movement of
regeneration that the world of mankind owes the continuance of the
United States as the example of a Republic. The death of President
Lincoln sets the seal to that Proclamation, which must be maintained. It
cannot but be maintained. It is the only rod that can safely carry off
the thunderbolt. He came to it perhaps reluctantly; he was brought to
adopt it, as it were, against his will, but compelled by inevitable
necessity. He disclaimed all praise for the act, saying reverently,
after it had succeeded, "The nation's condition God alone can
claim."
And what a futurity is opened before the country when its institutions
become homogeneous! From all the civilized world the nations will send
hosts to share the wealth and glory of this people. It will receive all
good ideas from abroad; and its great principles of personal equality
and freedom: freedom of conscience and mind, freedom of speech and
action, freedom of government through ever-renewed common consent, will
undulate through the world like the rays of light and heat from the sun.
With one wing touching the waters of the Atlantic and the other on the
Pacific, it will grow into a greatness of which the past has no
parallel; and there can be no spot in Europe or in Asia so remote or so
secluded as to shut out its influence.
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