Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and WritingsBasler has gone through the body of Lincoln utterance and his selections from it in a very peculiar time, a global war time and that war interwoven with many civil wars, a war in which the American Union of States issued as a colossal and decisive force among world powers. What have we to learn from Lincoln in this time when unprecedented and incalculable forces are to operate on our future, when the mind of man and his will and vision must meet the challenge of what is termed AA1, the Year One of the Atomic Age, when we hear the oft-recurring question, "What would Lincoln do now?" And now comes Mr. Basler to lay before you the best writings and speeches of Lincoln for you to find what of Lincoln is usable for these terrific history-shaping years. As a writer and speaker Lincoln had several styles and used them according to what events and occasions demanded. Plain talk, blunt and utterly lucid statements, these are to be found in plenty throughout his writings and speeches. Then again you may find him employing a prose that is cadenced, sonorous, masterly and having its relation to certain masterpieces of literature that had become part of him. - Preface. |
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Page xxvii
the Debates , the sentence appears without internal punctuation . Did Lincoln give up trying to punctuate it internally , for political reasons , leaving the reader to place the emphasis where he would , or did Lincoln's editors simply ...
the Debates , the sentence appears without internal punctuation . Did Lincoln give up trying to punctuate it internally , for political reasons , leaving the reader to place the emphasis where he would , or did Lincoln's editors simply ...
Page 55
This route is upon prairie land the whole distance ; -so that it appears to me , by removing the turf , a sufficient width and dam- ming up the old channel , the whole river in a short time would wash its way through , thereby ...
This route is upon prairie land the whole distance ; -so that it appears to me , by removing the turf , a sufficient width and dam- ming up the old channel , the whole river in a short time would wash its way through , thereby ...
Page 247
So to call such an act , to us appears no other than a naked , impudent absurdity , and we speak of it accordingly . But if , when the war had begun , and had become the cause of the country , the giving of our money and our blood ...
So to call such an act , to us appears no other than a naked , impudent absurdity , and we speak of it accordingly . But if , when the war had begun , and had become the cause of the country , the giving of our money and our blood ...
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Contents
LINCOLNS DEVELOPMENT AS A WRITER | 1 |
Speech in the United States House | 27 |
Political Announcement | 53 |
Copyright | |
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