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Abraham Lincoln |
Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April
15, 1865) was the 16th President of the United States, serving from March 1861
until his assassination in April 1865. Lincoln successfully led the United
States through one of its greatest constitutional, military, and moral
crises—the American Civil War—preserving the Union. Reared in a poor family on
the western frontier, Lincoln was mostly self-educated, and became a country
lawyer, a Whig Party leader, Illinois state legislator during the 1830s, and a
one-term member of the United States House of Representatives during the 1840s.
Abraham Lincoln wrote some poems in his life. Presenting a note with his
poems : Being Poet
It
should surprise few to learn that Abraham Lincoln wrote poetry. But this fact
about his life is dwarfed by those events that defined his political legacy,
and this is also no surprise. Nevertheless, in the midst of the current Lincoln
revival, the man and the statesman, I think it’s fitting to attend to Abraham
Lincoln the poet. Certainly scholars have read his poetry in relation to his
skillful prose and oratory. But, on its own, this writing gives us insight into
the sensitivity of Lincoln’s less public modes of expression.
Was
he a great poet? Well, it appears that he had at least three phases—the first,
a youthful one in his teens and early twenties when he produced some silly
juvenelia, “a number of crude and satirical verses.” The most popular of these
is called “Chronicles of Reuben,” a local satire Lincoln scholar Robert Bray
describes as “a series of pseudo-biblical prose and verse pieces that are, out
of their local Indiana context, so topical as to be neither funny nor
comprehensible.” The piece, written in 1828 to avenge himself upon a rival
Indiana family, apparently had great effect on the neighbors, however. One of
them, Joseph C. Richardson, claimed that the poem was “remembered here in
Indiana in scraps better than the Bible.”
We
have to credit frontier oral tradition for our knowledge of some of Lincoln’s
more serious poems in his second phase, after he joined “a Kind of Poetical
Society” in Illinois sometime between 1837-39. One neighbor, James Matheny, remembered
the following worldly lines from a Lincoln poem called “On Seduction”:
No woman ever played
the whore
Unless She had a man to help her.
If this is truly a stanza from Lincoln’s pen, the satirist is still very much in evidence—Swift could have written these lines—but the self-described “prairie lawyer” has grown philosophical and left the adolescent boundaries of local feuds and pranks.
Unless She had a man to help her.
If this is truly a stanza from Lincoln’s pen, the satirist is still very much in evidence—Swift could have written these lines—but the self-described “prairie lawyer” has grown philosophical and left the adolescent boundaries of local feuds and pranks.
His
third, most serious phase begins when Lincoln returned to Indiana, after
leaving Illinois briefly in an attempt to help Henry Clay’s failed presidential
bid against James Polk. Lincoln called Indiana “as unpoetical as any spot of
the earth,” and yet it serves as a subject for a poem completed in 1846 called
“My Childhood Home I See Again.” (The image above is of the first six stanzas
of this long poem in Lincoln’s handwriting. Click here to see the remaining
pages). Here in the first two stanzas (below), you can see the cutting wit of
the younger, more confident man give way to a kind of wistful nostalgia worthy
of Wordsworth:
My child-hood home I
see again,
And gladden with the view;
And still as mem’ries crowd my brain,
There’s sadness in it too–
O memory! thou mid-way world
‘Twixt Earth and Paradise;
Where things decayed, and loved ones lost
In dreamy shadows rise–
And gladden with the view;
And still as mem’ries crowd my brain,
There’s sadness in it too–
O memory! thou mid-way world
‘Twixt Earth and Paradise;
Where things decayed, and loved ones lost
In dreamy shadows rise–
You
can read a complete transcript of the poem here, and the Library of Congress
has a detailed description of the poem’s stages of composition.
Lincoln-as-poet
continued in this thoughtful, mature voice in the remaining years of his life,
though never equaling the poetic output of 1846. Somewhat out of character, the
final documented piece of poetry from Lincoln comes from July 19, 1863. Written
in response to the North’s victory in Gettysburg, “Verse on Lee’s Invasion of
the North” is a short piece of doggerel that sees him returning to satire,
writing in the voice of “Gen. Lee”:
Gen. Lee’s invasion
of the North written by himself—
In eighteen sixty three, with pomp,
and mighty swell,
Me and Jeff’s Confederacy, went
forth to sack Phil-del,
The Yankees they got arter us, and
giv us particular hell,
And we skedaddled back again,
And didn’t sack Phil-del.
In eighteen sixty three, with pomp,
and mighty swell,
Me and Jeff’s Confederacy, went
forth to sack Phil-del,
The Yankees they got arter us, and
giv us particular hell,
And we skedaddled back again,
And didn’t sack Phil-del.
Surely
the poem was written in a hurry, and with jubilant, triumphal glee, but if this
is the last we heard from Lincoln the poet, it might be a shame, though it
would not blot out the literary skill of poems like “My Childhood Home I See
Again” and others like “The Bear Hunt” and “To Rosa,” which you can read here.
But
there’s more to this story; in 2004, a historian discovered an unsigned poem
called “The Suicide’s Soliloquy”—published in the August 25, 1838 issue of the
Sangamo Journal, a Springfield newspaper—and believed the former president to
be the poet. In the video above, listen to a moody, dramatic reading of the
poem:
It
is not known with certainty if Lincoln wrote this poem, but scholarly consensus
inclines heavily in that direction, given its stylistic similarity to his other
work from this period. “The Suicide’s Soliloquy” is as passionate and morbid as
any of Edgar Allen Poe’s verse, and betrays Lincoln’s characteristic melancholy
in its stormiest and most Romantic guise. NPR has the full poem and the story
of its discovery.
(source : openculture.com)
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