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<h2> V. THE CHAMPION OF FREEDOM </h2>
<p>For four or five years after his return from Congress, Lincoln remained in
Springfield, working industriously at his profession. He was offered a law
partnership in Chicago, but declined on the ground that his health would
not stand the confinement of a great city. His business increased in
volume and importance as the months went by; and it was during this time
that he engaged in what is perhaps the most dramatic as well as the best
known of all his law cases—his defense of Jack Armstrong's son on a
charge of murder. A knot of young men had quarreled one night on the
outskirts of a camp-meeting, one was killed, and suspicion pointed
strongly toward young Armstrong as the murderer. Lincoln, for old
friendship's sake, offered to defend him—an offer most gratefully
accepted by his family. The principal witness swore that he had seen young
Armstrong strike the fatal blow—had seen him distinctly by the light
of a bright moon. Lincoln made him repeat the statement until it seemed as
if he were sealing the death-warrant of the prisoner. Then Lincoln began
his address to the jury. He was not there as a hired attorney, he told
them, but because of friendship. He told of his old relations with Jack
Armstrong, of the kindness the prisoner's mother had shown him in New
Salem, how he had himself rocked the prisoner to sleep when the latter was
a little child. Then he reviewed the testimony, pointing out how
completely everything depended on the statements of this one witness; and
ended by proving beyond question that his testimony was false, since,
according to the almanac, which he produced in court and showed to judge
and jury, THERE WAS NO MOON IN THE SKY THAT NIGHT at the hour the murder
was committed. The jury brought in a verdict of "Not guilty," and the
prisoner was discharged.</p>
<p>Lincoln was always strong with a jury. He knew how to handle men, and he
had a direct way of going to the heart of things. He had, moreover,
unusual powers of mental discipline. It was after his return from
Congress, when he had long been acknowledged one of the foremost lawyers
of the State, that he made up his mind he lacked the power of close and
sustained reasoning, and set himself like a schoolboy to study works of
logic and mathematics to remedy the defect. At this time he committed to
memory six books of the propositions of Euclid; and, as always, he was an
eager reader on many subjects, striving in this way to make up for the
lack of education he had had as a boy. He was always interested in
mechanical principles and their workings, and in May, 1849, patented a
device for lifting vessels over shoals, which had evidently been dormant
in his mind since the days of his early Mississippi River experiences. The
little model of a boat, whittled out with his own hand, that he sent to
the Patent Office when he filed his application, is still shown to
visitors, though the invention itself failed to bring about any change in
steamboat architecture.</p>
<p>In work and study time slipped away. He was the same cheery companion as
of old, much sought after by his friends, but now more often to be found
in his office surrounded by law-books and papers than had been the case
before his term in Congress. His interest in politics seemed almost to
have ceased when, in 1854, something happened to rouse that and his sense
of right and justice as they had never been roused before. This was the
repeal of the "Missouri Compromise," a law passed by Congress in the year
1820, allowing Missouri to enter the Union as a slave State, but
positively forbidding slavery in all other territory of the United States
lying north of latitude 36 degrees 30 minutes, which was the southern
boundary-line of Missouri.</p>
<p>Up to that time the Southern States, where slavery was lawful, had been as
wealthy and quite as powerful in politics as the Northern or free States.
The great unoccupied territory lying to the west, which, in years to come,
was sure to be filled with people and made into new States, lay, however,
mostly north of 36 degrees 30 minutes; and it was easy to see that as new
free States came one after the other into the Union the importance of the
South must grow less and less, because there was little or no territory
left out of which slave States could be made to offset them. The South
therefore had been anxious to have the Missouri Compromise repealed.</p>
<p>The people of the North, on the other hand, were not all wise or
disinterested in their way of attacking slavery. As always happens,
self-interest and moral purpose mingled on both sides; but, as a whole, it
may be said that they wished to get rid of slavery because they felt it to
be wrong, and totally out of place in a country devoted to freedom and
liberty. The quarrel between them was as old as the nation, and it had
been gaining steadily in intensity. At first only a few persons in each
section had been really interested. By the year 1850 it had come to be a
question of much greater moment, and during the ten years that followed
was to increase in bitterness until it absorbed the thoughts of the entire
people, and plunged the country into a terrible civil war.</p>
<p>Abraham Lincoln had grown to manhood while the question was gaining in
importance. As a youth, during his flatboat voyages to New Orleans he had
seen negroes chained and beaten, and the injustice of slavery had been
stamped upon his soul. The uprightness of his mind abhorred a system that
kept men in bondage merely because they happened to be black. The
intensity of his feeling on the subject had made him a Whig when, as a
friendless boy, he lived in a town where Whig ideas were much in disfavor.
The same feeling, growing stronger as he grew older, had inspired the
Lincoln-Stone protest and the bill to free the slaves in the District of
Columbia, and had caused him to vote at least forty times against slavery
in one form or another during his short term in Congress. The repeal of
the Missouri Compromise, throwing open once more to slavery a vast amount
of territory from which it had been shut out, could not fail to move him
deeply. His sense of justice and his strong powers of reasoning were
equally stirred, and from that time until slavery came to its end through
his own act, he gave his time and all his energies to the cause of
freedom.</p>
<p>Two points served to make the repeal of the Missouri Compromise of special
interest to Lincoln. The first was personal, in that the man who
championed the measure, and whose influence in Congress alone made it
possible, was Senator Stephen A. Douglas, who had been his neighbor in
Illinois for many years.</p>
<p>The second was deeper. He realized that the struggle meant much more than
the freedom or bondage of a few million black men: that it was in reality
a struggle for the central idea of our American republic—the
statement in our Declaration of Independence that "all men are created
equal." He made no public speeches until autumn, but in the meantime
studied the question with great care, both as to its past history and
present state. When he did speak it was with a force and power that
startled Douglas and, it is said, brought him privately to Lincoln with
the proposition that neither of them should address a public meeting again
until after the next election.</p>
<p>Douglas was a man of great ambition as well as of unusual political skill.
Until recently he had been heartily in favor of keeping slavery out of the
Northwest Territory; but he had set his heart upon being President of the
United States, and he thought that he saw a chance of this if he helped
the South to repeal the Missouri Compromise, and thus gained its gratitude
and its votes. Without hesitation he plunged into the work and labored
successfully to overthrow this law of more than thirty years' standing.</p>
<p>Lincoln's speech against the repeal had made a deep impression in
Illinois, where he was at once recognized as the people's spokesman in the
cause of freedom. His statements were so clear, his language so eloquent,
the stand he took so just, that all had to acknowledge his power. He did
not then, nor for many years afterward, say that the slaves ought to be
immediately set free. What he did insist upon was that slavery was wrong,
and that it must not be allowed to spread into territory already free; but
that, gradually, in ways lawful and just to masters and slaves alike, the
country should strive to get rid of it in places where it already existed.
He never let his hearers lose sight of the great underlying moral fact.
"Slavery," he said, "is founded in the selfishness of man's nature;
opposition to it in his love of justice." Even Senator Douglas was not
prepared to admit that slavery was right. He knew that if he said that he
could never be President, for the whole North would rise against him. He
wished to please both sides, so he argued that it was not a question for
him or for the Federal Government to decide, but one which each State and
Territory must settle for itself. In answer to this plea of his that it
was not a matter of morals, but of "State rights"—a mere matter of
local self-government—Mr. Lincoln replied, "When the white man
governs himself that is self-government; but when he governs himself and
also governs another man, that is more than self-government—that is
despotism."</p>
<p>It was on these opposing grounds that the two men took their stand for the
battle of argument and principle that was to continue for years, to
outgrow the bounds of the State, to focus the attention of the whole
country upon them, and, in the end, to have far-reaching consequences of
which neither at that time dreamed. At first the field appeared much
narrower, though even then the reward was a large one. Lincoln had entered
the contest with no thought of political gain; but it happened that a new
United States senator from Illinois had to be chosen about that time.
Senators are not voted for by the people, but by the legislatures of their
respective States and as a first result of all this discussion about the
right or wrong of slavery it was found that the Illinois legislature,
instead of having its usual large Democratic majority, was almost evenly
divided. Lincoln seemed the most likely candidate; and he would have
undoubtedly been chosen senator, had not five men, whose votes were
absolutely necessary, stoutly refused to vote for a Whig, no matter what
his views upon slavery might be. Keeping stubbornly aloof, they cast their
ballots time after time for Lyman Trumbull, who was a Democrat, although
as strongly opposed to slavery as Lincoln himself.</p>
<p>A term of six years in the United States Senate must have seemed a large
prize to Lincoln just then—possibly the largest he might ever hope
to gain; and it must have been a hard trial to feel it so near and then
see it slipping away from him. He did what few men would have had the
courage or the unselfishness to do. Putting aside all personal
considerations, and intent only on making sure of an added vote against
slavery in the Senate, he begged his friends to cease voting for him and
to unite with those five Democrats to elect Trumbull.</p>
<p>"I regret my defeat moderately," he wrote to a sympathizing friend, "but I
am not nervous about it." Yet it must have been particularly trying to
know that with forty-five votes in his favor, and only five men standing
between him and success, he had been forced to give up his own chances and
help elect the very man who had defeated him.</p>
<p>The voters of Illinois were quick to realize the sacrifice he had made.
The five stubborn men became his most devoted personal followers; and his
action at this time did much to bring about a great political change in
the State. All over the country old party lines were beginning to break up
and re-form themselves on this one question of slavery. Keeping its old
name, the Democratic party became the party in favor of slavery, while the
Northern Whigs and all those Democrats who objected to slavery joined in
what became known as the Republican party. It was at a great mass
convention held in Bloomington in May, 1856, that the Republican party of
Illinois took final shape; and it was here that Lincoln made the wonderful
address which has become famous in party history as his "lost speech."
There had been much enthusiasm. Favorite speakers had already made
stirring addresses that had been listened to with eagerness and heartily
applauded; but hardly a man moved from his seat until Lincoln should be
heard. It was he who had given up the chance of being senator to help on
the cause of freedom. He alone had successfully answered Douglas. Every
one felt the fitness of his making the closing speech—and right
nobly did he honor the demand. The spell of the hour was visibly upon him.
Standing upon the platform before the members of the convention, his tall
figure drawn up to its full height, his head thrown back, and his voice
ringing with earnestness, he denounced the evil they had to fight in a
speech whose force and power carried his hearers by storm, ending with a
brilliant appeal to all who loved liberty and justice to</p>
<p>Come as the winds come when forests are rended;<br/>
Come as the waves come when navies are stranded;<br/></p>
<p>and unite with the Republican party against this great wrong.</p>
<p>The audience rose and answered him with cheer upon cheer. Then, after the
excitement had died down, it was found that neither a full report nor even
trustworthy notes of his speech had been taken. The sweep and magnetism of
his oratory had carried everything before it—even the reporters had
forgotten their duty, and their pencils had fallen idle. So it happened
that the speech as a whole was lost. Mr. Lincoln himself could never
recall what he had said; but the hundreds who heard him never forgot the
scene or the lifting inspiration of his words.</p>
<p>Three weeks later the first national convention of the Republican party
was held. John C. Fremont was nominated for President, and Lincoln
received over a hundred votes for Vice-President, but fortunately, as it
proved, was not selected, the honor falling to William L. Dayton of New
Jersey. The Democratic candidate for President that year was James
Buchanan, "a Northern man with Southern principles," very strongly in
favor of slavery. Lincoln took an active part in the campaign against him,
making more than fifty speeches in Illinois and the adjoining States. The
Democrats triumphed, and Buchanan was elected President; but Lincoln was
not discouraged, for the new Republican party had shown unexpected
strength throughout the North. Indeed, Lincoln was seldom discouraged. He
had an abiding faith that the people would in the long run vote wisely;
and the cheerful hope he was able to inspire in his followers was always a
strong point in his leadership.</p>
<p>In 1858, two years after this, another election took place in Illinois, on
which the choice of a United States senator depended. This time it was the
term of Stephen A. Douglas that was drawing to a close. He greatly desired
reelection. There was but one man in the State who could hope to rival
him, and with a single voice the Republicans of Illinois called upon
Lincoln to oppose him. Douglas was indeed an opponent not to be despised.
His friends and followers called him the "Little Giant." He was plausible,
popular, quick-witted, had winning manners, was most skilful in the use of
words, both to convince his hearers and, at times, to hide his real
meaning. He and Lincoln were old antagonists. They had first met in the
far-away Vandalia days of the Illinois legislature. In Springfield,
Douglas had been the leader of the young Democrats, while Lincoln had been
leader of the younger Whigs. Their rivalry had not always been confined to
politics, for gossip asserted that Douglas had been one of Miss Todd's
more favored suitors. Douglas in those days had no great opinion of the
tall young lawyer; while Lincoln is said to have described Douglas as "the
least man I ever saw"—although that referred to his rival's small
stature and boyish figure, not to his mental qualities. Douglas was not
only ambitious to be President: he had staked everything on the repeal of
the Missouri Compromise and his statement that this question of slavery
was one that every State and Territory must settle for itself, but with
which the Federal Government had nothing to do. Unfortunately, his own
party no longer agreed with him. Since Buchanan had become President the
Democrats had advanced their ground. They now claimed that while a State
might properly say whether or not it would tolerate slavery, slavery ought
to be lawful in all the Territories, no matter whether their people liked
it or not.</p>
<p>A famous law case, called the Dred Scott case, lately decided by the
Supreme Court of the United States, went far toward making this really the
law of the land. In its decision the court positively stated that neither
Congress nor a territorial legislature had power to keep slavery out of
any United States Territory. This decision placed Senator Douglas in a
most curious position. It justified him in repealing the Missouri
Compromise, but at the same time it absolutely denied his statement that
the people of a Territory had a right to settle the slavery question to
suit themselves. Being a clever juggler with words, he explained away the
difference by saying that a master might have a perfect right to his slave
in a Territory, and yet that right could do him no good unless it were
protected by laws in force where his slave happened to be. Such laws
depended entirely on the will of the people living in the Territory, and
so, after all, they had the deciding voice. This reasoning brought upon
him the displeasure of President Buchanan and all the Democrats who
believed as he did, and Douglas found himself forced either to deny what
he had already told the voters of Illinois, or to begin a quarrel with the
President. He chose the latter, well knowing that to lose his reelection
to the Senate at this time would end his political career. His fame as
well as his quarrel with the President served to draw immense crowds to
his meetings when he returned to Illinois and began speech-making, and his
followers so inspired these meetings with their enthusiasm that for a time
it seemed as though all real discussion would be swallowed up in noise and
shouting.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln, acting on the advice of his leading friends, sent Douglas a
challenge to joint debate. Douglas accepted, though not very willingly;
and it was agreed that they should address the same meetings at seven
towns in the State, on dates extending through August, September, and
October. The terms were that one should speak an hour in opening, the
other an hour and a half in reply, and the first again have half an hour
to close. Douglas was to open the meeting at one place, Lincoln at the
next.</p>
<p>It was indeed a memorable contest. Douglas, the most skilled and plausible
speaker in the Democratic party, was battling for his political life. He
used every art, every resource, at his command. Opposed to him was a
veritable giant in stature—a man whose qualities of mind and of body
were as different from those of the "Little Giant"—as could well be
imagined. Lincoln was direct, forceful, logical, and filled with a purpose
as lofty as his sense of right and justice was strong. He cared much for
the senatorship, but he cared far more to right the wrong of slavery, and
to warn people of the peril that menaced the land. Already in June he had
made a speech that greatly impressed his hearers. "A house divided against
itself cannot stand," he told them. "I believe this government cannot
endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to
be dissolved, I do not expect the house to fall—but I do expect it
will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other";
and he went on to say that there was grave danger it might become all
slave. He showed how, little by little, slavery had been gaining ground,
until all it lacked now was another Supreme Court decision to make it
alike lawful in all the States, North as well as South. The warning came
home to the people of the North with startling force, and thereafter all
eyes were fixed upon the senatorial campaign in Illinois.</p>
<p>The battle continued for nearly three months. Besides the seven great
joint debates, each man spoke daily, sometimes two or three times a day,
at meetings of his own. Once before their audiences, Douglas's dignity as
a senator afforded him no advantage, Lincoln's popularity gave him little
help. Face to face with the followers of each, gathered in immense numbers
and alert with jealous watchfulness, there was no escaping the rigid test
of skill in argument and truth in principle. The processions and banners,
the music and fireworks, of both parties were stilled and forgotten while
the people listened to the three hours' battle of mind against mind.</p>
<p>Northern Illinois had been peopled largely from the free States, and
southern Illinois from the slave States; thus the feeling about slavery in
the two parts was very different. To take advantage of this, Douglas, in
the very first debate, which took place at Ottawa, in northern Illinois,
asked Lincoln seven questions, hoping to make him answer in a way that
would be unpopular farther south. In the second debate Lincoln replied to
these very frankly, and in his turn asked Douglas four questions, the
second of which was whether, in Douglas's opinion, the people of any
Territory could, in any lawful way, against the wish of any citizen of the
United States, bar out slavery before that Territory became a State. Mr.
Lincoln had long and carefully studied the meaning and effect of this
question. If Douglas said, "No," he would please Buchanan and the
administration Democrats, but at the cost of denying his own words. If he
said, "Yes," he would make enemies of every Democrat in the South.
Lincoln's friends all advised against asking the question. They felt sure
that Douglas would answer, "Yes," and that this would win him his
election. "If you ask it, you can never be senator," they told Lincoln.
"Gentlemen," he replied, "I am killing larger game. If Douglas answers he
can never be President, and the battle of 1860 is worth a hundred of
this."</p>
<p>Both prophecies were fulfilled. Douglas answered as was expected; and
though, in actual numbers, the Republicans of Illinois cast more votes
than the Democrats, a legislature was chosen that rejected him to the
Senate. Two years later, Lincoln, who in 1858 had not the remotest dream
of such a thing, found himself the successful candidate of the Republican
party for President of the United States.</p>
<p>To see how little Lincoln expected such an outcome it is only necessary to
glance at the letters he wrote to friends at the end of his campaign
against Douglas. Referring to the election to be held two years later, he
said, "In that day I shall fight in the ranks, but I shall be in no one's
way for any of the places." To another correspondent he expressed himself
even more frankly: "Of course I wished, but I did not much expect, a
better result... . I am glad I made the late race. It gave me a hearing on
the great and durable question of the age, which I could have had in no
other way; and though I now sink out of view and shall be forgotten, I
believe I have made some marks which will tell for the cause of civil
liberty long after I am gone."</p>
<p>But he was not to "sink out of view and be forgotten." Douglas himself
contributed not a little toward keeping his name before the public; for
shortly after their contest was ended the reelected senator started on a
trip through the South to set himself right again with the Southern
voters, and in every speech that he made he referred to Lincoln as the
champion of "abolitionism." In this way the people were not allowed to
forget the stand Lincoln had taken, and during the year 1859 they came to
look upon him as the one man who could be relied on at all times to answer
Douglas and Douglas's arguments.</p>
<p>In the autumn of that year Lincoln was asked to speak in Ohio, where
Douglas was again referring to him by name. In December he was invited to
address meetings in various towns in Kansas, and early in 1860 he made a
speech in New York that raised him suddenly and unquestionably to the
position of a national leader.</p>
<p>It was delivered in the hall of Cooper Institute, on the evening of
February 27, 1860, before an audience of men and women remarkable for
their culture, wealth and influence.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln's name and words had filled so large a space in the Eastern
newspapers of late, that his listeners were very eager to see and hear
this rising Western politician. The West, even at that late day, was very
imperfectly understood by the East. It was looked upon as a land of
bowie-knives and pistols, of steamboat explosions, of mobs, of wild
speculation and wilder adventure. What, then, would be the type, the
character, the language of this speaker? How would he impress the great
editor Horace Greeley, who sat among the invited guests; David Dudley
Field, the great lawyer, who escorted him to the platform; William Cullen
Bryant, the great poet, who presided over the meeting?</p>
<p>The audience quickly forgot these questioning doubts. They had but time to
note Mr. Lincoln's unusual height, his rugged, strongly marked features,
the clear ring of his high-pitched voice, the commanding earnestness of
his manner. Then they became completely absorbed in what he was saying. He
began quietly, soberly, almost as if he were arguing a case before a
court. In his entire address he uttered neither an anecdote nor a jest. If
any of his hearers came expecting the style or manner of the Western
stump-speaker, they met novelty of an unlooked-for kind; for such was the
apt choice of words, the simple strength of his reasoning, the fairness of
every point he made, the force of every conclusion he drew, that his
listeners followed him, spellbound. He spoke on the subject that he had so
thoroughly mastered and that was now uppermost in men's minds—the
right or wrong of slavery. He laid bare the complaints and demands of the
Southern leaders, pointed out the injustice of their threat to break up
the Union if their claims were not granted, stated forcibly the stand
taken by the Republican party, and brought his speech to a close with the
short and telling appeal:</p>
<p>"Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith let us, to
the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it."</p>
<p>The attention with which it was followed, the applause that greeted its
telling points, and the enthusiasm of the Republican journals next morning
showed that Lincoln's Cooper Institute speech had taken New York by storm.
It was printed in full in four of the leading daily papers of the city,
and immediately reprinted in pamphlet form. From New York Mr. Lincoln made
a tour of speech-making through several of the New England States, where
he was given a hearty welcome, and listened to with an eagerness that
showed a marked result at the spring elections. The interest of the
working-men who heard these addresses was equaled, perhaps excelled, by
the pleased surprise of college professors and men of letters when they
found that the style and method of this self-taught popular Western orator
would stand the test of their most searching professional criticism.</p>
<p>One other audience he had during this trip, if we may trust report, which,
while neither as learned as the college professors, nor perhaps as
critical as the factory-men, was quite as hard to please, and the winning
of whose approval shows another side of this great and many-sided man. A
teacher in a Sunday-school in the Five Points district of New York, at
that time one of the worst parts of the city, has told how, one morning, a
tall, thin, unusual-looking man entered and sat quietly listening to the
exercises. His face showed such genuine interest that he was asked if he
would like to speak to the children. Accepting the invitation with evident
pleasure, he stepped forward and began a simple address that quickly
charmed the roomful of youngsters into silence. His language was
singularly beautiful, his voice musical with deep feeling. The faces of
his little listeners drooped into sad earnestness at his words of warning,
and brightened again when he spoke of cheerful promises. "Go on! Oh, do go
on!" they begged when at last he tried to stop. As he left the room
somebody asked his name. "Abraham Lincoln, from Illinois," was the
courteous reply.</p>
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