Lincoln; An Account of his Personal Life, Especially of its Springs of Action as Revealed and Deepened by the Ordeal of War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 450 pages of information about Lincoln; An Account of his Personal Life, Especially of its Springs of Action as Revealed and Deepened by the Ordeal of War.

Lincoln; An Account of his Personal Life, Especially of its Springs of Action as Revealed and Deepened by the Ordeal of War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 450 pages of information about Lincoln; An Account of his Personal Life, Especially of its Springs of Action as Revealed and Deepened by the Ordeal of War.

The legend centers in his witnessing a slave auction and giving voice to his horror in a style quite unlike any of his authentic utterances.  The authority for all this is doubtful.(2) Furthermore, the Lincoln of 1831 was not yet awakened.  That inner life in which such a reaction might take place was still largely dormant.  The outer life, the life of the harvest clown, was still a thick insulation.  Apparently, the waking of the inner life, the termination of its dormant stage, was reserved for an incident far more personal that fell upon him in desolating force a few years later.

Following the New Orleans venture, came a period as storekeeper for a man named Denton Offut, in perhaps the least desirable town in Illinois—­a dreary little huddle of houses gathered around Rutledge’s Mill on the Sangamon River and called New Salem.(3) Though a few of its people were of a better sort than any Lincoln had yet known except, perhaps, the miller’s family in the old days in Kentucky—­and still a smaller few were of fine quality, the community for the most part was hopeless.  A fatality for unpromising neighborhoods overhangs like a doom the early part of this strange life.  All accounts of New Salem represent it as predominantly a congregation of the worthless, flung together by unaccountable accident at a spot where there was no genuine reason for a town’s existence.  A casual town, created by drifters, and void of settled purpose.  Small wonder that ere long it vanished from the map; that after a few years its drifting congregation dispersed to every corner of the horizon, and was no more.  But during its brief existence it staged an episode in the development of Lincoln’s character.  However, this did not take place at once.  And before it happened, came another turn of his soul’s highway scarcely less important.  He discovered, or thought he discovered, what he wanted.  His vague ambition took shape.  He decided to try to be a politician.  At twenty-three, after living in New Salem less than a year, this audacious, not to say impertinent, young man offered himself to the voters of Sangamon County as a candidate for the Legislature.  At this time that humility which was eventually his characteristic had not appeared.  It may be dated as subsequent to New Salem—­a further evidence that the deep spiritual experience which closed this chapter formed a crisis.  Before then, at New Salem as at Pigeon Creek, he was but a variant, singularly decent, of the boisterous, frolicking, impertinent type that instinctively sought the laxer neighborhoods of the frontier.  An echo of Pigeon Creek informed the young storekeeper’s first state paper, the announcement of his candidacy, in the year 1832.  His first political speech was in a curious vein, glib, intimate and fantastic:  “Fellow citizens, I presume you all know who I am.  I am humble Abraham Lincoln.  I have been solicited by many friends to become a candidate for the Legislature.  My politics are short and sweet like the old woman’s dance.  I am in favor of a national bank.  I am in favor of the internal improvement system and a high protective tariff.  These are my sentiments and political principles.  If elected, I shall be thankful; if not it will be all the same."(4)

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Lincoln; An Account of his Personal Life, Especially of its Springs of Action as Revealed and Deepened by the Ordeal of War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.