His Life and Times. BEING THE LIFE AND PUBLIC SERVICES OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN, SIXTEENTH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. TOGETHER WITH HIS STATE PAPERS,. INCLUDING HIS SPEECHES, ADDRESSES, MESSAGES, LETTERS, AND PROCLAMATIONS, AND THE CLOSING SCENES CONNECTED WITH HIS LIFE AND DEATH. BY HENRY J. RAYMOND. TO WHICH ARE ADDED ANECDOTES AND PERSONAL REMINISCENCES OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN, BY FRANK 3, CARPENTER. VOLUME I. CHICAGO: PUBLISHERS, PREFACE. E457 1891 V.1 DURING the Presidential canvass of 1864, the author of this work prepared for its publishers a volume upon the Administration of President Lincoln. Its main object was to afford the American people the materials for forming an intelligent judgment as to the wisdom of continuing Mr. Lincoln, for four years more, in the Presidential office. That canvass resulted in his re-election. But he had scarcely entered upon the duties and responsibilities of his second term, when his career was closed by assassination. He had lived long enough, however, to finish the great work which had devolved upon him. Before his eyes were closed, they beheld the overthrow of the rebellion, the extirpation of slavery, and the restoration, over all the land, of the authority of the Constitution of the United States. Not the people of his own country alone, but all the world, will study with interest the life and public acts of one whose work was at once so great and so successful. The principles which guided his conduct, and the policy by which he sought to carry them outthe temper and character which were the secret sources of his strength-will be sought and found in the acts and words of his public life. For more truly, perhaps, M808338 |