The Life and Writings of Abraham Lincoln (114 page)

BOOK: The Life and Writings of Abraham Lincoln
7.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Such complaints, many of them, Lincoln had to endure
while all the time he was awaiting the appropriate public opportunity for launching the proclamation on which he had determined. To supply this much-to-be-desired opportunity rested with McClellan and his men. Major Union victories were not so frequent in ’62; if McClellan had not checked Lee at Antietam, Lincoln’s proclamation, withheld in hope of Federal triumph, would have been indefinitely delayed. From the day (July 22, 1862) when Lincoln put the famous paper aside on Seward’s suggestion that it be not a shriek on the retreat, no important triumph for the United States came, except for Antietam, until July 1863. One appreciates the timeliness of this achievement by the much abused McClellan when one tries to speculate just where Lincoln and emancipation would have stood had the story of McClellan in Maryland been of a piece with that of Pope, Burnside, or Hooker.

It was in this very period of waiting for a victory that there came the word of Pope’s disaster at Second Bull Run. “Things looked darker than ever.” McClellan was grudgingly reinstated. Further anxious days passed. On Wednesday, September 17, Antietam was fought. Lincoln, according to his own account, was then staying at the Soldiers’ Home outside Washington. Here, determining to wait no longer, he finished the “second draft of the preliminary proclamation”; coming in on Saturday, he summoned his Cabinet for Monday.

From
Lincoln the President: Springfield to Gettysburg
, vol. 2, 1946

BENJAMIN P. THOMAS

Benjamin P. Thomas (1902–1956) was an author who dedicated his life to Lincoln. He was the associate editor of the
Abraham Lincoln Quarterly
from 1940 to 1953, editorial advisor to the Collected Works of Lincoln (1953 to 1955), and director of the Abraham Lincoln Association for twenty years. His 1947 book
, Portrait for Posterity: Lincoln and His Biographers,
was awarded the Lincoln
Book of the Year, and in 1949 he was the recipient of the Lincoln Diploma of Honor from Lincoln Memorial University. His books include
Russo-American Relations, 1815–1867
(1930)
, Lincoln’s New Salem
(1934)
, Theodore Weld, Crusader for Freedom
(1950)
,
and a biography of Lincoln (1952), among others.

W
HEN
C
ONGRESS
met early in December, the perplexed and venerable Buchanan, fearful of secession but still sympathetic toward his Southern friends and the Southern point of view, asserted in his annual message that while a state could not lawfully secede, neither could the Federal government coerce it. He proposed to quiet Southern fears by calling a constitutional convention to frame amendments guaranteeing slavery in the states and territories, and assuring the recovery of runaway slaves.

Unmindful of the President’s efforts, South Carolina seceded on December 20. Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana speedily took similar action. With Texas’s renunciation of the Union on February 1, 1861, revolt had swept the Gulf states. The secessionists took over Federal forts and arsenals. State flags replaced the Stars and Stripes on customhouses.

Worried Congressmen, with scant faith in Buchanan, sought for their own formula of settlement. A House Committee of Thirty-three proved ineffectual; but the Senate Committee of Thirteen, composed of capable, intelligent men of the caliber of Seward and Douglas, came up with a number of plans. Douglas again advanced the idea of popular sovereignty. Senator Crittenden of Kentucky, political heir of the famous compromiser, Henry Clay, proposed a series of permanent amendments to the Constitution whereby slavery would be guaranteed forever in the slave states and the District of Columbia, continuance of the domestic slave trade would be assured, and slaveowners would be indemnified for runaways. On the troublesome territorial question, Crittenden
favored an extension of the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific, slavery to be forever excluded north of it and guaranteed in all territory then owned or thereafter acquired to the south.

Sharing the general anxiety for the safety of the Union, a number of Republican Congressmen were disposed to be conciliatory. Several of them, notably those from Illinois, sought Lincoln’s guidance. The President-elect, worn, torn, harassed by the flood of visitors and office-seekers, knew that his decision might be fateful for the Union, which he was determined to preserve at every cost. But how could this best be done—through such firmness as President Jackson had displayed in the nullification crisis of 1832, or through compromise? And would refusal to compromise mean war?

Lincoln quickly made up his mind. To all inquiries he gave essentially the same response: as to fugitive slaves, slavery in the District of Columbia, the internal slave trade, and “whatever springs of necessity from the fact that the institution is amongst us,” he cared but little. But on the question of slavery in the territories he was immovable. Either popular sovereignty or toleration of slavery south of the Missouri Compromise line would, in his opinion, “put us again on the high road to a slave empire.” In 1854 a restoration of the Missouri Compromise would have satisfied him. Since then, however, he had noted the eagerness of the slave power for expansion into Mexico and Central America, and for the acquisition of Cuba. Allow any sort of territorial compromise to be adopted, he warned Congressman Washburne, and “immediately filibustering and extending slavery recommences.” A year would not pass, he was convinced, “till we shall have to take Cuba as a condition upon which they will stay in the Union.”

Thus Lincoln took upon himself the grave responsibility of blocking compromise. “Stand firm,” he admonished Senator Trumbull. “The tug has to come, & better, now than any time hereafter.” “Hold firm, as with a chain of steel,” he wrote to
Washburne. To Lincoln, compromise did not necessarily mean peace. He had seen too many supposed compromises perverted or renounced.

But neither did Lincoln’s rejection of compromise mean that he either wanted or expected war. He had supreme confidence in the sound common sense of the people. During the entire four months between his election and his assumption of office, he continued to believe that the strong Union sentiment in the Southern states would assert itself if given time. The real test would come in the more northerly slave states. If they remained under the old flag, traditions, self-interest, and inherent loyalties would soon bring the others back.

Nor did Lincoln seem to have misjudged the strength of Southern Unionism. Secession appeared to have run its course. News came from North Carolina: a decisive vote against a secession convention. Similar good tidings came from Tennessee. Arkansas and Missouri showed little disposition toward hasty action. Buchanan and his reconstructed cabinet had stiffened. Douglas was preaching loyalty. Lincoln’s native state of Kentucky was resisting the efforts of her Governor to take her out. Governor Thomas H. Hicks of Maryland, where secession sentiment burned hot, staved off the disunionists by refusing to call the Legislature into session. And, most encouraging of all, Virginia, whose influence was paramount with the slave states, not only selected 122 loyalists against 30 disunionists as delegates to her state convention, but stipulated additionally that any ordinance of secession must be ratified by popular vote. Going even farther, Virginia offered her own plan of reconciliation. All the loyal slave states except Arkansas accepted her invitation to send delegates to a peace convention at Washington. With seven states out of the Union, eight showed unmistakable signs of loyalty. It seemed that the tide had turned.

With the safety of the Union hinging on the attitude of these loyal slave states, Lincoln made it his objective to maintain the
national authority while avoiding any rash or provocative action. The Republicans must come to power with the government still respected, and with the slave states in a temperate mood. Tactically such a policy would demand rare skill. Signs of weakness would inspirit the hotheads and forfeit the confidence of the moderates, whereas belligerence would encourage the upper slave states to join their sister commonwealths in revolt.

From
Abraham Lincoln: A Biography
, 1952

STEFAN LORENT

Stefan Lorent (1901–1997) was a Hungarian-born journalist, editor, and photographer. After a short career in filmmaking, he began reporting and writing for various newspapers in Berlin and then in 1928, he became chief editor of the
Müncher Illustrierte Presse
(which he turned into the first modern photo journalistic paper in Europe). After having spent a year in prison for criticizing Hitler, he left Germany for Britain, where he embarked on a very successful career launching and editing illustrated magazines. In 1940, he moved to New York, where, after immersing himself in a study of United States history, he began publishing illustrated books in the field.

Y
ES, THERE
was the frightful plague of milk sickness that winter in Indiana. Dennis [Hanks] lost four milk cows and eleven calves in one week; how many of Thomas Lincoln’s perished, we do not know. But we do know that his farm was not paying, and as John Hanks sent messages of the wonderful land in Illinois, he was willing to give it a try. By the middle of February, 1830, he had sold his farm for $125—and once more he and his family were on the move.

Thirteen people went with the wagons, drawn by ox teams and filled with bedding, furniture, ovens, skillets, and all the
household goods the migrants possessed. Thomas Lincoln, his wife Sarah, his son Abraham, and her son John D. Johnston made four. (Sarah, the elder sister of Abraham was no longer living. Married to Aaron Grigsby, she had died in childbirth two years before.) Dennis Hanks, who nine years before had married Sarah Bush Lincoln’s fifteen-year-old daughter Elizabeth, was with his wife and four children in another wagon; Squire Hall, the husband of Matilda Johnston, Sarah Bush Lincoln’s second daughter, his wife and child were in still another.

It was a tedious journey, “painfully slow and tiresome,” recalled Lincoln later.

Abraham, who around this time had completed his twenty-first year and was lawfully free of his father’s command, drove one of the teams. Before they left, he bought $30 worth of merchandise, investing all his savings in it. There were knives, forks, needles, pins, threads, buttons, and other things which he peddled all the way, making a handsome profit on his investment.

From
Lincoln: A Picture Story of His Life
, 1957

READING GROUP GUIDE

1. Philip Van Doren Stern writes in his “Life of Abraham Lincoln,” “There is only one way to understand this man as a person and as a force in history. No amount of reading biographical accounts of him will give the whole picture; no study of history will give as complete an understanding of his curiously complex personality as well as his own words do” (
this page
). After having read both Van Doren Stern’s and the writings of Lincoln himself, do you agree with Van Doren Stern’s claim that Lincoln’s own words provide the most insight into his character?

2. Given that Lincoln was in many ways a conservative man, does the fact that early on his career he endorsed women’s suffrage (
this page
, Announcement of Political Views, June 13, 1836) surprise you? If not, why?

3. Lincoln historians consider the letters Lincoln wrote to Mary Owens and the one he wrote to Mrs. O. H. Browning describing his failed courtship of Mary Owens to be deeply revealing. Van Doren Stern calls the one to Mrs. Browning a “cruel letter, ridiculing the woman he had once considered worthy of being his wife,” but also “one of the most intimate and self-revelatory documents Lincoln ever wrote. It shows his indecision, his lack of ability to judge others, and, more than any other bit of Lincoln’s writing, it offers a key to the psychological puzzle of his attitude toward women and marriage” (
this page
). Do you concur with Van Doren Stern’s assessment of what the letter shows about Lincoln?

4. How persuasive do you find the speech considered by many to be Lincoln’s first great address (the reply to Douglas, on the implicit repeal of the Missouri Compromise effected by the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act on
May 30, 1854, at Peoria, Illinois, on 16 October 1854)? Identify and consider the effectiveness of his rhetorical strategies. He argues at one point, for example, that the claim made by Southerners that they should be permitted to take slaves into Nebraska just like they would be allowed to take hogs “is perfectly logical, if there is no difference between hogs and Negroes.” However, he continues,

while you thus require me to deny the humanity of the Negro, I wish to ask whether you of the South, yourselves, have ever been willing to do as much? It is kindly provided that of all those who come into the world only a small percentage are natural tyrants. That percentage is no larger in the slave States than in the free. The great majority South, as well as North, have human sympathies, of which they can no more divest themselves than they can of their sensibility to physical pain (
this page
).

How do you imagine a Southerner might have answered this?

5. In denouncing slavery in the Peoria speech, Lincoln appeals a number of times to the Declaration of Independence and in particular to its founding principle that it is a self-evident truth that all men are created equal. Yet he also states that he would not be for freeing slaves and making them the political and social equal of whites [“My feelings will not admit this” (
this page
)], and at another point, right after invoking the Declaration of Independence, he says “Let it not be said that I am contending for the establishment of political and social equality between the whites and blacks. I have already said the contrary” (
this page
). He clearly thinks there is no contradiction in his position. Is there? Why do you think he believes his position is sound?

6. Lincoln states at one point in his Peoria speech that he would accept the extension of slavery if it would save the Union [“Well, I too go for saving the Union. Much as I hate slavery, I would consent to the extension of it rather than see the Union dissolved, just as I would consent to any great evil to avoid a greater one” (
this page
)]. How do you think Lincoln might have justified his claim that the dissolution of the Union would be a greater evil than the expansion of slavery?

7. Compare the first speech addressing the issue of slavery to later ones [e.g., August 27, 1856, at Kalamazoo, Michigan (
this page
to
this page
); July 10, 1858, at Chicago (
this page
to
this page
); his replies/rejoinders/opening speeches in the Lincoln-Douglas debates (
this page
to
this page
); February 27, 1860, at the Cooper Institute, New York]. Do you see any differences in his views over time? Does he change his approach to the problem of slavery or propose new ways of resolving it? Does his speaking style change? If so, in what ways?

8. According to Douglas B. Wilson in
Honor’s Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln
, Lincoln was a confirmed fatalist from his earliest days (likely owing to his Baptist upbringing with its Calvinistic roots), and believed that human beings did not control their own destinies. How does this fatalism manifest itself in his letters and speeches? Can his belief in predestination be squared with his ambition, his desire to better himself, his will to succeed, and his belief that human beings are responsible for their actions? (Wilson notes that among the fundamentalists Lincoln grew up with, there were some who objected to reform programs like the temperance movement, but that Lincoln wasn’t one of them.)

9. In his message to the Congress in a special session on July 4, 1861, the President states in discussing the Civil War
that the issue of war versus dissolution of the country “embraces more than the fate of these United States,” that “it forces us to ask … ‘Must a [democratic] government, of necessity, be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?’ ” (
this page
). Is there in all democracies, as Lincoln himself puts it, this “inherent and fatal weakness”?

Other books

Deborah Camp by To Seduce andDefend
A Kiss to Kill by Nina Bruhns
Beach Music by Pat Conroy
Dead Reckoning by C. Northcote, Parkinson
Hugo & Rose by Bridget Foley
Friends till the End by Gloria Dank