Abraham Lincoln by George Haven Putnam
page 37 of 226 (16%)
page 37 of 226 (16%)
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and gave me no trouble whatever. The difficulty was to make nine
others, before reading audiences who had already seen all my ideas in print."[1] An edition of Mr. Lincoln's address was brought into print in September, 1860, by the Young Men's Republican Union of New York, with notes by Charles C. Nott (later Colonel, and after the war Judge of the Court of Claims in Washington) and Cephas Brainerd. The publication of this pamphlet shows that as early as September, 1860, the historic importance and permanent value of this speech were fairly realised by the national leaders of the day. In the preface to the reprint, the editors say: "The address is characterised by wisdom, truthfulness and learning ...From the first line to the last--from his premises to his conclusion, the speaker travels with a swift, unerring directness that no logician has ever excelled. His argument is complete and is presented without the affectation of learning, and without the stiffness which usually accompanies dates and details ...A single simple sentence contains a chapter of history that has taken days of labour to verify, and that must have cost the author months of investigation to acquire. The reader may take up this address as a political pamphlet, but he will leave it as an historical treatise--brief, complete, perfect, sound, impartial truth--which will serve the time and the occasion that called it forth, and which will be esteemed hereafter no less for its unpretending modesty than for its intrinsic worth."[2] Horace White, who was himself present at the Chicago Convention, writes (in 1909) as follows: |
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