<h2><SPAN name="XXXVII" id="XXXVII"></SPAN>XXXVII</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>The 14th of April—Celebration at Fort
Sumter—Last Cabinet Meeting—Lincoln's
Attitude toward Threats of Assassination—Booth's
Plot—Ford's Theater—Fate of the
Assassins—The Mourning Pageant</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>Mr. Lincoln had returned to Washington, refreshed by his visit
to City Point, and cheered by the unmistakable signs that the war
was almost over. With that ever-present sense of responsibility
which distinguished him, he gave his thoughts to the momentous
question of the restoration of the Union and of harmony between the
lately warring sections. His whole heart was now enlisted in the
work of "binding up the nation's wounds," and of doing all which
might "achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace."</p>
<p>April 14 was a day of deep and tranquil happiness throughout the
United States. It was Good Friday, observed by a portion of the
people as an occasion of fasting and religious meditation; though
even among the most devout the great tidings of the preceding week
exerted their joyous influence, and changed this period of
traditional mourning into an occasion of general thanksgiving. But
though the Misereres turned of themselves to Te Deums, the date was
not to lose its awful significance in the calendar: at night it was
claimed once more by a world-wide sorrow.</p>
<p>The thanksgiving of the nation found its principal expression at
Charleston Harbor, where the flag of the Union received that day a
conspicuous reparation on <SPAN name="page531" id="page531"></SPAN> the spot where it had first been
outraged. At noon General Robert Anderson raised over Fort Sumter
the identical flag lowered and saluted by him four years before;
the surrender of Lee giving a more transcendent importance to this
ceremony, made stately with orations, music, and military
display.</p>
<p>In Washington it was a day of deep peace and thankfulness. Grant
had arrived that morning, and, going to the Executive Mansion, had
met the cabinet, Friday being their regular day for assembling. He
expressed some anxiety as to the news from Sherman which he was
expecting hourly. The President answered him in that singular vein
of poetic mysticism which, though constantly held in check by his
strong common sense, formed such a remarkable element in his
character. He assured Grant that the news would come soon and come
favorably, for he had last night had his usual dream which preceded
great events. He seemed to be, he said, in a singular and
indescribable vessel, but always the same, moving with great
rapidity toward a dark and indefinite shore; he had had this dream
before Antietam, Murfreesboro, Gettysburg, and Vicksburg. The
cabinet were greatly impressed by this story; but Grant, most
matter-of-fact of created beings, made the characteristic response
that "Murfreesboro was no victory, and had no important results."
The President did not argue this point with him, but repeated that
Sherman would beat or had beaten Johnston; that his dream must
relate to that, since he knew of no other important event likely at
present to occur.</p>
<p>Questions of trade between the States, and of various phases of
reconstruction, occupied the cabinet on this last day of Lincoln's
firm and tolerant rule. The President spoke at some length,
disclosing his hope that much could be done to reanimate the States
<SPAN name="page532" id="page532"></SPAN> and get their governments in successful
operation before Congress came together. He was anxious to close
the period of strife without over-much discussion. Particularly did
he desire to avoid the shedding of blood, or any vindictiveness of
punishment. "No one need expect that he would take any part in
hanging or killing these men, even the worst of them." "Enough
lives have been sacrificed," he exclaimed; "we must extinguish our
resentments if we expect harmony and union." He did not wish the
autonomy nor the individuality of the States disturbed; and he
closed the session by commending the whole subject to the most
careful consideration of his advisers. It was, he said, the great
question pending—they must now begin to act in the interest
of peace. Such were the last words that Lincoln spoke to his
cabinet. They dispersed with these sentences of clemency and good
will in their ears, never again to meet under his wise and
benignant chairmanship. He had told them that morning a strange
story, which made some demand upon their faith, but the
circumstances under which they were next to come together were
beyond the scope of the wildest fancy.</p>
<p>The day was one of unusual enjoyment to Mr. Lincoln. His son
Robert had returned from the field with General Grant, and the
President spent an hour with the young captain in delighted
conversation over the campaign. He denied himself generally to the
throng of visitors, admitting only a few friends. In the afternoon
he went for a long drive with Mrs. Lincoln. His mood, as it had
been all day, was singularly happy and tender. He talked much of
the past and future; after four years of trouble and tumult he
looked forward to four years of comparative quiet and normal work;
after that he expected to go back to Illinois and <SPAN name="page533" id="page533"></SPAN> practise
law again. He was never simpler or gentler than on this day of
unprecedented triumph; his heart overflowed with sentiments of
gratitude to Heaven, which took the shape, usual to generous
natures, of love and kindness to all men.</p>
<p>From the very beginning of his presidency, Mr. Lincoln had been
constantly subject to the threats of his enemies. His mail was
infested with brutal and vulgar menace, and warnings of all sorts
came to him from zealous or nervous friends. Most of these
communications received no notice. In cases where there seemed a
ground for inquiry, it was made, as carefully as possible, by the
President's private secretary, or by the War Department; but always
without substantial result. Warnings that appeared most definite,
when examined, proved too vague and confused for further attention.
The President was too intelligent not to know that he was in some
danger. Madmen frequently made their way to the very door of the
executive office, and sometimes into Mr. Lincoln's presence. But he
had himself so sane a mind, and a heart so kindly, even to his
enemies, that it was hard for him to believe in political hatred so
deadly as to lead to murder.</p>
<p>He knew, indeed, that incitements to murder him were not
uncommon in the South, but as is the habit of men constitutionally
brave, he considered the possibilities of danger remote, and
positively refused to torment himself with precautions for his own
safety; summing the matter up by saying that both friends and
strangers must have daily access to him; that his life was
therefore in reach of any one, sane or mad, who was ready to murder
and be hanged for it; and that he could not possibly guard against
all danger unless he shut himself up in an iron box, in which
condition he could scarcely perform the duties of a President. He
<SPAN name="page534" id="page534"></SPAN> therefore went in and out before the
people, always unarmed, generally unattended. He received hundreds
of visitors in a day, his breast bare to pistol or knife. He walked
at midnight, with a single secretary, or alone, from the Executive
Mansion to the War Department and back. He rode through the lonely
roads of an uninhabited suburb from the White House to the
Soldiers' Home in the dusk of the evening, and returned to his work
in the morning before the town was astir. He was greatly annoyed
when it was decided that there must be a guard at the Executive
Mansion, and that a squad of cavalry must accompany him on his
daily drive; but he was always reasonable, and yielded to the best
judgment of others.</p>
<p>Four years of threats and boastings that were unfounded, and of
plots that came to nothing, thus passed away; but precisely at the
time when the triumph of the nation seemed assured, and a feeling
of peace and security was diffused over the country, one of the
conspiracies, apparently no more important than the others, ripened
in the sudden heat of hatred and despair. A little band of
malignant secessionists, consisting of John Wilkes Booth, an actor
of a family of famous players; Lewis Powell, alias Payne, a
disbanded rebel soldier from Florida; George Atzerodt, formerly a
coachmaker, but more recently a spy and blockade-runner of the
Potomac; David E. Herold, a young druggist's clerk; Samuel Arnold
and Michael O'Laughlin, Maryland secessionists and Confederate
soldiers; and John H. Surratt, had their ordinary rendezvous at the
house of Mrs. Mary E. Surratt, the widowed mother of the last
named, formerly a woman of some property in Maryland, but reduced
by reverses to keeping a small boarding-house in Washington.</p>
<p>Booth was the leader of the little coterie. He was a
<SPAN name="page535" id="page535"></SPAN> young man of twenty-six, strikingly
handsome, with that ease and grace of manner which came to him of
right from his theatrical ancestors. He had played for several
seasons with only indifferent success, his value as an actor lying
rather in his romantic beauty of person than in any talent or
industry he possessed. He was a fanatical secessionist, and had
imbibed at Richmond and other Southern cities where he played a
furious spirit of partizanship against Lincoln and the Union party.
After the reëlection of Mr. Lincoln, he visited Canada,
consorted with the rebel emissaries there, and—whether or not
at their instigation cannot certainly be said—conceived a
scheme to capture the President and take him to Richmond. He passed
a great part of the autumn and winter pursuing this fantastic
enterprise, seeming to be always well supplied with money; but the
winter wore away, and nothing was accomplished. On March 4 he was
at the Capitol, and created a disturbance by trying to force his
way through the line of policemen who guarded the passage through
which the President walked to the east front of the building. His
intentions at this time are not known; he afterward said he lost an
excellent chance of killing the President that day.</p>
<p>His ascendancy over his fellow-conspirators seems to have been
complete. After the surrender of Lee, in an access of malice and
rage akin to madness he called them together and assigned each his
part in the new crime which had risen in his mind out of the
abandoned abduction scheme. This plan was as brief and simple as it
was horrible. Powell, alias Payne, the stalwart, brutal,
simple-minded boy from Florida, was to murder Seward; Atzerodt, the
comic villain of the drama, was assigned to remove Andrew Johnson;
Booth reserved for himself the most conspicuous rôle of the
tragedy.<SPAN name="page536" id="page536"></SPAN> It was Herold's duty to attend him as
page and aid him in his escape. Minor parts were given to
stage-carpenters and other hangers-on, who probably did not
understand what it all meant. Herold, Atzerodt, and Surratt had
previously deposited at a tavern at Surrattsville, Maryland, owned
by Mrs. Surratt, but kept by a man named Lloyd, a quantity of arms
and materials to be used in the abduction scheme. Mrs. Surratt,
being at the tavern on the eleventh, warned Lloyd to have the
"shooting-irons" in readiness, and, visiting the place again on the
fourteenth, told him they would probably be called for that
night.</p>
<p>The preparations for the final blow were made with feverish
haste. It was only about noon of the fourteenth that Booth learned
that the President was to go to Ford's Theater that night to see
the play "Our American Cousin." It has always been a matter of
surprise in Europe that he should have been at a place of amusement
on Good Friday; but the day was not kept sacred in America, except
by the members of certain churches. The President was fond of the
theater. It was one of his few means of recreation. Besides, the
town was thronged with soldiers and officers, all eager to see him;
by appearing in public he would gratify many people whom he could
not otherwise meet. Mrs. Lincoln had asked General and Mrs. Grant
to accompany her; they had accepted, and the announcement that they
would be present had been made in the evening papers; but they
changed their plans, and went north by an afternoon train. Mrs.
Lincoln then invited in their stead Miss Harris and Major Rathbone,
the daughter and the stepson of Senator Ira Harris. Being detained
by visitors, the play had made some progress when the President
appeared. The band struck up "Hail to the Chief," the actors ceased
<SPAN name="page537" id="page537"></SPAN> playing, the audience rose, cheering
tumultuously, the President bowed in acknowledgment, and the play
went on.</p>
<p>From the moment he learned of the President's intention, Booth's
every action was alert and energetic. He and his confederates were
seen on horseback in every part of the city. He had a hurried
conference with Mrs. Surratt before she started for Lloyd's tavern.
He intrusted to an actor named Matthews a carefully prepared
statement of his reasons for committing the murder, which he
charged him to give to the publisher of the "National
Intelligencer," but which Matthews, in the terror and dismay of the
night, burned without showing to any one. Booth was perfectly at
home in Ford's Theater. Either by himself, or with the aid of
friends, he arranged his whole plan of attack and escape during the
afternoon. He counted upon address and audacity to gain access to
the small passage behind the President's box. Once there, he
guarded against interference by an arrangement of a wooden bar to
be fastened by a simple mortise in the angle of the wall and the
door by which he had entered, so that the door could not be opened
from without. He even provided for the contingency of not gaining
entrance to the box by boring a hole in its door, through which he
might either observe the occupants, or take aim and shoot. He hired
at a livery-stable a small, fleet horse.</p>
<p>A few minutes before ten o'clock, leaving his horse at the rear
of the theater in charge of a call-boy, he went into a neighboring
saloon, took a drink of brandy, and, entering the theater, passed
rapidly to the little hallway leading to the President's box.
Showing a card to the servant in attendance, he was allowed to
enter, closed the door noiselessly, and secured it with the wooden
bar he had previously made ready, without <SPAN name="page538" id="page538"></SPAN>
disturbing any of the occupants of the box, between whom and
himself yet remained the partition and the door through which he
had made the hole.</p>
<p>No one, not even the comedian who uttered them, could ever
remember the last words of the piece that were spoken that
night—the last Abraham Lincoln heard upon earth. The tragedy
in the box turned play and players to the most unsubstantial of
phantoms. Here were five human beings in a narrow space—the
greatest man of his time, in the glory of the most stupendous
success of our history; his wife, proud and happy; a pair of
betrothed lovers, with all the promise of felicity that youth,
social position, and wealth could give them; and this handsome
young actor, the pet of his little world. The glitter of fame,
happiness, and ease was upon the entire group; yet in an instant
everything was to be changed. Quick death was to come to the
central figure—the central figure of the century's great and
famous men. Over the rest hovered fates from which a mother might
pray kindly death to save her children in their infancy. One was to
wander with the stain of murder upon his soul, in frightful
physical pain, with a price upon his head and the curse of a world
upon his name, until he died a dog's death in a burning barn; the
wife was to pass the rest of her days in melancholy and madness;
and one of the lovers was to slay the other, and end his life a
raving maniac.</p>
<p>The murderer seemed to himself to be taking part in a play. Hate
and brandy had for weeks kept his brain in a morbid state. Holding
a pistol in one hand and a knife in the other, he opened the box
door, put the pistol to the President's head, and fired. Major
Rathbone sprang to grapple with him, and received a savage knife
wound in the arm. Then, rushing forward,<SPAN name="page539" id="page539"></SPAN> Booth
placed his hand on the railing of the box and vaulted to the stage.
It was a high leap, but nothing to such an athlete. He would have
got safely away but for his spur catching in the flag that draped
the front of the box. He fell, the torn flag trailing on his spur;
but, though the fall had broken his leg, he rose instantly and
brandishing his knife and shouting, "Sic Semper Tyrannis!" fled
rapidly across the stage and out of sight. Major Rathbone called,
"Stop him!" The cry rang out, "He has shot the President!" and from
the audience, stupid at first with surprise, and wild afterward
with excitement and horror, two or three men jumped upon the stage
in pursuit of the assassin. But he ran through the familiar
passages, leaped upon his horse, rewarding with a kick and a curse
the boy who held him, and escaped into the night.</p>
<p>The President scarcely moved; his head drooped forward slightly,
his eyes closed. Major Rathbone, not regarding his own grievous
hurt, rushed to the door of the box to summon aid. He found it
barred, and some one on the outside beating and clamoring for
admittance. It was at once seen that the President's wound was
mortal. A large derringer bullet had entered the back of the head,
on the left side, and, passing through the brain, lodged just
behind the left eye. He was carried to a house across the street,
and laid upon a bed in a small room at the rear of the hall on the
ground floor. Mrs. Lincoln followed, tenderly cared for by Miss
Harris. Rathbone, exhausted by loss of blood, fainted, and was
taken home. Messengers were sent for the cabinet, for the
surgeon-general, for Dr. Stone, Mr. Lincoln's family physician, and
for others whose official or private relations to the President
gave them the right to be there. A crowd of people rushed
instinctively to the White House, and, bursting<SPAN name="page540" id="page540"></SPAN>
through the doors, shouted the dreadful news to Robert Lincoln and
Major Hay, who sat together in an upper room. They ran down-stairs,
and as they were entering a carriage to drive to Tenth Street, a
friend came up and told them that Mr. Seward and most of the
cabinet had been murdered. The news seemed so improbable that they
hoped it was all untrue; but, on reaching Tenth Street, the
excitement and the gathering crowds prepared them for the worst. In
a few moments those who had been sent for and many others were
assembled in the little chamber where the chief of the state lay in
his agony. His son was met at the door by Dr. Stone, who with grave
tenderness informed him that there was no hope.</p>
<p>The President had been shot a few minutes after ten. The wound
would have brought instant death to most men, but his vital
tenacity was remarkable. He was, of course, unconscious from the
first moment; but he breathed with slow and regular respiration
throughout the night. As the dawn came and the lamplight grew pale,
his pulse began to fail; but his face, even then, was scarcely more
haggard than those of the sorrowing men around him. His automatic
moaning ceased, a look of unspeakable peace came upon his worn
features, and at twenty-two minutes after seven he died. Stanton
broke the silence by saying:</p>
<p>"Now he belongs to the ages."</p>
<p>Booth had done his work efficiently. His principal subordinate,
Payne, had acted with equal audacity and cruelty, but not with
equally fatal result. Going to the home of the Secretary of State,
who lay ill in bed, he had forced his way to Mr. Seward's room, on
the pretext of being a messenger from the physician with a packet
of medicine to deliver. The servant at the door tried to prevent
him from going up-stairs; the<SPAN name="page541" id="page541"></SPAN> Secretary's son, Frederick
W. Seward, hearing the noise, stepped out into the hall to check
the intruders. Payne rushed upon him with a pistol which missed
fire, then rained blows with it upon his head, and, grappling and
struggling, the two came to the Secretary's room and fell together
through the door. Frederick Seward soon became unconscious, and
remained so for several weeks, being, perhaps, the last man in the
civilized world to learn the strange story of the night. The
Secretary's daughter and a soldier nurse were in the room. Payne
struck them right and left, wounding the nurse with his knife, and
then, rushing to the bed, began striking at the throat of the
crippled statesman, inflicting three terrible wounds on his neck
and cheek. The nurse recovered himself and seized the assassin from
behind, while another son, roused by his sister's screams, came
into the room and managed at last to force him outside the
door—not, however, until he and the nurse had been stabbed
repeatedly. Payne broke away at last, and ran down-stairs,
seriously wounding an attendant on the way, reached the door
unhurt, sprang upon his horse, and rode leisurely away. When
surgical aid arrived, the Secretary's house looked like a field
hospital. Five of its inmates were bleeding from ghastly wounds,
and two of them, among the highest officials of the nation, it was
thought might never see the light of another day; though all
providentially recovered.</p>
<p>The assassin left behind him his hat, which apparently trivial
loss cost him and one of his fellow conspirators their lives.
Fearing that the lack of it would arouse suspicion, he abandoned
his horse, instead of making good his escape, and hid himself in
the woods east of Washington for two days. Driven at last by
hunger, he returned to the city and presented himself
at<SPAN name="page542" id="page542"></SPAN> Mrs. Surratt's house at the very moment
when all its inmates had been arrested and were about to be taken
to the office of the provost-marshal. Payne thus fell into the
hands of justice, and the utterance of half a dozen words by him
and the unhappy woman whose shelter he sought proved the
death-warrant of them both.</p>
<p>Booth had been recognized by dozens of people as he stood before
the footlights and brandished his dagger; but his swift horse
quickly carried him beyond any haphazard pursuit. He crossed the
Navy-Yard bridge and rode into Maryland, being joined very soon by
Herold. The assassin and his wretched acolyte came at midnight to
Mrs. Surratt's tavern, and afterward pushed on through the
moonlight to the house of an acquaintance of Booth, a surgeon named
Mudd, who set Booth's leg and gave him a room, where he rested
until evening, when Mudd sent them on their desolate way south.
After parting with him they went to the residence of Samuel Cox
near Port Tobacco, and were by him given into the charge of Thomas
Jones, a contraband trader between Maryland and Richmond, a man so
devoted to the interests of the Confederacy that treason and murder
seemed every-day incidents to be accepted as natural and necessary.
He kept Booth and Herold in hiding at the peril of his life for a
week, feeding and caring for them in the woods near his house,
watching for an opportunity to ferry them across the Potomac; doing
this while every wood-path was haunted by government detectives,
well knowing that death would promptly follow his detection, and
that a reward was offered for the capture of his helpless charge
that would make a rich man of any one who gave him up.</p>
<p>With such devoted aid Booth might have wandered <SPAN name="page543" id="page543"></SPAN> a long
way; but there is no final escape but suicide for an assassin with
a broken leg. At each painful move the chances of discovery
increased. Jones was able, after repeated failures, to row his
fated guests across the Potomac. Arriving on the Virginia side,
they lived the lives of hunted animals for two or three days
longer, finding to their horror that they were received by the
strongest Confederates with more of annoyance than enthusiasm,
though none, indeed, offered to betray them. Booth had by this time
seen the comments of the newspapers on his work, and bitterer than
death or bodily suffering was the blow to his vanity. He confided
his feelings of wrong to his diary, comparing himself favorably
with Brutus and Tell, and complaining: "I am abandoned, with the
curse of Cain upon me, when, if the world knew my heart, that one
blow would have made me great."</p>
<p>On the night of April 25, he and Herold were surrounded by a
party under Lieutenant E.P. Doherty, as they lay sleeping in a barn
belonging to one Garrett, in Caroline County, Virginia, on the road
to Bowling Green. When called upon to surrender, Booth refused. A
parley took place, after which Doherty told him he would fire the
barn. At this Herold came out and surrendered. The barn was fired,
and while it was burning, Booth, clearly visible through the cracks
in the building, was shot by Boston Corbett, a sergeant of cavalry.
He was hit in the back of the neck, not far from the place where he
had shot the President, lingered about three hours in great pain,
and died at seven in the morning.</p>
<p>The surviving conspirators, with the exception of John H.
Surratt, were tried by military commission sitting in Washington in
the months of May and June. The charges against them specified that
they were<SPAN name="page544" id="page544"></SPAN> "incited and encouraged" to treason and
murder by Jefferson Davis and the Confederate emissaries in Canada.
This was not proved on the trial; though the evidence bearing on
the case showed frequent communications between Canada and Richmond
and the Booth coterie in Washington, and some transactions in
drafts at the Montreal Bank, where Jacob Thompson and Booth both
kept accounts. Mrs. Surratt, Payne, Herold, and Atzerodt were
hanged on July 7; Mudd, Arnold, and O'Laughlin were imprisoned for
life at the Tortugas, the term being afterward shortened; and
Spangler, the scene-shifter at the theater, was sentenced to six
years in jail. John H. Surratt escaped to Canada, and from there to
England. He wandered over Europe, and finally was detected in Egypt
and brought back to Washington in 1867, where his trial lasted two
months, and ended in a disagreement of the jury.</p>
<p>Upon the hearts of a people glowing with the joy of victory, the
news of the President's assassination fell as a great shock. It was
the first time the telegraph had been called upon to spread over
the world tidings of such deep and mournful significance. In the
stunning effect of the unspeakable calamity the country lost sight
of the national success of the past week, and it thus came to pass
that there was never any organized expression of the general
exultation or rejoicing in the North over the downfall of the
rebellion. It was unquestionably best that it should be so; and
Lincoln himself would not have had it otherwise. He hated the
arrogance of triumph; and even in his cruel death he would have
been glad to know that his passage to eternity would prevent too
loud an exultation over the vanquished. As it was, the South could
take no umbrage at a grief so genuine and so legitimate; the
<SPAN name="page545" id="page545"></SPAN> people of that section even shared, to a
certain degree, in the lamentations over the bier of one whom in
their inmost hearts they knew to have wished them well.</p>
<p>There was one exception to the general grief too remarkable to
be passed over in silence. Among the extreme radicals in Congress,
Mr. Lincoln's determined clemency and liberality toward the
Southern people had made an impression so unfavorable that, though
they were naturally shocked at his murder, they did not, among
themselves, conceal their gratification that he was no longer in
the way. In a political caucus, held a few hours after the
President's death, "the feeling was nearly universal," to quote the
language of one of their most prominent representatives, "that the
accession of Johnson to the presidency would prove a godsend to the
country."</p>
<p>In Washington, with this singular exception, the manifestation
of public grief was immediate and demonstrative. Within an hour
after the body was taken to the White House, the town was shrouded
in black. Not only the public buildings, the shops, and the better
residences were draped in funeral decorations, but still more
touching proof of affection was seen in the poorest class of
houses, where laboring men of both colors found means in their
penury to afford some scanty show of mourning. The interest and
veneration of the people still centered in the White House, where,
under a tall catafalque in the East Room, the late chief lay in the
majesty of death, and not at the modest tavern on Pennsylvania
Avenue, where the new President had his lodging, and where
Chief-Justice Chase administered the oath of office to him at
eleven o'clock on the morning of April 15.</p>
<p>It was determined that the funeral ceremonies in Washington
should be celebrated on Wednesday, April<SPAN name="page546" id="page546"></SPAN> 19, and
all the churches throughout the country were invited to join at the
same time in appropriate observances. The ceremonies in the East
Room were brief and simple—the burial service, a prayer, and
a short address; while all the pomp and circumstance which the
government could command was employed to give a fitting escort from
the White House to the Capitol, where the body of the President was
to lie in state. The vast procession moved amid the booming of
minute-guns, and the tolling of all the bells in Washington
Georgetown, and Alexandria; and to associate the pomp of the day
with the greatest work of Lincoln's life, a detachment of colored
troops marched at the head of the line.</p>
<p>As soon as it was announced that Mr. Lincoln was to be buried at
Springfield, Illinois, every town and city on the route begged that
the train might halt within its limits and give its people the
opportunity of testifying their grief and reverence. It was finally
arranged that the funeral cortege should follow substantially the
same route over which he had come in 1861 to take possession of the
office to which he had given a new dignity and value for all time.
On April 21, accompanied by a guard of honor, and in a train decked
with somber trappings, the journey was begun. At Baltimore through
which, four years before, it was a question whether the
President-elect could pass with safety to his life, the coffin was
taken with reverent care to the great dome of the Exchange, where,
surrounded with evergreens and lilies, it lay for several hours,
the people passing by in mournful throngs. The same demonstration
was repeated, gaining continually in intensity of feeling and
solemn splendor of display, in every city through which the
procession passed. The reception in New York was worthy alike
<SPAN name="page547" id="page547"></SPAN> of the great city and of the memory of
the man they honored. The body lay in state in the City Hall, and a
half-million people passed in deep silence before it. Here General
Scott came, pale and feeble, but resolute, to pay his tribute of
respect to his departed friend and commander.</p>
<p>The train went up the Hudson River by night, and at every town
and village on the way vast waiting crowds were revealed by the
fitful glare of torches, and dirges and hymns were sung. As the
train passed into Ohio, the crowds increased in density, and the
public grief seemed intensified at every step westward. The people
of the great central basin were claiming their own. The day spent
at Cleveland was unexampled in the depth of emotion it brought to
life. Some of the guard of honor have said that it was at this
point they began to appreciate the place which Lincoln was to hold
in history.</p>
<p>The last stage of this extraordinary progress was completed, and
Springfield reached at nine o'clock on the morning of May 3.
Nothing had been done or thought of for two weeks in Springfield
but the preparations for this day, and they had been made with a
thoroughness which surprised the visitors from the East. The body
lay in state in the Capitol, which was richly draped from roof to
basement in black velvet and silver fringe. Within it was a bower
of bloom and fragrance. For twenty-four hours an unbroken stream of
people passed through, bidding their friend and neighbor welcome
home and farewell; and at ten o'clock on May 4, the coffin lid was
closed, and a vast procession moved out to Oak Ridge, where the
town had set apart a lovely spot for his grave, and where the dead
President was committed to the soil of the State which had so loved
and honored him. The <SPAN name="page548" id="page548"></SPAN>ceremonies at the grave were simple and
touching. Bishop Simpson delivered a pathetic oration; prayers were
offered and hymns were sung; but the weightiest and most eloquent
words uttered anywhere that day were those of the second inaugural,
which the committee had wisely ordained to be read over his grave,
as the friends of Raphael chose the incomparable canvas of the
Transfiguration to be the chief ornament of his funeral.</p>
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