<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">IV</h2>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Two</span> years later the milk-sickness which
had robbed Lincoln of his mother
again visited the Pigeon Creek settlers,
and his father decided to move to
Illinois, where rich lands were to be had
cheap. Dennis Hanks and Levi Hall accompanied
the Lincoln family.</p>
<p>The tall young woodchopper had just
passed his twenty-first birthday, and it was
he, in buckskin breeches and coonskin cap,
who goaded on the oxen hitched to the
clumsy wagon that creaked and lurched
through the March mud and partly frozen
streams on that terrible two weeks’ journey
into the Sangamon country of Illinois.</p>
<p>He said good-bye to the old log-cabin. It
was rude and mean, but, after all, it was his
home. He shook hands with his friends in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
Gentryville. He took a last look at the unmarked
grave of his mother. His boyhood
was over.</p>
<p>Before setting out for his new home, Lincoln
spent all his money, more than thirty
dollars, in buying petty merchandise, knives,
forks, needles, pins, buttons, thread and
other things that might appeal to housewives.
And on the voyage to Illinois the
future President of the United States peddled
his little wares so successfully that he
doubled his money. Thus Abraham Lincoln
entered the State which saw him rise
to greatness—woodchopper, ox-driver, peddler,
pioneer.</p>
<p>Even in that rough, heroic pilgrimage, the
tender heart of the man showed itself again
and again. One loves to remember Lincoln
as Mr. Herndon, his law-partner, has
described him, pulling off his shoes and
stockings and wading a stream through
broken ice to save a pet dog left whining on
the other side.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span></p>
<p>“I could not bear to abandon even a dog,”
he explained.</p>
<p>Presently the emigrants settled on a bluff
overlooking the Sangamon River, five miles
from Decatur, in Macon County. All
promptly set to work. A clearing was
made, trees felled, and a cabin built. Abraham
and his cousin, John Hanks, ploughed
fifteen acres of sod and split rails enough to
fence the space in.</p>
<p>Some of the rails split by Lincoln at that
time were thirty years later carried into the
convention which nominated him for President.</p>
<p>Having reached his majority and seen his
father and family safely housed, Lincoln
started out to shift for himself. Among
other things, he split three thousand rails
for a Major Warnick, walking three miles a
day to his work.</p>
<p>Then came the winter of “the deep snow,”
a season so terrible that John Hay has thus
described its effects:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
<p>“Geese and chickens were caught by the
feet and wings and frozen to the wet ground.
A drove of a thousand hogs, which were being
driven to St. Louis, rushed together for
warmth, and became piled in a great heap.
Those inside smothered and those outside
froze, and the ghastly pyramid remained
there on the prairie for weeks; the drovers
barely escaped with their lives. Men killed
their horses, disemboweled them, and crept
into the cavities of their bodies to escape the
murderous wind.”</p>
<p>Lincoln left his father’s house empty-handed,
save for his axe, and he had to face
that blizzard winter as best he could. No
man or woman ever heard him complain.
In all his after years he looked back upon
the struggles of his early career without a
word of self-pity. Those were iron days,
but they were not without romance, and life
was honest and strengthening.</p>
<p>It is doubtful, after all, whether Lincoln’s
son, who became rich, dined with kings and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
queens, and came to be president of the hundred-million-dollar
Pullman Company, ever
in his comfortable and successful career
once felt half the sense of life in its deepest,
grandest moods that thrilled his gaunt
father facing that fearful winter.</p>
<p>Let the discouraged American, whose
heart grows faint in the presence of “bad
luck,” think of that rude frontiersman, to
whom hardship brought only strength and
renewed courage. In spite of everything,
the sources of a man’s success are within
him, and none can stay him but himself.
Lincoln knew famine, and cold, and wandering.
But he did not pity himself. Axe in
hand, he confronted his fate in that smitten
country with as great a soul as when he
faced the armed Confederacy and saw his
country riven and bleeding.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1831 Denton Offut hired
Lincoln to go with him on a boat, with a
load of stock and provisions, to New Orleans,
and, after many adventures, in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
his strength and ingenuity saved boat and
cargo several times, he again found himself
at the mouth of the Mississippi.</p>
<p>Here he first saw the hideous side of slavery.
His law-partner thus refers to one
of the scenes he witnessed:</p>
<p>“A vigorous and comely mulatto girl was
being sold. She underwent a thorough examination
at the hands of the bidders; they
pinched her flesh and made her trot up and
down the room like a horse.... Bidding
his companions follow him, he said,
‘By God, boys, let’s get away from this. If
ever I get a chance to hit that thing I’ll hit
it hard.’”</p>
<p>The grandest and bloodiest page of modern
history is a record of how Lincoln fulfilled
that promise.</p>
<p>That very summer he went to the village
of New Salem, on the Sangamon River—a
village that has long since vanished—and
became clerk in a log-house general store
opened by Offut, who was a restless commercial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
adventurer. Lincoln and an assistant
slept in the store.</p>
<p>Here the tall clerk became famous for his
stories and homely wit. His immense stature,
his strength, his humor and his penetrating
logic attracted attention at once. He
talked in quaint, waggish parables, but he
never failed to reach the heart or brain.</p>
<p>Offut’s store grew to be the common
meeting place of the frontiersmen, and long-legged,
droll, kindly Lincoln developed his
natural genius for story-telling and argument.</p>
<p>But Offut bragged of his clerk’s strength.
That angered the rough, rollicking youths of
a nearby settlement known as Clary’s Grove,
who picked out Jack Armstrong, their leader
and a veritable giant, to “throw” Lincoln.
At first Lincoln declined the challenge on
the ground that he did not like “wooling and
pulling.” But, although his inheritance of
Quaker blood inclined him to avoid violence,
he was finally taunted into the struggle. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
the presence of all New Salem and Clary’s
Grove he partly stripped his two hundred
and fourteen pounds of muscle-ribbed body
and conquered the bully of Sangamon
County.</p>
<p>After that exhibition of strength and
pluck, Lincoln was the hero of the community.
Braggarts became silent in his presence.
A ruffian swore one day in the store
before a woman. Lincoln bade him stop,
but he continued his abuse. “Well, if you
must be whipped,” said the clerk, “I suppose
I might as well whip you as any man.”
And he did it. That was Lincoln.</p>
<p>His honesty became a proverb. It is said
that, having overcharged a customer six
cents, he walked three miles in the dark,
after the store was closed, to give back the
money. By mistake he sold four ounces of
tea for a half-pound, and the next day
trudged to the customer’s cabin with the
rest of the tea.</p>
<p>Just when Lincoln became a conscious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
politician no man can say. His endless
anecdotes and jokes, his winning honesty
and good nature, his readiness to accept or
stop a fight, his willingness to do a good
turn for man, woman or child, and his open
scorn for meanness, cruelty or deceit, were
the simple overflowings of his natural character.
He was coarse in his speech and
manners. But behind the joking and buffoonery,
the primitive man in him was true,
gentle, chivalrous. His tender-heartedness
was real. His kindliness was not merely
the result of a desire to catch friends.</p>
<p>He once illustrated himself by quoting an
old man at an Indiana church meeting:
“When I do good I feel good, when I do
bad I feel bad, and that’s my religion.”</p>
<p>But in New Salem it soon became evident
that Lincoln was not satisfied to remain
a clerk in a general store, and that the
strivings of leadership were in him. He
borrowed books. He asked Menton Graham,
the schoolmaster, for advice. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
read, read, read. He walked many miles at
night to speak in debating clubs. He
trudged twelve miles to get Kirkham’s
Grammar, and often asked his assistant in
the store to keep watch with the book while
he said the lesson. It was a common thing
to find him stretched out on the counter,
head on a roll of calicos, grammar in hand.
His desire to master language became a
passion. The whole village “took notice.”
Even the cooper would keep a fire of shavings
going at night that Lincoln might read.</p>
<p>The young frontiersman of six-feet-four,
who could outlift, outwrestle and outrun any
man in Sagamon County, rising from an
almost hopeless abyss of ignorance and poverty,
was, by his own resolute efforts, acquiring
the power that made him the hero of
civilization and the savior of a race.</p>
<div id="if_i_036" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 35em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_036.jpg" width-obs="1840" height-obs="1291" alt="" />
<div class="caption">
<p class="p0 floatr small">
From “Abraham Lincoln.” Copyright, 1892, D. Appleton & Co.</p>
<p class="floatc">The Globe Tavern, Springfield, where Lincoln lived</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>How many of the almost seventeen million
children who receive free education in
the public schools in the United States, and
who assemble once a year to repeat the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
imperishable sayings of Lincoln, realize how
he had to strain and struggle for the knowledge
which is offered daily to them as a gift?</p>
<p>No wonder that Lincoln became popular
in New Salem, and that when the little Black
Hawk Indian war broke out he was elected
captain of the company which marched
forth from the village in April, 1831, in
buckskin breeches and coon caps, with
rifles, powder horns and blankets.</p>
<p>It was in that picturesque campaign that
Lincoln, coming with his company to a
fence gate and not remembering the military
word of command necessary to get his company
in order through such a narrow space,
instantly showed his ingenuity by shouting,
“This company is dismissed for two minutes,
when it will fall in again on the other
side of the gate.”</p>
<p>A poor, old half-starved Indian crept into
Lincoln’s camp for shelter. The excited
soldiers insisted on killing him. But Lincoln
stood between them and the frightened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
fugitive. At the risk of his own life he
saved the Indian. The soul of chivalry was
in him.</p>
<p>He had no chance to fight, and he was
compelled to wear a wooden sword for two
weeks because his company got drunk—he
who afterwards commanded Grant, Sherman
and Sheridan—yet he returned to his
village a hero without having shed blood,
for the world honors courage and patience
even in those who fail to reach the firing
line.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />