<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p class="hang">Lincoln settles at Springfield as a Lawyer—Candidate for the Office of
Presidential Elector—A Love Affair—Marries Miss Todd—Religious
Views—Exerts himself for Henry Clay—Elected to Congress in 1846—Speeches
in Congress—Out of Political Employment until 1854—Anecdotes
of Lincoln as a Lawyer.</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">Abraham</span> Lincoln’s career was now clear.
He was to follow the law for a living, as a step
to political eminence. And as the seat of State
Government was henceforth to be at Springfield, he
determined to live where both law and politics might
be followed to the greatest advantage, since it was
in Springfield that, in addition to the State Courts,
the Circuit and District Courts of the United States
sat. He obtained his license as an attorney in 1837,
and commenced his practice in the March of that
year. He entered into partnership with his friend,
J. T. Stewart, and lived with the Hon. W. Butler,
who was of great assistance to him in the simple
matter of living, for he was at this time as poor as
ever. During 1837, he delivered several addresses
in which there was a strong basis of common sense,
though they were fervid and figurative to extravagance,
as suited the tastes of his hearers. In these
speeches he predicted the great struggle on which
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
the country was about to enter, and that it would
never be settled by passion but by reason—“cold,
calculating, unimpassioned reasoning, which must
furnish all the materials for our future defence and
support.” He also distinguished himself in debate
and retort, so that ere long he became unrivalled,
in his sphere, in ready eloquence. From this time,
for twenty years, he followed his great political
rival, Douglas, seeking every opportunity to contend
with him. From 1837 he concerned himself little
with the politics of his state, but entered with zeal
into the higher interests of the Federal Union.</p>
<p>In 1840, Lincoln was a candidate for the office
of Presidential elector on the Harrison ticket, and
made speeches through a great part of Illinois.
Soon after, he again became involved in a love
affair, which, through its perplexities and the revival
of the memory of his early disappointment, had a
terrible effect upon his mind. He had become
intimate with a Mr. Speed, who remained through
life his best friend. For a year he was almost a
lunatic, and was taken to Kentucky by Mr. Speed,
and kept there until he recovered. It was for this
reason that he did not attend the Legislature of
1841-42. It is very characteristic of Lincoln that,
from boyhood, he never wanted true friends to aid
him in all his troubles.</p>
<p>Soon after his recovery, Lincoln became engaged
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
to Miss Mary Todd. This lady was supposed to
be gifted as a witty and satirical writer, though it
must be admitted that the specimens of her literary
capacity, exhibited in certain anonymous contributions
to the newspapers, show little talent beyond
the art of irritation. Several of these were levelled
at a politician named James Shields, an Irishman,
who, being told that Lincoln had written them, sent
him a challenge. The challenge was accepted, but
the duel was prevented by mutual friends. Lincoln
married Miss Todd on the 4th November, 1842.
This marriage, which had not been preceded by the
most favourable omens, was followed by a singular
misfortune. In 1843, Lincoln was a Whig candidate
for Congress, but was defeated. “He had a hard
time of it, and was compelled to meet accusations of
a strange character. Among other things, he was
charged with being an aristocrat, and with having
deserted his old friends, the people, by marrying a
proud woman on account of her blood and family.
This hurt him keenly,” says Lamon, “and he took
great pains to disprove it.” Other accusations,
equally frivolous, relative to his supposed religion
or irreligion, also contributed to his defeat.</p>
<p>On this much-vexed subject of Lincoln’s religious
faith, or his want of it, something may here be said.
In his boyhood, when religious associations are most
valuable in disciplining the mind, he had never even
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
seen a church, and, as he grew older, his sense of
humour and his rude companions prevented him from
being seriously impressed by the fervid but often
eccentric oratory of the few itinerant preachers who
found their way into the backwoods. At New Salem,
he had read “Volney’s Ruins” and the works of
Thomas Paine, and was for some time a would-be
unbeliever. It is easy to trace in his youthful
irreligion the influence of irresistible causes. As he
grew older, his intensely melancholy and emotional
temperament inclined him towards reliance in an
unseen Providence and belief in a future state; and
it is certain that, after the unpopularity of freethinkers
had forced itself upon his mind, the most
fervidly passionate expressions of piety began to
abound in his speeches. In this he was not, however,
hypocritical. From his childhood, Abraham Lincoln
was possessed even to unreason with the idea that
whatever was absolutely popular, was founded on
reason and right. He was a Republican of Republicans,
faithfully believing that whatever average
common sense accepted must be followed.<SPAN name="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</SPAN> His own
personal popularity was at all times very great.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
One who knew him testifies that, when the lawyers
travelling the judicial circuit of Illinois arrived at
the villages where trials were to be held, crowds of
men and women always assembled to welcome
Abraham Lincoln.</p>
<p>Lincoln himself had a great admiration for Henry
Clay. In 1844, he went through Illinois delivering
speeches and debating and speaking, or, as it is called
in America, “stumping” for him, and he even extended
his labours into Indiana. It was all in vain, and Clay’s
defeat was a great blow to Lincoln.<SPAN name="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</SPAN> At this time,
though he withdrew from politics in favour of law,
he began to think seriously of getting a seat in
Congress. His management of this affair indicates
forcibly his entire faith in party-right, and his principle
of <i>never</i> advancing beyond his party. Of all
the men of action known to history as illustrating
great epochs, there never was a more thorough man
of action than Lincoln, but the brain which inspired
his action was always that of the people.</p>
<p>Through all his poverty, Lincoln was always just
and generous. In 1843, while living with his wife
for four dollars a-week, at a country tavern, he gave
up a promissory-note for a large fee to an impoverished
client who, after the trial, had lost a hand.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
He paid all his own debts, and generously aided his
stepmother and other friends.</p>
<p>In 1846, Lincoln accepted the nomination for
Congress. His Democratic opponent was Peter
Cartwright, a celebrated pioneer Methodist preacher.
It is a great proof of Lincoln’s popularity that he
was elected by an unprecedented majority, though
he was the only Whig Congressman from Illinois.
At this session, his almost life-long adversary, Douglas,
took a place in the Senate. Both houses shone with
an array of great and brilliant names, and Lincoln,
as the only representative of his party from his state,
was in a critical and responsible situation. But he
was no novice in legislation, and he acquitted himself
bravely. He became a member of the Committee
on Post Offices and Post Roads, and in that capacity
made his first speech. He found it as easy a matter
to address his new colleagues as his old clients.
“I was about as badly scared,” he wrote to W. J.
Herndon, “and no worse, as when I speak in court.”
During this session, the United States were at war
with Mexico, and Lincoln was, with his party, in a
painful dilemma. They were opposed to the principle
of the war, since they detested forcible acquisition
of territory, and it was evident that Mexico was
wanted by the South to extend the area of slavery.
Yet they could not, in humanity, withhold supplies
from the army in Mexico while fighting bravely.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
So Lincoln denounced the war, and yet voted the
supplies—an inconsistency creditable to his heart,
but which involved him in trouble with his constituents.
But he struck the Administration a severe
blow in what was really his first speech before the
whole House. President Polk having declared, in
a Message, that “the Mexicans had invaded our
territory, and shed the blood of our citizens on our
own soil,” Lincoln introduced what were called the
famous “spot resolutions,” in which the President
was invited in a series of satirical yet serious
questions to indicate the spot where this outrage had
been committed.</p>
<p>Lincoln was very busy this year. The Whig
National Convention was to nominate a candidate
for President on the 1st June, and he was to be one
of its members. On July 27th, he delivered, in
Congress, a speech as remarkable in some respects
for solid sense and shrewdness as it was in others
for eccentric drollery and scathing Western retorts.
The second session, 1848-49, was quieter. At one
time he proposed, as a substitute for a resolution
that slavery be at once abolished by law in the
district of Columbia, another, providing that the
owners be paid for their slaves. If he did little in
this session to attract attention, he made for himself
a name, and was known as a powerful speaker and a
rising man; but, after returning to Springfield,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
though a Whig President had been elected, and his
own reputation greatly increased, he was thrown out
of political employment until the year 1854. He
made great efforts to secure the office of Commissioner
of the General Land Office, but failed.
President Fillmore, it is true, offered him the Governorship
of Oregon, but Mrs. Lincoln induced him to
decline it.</p>
<p>In 1850, his friends wished to nominate him for
Congress, but he positively refused the honour. It
is thought that he wished to establish himself in his
profession for the sake of a support for his family,
or that he had entered into a secret understanding
with other candidates for Congress, who were to
nominally oppose each other, but in reality secure
election in turn by excluding rivals.<SPAN name="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</SPAN> But it is most
probable that he clearly foresaw at this time the
tremendous struggle which was approaching between
North and South, and wished to prepare himself for
some great part in it. To engage in minor political
battles and be defeated, as would probably be the
case in his district, where his war-vote in Congress
was still remembered to his disadvantage, would have
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
seriously injured his future prospects of every kind.
He said, in 1850, to his friend Stuart—“The time
will come when we must all be Democrats or
Abolitionists. When that time comes, my mind is
made up. The slavery question can’t be compromised.”</p>
<p>Many interesting anecdotes of Lincoln’s legal
experiences at this time have been preserved. In
his first case, at Springfield, he simply admitted that
all laws and precedents were in favour of his
opponent, and, having stated them in detail, left the
decision to the Court. He would never take an
unjust, or mean, or a purely litigious case. When
retained with a colleague, named Swett, to defend
a man accused of murder, Lincoln became convinced
of his client’s guilt, and said to his associate—“You
must defend him—I cannot.” Mr. Swett obtained
an acquittal, but Lincoln would take no part of the
large fee which was paid. On one occasion, however,
when one of his own friends of boyhood, John Armstrong,
was indicted for a very atrocious murder,
Lincoln, moved by the tears and entreaties of the
aged mother of the prisoner, consented to plead his
cause. It having been testified that, when the man
was murdered, the full moon was shining high in the
heavens, Lincoln, producing an almanac, proved that,
on the night in question, there was in fact no moon
at all. Those who were associated with him for
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
years declare that they never knew a lawyer who
was so moderate in his charges. Though he attained
great reputation in his profession, the highest fee
he ever received was 5,000 dollars. His strength
lay entirely in shrewd common sense, in quickly
mastering all the details of a case, and in ready
eloquence or debate, for he had very little law-learning,
and was averse to making researches. But
his rare genius for promptly penetrating all the
difficulties of a legal or political problem, which
aided him so much as President, enabled him to deal
with juries in a masterly manner. On one occasion,
when thirty-four witnesses swore to a fact on one
side, and exactly as many on the other, Mr. Lincoln
proposed a very practical test to the jury—“If you
were going to <i>bet</i> on this case,” he said, “on which
side would you lay a picayune?”<SPAN name="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</SPAN></p>
<p>Any poor person in distress for want of legal aid
could always find a zealous friend in Lincoln. On
one occasion, a poor old negro woman came to him
and Mr. Herndon, complaining that her son had been
imprisoned at New Orleans for simply going, in his
ignorance, ashore, thereby breaking a disgraceful
law which then existed, forbidding free men of
colour from other states to enter Louisiana. Having
been condemned to pay a fine, and being without
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
money, the poor man was about to be sold for
a slave. Messrs. Lincoln and Herndon, finding law
of no avail, ransomed the prisoner out of their own
pockets. In those days, a free-born native of a
Northern state could, if of African descent, be seized
and sold simply for setting foot on Southern
soil.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
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