hero tales from american history-第36章
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they call; the swaying mass; their eager faces turning; O captain。 Dear father。 This arm I push beneath you; It is some dream that on the deck; You've fallen cold and dead。
My captain does not answer; his lips are pale and still; My father does not feel my arm; he has no pulse nor win: But the ship; the ship is anchor'd safe; its voyage closed and done; From fearful trip; the victor ship; comes in with object won: Exult O shores; and ring; O bells。 But I with silent tread; Walk the spot the captain lies; Fallen cold and dead。 Walt Whitman。
LINCOLN
As Washington stands to the Revolution and the establishment of the government; so Lincoln stands as the hero of the mightier struggle by which our Union was saved。 He was born in 1809; ten years after Washington; his work done had been laid to rest at Mount Vernon。 No great man ever came from beginnings which seemed to promise so little。 Lincoln's family; for more than one generation; had been sinking; instead of rising; in the social scale。 His father was one of those men who were found on the frontier in the early days of the western movement; always changing from one place to another; and dropping a little lower at each remove。 Abraham Lincoln was born into a family who were not only poor; but shiftless; and his early days were days of ignorance; and poverty; and hard work。 Out of such inauspicious surroundings; he slowly and painfully lifted himself。 He gave himself an education; he took part in an Indian war; he worked in the fields; he kept a country store; he read and studied; and; at last; he became a lawyer。 Then he entered into the rough politics of the newly…settled State。 He grew to be a leader in his county; and went to the legislature。 The road was very rough; the struggle was very hard and very bitter; but the movement was always upward。
At last he was elected to Congress; and served one term in Washington as a Whig with credit; but without distinction。 Then he went back to his law and his politics in Illinois。 He had; at last; made his position。 All that was now needed was an opportunity; and that came to him in the great anti…slavery struggle。
Lincoln was not an early Abolitionist。 His training had been that of a regular party man; and as a member of a great political organization; but he was a lover of freedom and justice。 Slavery; in its essence; was hateful to him; and when the conflict between slavery and freedom was fairly joined; his path was clear before him。 He took up the antislavery cause in his own State and made himself its champion against Douglas; the great leader of the Northern Democrats。 He stumped Illinois in opposition to Douglas; as a candidate for the Senate; debating the question which divided the country in every part of the State。 He was beaten at the election; but; by the power and brilliancy of his speeches; his own reputation was made。 Fighting the anti…slavery battle within constitutional lines; concentrating his whole force against the single point of the extension of slavery to the Territories; he had made it clear that a new leader had arisen in the cause of freedom。 From Illinois his reputation spread to the East; and soon after his great debate he delivered a speech in New York which attracted wide attention。 At the Republican convention of 1856; his name was one of those proposed for vice…president。
When 1860 came; he was a candidate for the first place on the national ticket。 The leading candidate was William H。 Seward; of New York; the most conspicuous man of the country on the Republican side; but the convention; after a sharp struggle; selected Lincoln; and then the great political battle came at the polls。 The Republicans were victorious; and; as soon as the result of the voting was known; the South set to work to dissolve the Union。 In February Lincoln made his way to Washington; at the end coming secretly from Harrisburg to escape a threatened attempt at assassination; and on March 4; 1861 assumed the presidency。
No public man; no great popular leader; ever faced a more terrible situation。 The Union was breaking; the Southern States were seceding; treason was rampant in Washington; and the Government was bankrupt。 The country knew that Lincoln was a man of great capacity in debate; devoted to the cause of antislavery and to the maintenance of the Union。 But what his ability was to deal with the awful conditions by which he was surrounded; no one knew。 To follow him through the four years of civil war which ensued is; of course; impossible here。 Suffice it to say that no greater; no more difficult; task has ever been faced by any man in modern times; and no one ever met a fierce trial and conflict more successfully。
Lincoln put to the front the question of the Union; and let the question of slavery drop; at first; into the background。 He used every exertion to hold the border States by moderate measures; and; in this way; prevented the spread of the rebellion。 For this moderation; the antislavery extremists in the North assailed him; but nothing shows more his far…sighted wisdom and strength of purpose than his action at this time。 By his policy at the beginning of his administration; he held the border States; and united the people of the North in defense of the Union。
As the war went on; he went on; too。 He had never faltered in his feelings about slavery。 He knew; better than any one; that the successful dissolution of the Union by the slave power meant; not only the destruction of an empire; but the victory of the forces of barbarism。 But he also saw; what very few others at the moment could see; that; if he was to win; he must carry his people with him; step by step。 So when he had rallied them to the defense of the Union; and checked the spread of secession in the border States; in the autumn of 1862 he announced that he would issue a proclamation freeing the slaves。 The extremists had doubted him in the beginning; the con servative and the timid doubted him now; but when the Emancipation Proclamation was issued; on January 1; 1863; it was found that the people were with him in that; as they had been with him when he staked everything upon the maintenance of the Union。 The war went on to victory; and in 1864 the people showed at the polls that they were with the President; and reelected him by overwhelming majorities。 Victories in the field went hand in hand with success at the ballot…box; and; in the spring of 1865; all was over。 On April 9; 1865; Lee surrendered at Appomattox; and five days later; on April 14; a miserable assassin crept into the box at the theater where the President was listening to a play; and shot him。 The blow to the country was terrible beyond words; for then men saw; in one bright flash; how great a man had fallen。
Lincoln died a martyr to the cause to which he had given his life; and both life and death were heroic。 The qualities which enabled him to do his great work are very clear now to all men。 His courage and his wisdom; his keen perception and his almost prophetic foresight; enabled him to deal with all the problems of that distracted time as they arose around him。 But he had some qualities; apart from those of the intellect; which were of equal importance to his people and to the work he had to do。 His character; at once strong and gentle; gave confidence to every one; and dignity to his cause。 He had an infinite patience; and a humor that enabled him to turn aside many difficulties which could have been met in no other way。 But most important of all was the fact that he personified a great sentiment; which ennobled and uplifted his people; and made them capable of the patriotism which fought the war and saved the Union。 He carried his people with him; because he knew instinctively; how they felt and what they wanted。 He embodied; in his own person; all their highest ideals; and he never erred in his judgment。
He is not only a great and commanding figure among the great statesmen and leaders of history; but he personifies; also; all the sadness and the pathos of the war; as well as its triumphs and its glories。 No words that any one can use about Lincoln can; however; do him such justice as his own; and I will close this volume with two of Lincoln'