as he talked to me before the meeting, he seemed ill
at ease, with that sort of apprehension which a young
man might feel before presenting himself to a new and
strange audience, whose critical disposition he dreaded.
It was a great audience, including all the noted men—all
the learned and cultured of his party in New York
editors, clergymen, statesmen, lawyers, merchants,
critics. They were all very curious to hear him.
His fame as a powerful speaker had preceded him, and
exaggerated rumor of his wit—the worst
forerunner of an orator—had reached the
East. When Mr. Bryant presented him, on the high
platform of the Cooper Institute, a vast sea of eager
upturned faces greeted him, full of intense curiosity
to see what this rude child of the people was like.
He was equal to the occasion. When he spoke he
was transformed; his eye kindled, his voice rang,
his face shone and seemed to light up the whole assembly.
For an hour and a half he held his audience in the
hollow of his hand. His style of speech and manner
of delivery were severely simple. What Lowell
called “the grand simplicities of the Bible,”
with which he was so familiar, were reflected in his
discourse. With no attempt at ornament or rhetoric,
without parade or pretence, he spoke straight to the
point. If any came expecting the turgid eloquence
or the ribaldry of the frontier, they must have been
startled at the earnest and sincere purity of his
utterances. It was marvellous to see how this
untutored man, by mere self-discipline and the chastening
of his own spirit, had outgrown all meretricious arts,
and found his own way to the grandeur and strength
of absolute simplicity.
He spoke upon the theme which he had mastered so thoroughly.
He demonstrated by copious historical proofs and masterly
logic that the fathers who created the Constitution
in order to form a more perfect union, to establish
justice, and to secure the blessings of liberty to
themselves and their posterity, intended to empower
the Federal Government to exclude slavery from the
Territories. In the kindliest spirit he protested
against the avowed threat of the Southern States to
destroy the Union if, in order to secure freedom in
those vast regions out of which future States were
to be carved, a Republican President were elected.
He closed with an appeal to his audience, spoken with
all the fire of his aroused and kindling conscience,
with a full outpouring of his love of justice and
liberty, to maintain their political purpose on that
lofty and unassailable issue of right and wrong which
alone could justify it, and not to be intimidated
from their high resolve and sacred duty by any threats
of destruction to the government or of ruin to themselves.
He concluded with this telling sentence, which drove
the whole argument home to all our hearts: “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.” That night the great hall,
and the next day the whole city, rang with delighted
applause and congratulations, and he who had come
as a stranger departed with the laurels of great triumph.