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<h2> X. THE MAN WHO WAS PRESIDENT </h2>
<p>The way Mr. Lincoln signed this most important state paper was thoroughly
in keeping with his nature. He hated all shams and show and pretense, and
being absolutely without affectation of any kind, it would never have
occurred to him to pose for effect while signing the Emancipation
Proclamation or any other paper. He never thought of himself as a
President to be set up before a multitude and admired, but always as a
President charged with duties which he owed to every citizen. In
fulfilling these he did not stand upon ceremony, but took the most direct
way to the end he had in view.</p>
<p>It is not often that a President pleads a cause before Congress. Mr.
Lincoln did not find it beneath his dignity at one time to go in person to
the Capitol, and calling a number of the leading senators and
representatives around him, explain to them, with the aid of a map, his
reasons for believing that the final stand of the Confederates would be
made in that part of the South where the seven States of Virginia, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia
come together; and strive in this way to interest them in the sad plight
of the loyal people of Tennessee who were being persecuted by the
Confederate government, but whose mountainous region might, with a little
help, be made a citadel of Union strength in the very heart of this
stronghold of rebellion.</p>
<p>In his private life he was entirely simple and unaffected. Yet he had a
deep sense of what was due his office, and took part with becoming dignity
in all official or public ceremonies. He received the diplomats sent to
Washington from the courts of Europe with a formal and quiet reserve which
made them realize at once that although this son of the people had been
born in a log cabin, he was ruler of a great nation, and more than that,
was a prince by right of his own fine instincts and good breeding.</p>
<p>He was ever gentle and courteous, but with a few quiet words he could
silence a bore who had come meaning to talk to him for hours. For his
friends he had always a ready smile and a quaintly turned phrase. His
sense of humor was his salvation. Without it he must have died of the
strain and anxiety of the Civil War. There was something almost pathetic
in the way he would snatch a moment from his pressing duties and gravest
cares to listen to a good story or indulge in a hearty laugh. Some people
could not understand this. To one member of his cabinet, at least, it
seemed strange and unfitting that he should read aloud to them a chapter
from a humorous book by Artemus Ward before taking up the weighty matter
of the Emancipation Proclamation. From their point of view it showed lack
of feeling and frivolity of character, when, in truth, it was the very
depth of his feeling, and the intensity of his distress at the suffering
of the war, that led him to seek relief in laughter, to gather from the
comedy of life strength to go on and meet its sternest tragedy.</p>
<p>He was a social man. He could not fully enjoy even a jest alone. He wanted
somebody to share the pleasure with him. Often when care kept him awake
late at night he would wander through the halls of the Executive Mansion,
and coming to the room where his secretaries were still at work, would
stop to read to them some poem, or a passage from Shakspere, or a bit from
one of the humorous books in which he found relief. No one knew better
than he what could be cured, and what must be patiently endured. To every
difficulty that he could remove he gave cheerful and uncomplaining thought
and labor. The burdens he could not shake off he bore with silent courage,
lightening them whenever possible with the laughter that he once described
as the "universal joyous evergreen of life."</p>
<p>It would be a mistake to suppose that he cared only for humorous reading.
Occasionally he read a scientific book with great interest, but his duties
left him little time for such indulgences. Few men knew the Bible more
thoroughly than he did, and his speeches are full of scriptural
quotations. The poem beginning "Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be
proud?" was one of his favorites, and Dr. Holmes's "Last Leaf" was
another. Shakespere was his constant delight. A copy of Shakespere's works
was even to be found in the busy Executive Office, from which most books
were banished. The President not only liked to read the great poet's
plays, but to see them acted; and when the gifted actor Hackett came to
Washington, he was invited to the White House, where the two discussed the
character of Falstaff, and the proper reading of many scenes and passages.</p>
<p>While he was President, Mr. Lincoln did not attempt to read the
newspapers. His days were long, beginning early and ending late, but they
were not long enough for that. One of his secretaries brought him a daily
memorandum of the important news they contained. His mail was so enormous
that he personally read only about one in every hundred of the letters
sent him.</p>
<p>His time was principally taken up with interviews with people on matters
of importance, with cabinet meetings, conferences with his generals, and
other affairs requiring his close and immediate attention. If he had
leisure he would take a drive in the late afternoon, or perhaps steal away
into the grounds south of the Executive Mansion to test some new kind of
gun, if its inventor had been fortunate enough to bring it to his notice.
He was very quick to understand mechanical contrivances, and would often
suggest improvements that had not occurred to the inventor himself.</p>
<p>For many years it has been the fashion to call Mr. Lincoln homely. He was
very tall, and very thin. His eyes were deep-sunken, his skin of a sallow
pallor, his hair coarse, black, and unruly. Yet he was neither ungraceful,
nor awkward, nor ugly. His large features fitted his large frame, and his
large hands and feet were but right on a body that measured six feet four
inches. His was a sad and thoughtful face, and from boyhood he had carried
a load of care. It was small wonder that when alone, or absorbed in
thought, the face should take on deep lines, the eyes appear as if seeing
something beyond the vision of other men, and the shoulders stoop, as
though they too were bearing a weight. But in a moment all would be
changed. The deep eyes could flash, or twinkle merrily with humor, or look
out from under overhanging brows as they did upon the Five Points children
in kindliest gentleness. In public speaking, his tall body rose to its
full height, his head was thrown back, his face seemed transfigured with
the fire and earnestness of his thought, and his voice took on a high
clear tenor tone that carried his words and ideas far out over the
listening crowds. At such moments, when answering Douglas in the heat of
their joint-debate, or later, during the years of war, when he pronounced
with noble gravity the words of his famous addresses, not one in the
throngs that heard him could say with truth that he was other than a
handsome man.</p>
<p>It has been the fashion, too, to say that he was slovenly, and careless in
his dress. This also is a mistake. His clothes could not fit smoothly on
his gaunt and bony frame. He was no tailor's figure of a man; but from the
first he clothed himself as well as his means allowed, and in the fashion
of the time and place. In reading the grotesque stories of his boyhood, of
the tall stripling whose trousers left exposed a length of shin, it must
be remembered not only how poor he was, but that he lived on the frontier,
where other boys, less poor, were scarcely better clad. In Vandalia, the
blue jeans he wore was the dress of his companions as well, and later,
from Springfield days on, clear through his presidency, his costume was
the usual suit of black broadcloth, carefully made, and scrupulously neat.
He cared nothing for style. It did not matter to him whether the man with
whom he talked wore a coat of the latest cut, or owned no coat at all. It
was the man inside the coat that interested him.</p>
<p>In the same way he cared little for the pleasures of the table. He ate
most sparingly. He was thankful that food was good and wholesome and
enough for daily needs, but he could no more enter into the mood of the
epicure for whose palate it is a matter of importance whether he eats
roast goose or golden pheasant, than he could have counted the grains of
sand under the sea.</p>
<p>In the summers, while he was President, he spent the nights at a cottage
at the Soldiers' Home, a short distance north of Washington, riding or
driving out through the gathering dusk, and returning to the White House
after a frugal breakfast in the early morning. Ten o'clock was the hour at
which he was supposed to begin receiving visitors, but it was often
necessary to see them unpleasantly early. Occasionally they forced their
way to his bedroom before he had quite finished dressing. Throngs of
people daily filled his office, the ante-rooms, and even the corridors of
the public part of the Executive Mansion. He saw them all, those he had
summoned on important business, men of high official position who came to
demand as their right offices and favors that he had no right to give;
others who wished to offer tiresome if well-meant advice; and the
hundreds, both men and women, who pressed forward to ask all sorts of
help. His friends besought him to save himself the weariness of seeing the
people at these public receptions, but he refused. "They do not want much,
and they get very little," he answered. "Each one considers his business
of great importance, and I must gratify them. I know how I would feel if I
were in their place." And at noon on all days except Tuesday and Friday,
when the time was occupied by meetings of the cabinet, the doors were
thrown open, and all who wished might enter. That remark of his, "I know
how I would feel if I were in their place," explained it all. His early
experience of life had drilled him well for these ordeals. He had read
deeply in the book of human nature, and could see the hidden signs of
falsehood and deceit and trickery from which the faces of some of his
visitors were not free; but he knew, too, the hard, practical side of
life, the hunger, cold, storms, sickness and misfortune that the average
man must meet in his struggle with the world. More than all, he knew and
sympathized with that hope deferred which makes the heart sick.</p>
<p>Not a few men and women came, sad-faced and broken-hearted, to plead for
soldier sons or husbands in prison, or under sentence of death by
court-martial. An inmate of the White House has recorded the eagerness
with which the President caught at any fact that would justify him in
saving the life of a condemned soldier. He was only merciless when
meanness or cruelty were clearly proved. Cases of cowardice he disliked
especially to punish with death. "It would frighten the poor devils too
terribly to shoot them," he said. On the papers in the case of one soldier
who had deserted and then enlisted again, he wrote: "Let him fight,
instead of shooting him."</p>
<p>He used to call these cases of desertion his "leg cases," and sometimes
when considering them, would tell the story of the Irish soldier,
upbraided by his captain, who replied: "Captain, I have a heart in me
breast as brave as Julius Caesar, but when I go into battle, Sor, these
cowardly legs of mine will run away with me."</p>
<p>As the war went on, Mr. Lincoln objected more and more to approving
sentences of death by court-martial, and either pardoned them outright, or
delayed the execution "until further orders," which orders were never
given by the great-hearted, merciful man. Secretary Stanton and certain
generals complained bitterly that if the President went on pardoning
soldiers he would ruin the discipline of the army; but Secretary Stanton
had a warm heart, and it is doubtful if he ever willingly enforced the
justice that he criticized the President for tempering with so much mercy.</p>
<p>Yet Mr. Lincoln could be sternly just when necessary. A law declaring the
slave trade to be piracy had stood on the statute books of the United
States for half a century. Lincoln's administration was the first to
convict a man under it, and Lincoln himself decreed that the well-deserved
sentence be carried out.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln sympathized keenly with the hardships and trials of the
soldier boys, and found time, amid all his labors and cares, to visit the
hospitals in and around Washington where they lay ill. His afternoon drive
was usually to some camp in the neighborhood of the city; and when he
visited one at a greater distance, the cheers that greeted him as he rode
along the line with the commanding general showed what a warm place he
held in their hearts.</p>
<p>He did not forget the unfortunate on these visits. A story is told of his
interview with William Scott, a boy from a Vermont farm, who, after
marching forty-eight hours without sleep, volunteered to stand guard for a
sick comrade. Weariness overcame him, and he was found asleep at his post,
within gunshot of the enemy. He was tried, and sentenced to be shot. Mr.
Lincoln heard of the case, and went himself to the tent where young Scott
was kept under guard. He talked to him kindly, asking about his home, his
schoolmates, and particularly about his mother. The lad took her picture
from his pocket, and showed it to him without speaking. Mr. Lincoln was
much affected. As he rose to leave he laid his hand on the prisoner s
shoulder. "My boy," he said, "you are not going to be shot to-morrow. I
believe you when you tell me that you could not keep awake. I am going to
trust you, and send you back to your regiment. Now, I want to know what
you intend to pay for all this?" The lad, overcome with gratitude, could
hardly say a word, but crowding down his emotions, managed to answer that
he did not know. He and his people were poor, they would do what they
could. There was his pay, and a little in the savings bank. They could
borrow something by a mortgage on the farm. Perhaps his comrades would
help. If Mr. Lincoln would wait until pay day possibly they might get
together five or six hundred dollars. Would that be enough? The kindly
President shook his head. "My bill is a great deal more than that," he
said. "It is a very large one. Your friends cannot pay it, nor your
family, nor your farm. There is only one man in the world who can pay it,
and his name is William Scott. If from this day he does his duty so that
when he comes to die he can truly say 'I have kept the promise I gave the
President. I have done my duty as a soldier,' then the debt will be paid."
Young Scott went back to his regiment, and the debt was fully paid a few
months later, for he fell in battle.</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln's own son became a soldier after leaving college. The letter
his father wrote to General Grant in his behalf shows how careful he was
that neither his official position nor his desire to give his boy the
experience he wanted, should work the least injustice to others:</p>
<p>Executive Mansion,</p>
<p>Washington, January 19th, 1865.</p>
<p>Lieutenant-General Grant:</p>
<p>Please read and answer this letter as though I was not President, but only
a friend. My son, now in his twenty-second year, having graduated at
Harvard, wishes to see something of the war before it ends. I do not wish
to put him in the ranks, nor yet to give him a commission, to which those
who have already served long are better entitled, and better qualified to
hold. Could he, without embarrassment to you, or detriment to the service,
go into your military family with some nominal rank, I and not the public
furnishing the necessary means? If no, say so without the least
hesitation, because I am as anxious and as deeply interested that you
shall not be encumbered as you can be yourself.</p>
<p>Yours truly,</p>
<p>A. Lincoln.</p>
<p>His interest did not cease with the life of a young soldier. Among his
most beautiful letters are those he wrote to sorrowing parents who had
lost their sons in battle; and when his personal friend, young Ellsworth,
one of the first and most gallant to fall, was killed at Alexandria, the
President directed that his body be brought to the White House, where his
funeral was held in the great East Room.</p>
<p>Though a member of no church, Mr. Lincoln was most sincerely religious and
devout. Not only was his daily life filled with acts of forbearance and
charity; every great state paper that he wrote breathes his faith and
reliance on a just and merciful God. He rarely talked, even with intimate
friends, about matters of belief, but it is to be doubted whether any
among the many people who came to give him advice and sometimes to pray
with him, had a better right to be called a Christian. He always received
such visitors courteously, with a reverence for their good intention, no
matter how strangely it sometimes manifested itself. A little address that
he made to some Quakers who came to see him in September, 1862, shows both
his courtesy to them personally, and his humble attitude toward God.</p>
<p>"I am glad of this interview, and glad to know that I have your sympathy
and prayers. We are indeed going through a great trial, a fiery trial. In
the very responsible position in which I happen to be placed, being a
humble instrument in the hands of our Heavenly Father as I am, and as we
all are, to work out His great purposes, I have desired that all my works
and acts may be according to His will, and that it might be so I have
sought His aid; but if, after endeavoring to do my best in the light which
he affords me, I find my efforts fail, I must believe that for some
purpose unknown to me, He wills it otherwise. If I had had my way, this
war would never have been commenced. If I had been allowed my way, this
war would have been ended before this; but we find it still continues, and
we must believe that He permits it for some wise purpose of His own,
mysterious and unknown to us; and though with our limited understandings
we may not be able to comprehend it, yet we cannot but believe that He who
made the world still governs it."</p>
<p>Children held a warm place in the President's affections. He was not only
a devoted father; his heart went out to all little folk. He had been kind
to babies in his boyish days, when, book in hand, and the desire for study
upon him, he would sit with one foot on the rocker of a rude frontier
cradle, not too selfishly busy to keep its small occupant lulled and
content, while its mother went about her household tasks. After he became
President many a sad-eyed woman carrying a child in her arms went to see
him, and the baby always had its share in gaining her a speedy hearing,
and if possible a favorable answer to her petition.</p>
<p>When children came to him at the White House of their own accord, as they
sometimes did, the favors they asked were not refused because of their
youth. One day a small boy, watching his chance, slipped into the
Executive Office between a governor and a senator, when the door was
opened to admit them. They were as much astonished at seeing him there as
the President was, and could not explain his presence; but he spoke for
himself. He had come, he said, from a little country town, hoping to get a
place as page in the House of Representatives. The President began to tell
him that he must go to Captain Goodnow, the doorkeeper of the House, for
he himself had nothing to do with such appointments. Even this did not
discourage the little fellow. Very earnestly he pulled his papers of
recommendation out of his pocket, and Mr. Lincoln, unable to resist his
wistful face, read them, and sent him away happy with a hurried line
written on the back of them, saying: "If Captain Goodnow can give this
good little boy a place, he will oblige A. Lincoln."</p>
<p>It was a child who persuaded Mr. Lincoln to wear a beard. Up to the time
he was nominated for President he had always been smooth-shaven. A little
girl living in Chautauqua County, New York, who greatly admired him, made
up her mind that he would look better if he wore whiskers, and with
youthful directness wrote and told him so. He answered her by return mail:</p>
<p>Springfield, ILL., Oct. 19, 1860.</p>
<p>Miss Grace Bedelt,</p>
<p>My dear little Miss: Your very agreeable letter of the fifteenth is
received. I regret the necessity of saying I have no daughter. I have
three sons, one seventeen, one nine, and one seven years of age. They,
with their mother, constitute my whole family. As to the whiskers, never
having worn any, do you not think people would call it a piece of silly
affectation if I were to begin now?</p>
<p>Your very sincere well-wisher,</p>
<p>A. Lincoln.</p>
<p>Evidently on second thoughts he decided to follow her advice. On his way
to Washington his train stopped at the town where she lived. He asked if
she were in the crowd gathered at the station to meet him. Of course she
was, and willing hands forced a way for her through the mass of people.
When she reached the car Mr. Lincoln stepped from the train, kissed her,
and showed her that he had taken her advice.</p>
<p>The Secretary who wrote about the President's desire to save the lives of
condemned soldiers tells us that "during the first year of the
administration the house was made lively by the games and pranks of Mr.
Lincoln's two younger children, William and Thomas. Robert the eldest was
away at Harvard, only coming home for short vacations. The two little
boys, aged eight and ten, with their western independence and enterprise,
kept the house in an uproar. They drove their tutor wild with their
good-natured disobedience. They organized a minstrel show in the attic;
they made acquaintance with the office-seekers and became the hot
champions of the distressed. William was, with all his boyish frolic, a
child of great promise, capable of close application and study. He had a
fancy for drawing up railway time-tables, and would conduct an imaginary
train from Chicago to New York with perfect precision. He wrote childish
verses, which sometimes attained the unmerited honors of print. But this
bright, gentle and studious child sickened and died in February, 1862. His
father was profoundly moved by his death, though he gave no outward sign
of his trouble, but kept about his work, the same as ever. His bereaved
heart seemed afterwards to pour out its fulness on his youngest child.
'Tad' was a merry, warm-blooded, kindly little boy, perfectly lawless, and
full of odd fancies and inventions, the 'chartered libertine' of the
Executive Mansion." He ran constantly in and out of his father's office,
interrupting his gravest labors. Mr. Lincoln was never too busy to hear
him, or to answer his bright, rapid, imperfect speech, for he was not able
to speak plainly until he was nearly grown. "He would perch upon his
father's knee, and sometimes even on his shoulder, while the most weighty
conferences were going on. Sometimes, escaping from the domestic
authorities, he would take refuge in that sanctuary for the whole evening,
dropping to sleep at last on the floor, when the President would pick him
up, and carry him tenderly to bed."</p>
<p>The letters and even the telegrams Mr. Lincoln sent his wife had always a
message for or about Tad. One of them shows that his pets, like their
young master, were allowed great liberty. It was written when the family
was living at the Soldiers' Home, and Mrs. Lincoln and Tad had gone away
for a visit. "Tell dear Tad," he wrote, "that poor Nanny Goat is lost, and
Mrs. Cuthbert and I are in distress about it. The day you left, Nanny was
found resting herself and chewing her little cud on the middle of Tad's
bed; but now she's gone! The gardener kept complaining that she destroyed
the flowers, till it was concluded to bring her down to the White House.
This was done, and the second day she had disappeared and has not been
heard of since. This is the last we know of poor Nanny."</p>
<p>Tad was evidently consoled by, not one, but a whole family of new goats,
for about a year later Mr. Lincoln ended a business telegram to his wife
in New York with the words: "Tell Tad the goats and Father are very well."
Then, as the weight of care rolled back upon this greathearted, patient
man, he added, with humorous weariness, "especially the goats."</p>
<p>Mr. Lincoln was so forgetful of self as to be absolutely without personal
fear. He not only paid no attention to the threats which were constantly
made against his life, but when, on July 11, 1864, the Confederate General
Early appeared suddenly and unexpectedly before the city with a force of
17,000 men, and Washington was for two days actually in danger of assault
and capture, his unconcern gave his friends great uneasiness. On the tenth
he rode out, as was his custom, to spend the night at the Soldiers' Home,
but Secretary Stanton, learning that Early was advancing, sent after him,
to compel his return. Twice afterward, intent upon watching the fighting
which took place near Fort Stevens, north of the city, he exposed his tall
form to the gaze and bullets of the enemy, utterly heedless of his own
peril; and it was not until an officer had fallen mortally wounded within
a few feet of him, that he could be persuaded to seek a place of greater
safety.</p>
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