Produced by Al Haines
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
BY LORD CHARNWOOD
GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK
GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.
COPYRIGHT, 1917
BY
HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
GENERAL EDITOR'S PREFACE
Statesmen--even the greatest--have rarely won the same unquestioning recognition that falls to the great warriors or those supreme in science, art or literature. Not in their own lifetime and hardly to this day have the claims to supremacy of our own Oliver Cromwell, William III. and Lord Chatham rested on so sure a foundation as those of a Marlborough or a Nelson, a Newton, a Milton or a Hogarth. This is only natural. A warrior, a man of science, an artist or a poet are judged in the main by definite achievements, by the victories they have won over foreign enemies or over ignorance and prejudice, by the joy and enlightenment they have brought to the consciousness of their own and succeeding generations. For the statesman there is no such exact measure of greatness. The greater he is, the less likely is his work to be marked by decisive achievement which can be recalled by anniversaries or signalised by some outstanding event: the chief work of a great statesman rests in a gradual change of direction given to the policy of his people, still more in a change of the spirit within them. Again, the statesman must work with a rough and ready instrument. The soldier finds or makes his army ready to yield unhesitating obedience to his commands, the sailor animates his fleet with his own personal touch, and the great man in art, literature or science is master of his material, if he can master himself. The statesman cannot mould a heterogeneous people, as the men of a well-disciplined army or navy can be moulded, to respond to his call and his alone. He has to do all his work in a society of which a large part cannot see his object and another large part, as far as they do see it, oppose it. Hence his work at the best is often incomplete and he has to be satisfied with a rough average rather than with his ideal.
Lincoln, one of the few supreme statesmen of the last three centuries, was no exception to this rule. He was misunderstood and underrated in his lifetime, and even yet has hardly come to his own. For his place is among the great men of the earth. To them he belongs by right of his immense power of hard work, his unfaltering pursuit of what seemed to him right, and above all by that childlike directness and simplicity of vision which none but the greatest carry beyond their earliest years. It is fit that the first considered attempt by an Englishman to give a picture of Lincoln, the great hero of America's struggle for the noblest cause, should come at a time when we in England are passing through as fiery a trial for a cause we feel to be as noble. It is a time when we may learn much from Lincoln's failures and success, from his patience, his modesty, his serene optimism and his eloquence, so simple and so magnificent.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Abraham Lincoln by Charnwood
- 2: The Progress of Secession 3
- 3: Shortly Josiah returned with soldiers from the fort
- 4: After Abraham was turned loose
- 5: Sarah his sister was married at Gentryville to one Mr
- 6: Like the winter of the deep snow in Illinois
- 7: With preachers who taught a grim doctrine
- 8: Bore a grudge against the Grigsbys
- 9: One of them had a tenacious memory and a tenacious will
- 10: The middle group of Colonies were of more mixed origin
- 11: Presumed for the moment to represent the people
- 12: The separate government of each State
- 13: Sit or speak in the Legislature
- 14: But the Union authority is equally powerless
- 15: Not occasional slaves as in Kentucky and Tennessee
- 16: Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson
- 17: Democrats to day have described Lincoln
- 18: Reforming a preposterous land law
- 19: Jefferson was a great American patriot
- 20: That slavery was a doomed institution
- 21: Had abolished that before 1805
- 22: While by tacit agreement permitted south of it
- 23: And Webster at least was doing good
- 24: That is Calhoun's real monument
- 25: Nullification quietly collapsed
- 26: And very many Democrats in the North
- 27: The party candidates for the Presidency
- 28: But in or about 1830 a Quaker named Lundy had
- 29: Even on large plantations in the extreme South
- 30: Their relations with their slaves humane
- 31: Became the policy of the South
- 32: As population slowly grew in the South
- 33: Submerged evermore by a flood of newcomers
- 34: Chapter iiilincoln's early career1
- 35: Offutt was some time before he arrived with his goods
- 36: Berry and Lincoln next acquired
- 37: But was soon employed as assistant surveyor by John Calhoun
- 38: Springfield was a different place from New Salem
- 39: And in 1838 and 1840 the Whig members though
- 40: Was there in his statesmanship
- 41: It was at Alton in Illinois that
- 42: Nor is the condescension very great
- 43: Miss Mary Owens was slightly older than Lincoln
- 44: And Speed himself had painful searchings of heart
- 45: That gem I lost how and where you know too well
- 46: When Lincoln was nearly thirty three
- 47: Herndon makes it clear that in some respects Mrs
- 48: But it was by inference from the feelings of Speed
- 49: Here it became obvious that Hardin would be chosen
- 50: Polk ordered General Zachary Taylor
- 51: Butterfield a lawyer renowned for his jokes
- 52: The peacefully acquired region of Oregon
- 53: The chief concessions made to the South were two
- 54: It was the last achievement of Webster and Clay
- 55: Expresses approval of the Compromise
- 56: Nor did he make himself an exact lawyer
- 57: An advocate glanced at Lincoln's notes for his speech
- 58: And the relevant Statute read and expounded
- 59: He was nevertheless an accomplished Parliamentarian
- 60: Its principle was dislike of foreign immigrants
- 61: He decided that Dred Scott was not a citizen
- 62: Which Taney is known to have entertained
- 63: But others say there are no Whigs
- 64: This was hard on its confiding editor
- 65: Became a contest between Lincoln and Douglas
- 66: The Principles and the Oratory of Lincoln
- 67: And that was the permanent acquiescence in slavery
- 68: Slavery to exist in the slave States
- 69: For the extinction of slavery he would wait
- 70: Everlasting principle of 'popular sovereignty
- 71: His speeches in the formal Lincoln Douglas debates
- 72: Occasionally he uses hackneyed phrases
- 73: Do justice to the awkwardness and ungainliness of his figure
- 74: Illinois is a State bigger than Ireland
- 75: Brooks himself challenged Burlingame
- 76: The Convention framed a Constitution legalising slavery
- 77: Douglas here behaved very honourably
- 78: But an acknowledgment that slavery is right
- 79: In the business of the Kansas Constitution
- 80: Having prepared his speech he read it to Herndon
- 81: Lincoln did go down in this particular contest
- 82: Quietly freeing slaves as he went
- 83: Who saw in slavery a great oppression
- 84: His appearance at the Cooper Institute
- 85: It was marvellous to see how this untutored man
- 86: Two separate Democratic Conventions at Baltimore
- 87: Claiming to represent the old Whigs
- 88: And we know that Seward himself
- 89: Besides consulting him as to other appointments in Kansas
- 90: An acute literary man wrote of Lincoln
- 91: John Hanks and I did make rails in the Sangamon Bottom
- 92: Other Presidential candidates have been born in poverty
- 93: Maintained most passionately the absolute right of secession
- 94: More deeply engrained in the original States of the North
- 95: Had early seen in a view of State sovereignty
- 96: When the Constitution was accepted
- 97: In which the question of secession hung in the balance
- 98: They in fact destroyed slavery
- 99: Were the leaders who declared immediately for secession
- 100: To say that they fought against slavery
- 101: Believed and said that secession was absolutely unlawful
- 102: No doubt as to the right of secession
- 103: Laying down very clearly the illegality of secession
- 104: And decided to reinforce Anderson on Fort Sumter
- 105: Buchanan waited in the hope of avoiding action
- 106: Seward's support was not given to the compromise
- 107: The writing that Weed brought to Seward must have said
- 108: In Texas there were peculiar conditions
- 109: Who thus struggled against secession at that moment
- 110: The Congress of the seceding States
- 111: Representative of the weighty Protectionist influence there
- 112: Whether they were felicitous or not
- 113: They could be far better adjusted in Union than in enmity
- 114: It was politically advisable now to provision Fort Sumter
- 115: And they greatly exercised Seward
- 116: Fort Sumter became untenable on the next day
- 117: Or on which candid admiration has pronounced with hesitancy
- 118: The Southern forces during most of the war were
- 119: Thought Lee even greater than Moltke
- 120: The dearth of trained military faculty
- 121: If its proceedings were studied in detail
- 122: Some West Pointers of repute of course proved incapable
- 123: Instead of Montgomery in Alabama
- 124: Arrived at Atlanta or Columbus
- 125: Of the States which had already seceded
- 126: The outcome of his sure trust in God
- 127: So we shall hate to whip the naughty South
- 128: A humorist like Lincoln himself
- 129: When Motley writes again from Vienna to his mother
- 130: Found the arsenal with open doors
- 131: Quickly arrived near Baltimore
- 132: And incidentally the reputation of McClellan
- 133: Commissioned Lyon to raise them in Missouri
- 134: McDowell was to attack the Confederate position at Manassas
- 135: He devoted himself to entrenching his position at Manassas
- 136: Lincoln's Administration Generally
- 137: An attack upon Charleston itself
- 138: His jobbery proved to have one shining attribute of virtue
- 139: When their mediation had been rejected
- 140: Said Lord Robert Cecil to a Northern lady
- 141: And the Duke of Argyll share his credit
- 142: Took Mason and Slidell off her
- 143: Seward knows that I am his master
- 144: He appealed to Congress now to do its part
- 145: Were half hearted in their detestation of slavery
- 146: That Fremont himself should withdraw his Proclamation
- 147: Stanton before the war was a strong Democrat
- 148: Coiling itself round the Confederacy
- 149: Upon Knoxville in Eastern Tennessee
- 150: Buell was perhaps unlucky in this
- 151: The ablest strategist of the war
- 152: Halleck had given Grant little help
- 153: The great loss of life at Shiloh
- 154: McClellan publicly repudiated their principles
- 155: There was some security in employing McClellan
- 156: The Southern President came to Manassas
- 157: McClellan came in and went upstairs
- 158: His project of going to Urbana was now changed
- 159: McClellan received several mortifications
- 160: And which indeed McClellan had advised him not to expect
- 161: Having successfully kept McDowell from McClellan
- 162: McClellan was slowly but steadily nearing Richmond
- 163: McClellan handed him the letter
- 164: McClellan had not been deprived of command
- 165: If McClellan could not fight himself
- 166: He was convinced that McClellan
- 167: Burnside offered his resignation
- 168: Drew back across the Rappahannock
- 169: For the bloody and inconclusive battle upon the Antietam
- 170: English people did not know the American Constitution
- 171: Gradual and not sudden emancipation
- 172: The hope of the Confederacy was
- 173: Seward raised a point which had never struck him before
- 174: A week or two after his correspondence with Greeley
- 175: It is less amusing than most of Artemus Ward
- 176: And in a number of States the Democrats gained considerably
- 177: So we must think anew and act anew
- 178: Confronted with all the Cabinet except Seward
- 179: But the recollections of Army Chaplain John Eaton
- 180: This Colony had a plague of jiggers
- 181: Louisiana had been reconquered
- 182: The Republican Convention of 1864
- 183: That Halleck lacked energy of will
- 184: The mountains behind Chattanooga
- 185: Took place between Buell with 58
- 186: Ultimately he moved on Murfreesborough
- 187: As he watched those of Rosecrans after him
- 188: Not of all the clamour against Lincoln
- 189: Were commanded by the Vicksburg guns
- 190: This was a mortification to McClernand
- 191: Would have rendered Vicksburg useless
- 192: Lay covering Vicksburg with 20
- 193: As he did before at Chancellorsville
- 194: Lee was forced over the Rappahannock
- 195: Rosecrans made good his retreat to Chattanooga
- 196: But in the great responsibility resting upon me
- 197: It was dedicated on November 19
- 198: When no compulsion was in force
- 199: On the whole the seceding States
- 200: With certain statutory exemptions
- 201: Very readily became sanguine that McClellan
- 202: 192 were substitutes provided by conscripts
- 203: After speaking of the precedents for conscription in America
- 204: Statesmen such as Pitt and Lincoln
- 205: Attach extreme importance to this legal contention
- 206: Was ridiculously small see Ex parte Milligan
- 207: But men like Senator John Sherman
- 208: Vallandigham was indeed released
- 209: Fresh complaints from Seymour followed
- 210: This seems to have been the opinion of Lee and Longstreet
- 211: For this purpose he left Thomas to hold Chattanooga
- 212: To settle his plans with Sherman
- 213: Lee must now stand siege in Richmond and Petersburg
- 214: Some twenty miles north of Atlanta
- 215: Schofield fell back slowly on Thomas
- 216: And which Sherman could not endure
- 217: With its solid Unionist population
- 218: But sharp disagreement arose in 1864
- 219: Jefferson Davis had his army with him
- 220: Have made it sure by dismissing Blair
- 221: He would step in and crush Stanton flat
- 222: Once Chase was overruled and wrote his resignation
- 223: Of the other possible candidates
- 224: Unanimity among Republicans was secured
- 225: The candidate chosen was McClellan
- 226: McClellan had repudiated the Peace Resolution
- 227: In August he told his mind plainly to Grant's friend Eaton
- 228: In which Lincoln had to live and work
- 229: A duty which Lincoln especially strove to fulfil
- 230: Though Stanton intervened and Dennis
- 231: If from this day William Scott does his duty
- 232: Like the comedy of Shakespeare
- 233: This election shows that you are stronger
- 234: And the President had nominated Chase
- 235: Lincoln urged many of Chase's defects
- 236: As a military measure it was belated and inoperative
- 237: And he entreated Lincoln to receive them
- 238: Making feints against Augusta on the one side
- 239: The city itself fell to Schofield
- 240: Had driven Sheridan into winter quarters
- 241: And Christ and reason say the same
- 242: Not distributed generally over the Union
- 243: 'Woe unto the world because of offenses
- 244: But Lincoln was much concerned
- 245: Which flows east through Petersburg to the James estuary
- 246: Important principles may and must be inflexible
- 247: Was seen to strike with a knife at Major Rathbone
- 248: And another alleged conspirator
- 249: Jefferson Davis was captured on May 10
- 250: This expresses my idea of democracy
- 251: Junior Houghton Mifflin Company
- 252: By Brigadier General Frederick Maurice
- 253: Eli Whitney invents cotton 1793
- 254: Garrison publishes first 1831
- 255: Missouri Compromise 1854 5
- 256: Alabama arbitration with 1872
- 257: Alleghany or Appalachian Mountains 26
- 258: Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union 20
- 259: Davis and Congress of Confederacy
- 260: His argument for right of Secession
- 261: Relations with Lincoln after Secession
- 262: Siege of Petersburg and Richmond continued
- 263: Inaugural Address Lincoln's first
- 264: Army of Potomac restored to him
- 265: And see Meridian and Vicksburg
- 266: Pardon of offenders by Lincoln
- 267: Siege of Petersburg and Richmond
- 268: Action during progress of Secession
- 269: Causes of Secession and prevailing feeling in South about it
- 270: Sheridan in Lower Shenandoah Valley
- 271: These are pages picked at random
- 272: Lincoln was a very abstemious man
- 273: Referring to General McClellan's inactivity
- 274: But that's the way I got rid of Governor
- 275: Descriptive of my most interesting interview with you
- 276: Was entirely for your own information
- 277: Taken in Richmond when captured
- 278: When occupying Lexington with a body of Federal troops
