Happy Birthday Abraham Lincoln!

 


Today marks the 214th anniversary of the birth of one of the noblest men in American history.

The 1917 biography of Abraham Lincoln by Wilbur Fisk Gordy was the book that brought me to know the man. By the final pages, as Gordy recounts Lincoln's funeral procession, I was literally weeping with the Americans of 1865. "But the most tender of all the expressions of love and sorrow came from those who had been his friends and neighbors before he was called to the White House. As they looked upon his familiar face for the last time, they thought of him, not as the emancipator of slaves, nor as President of the United States, but as one who in earlier years had been kind and helpful in a thousand ways." Gordy introduces his work about Lincoln with these words, "It is an old and true maxim which says that we learn from experience; meaning, of course, our own personal experience. But much is to be learned also from the experience of others, especially of the great and the good who have lived before us. Herein lies the value of biography. By coming to know, through books, men of great and strong character, we learn from their lives much that is helpful in living our own. For if in imagination we enter into their purposes and plans, their sorrows and joys, their defeats and victories, we learn through their experiences, and they become in a real sense our teachers, guides, and friends.
"Perhaps to Abraham Lincoln, more than to any other man in the history of our country, has been given the power of influence over the lives of those unknown to him. To thousands who never saw him, but who know him through his letters and speeches, and through the record of his private and public life, he is an inspiration. The story of his overcoming the difficulties of his early life had put courage into many a young heart; his resolute stand by what he thought to be right has helped countless souls to be true to their duty; and the kindliness and good-will which flowed from his great heart toward all--even his foes--made the cherishing of malice and bitterness seem unworthy and shameful.

"To know such a man, as we may know him by the study or even the reading of his life, cannot fail to inspire us to nobler living and more patriotic service in that little community we call our neighborhood and that larger community, our country.

"Such a hero and leader, who continues to live in the ideals and institutions of his native land, is one of its richest possessions; and it is especially fitting, in days when the nation is again called to take a stand in a great cause, that we should learn to understand and appreciate something of the high purpose and immortal achievements of his life.

"In writing this volume my aim has been to make real to my young readers Abraham Lincoln; first as a youth who worked and struggled in the backwoods to prepare himself for greater usefulness; then as a man raised by his own merits to positions of responsibility; and finally, as a leader of a great nation, who through four of the most troubled years of that nation's history carried its burdens amid peril and crisis; but always and under all circumstances as one who was simple, honest, and friendly, living true to high and unselfish motives of service to his fellow men."

That was Abraham Lincoln, the example our nation needs anew.

Paul Harvey shared great stories about the man Lincoln. Today the website is under maintenance, but check back in the archives under "A" (Abraham Lincoln) for inspiring short stories of this man. Great length and intrigue for young listeners.


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