<h3>THE TWO PRAYERS.</h3>
<p>In Lincoln's inaugural address will be found the passage about the sad
singularity of the two contendants in the fratricidal combat being
Christians alike: "Both read the same Bible, and pray to the same
God." The example is forthcoming. There is plenty of evidence that
the speaker always "took counsel of God." His words are: "I have been
driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I
have nowhere else to go." [Footnote: No longer was Lincoln's piety
held as hypocrisy, as in 1860, when a campaign song sneers at</p>
<p class="ind">
How each night he seeks the closet,<br/>
There, alone, to kneel and pray.]</p>
<p>(Connect with the Confederate commander, Robert E. Lee's avowal:
"I have never seen the day when I did not pray for the people of the
North.")</p>
<p>"Everybody thinks better than anybody."--(Lincoln.) (This is also
ascribed to Talleyrand. "It is only the rich who are robbed.")
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