<h2 class="nobreak" id="III">III</h2>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Even</span> at the age of ten years the frontier
lad was a hard worker. When
he was not wielding the axe in the
forest, he was driving the horses, threshing,
ploughing, assisting his father as a carpenter.
He also “hired out” to the neighbors
as ploughboy, hostler, water-carrier, baby-minder
or doer of odd chores, at twenty-five
cents a day. He suddenly began to
grow tall, and there was no stronger youth
in the community than the lank, loose-limbed
boy in deerskins, linsey-woolsey,
and coonskin cap, who could make an axe
bite so deep into a tree.</p>
<p>His stepmother sent him to school again
for several months. In 1826, too, he walked
nine miles a day to attend a log-house
school. He had new companions at home
now, a stepbrother, two stepsisters, and his
cousins, John and Dennis Hanks.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
<p>As young Lincoln grew taller his skill and
strength as a woodchopper and rail-splitter,
and his willingness to do any kind of work,
however drudging or menial—in spite of a
natural meditative indolence—made him
widely known. His kindly, helpful disposition
and simple honesty gave him a distinct
popularity, and he was much sought
after as a companion, notwithstanding his
ungainly figure and rough ways.</p>
<p>But it was his extraordinary thirst for
knowledge, his efforts to raise himself out
of the depths of ignorance, that showed the
inner power struggling against adverse surroundings.</p>
<p>He grew to a height of six feet and four
inches by the time he was seventeen years
old. His legs and arms were long, his hands
and feet big, and his skin was dry and yellow.
His face was gaunt, and his melancholy
gray eyes were sunk in cavernous
sockets above his prominent cheek bones.
A girl schoolmate has described him: “His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
shoes, when he had any, were low. He
wore buckskin breeches, linsey-woolsey shirt,
and a cap made of the skin of a squirrel or
coon. His breeches were baggy and lacked
by several inches meeting the tops of his
shoes, thereby exposing his shin-bone, sharp,
blue and narrow.”</p>
<p>This is the real Abraham Lincoln, who
read, and read, and read; whose constant
spells of brooding abstraction, eyes fixed,
dreaming face, gave him a reputation for
laziness among some of his shallow fellows;
who would crouch down in the forest or sit
on a fence-rail for hours to study a book;
who would lie on his stomach at night in
front of the fireplace and, having no paper
or slate, would write and cipher with charcoal
on the wooden shovel, on boards and
the hewn sides of logs, shaving them clean
when he wanted to write again.</p>
<p>Here is his cousin’s picture of him at the
age of fourteen:</p>
<p>“When Abe and I returned to the house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
from work he would go to the cupboard,
snatch a piece of corn bread, sit down, take
a book, cock his legs up as high as his head,
and read. We grubbed, plowed, mowed
and worked together barefooted in the field.
Whenever Abe had a chance in the field
while at work, or at the house, he would
stop and read.”</p>
<p>His principal books were an arithmetic,
the Bible, “Æsop’s Fables,” “Robinson
Crusoe,” Weems’ “Life of Washington,”
“The Pilgrim’s Progress,” and a history of
the United States. He became the best
speller and penman in his neighborhood.
Yet there was a vein of waggery in him
which occasionally found a vent in such
written verse as this:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0"><i>Abraham Lincoln,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>His hand and pen,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>He will be good,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>But God knows when.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>All this has been told of him many times
and in many ways; yet the nation he saved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
loves to dwell on the picture of the tall,
tanned, awkward woodchopper and farm
drudge; gawky, angular, iron-muscled, with
bare feet or moccasins, deerhide breeches
and coonskin cap, battling out in the forest
against his own ignorance and, by sheer
force of will power, conquering knowledge
and commanding destiny.</p>
<p>Not a whimper against fate, not a word
against youths more successful than himself,
no complaint of the hard work and
coarse food—simply the strivings of a soul
not yet conscious of its own greatness, but
already superior to its squalid environments.</p>
<p>It is probable that there is not a youth in
all America to-day, however poor, ignorant,
and forlorn, that has not a better chance to
rise in life than Abraham Lincoln had when
he started to climb the ladder of light by
courage and persistent application.</p>
<p>He attended spelling matches, log-rollings
and horse races. He wrote vulgar and
sometimes silly verse. He outraged the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
farmers who employed him by delivering
comic addresses and buffoonery in the form
of sermons from tree-stumps, to the snickering
field hands. Sometimes he thrashed a
bully. His strength was tremendous. No
man in the country could withstand him. It
is said that he once lifted half a ton. Yet his
temper was cool, his heart gentle and generous,
and back of his singsongy, rollicking,
spraddling youth, with its swinging axe-blows,
forest-prowlings, and coarse humor, there
was a gravity, dignity, sanity, fairness, generosity
and deep, straightout eloquence that
made him a power in that small community.</p>
<p>Think of a young man of six feet and four
inches in coonskin and deerhide, who could
sink an axe deeper into a tree than any pioneer
in that heroic region, and who yet had
perseverance enough in his cabin home to
read “The Revised Statutes of Indiana”
until he could almost repeat them by heart!</p>
<p>He became a leader and could gather an
audience by merely mounting a stump and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
waving his hands. Nor was that all. He
frequently stopped brawls and acted as umpire
between disputants. Another side of
his nature was displayed when he found the
neighborhood drunkard freezing by the
roadside, carried him in his arms to the
tavern and worked over him for hours.</p>
<p>When Lincoln’s sister Sarah married
Aaron Grigsby in 1826, the seventeen-year-old
giant composed a song and sang it at
the wedding. Here are the concluding
verses:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0"><i>The woman was not taken</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>From Adam’s feet we see,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>So he must not abuse her,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>The meaning seems to be.</i></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0"><i>The woman was not taken</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>From Adam’s head we know,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>To show she must not rule him—</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>’Tis evidently so.</i></div>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0"><i>The woman she was taken</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>From under Adam’s arm,</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>So she must be protected</i></div>
<div class="verse indent0"><i>From injuries and harm.</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
<p>Yet that dry volume of “The Revised
Statutes of Indiana,” through which the
woodchopper worked so bravely, contained
the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution
of the United States and the Ordinance
of 1787, and he bound them on his
heart like a seal and wore them till the hour
of his cruel death.</p>
<p>As time went on Lincoln developed into a
popular story-teller and oracle at Jones’ grocery
store in the nearby village of Gentryville.
His oratory grew at the expense of
his farm-work. He went to all the trials in
the local courts, and trudged fifteen miles to
Booneville for the sake of hearing a lawsuit
tried. Between times he wrote an essay on
the American Government and another on
temperance. He made speeches, he gossiped,
he argued public questions, he cracked
jokes, he made everybody his friend—sometimes
he worked. Already he was an American
politician, although he did not know it.</p>
<div id="if_i_024" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 40em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_024.jpg" width-obs="1963" height-obs="1604" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="floatr small p0">Taken from an old print</p>
<p class="floatc">Lincoln debating with Douglas in 1858</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>It is hard to realize that, even later in his
career, and with all his mighty strength and
courage, the man who preserved “government
of the people, for the people, and by
the people” to the world could earn only
thirty-seven cents a day, and that he had “to
split four hundred rails for every yard of
brown jeans dyed with white walnut bark
that would be necessary to make him a pair
of trousers.”</p>
<p>When he was President of the United
States he told Secretary Seward the story of
how he had once taken two men and their
trunks to a river steamer in a flatboat built
by his own hands, and got a dollar for it.</p>
<p>“In these days it seems like a trifle to
me,” he added, “but it was a most important
incident in my life. I could scarcely
credit that I, the poor boy, had earned a
dollar in less than a day; that by honest
work I had earned a dollar.”</p>
<p>In 1828 Mr. Gentry, of Gentryville,
loaded a flatboat with produce, put his son
in charge of it and hired Lincoln for eight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
dollars a month and board to work the bow
oars and take it to New Orleans. Near
Baton Rouge the young men tied the boat
up at night and were asleep in a cabin when
they were awakened to find a gang of negroes
attempting to plunder the cargo. With
a club Lincoln knocked several of the marauders
into the river and chased the rest
for some distance, returning bloody but victorious.
The boat was then hurriedly cut
loose, and they floated on all night.</p>
<p>That voyage was Lincoln’s first brief
glimpse of the great world. Till then he
had never seen a large city. In New Orleans
he was yet to see human beings bought
and sold, and hear the groans that were afterwards
answered by the thunders of the
Civil War.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />