海角大神

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Where morality and politics collide: How Abraham Lincoln held his ground

Lincoln was by no means perfect, but his convictions took the country forward, writes historian Jon Meacham in 鈥淎nd There Was Light.鈥

By Barbara Spindel , Contributor

Not long after Abraham Lincoln was elected 16th president of the United States, South Carolina seceded from the Union. In the months leading up to his March 1861 inauguration, various politicians and business leaders appealed to the president-elect to compromise with the South in order to avert a civil war. The most developed plan, the Crittenden Compromise, proposed constitutional amendments protecting slavery where it existed and allowing its spread to southern territories, but prohibiting its expansion in the northern territories.聽

Lincoln would not entertain it. As Jon Meacham observes in 鈥淎nd There Was Light: Abraham Lincoln and the American Struggle,鈥 鈥淚n these cold and complex months, Abraham Lincoln was both statesman and moral being, choosing the difficult over the easy, the catastrophic over the convenient, the right over the wrong.鈥澛

Meacham鈥檚 sweeping, elegantly written biography, a welcome addition to the vast library of work on the 16th president, is largely focused on what made Lincoln stand his ground, then and in 1864. By that time, the Civil War was raging, his reelection was in doubt, and he was again urged to negotiate with the South on the issue of slavery. The Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer concentrates on the president鈥檚 complicated balancing act between moral principle and political calculation, demonstrating Lincoln鈥檚 evolution toward a more expansive view of liberty. Meacham鈥檚 Lincoln is willing to change and grow as he struggles to lead the country through calamitous times; in doing so, he has much wisdom to offer our age.聽

The book begins with Lincoln鈥檚 early years, showing that his anti-slavery feelings dated back to his impoverished childhood in Kentucky and Indiana, where his family belonged to anti-slavery churches. Lincoln always held the conviction that slavery was wrong. Self-educated as a lawyer, he also believed, as many then did, that the federal government did not possess the authority to abolish slavery where it already existed. While he saw slavery as protected by the Constitution, Lincoln looked back to an earlier document, the Declaration of Independence, regarding its assertion that 鈥渁ll men are created equal鈥 as, in Meacham鈥檚 words, 鈥渁 goal to seek, an ideal to realize, a promise to fulfill.鈥澛

鈥淎nd There Was Light鈥 is not a hagiography; Meacham is clear-eyed on Lincoln鈥檚 shortcomings, even as he notes that they were often consistent with the dominant climate of the times. During the famous Lincoln-Douglas debates held over the course of his failed 1858 Senate race against Stephen Douglas, Lincoln said, 鈥淚 have no purpose to introduce political and social equality between the white and the black races.鈥 Until late in the war he supported the voluntary removal of Black people from the country. As Meacham notes, Lincoln was 鈥渁 white man in a white-dominated nation shaped by anti-Black prejudice that he to some extent shared.鈥澛犅

The author also points out that the opponents of emancipation weren鈥檛 confined to the secessionist states, reminding us that while the Civil War is remembered as a battle between North and South, that framing is an oversimplification. 鈥淗e was a minority president,鈥 Meacham writes. 鈥淗e faced opposition not only in the Confederacy but in the tenuously loyal border states; and the Union itself was far from monolithic.鈥澛

Despite the political risks, however, Lincoln eventually determined that the war must end slavery, and he committed to emancipation. (He issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863.) 鈥淟incoln believed he was acting according to motives higher than the merely political,鈥 Meacham explains. The author considers, as many others have before him, the role of religion in the president鈥檚 decision-making. While it鈥檚 impossible to know his beliefs, it seems clear that the 1862 death of Lincoln鈥檚 11-year-old son Willie led the president to think deeply about divine providence and the will of God, not only in terms of his personal life but in the context of his presidency as well.

Meacham counterpoints the president鈥檚 lifelong expansion of his understanding of liberty with a very different evolution of views in the Dixie states. He refers to the 鈥渉ardening white Southern view鈥 that slavery, once regarded as a necessary evil, was in fact, in the 1837 words of former Vice President John C. Calhoun, a 鈥減ositive good.鈥 鈥淪uch delusions about its own virtue would fuel the rise of the Lost Cause in the postwar world,鈥 the author writes, referring to the distorted ideology that views the Confederate cause as honorable and heroic.

Meacham seems to be alluding to our own time when he speaks of the dangers of a zealous belief, divorced from reason, in the rightness of your cause. Lincoln, on the other hand, exemplifies the possibilities of humble moral leadership, rare as it is, to inch us closer to realizing our national ideals.