<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">VI</h2>
<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">And</span> now came the first great romance
of Lincoln’s life. He fell in love
with pretty, auburn-haired Anne
Rutledge, daughter of the owner of the
tavern in which he lived. His passion
seemed hopeless, for the slender maid of
seventeen was pledged to a young man
from New York. Yet Lincoln loved and
waited and hoped. His studies had worn
him to emaciation. His ill-fitting clothes
hung loose on his ungainly figure. His
face was thin and his eyes sunken. He
was poor, and a mere clodhopper. Still he
loved sweet little Anne Rutledge, even
though all the village knew she was another’s,
and that love burned in him always.</p>
<p>When her lover went away, promising to
return, Lincoln was her watchful knight,
serving and hoping. But the New Yorker
did not come back. Anne Rutledge grew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
pale with waiting. It was evident that she
was deserted. All New Salem knew it.</p>
<p>Then Lincoln offered her his heart and
she consented, asking only time enough to
write to her lost lover. No answer to the
letter came. Week after week passed. And
then Lincoln was accepted. But, alas, the
strain had been too great, and the abandoned
young beauty grew mortally ill. On
her deathbed she called for Lincoln continually,
and when he came they left him
alone with her for farewell. Afterwards he
went to her grave and wept like a child.
“My heart lies buried there,” he said.</p>
<div id="if_i_048" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_048.jpg" width-obs="1516" height-obs="1994" alt="" />
<div class="caption">Lincoln in 1857</div>
</div>
<p>Poor, honest, ugly Lincoln! That tragedy
saddened his life, and years afterwards
he could not refer to Anne Rutledge without
tears. So terrible was the effect of her
death upon him that for a time his friends
feared for his reason. He would wander in
the woods a victim to despair. To a companion
who urged him to forget his loss he
groaned, “I cannot; the thought of the snow
and rain on her grave fills me with indescribable
grief.” Finally, he was taken to
a friend’s house and there watched and comforted
through days of deep torment, bordering
on madness, till he could bear to go
out again among men.</p>
<p>Lincoln went to the Legislature at Vandalia
in a coarse suit of jeans, but most of
the Illinois lawmakers wore jeans and coonskin
caps. It cannot be honestly said that
he was a brilliant or important lawmaker,
although his great height, immense strength,
quaint, sharp wit and never-failing stories
made him a popular figure at the State
capital.</p>
<p>His mind was too much occupied with the
study of the law. He had resumed an acquaintance,
formed during the Black Hawk
war, with Major John T. Stuart, who encouraged
him to become a lawyer, and
loaned him books. Curiously enough he
seemed to desire no teacher, but followed
his course of studies alone. Self-reliance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
was his strongest trait, self-reliance and endless
work.</p>
<p>Those who attempt to account for Lincoln’s
remarkable rise in life are apt to overlook
the terrific mental grind to which he
subjected himself for so many years; and,
as we value most that which we get through
stress and sacrifice and pain, so the things
which Lincoln dug out of his books were
never forgotten.</p>
<p>Perhaps, in these easy days, when education
is pressed upon all, there is a lesson to
be found in the story of this man who laid
firm foundations for his after life of greatness
by taking upon himself the whole responsibility
for searching after sound knowledge
and principles.</p>
<p>Lincoln became Major Stuart’s law-partner,
and for many years he alternated between
petty lawsuits and his more profitable
work as a surveyor. His sincerity, shrewd
humor, fairness and hearty hand-shaking
qualities drew friends to him wherever he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
went. His long, almost ludicrous figure,
with its trousers short of the shoetops by
several inches; his stooping shoulders and
shriveled, sunken, melancholy face, were
not associated with the distinction, romance
and tragic dignity which history has given
to all that belongs to him. But his very
spraddling awkwardness, the picturesque
vernacular in which he told his countryside
parables, coarse and satirical though they
sometimes were; the humble spirit in which
the lawyer-surveyor-politician would do odd
jobs or chores to help a neighbor or earn a
dollar, gave him added political strength
with a frontier people who loved plain men.</p>
<p>He does not understand Lincoln who
thinks of him as a guileless, innocent frontiersman,
raised by accident from a log-cabin
to direct a mighty war and shape the
policy of a nation. He was a sagacious,
observant, natural politician, ambitious but
honest. His law-partner, Mr. Herndon, has
made that plain. Horace White, who knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
Lincoln in his days of political campaigning,
has written of him:</p>
<p>“He was as ambitious of earthly honors
as any man of his time. Furthermore, he
was an adept at log-rolling or any political
game that did not involve falsity....
Nobody knew better how to turn things to
advantage politically, and nobody was readier
to take such advantage, provided it did
not involve dishonorable means. He could
not cheat the people out of their votes any
more than out of their money. The Abraham
Lincoln that some people have pictured
to themselves, sitting in his dingy law
office, working over his cases till the voice
of duty roused him, never existed. If this
had been his type he never would have been
called at all.”</p>
<p>It helps one to realize the man who afterwards
roused the soul of the Republic to
resist the degradation of slavery and the
shock of war to read what he wrote from
Washington to Mr. Herndon in 1848:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
<p>“Now, as to the young men, you must
not wait to be brought forward by the older
men. For instance, do you suppose that I
should ever have got into notice if I had
waited to be hunted up and pushed forward
by older men? You young men get together
and form a Rough and Ready club,
and have regular meetings and speeches.
Take in everybody that you can get....
As you go along, gather up the shrewd,
wild boys about town, whether just of age
or just a little under. Let every one play
the part he can play best—some speak, some
sing, and all halloo.”</p>
<p>And in 1836 we catch sight of Lincoln,
again a candidate for the Legislature, leaping
forward, with flashing eyes to answer a
taunt of a Mr. Forquer, who had a lightning
rod on his new house, and had just left the
Whig party for a place in the Land Office:
“I desire to live, and I desire place and distinction;
but I would rather die now than,
like the gentleman, live to see the day that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
I would change my politics for an office
worth three thousand dollars a year, and
then feel compelled to erect a lightning rod
to protect a guilty conscience from an
offended God.”</p>
<p>Yes, Lincoln was a politician who could
seize your attention by the very witchery of
his grotesque personality, twist his opponent
into helplessness by the stinging shrewdness
of a humorous story, make you laugh or
cry alternately, reach down into your humanity
by some frank confession of his poverty
and rough beginnings, and then suddenly
stir the highest instincts of your nature
by a sublime moral appeal.</p>
<p>It is true that in his second term in the
Legislature he voted for all manner of extravagant
and preposterous schemes of “internal
improvements.” But that was a day
of inflated hope, and Illinois was delirious
with land gambling. Lincoln, like the
other politicians of the State, was swept
along by the current of popular enthusiasm.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
He swaggered, dreamed, bragged and voted
with the rest. The voters wanted railways,
canals and river improvements. So the
Legislature authorized thirteen hundred
miles of railways, a canal between the Illinois
River and Lake Michigan, and endless
improvements of rivers and streams; and
to carry out this staggering programme of
improvements in a poor, half-settled frontier
State, a loan of twelve million dollars was
voted.</p>
<p>Not only did Lincoln in his early life vote
for this audacious and spendthrift scheme,
in response to a harebrained popular demand,
but he advocated woman suffrage;
proposed a usury rate, with the naive suggestion
that “in cases of extreme necessity
there could always be found means to cheat
the law”; wrote foolish love letters to blue-eyed
Mary Owens, offering to keep his supposed
marriage engagement to her, but advising
her for her own sake not to hold him
to it; and developed into a more or less<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
ranting, downright country politician, ready
to make a stump speech, tell a story, shake
hands with a crowd or thrash a ruffian on
the slightest provocation.</p>
<p>And when the capital of Illinois was
changed to Springfield, he rode into that
town on a borrowed horse, with “two saddlebags,
containing two or three law books
and a few pieces of clothing,” and, not having
seventeen dollars with which to buy a
bed and furnishings, accepted a free room
over the store of his friend, Mr. Speed,
dropped his saddlebags on the floor and
smilingly said, “Well, Speed, I’m moved.”
That was his entrance into the town which
saw his rise to the Presidency.</p>
<p>Around the fireplace in Speed’s store Lincoln
used to sit with Douglas, Baker, Calhoun,
Browning, Lamborn and other rising
politicians and orators of the West. Here
every question under heaven was debated,
stories were told, jokes cracked, poems recited;
and it would take the pen of a Balzac<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
to describe the scenes of merriment, or serious,
sharp contest, that happened before
those blazing logs, with an attentive ring of
friends listening to the never-ceasing flow
of wit and wisdom.</p>
<p>Again and again Lincoln was elected to
the Illinois Legislature, always as a Whig.
Yet he remained humble in spirit. In
answer to the taunt that the Whigs were
aristocrats, he made a speech showing that
he understood how the political sympathies
of the West were to be won:</p>
<p>“I was a poor boy, hired on a flatboat at
eight dollars a month, and had only one pair
of breeches to my back, and they were buckskin.
Now, if you know the nature of buckskin
when wet, and dried by the sun, it will
shrink; and my breeches kept shrinking
until they left several inches of my legs bare
between the tops of my socks and the lower
part of my breeches; and whilst I was growing
taller, they were becoming shorter, and
so much tighter that they left a blue streak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
around my legs that can be seen to this day.
If you call this aristocracy I plead guilty to
the charge.”</p>
<p>He could outwrestle, outrun and out-talk
any man in his section. He was recognized
as the most skillful and hard-headed
politician in his State. His courage and
shrewdness in ordinary affairs were notable,
and his honesty and earnestness, sweetened
by a sure sense of humor, lent distinction
and dignity to a ridiculous figure and sometimes
theatrical manner of address.</p>
<p>Yet there was a strange, gloomy self-distrust
in Lincoln which showed itself in his
love affairs; an imaginative melancholy that
wrung his heart and tortured his mind with
baseless, shadowy misgivings. He engaged
himself to marry Mary Todd and, doubting
his own love, broke the engagement. It has
been even charged that he deserted her when
she was attired for the wedding. Lincoln
described his parting to Mr. Speed:</p>
<p>“When I told Mary I did not love her,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
he said, “she burst into tears and almost
springing from her chair and wringing her
hands as if in agony, said something about
the deceiver being himself deceived. To
tell you the truth, Speed, it was too much
for me. I found the tears trickling down
my own cheeks. I caught her in my arms
and kissed her.”</p>
<p>So great was Lincoln’s agony and depression
after this that he was watched by his
friends lest he might commit suicide. “I
am now the most miserable man living,” he
wrote to Major Stuart. “If what I feel
were distributed to the whole human family,
there would not be one cheerful face on
earth. Whether I shall ever be better, I
cannot tell; I awfully forbode I shall
not.”</p>
<p>The shadow of threatened insanity passed,
and within two years Mary Todd became
his wife. It was a singular jest of fate that
he should have won her away from Stephen
A. Douglas, who was yet to be his rival in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
the great anti-slavery struggle that was
ended only by millions of armed men.</p>
<p>Poor heart-torn, shrewd, foolish, humble,
sublime Lincoln!</p>
<div id="if_i_060" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_060.jpg" width-obs="1431" height-obs="2424" alt="" />
<div class="caption">Senator Stephen A. Douglas, Lincoln’s great rival</div>
</div>
<p>Then there was the duel with James
Shields. That hot-headed Irishman had
challenged Lincoln to fight because the tall
politician had written certain anonymous
letters for the <i>Springfield Journal</i>. Lincoln
accepted and named “cavalry broadswords
of the largest size.” The duelists went to
the place appointed by the river, and sat on
logs on opposite sides of the field. Here is
a description of the scene by an onlooker,
from Miss Tarbell’s “Life of Abraham
Lincoln”:</p>
<p>“I watched Lincoln closely while he set
on his log awaiting the signal to fight. His
face was grave and serious. I could discern
nothing suggestive of ‘old Abe,’ as we knew
him. I never knew him to go so long without
making a joke, and I began to believe
he was getting frightened. But presently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
he reached over and picked up one of the
swords, which he drew from its scabbard.
Then he felt along the edge of the weapon
with his thumb, like a barber feels of the
edge of his razor, raised himself to his full
height, stretched out his long arms and
clipped a twig from above his head with the
sword. There wasn’t another man of us
who could have reached anywhere near that
twig, and the absurdity of that long-reaching
fellow fighting with cavalry sabres with
Shields, who could walk under his arm,
came pretty near making me howl with
laughter. After Lincoln had cut off the
twig he returned the sword to the scabbard.”</p>
<p>Before the combat could begin, friends
arrived in a canoe, Shields was induced to
make a concession, and presently Lincoln
and his opponent returned to town fast
friends.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
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