It is portentous, and a thing of state
That here at midnight, in our little town
A mourning figure walks, and will not rest,
Near the old court-house pacing up and down . . . .
He cannot sleep upon his hillside now.
He is among us:-as in times before!
And we who toss and lie awake for long,
Breathe deep, and start, to see him pass the door.
-Vachel Lindsay,
"Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight
(In Springfield, Illinois)"
National heroes are national touchstones. Martin Luther King Jr., George
Washington, Abraham Lincoln. They are more than history; they have entered
into myth. They have come to figure in our rituals, rhetoric, folklore,
song, literature, even our dreams. And how each generation depicts a hero
may say more about us than about him.
What an unprepossessing figure he must have been when he first appeared upon
the national stage, this elongated stick figure with his high-pitched voice,
speaking in the accents of his native Kentucky with a vocabulary drawn from
Shakespeare, the King James Bible and his country people.
Just when he was most needed by a nation that was still far from knowing it
was one nation, this circuit lawyer, this half-comic, half-tragic apparition
materialized out of what was then the American West. This prairie thinker,
dreamer and schemer, this rustic storyteller, would turn out to be both the
simplest and most sophisticated of American political philosophers.
At what point did this tall, lanky, some would say grotesque, figure first
impinge on the national consciousness? In 1858 he was just a worn-out old
Whig, a one-term congressman whose opposition to the Slave Power and
therefore the Mexican War was supposed to have ended his political career.
That was the year he became a national figure by debating the great Stephen
A. Douglas in a race for the U.S. Senate in Illinois, which he would win in
all but the technical sense.
The singular truth Mr. Lincoln asserted that pivotal year was that this
government could not survive half-slave, half-free - that it was bound to
become all one thing or all the other. All men are created equal, and all
the excuses for moral neutrality, all the empty hopes that somehow we might
forever avoid facing that truth, would prove in vain - as Mr. Lincoln
foresaw. And he would not let his truth go. To quote a line from "John
Brown's Body," the man was Hell on a cold scent. He might maneuver, and he
did, in the great struggle of his time. But he would not give up.
The rest is history and, beyond history, myth. In the treasure trove called
the Federal Writers Project in Washington, one section is devoted to the
recollections of former slaves who were interviewed during the 1930s. Again
and again, a similar legend surfaces. Here is how it was told by Fanny
Burdock of Valdosta, Georgia, aged 91 at the time the interview was
conducted:
"We been picking in the field when my brother he point to the road and then
we see Marse Abe coming all dusty and on foot. We run right to the fence and
had the oak bucket and the dipper. When he draw up to us, he so tall, black
eyes so sad. Didn't say not one word, just looked hard at all us, every one
us crying. We give him nice cool water from the dipper. Then he nodded and
set off and we just stood there till he get to being dust then nothing.
After, didn't our owner or nobody credit it, but me and all my kin, we
knowed, I still got the dipper to prove it."
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