Abraham Lincoln eBook

George Haven Putnam
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 71 pages of information about Abraham Lincoln.

Abraham Lincoln eBook

George Haven Putnam
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 71 pages of information about Abraham Lincoln.

Lincoln: Gentlemen, at your service.  How d’ye do, James.  Will you be seated?

They sit round the table.

Tucker:  I have the honour to be chairman of this delegation.  We are sent from Chicago by the Republican Convention, to enquire whether you will accept their invitation to become the Republican candidate for the office of President of the United States.

Price:  The Convention is aware, Mr. Lincoln, that under the circumstances, seeing that the Democrats have split, this is more than an invitation to candidature.  Their nominee is almost certain to be elected.

Lincoln:  Gentlemen, I am known to one of you only.  Do you know my many disqualifications for this work?

Hind:  It’s only fair to say that they have been discussed freely.

Lincoln:  There are some, shall we say graces, that I lack.  Washington does not altogether neglect these.

Tucker:  They have been spoken of.  But these are days, Mr. Lincoln, if I may say so, too difficult, too dangerous, for these to weigh at the expense of other qualities that you were considered to possess.

Lincoln:  Seward and Hook have both had great experience.

Macintosh:  Hook had no strong support.  For Seward, there are doubts as to his discretion.

Lincoln:  Do not be under any misunderstanding, I beg you.  I aim at moderation so far as it is honest.  But I am a very stubborn man, gentlemen.  If the South insists upon the extension of slavery, and claims the right to secede, as you know it very well may do, and the decision lies with me, it will mean resistance, inexorable, with blood if needs be.  I would have everybody’s mind clear as to that.

Price:  It will be for you to decide, and we believe you to be an upright man, Mr. Lincoln.

Lincoln:  Seward and Hook would be difficult to carry as subordinates.

Tucker:  But they will have to be carried so, and there’s none likelier for the job than you.

Lincoln:  Will your Republican Press stand by me for a principle, James, whatever comes?

Macintosh:  There’s no other man we would follow so readily.

Lincoln:  If you send me, the South will have little but derision for your choice.

Hind:  We believe that you’ll last out their laughter.

Lincoln:  I can take any man’s ridicule—­I’m trained to it by a ... somewhat odd figure that it pleased God to give me, if I may so far be pleasant with you.  But this slavery business will be long, and deep, and bitter.  I know it.  If you do me this honour, gentlemen, you must look to me for no compromise in this matter.  If abolition comes in due time by constitutional means, good.  I want it.  But, while we will not force abolition, we will give slavery no approval, and we will not allow it to extend its boundaries by one yard.  The determination is in my blood.  When I was a boy I made a trip to New Orleans, and there I saw them, chained, beaten, kicked as a man would be ashamed to kick a thieving dog.  And I saw a young girl driven up and down the room that the bidders might satisfy themselves.  And I said then, “If ever I get a chance to hit that thing, I’ll hit it hard.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Abraham Lincoln from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.