<h3>LINCOLN WAS LOADED FOR BEAR.</h3>
<p>An eminent man of politics has said that the similes of the learned
which liken Abraham Lincoln to King Henry IV. of France and other
historical notables are far from the mark and reveal their
miscomprehension of the Machiavel redeemed by moral goodness. He
thinks that without the hypocrisy being censurable he was more of the
type of Pope Sixtus the Fifth. This celebrity, who, like Lincoln, was
in the hog business at one time, pretended silliness to be elected
pontiff. The die cast, he stood forth in all his native strength,
keeping the friends who did not try to sway him, and becoming a rod
of steel where he had been rated as lead. [Footnote: Greeley stamped
Lincoln as "the slowest piece of lead that ever crawled."] At the same
time as he dispraised himself--mocked and laughed--he let out glimpses
of true ambition. When his short-sighted advisers warmly crossed his
ground of setting himself with freedom against the pro-slavery party,
assuring him that he would thereby lose the senatorship as against
Douglas, he confessed:</p>
<p>"I am after larger game. The battle of 1860 (for the chair of
Washington) is worth a hundred of this."
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