WILLIE LINCOLN’S DEATH-BED
Mrs. Lincoln returned to Washington
in November, and again duty called me to the White
House. The war was now in progress, and every
day brought stirring news from the front the
front, where the Gray opposed the Blue, where flashed
the bright sabre in the sunshine, where were heard
the angry notes of battle, the deep roar of cannon,
and the fearful rattle of musketry; where new graves
were being made every day, where brother forgot a
mother’s early blessing and sought the lifeblood
of brother, and friend raised the deadly knife against
friend. Oh, the front, with its stirring battle-scenes!
Oh, the front, with its ghastly heaps of dead!
The life of the nation was at stake; and when the land
was full of sorrow, there could not be much gayety
at the capital. The days passed quietly with
me. I soon learned that some people had an intense
desire to penetrate the inner circle of the White House.
No President and his family, heretofore occupying
this mansion, ever excited so much curiosity as the
present incumbents. Mr. Lincoln had grown up
in the wilds of the West, and evil report had said
much of him and his wife. The polite world was
shocked, and the tendency to exaggerate intensified
curiosity. As soon as it was known that I was
the modiste of Mrs. Lincoln, parties crowded around
and affected friendship for me, hoping to induce me
to betray the secrets of the domestic circle.
One day a woman, I will not call her a lady, drove
up to my rooms, gave me an order to make a dress,
and insisted on partly paying me in advance.
She called on me every day, and was exceedingly kind.
When she came to take her dress away, she cautiously
remarked:
“Mrs. Keckley, you know Mrs. Lincoln?”
“Yes.”
“You are her modiste; are you not?”
“Yes.”
“You know her very well; do you not?”
“I am with her every day or two.”
“Don’t you think you would have some influence
with her?”
“I cannot say. Mrs. Lincoln,
I presume, would listen to anything I should suggest,
but whether she would be influenced by a suggestion
of mine is another question.”
“I am sure that you could influence
her, Mrs. Keckley. Now listen; I have a proposition
to make. I have a great desire to become an inmate
of the White House. I have heard so much of Mr.
Lincoln’s goodness that I should like to be
near him; and if I can enter the White House no other
way, I am willing to go as a menial. My dear Mrs.
Keckley, will you not recommend me to Mrs. Lincoln
as a friend of yours out of employment, and ask her
to take me as a chambermaid? If you will do this
you shall be well rewarded. It may be worth several
thousand dollars to you in time.”
I looked at the woman in amazement.
A bribe, and to betray the confidence of my employer!
Turning to her with a glance of scorn, I said:
“Madam, you are mistaken in
regard to my character. Sooner than betray the
trust of a friend, I would throw myself into the Potomac
river. I am not so base as that. Pardon
me, but there is the door, and I trust that you will
never enter my room again.”
She sprang to her feet in deep confusion,
and passed through the door, murmuring: “Very
well; you will live to regret your action today.”
“Never, never!” I exclaimed,
and closed the door after her with a bang. I
afterwards learned that this woman was an actress,
and that her object was to enter the White House as
a servant, learn its secrets, and then publish a scandal
to the world. I do not give her name, for such
publicity would wound the sensitive feelings of friends,
who would have to share her disgrace, without being
responsible for her faults. I simply record the
incident to show how I often was approached by unprincipled
parties. It is unnecessary to say that I indignantly
refused every bribe offered.
The first public appearance of Mrs.
Lincoln that winter was at the reception on New Year’s
Day. This reception was shortly followed by a
brilliant levee. The day after the levee I went
to the White House, and while fitting a dress to Mrs.
Lincoln, she said:
“Lizabeth” she
had learned to drop the E “Lizabeth,
I have an idea. These are war times, and we must
be as economical as possible. You know the President
is expected to give a series of state dinners every
winter, and these dinners are very costly; Now I want
to avoid this expense; and my idea is, that if I give
three large receptions, the state dinners can be scratched
from the programme. What do you think, Lizabeth?”
“I think that you are right, Mrs. Lincoln.”
“I am glad to hear you say so.
If I can make Mr. Lincoln take the same view of the
case, I shall not fail to put the idea into practice.”
Before I left her room that day, Mr.
Lincoln came in. She at once stated the case
to him. He pondered the question a few moments
before answering.
“Mother, I am afraid your plan will not work.”
“But it will work, if you will only determine
that it shall work.”
“It is breaking in on the regular custom,”
he mildly replied.
“But you forget, father, these
are war times, and old customs can be done away with
for the once. The idea is economical, you must
admit.”
“Yes, mother, but we must think of something
besides economy.”
“I do think of something else.
Public receptions are more democratic than stupid
state dinners are more in keeping with the
spirit of the institutions of our country, as you
would say if called upon to make a stump speech.
There are a great many strangers in the city, foreigners
and others, whom we can entertain at our receptions,
but whom we cannot invite to our dinners.”
“I believe you are right, mother.
You argue the point well. I think that we shall
have to decide on the receptions.”
So the day was carried. The question
was decided, and arrangements were made for the first
reception. It now was January, and cards were
issued for February.
The children, Tad and Willie, were
constantly receiving presents. Willie was so
delighted with a little pony, that he insisted on riding
it every day. The weather was changeable, and
exposure resulted in a severe cold, which deepened
into fever. He was very sick, and I was summoned
to his bedside. It was sad to see the poor boy
suffer. Always of a delicate constitution, he
could not resist the strong inroads of disease.
The days dragged wearily by, and he grew weaker and
more shadow-like. He was his mother’s favorite
child, and she doted on him. It grieved her heart
sorely to see him suffer. When able to be about,
he was almost constantly by her side. When I
would go in her room, almost always I found blue-eyed
Willie there, reading from an open book, or curled
up in a chair with pencil and paper in hand.
He had decidedly a literary taste, and was a studious
boy. A short time before his death he wrote this
simple little poem:
“WASHINGTON, D. C., October 30,
1861.
DEAR SIR: I enclose you
my first attempt at poetry.
“Yours truly,
“WM. W.
LINCOLN.
“To the Editor of the National
Republican.”
LINES ON THE DEATH OF COLONEL EDWARD BAKER.
THERE was no patriot like
Baker,
So noble and so
true;
He fell as a soldier on the
field,
His face to the
sky of blue.
His voice is silent in the
hall
Which oft his
presence graced;
No more he’ll hear the
loud acclaim
Which rang from
place to place.
No squeamish notions filled
his breast,
The Union
was his theme;
“No surrender and
no compromise,”
His day-thought
and night’s dream.
His Country has her
part to pay
To’rds those
he has left behind;
His widow and his children
all,
She must always
keep in mind.
Finding that Willie continued to grow worse, Mrs. Lincoln
determined to withdraw her cards of invitation and postpone the reception.
Mr. Lincoln thought that the cards had better not be withdrawn. At least
he advised that the doctor be consulted before any steps were taken.
Accordingly Dr. Stone was called in. He pronounced Willie better, and said
that there was every reason for an early recovery. He thought, since the
invitations had been issued, it would be best to go on with the reception.
Willie, he insisted, was in no immediate danger. Mrs. Lincoln was guided
by these counsels, and no postponement was announced. On the evening of
the reception Willie was suddenly taken worse. His mother sat by his
bedside a long while, holding his feverish hand in her own, and watching his
labored breathing. The doctor claimed there was no cause for alarm.
I arranged Mrs. Lincolns hair, then assisted her to dress. Her dress was
white satin, trimmed with black lace. The trail was very long, and as she
swept through the room, Mr. Lincoln was standing with his back to the fire, his
hands behind him, and his eyes on the carpet. His face wore a thoughtful,
solemn look. The rustling of the satin dress attracted his attention.
He looked at it a few moments; then, in his quaint, quiet way remarked
“Whew! our cat has a long tail to-night.”
Mrs. Lincoln did not reply. The President added:
“Mother, it is my opinion, if
some of that tail was nearer the head, it would be
in better style;” and he glanced at her bare
arms and neck. She had a beautiful neck and arm,
and low dresses were becoming to her. She turned
away with a look of offended dignity, and presently
took the President’s arm, and both went down-stairs
to their guests, leaving me alone with the sick boy.
The reception was a large and brilliant
one, and the rich notes of the Marine Band in the
apartments below came to the sick-room in soft, subdued
murmurs, like the wild, faint sobbing of far-off spirits.
Some of the young people had suggested dancing, but
Mr. Lincoln met the suggestion with an emphatic veto.
The brilliance of the scene could not dispel the sadness
that rested upon the face of Mrs. Lincoln. During
the evening she came upstairs several times, and stood
by the bedside of the suffering boy. She loved
him with a mother’s heart, and her anxiety was
great. The night passed slowly; morning came,
and Willie was worse. He lingered a few days,
and died. God called the beautiful spirit home,
and the house of joy was turned into the house of
mourning. I was worn out with watching, and was
not in the room when Willie died, but was immediately
sent for. I assisted in washing him and dressing
him, and then laid him on the bed, when Mr. Lincoln
came in. I never saw a man so bowed down with
grief. He came to the bed, lifted the cover from
the face of his child, gazed at it long and earnestly,
murmuring, “My poor boy, he was too good for
this earth. God has called him home. I know
that he is much better off in heaven, but then we loved
him so. It is hard, hard to have him die!”
Great sobs choked his utterance.
He buried his head in his hands, and his tall frame
was convulsed with emotion. I stood at the foot
of the bed, my eyes full of tears, looking at the
man in silent, awe-stricken wonder. His grief
unnerved him, and made him a weak, passive child.
I did not dream that his rugged nature could be so
moved. I shall never forget those solemn moments genius
and greatness weeping over love’s idol lost.
There is a grandeur as well as a simplicity about the
picture that will never fade. With me it is immortal I
really believe that I shall carry it with me across
the dark, mysterious river of death.
Mrs. Lincoln’s grief was inconsolable.
The pale face of her dead boy threw her into convulsions.
Around him love’s tendrils had been twined,
and now that he was dressed for the tomb, it was like
tearing the tendrils out of the heart by their roots.
Willie, she often said, if spared by Providence, would
be the hope and stay of her old age. But Providence
had not spared him. The light faded from his eyes,
and the death-dew had gathered on his brow.
In one of her paroxysms of grief the
President kindly bent over his wife, took her by the
arm, and gently led her to the window. With a
stately, solemn gesture, he pointed to the lunatic
asylum.
“Mother, do you see that large
white building on the hill yonder? Try and control
your grief, or it will drive you mad, and we may have
to send you there.”
Mrs. Lincoln was so completely overwhelmed with sorrow that
she did not attend the funeral. Willie was laid to rest in the cemetery,
and the White House was draped in mourning. Black crape everywhere met the
eye, contrasting strangely with the gay and brilliant colors of a few days
before. Party dresses were laid aside, and every one who crossed the
threshold of the Presidential mansion spoke in subdued tones when they thought
of the sweet boy at rest
“Under the sod and the dew.”
Previous to this I had lost my son.
Leaving Wilberforce, he went to the battle-field with
the three months troops, and was killed in Missouri found
his grave on the battle-field where the gallant General
Lyon fell. It was a sad blow to me, and the kind
womanly letter that Mrs. Lincoln wrote to me when
she heard of my bereavement was full of golden words
of comfort.
Nathaniel Parker Willis, the genial
poet, now sleeping in his grave, wrote this beautiful
sketch of Willie Lincoln, after the sad death of the
bright-eyed boy:
This little fellow had his acquaintances among his fathers
friends, and I chanced to be one of them. He never failed to seek me out
in the crowd, shake hands, and make some pleasant remark; and this, in a boy of
ten years of age, was, to say the least, endearing to a stranger. But he
had more than mere affectionateness. His self-possession aplomb, as the French
call it was extraordinary. I was one
day passing the White House, when he was outside with
a play-fellow on the side-walk. Mr. Seward drove
in, with Prince Napoleon and two of his suite in the
carriage; and, in a mock-heroic way terms
of intimacy evidently existing between the boy and
the Secretary the official gentleman took
off his hat, and the Napoleon did the same, all making
the young Prince President a ceremonious salute.
Not a bit staggered with the homage, Willie drew himself
up to his full height, took off his little cap with
graceful self-possession, and bowed down formally to
the ground, like a little ambassador. They drove
past, and he went on unconcernedly with his play:
the impromptu readiness and good judgment being clearly
a part of his nature. His genial and open expression
of countenance was none the less ingenuous and fearless
for a certain tincture of fun; and it was in this
mingling of qualities that he so faithfully resembled
his father.
“With all the splendor that
was around this little fellow in his new home, he
was so bravely and beautifully himself and
that only. A wild flower transplanted from the
prairie to the hot-house, he retained his prairie
habits, unalterably pure and simple, till he died.
His leading trait seemed to be a fearless and kindly
frankness, willing that everything should be as different
as it pleased, but resting unmoved in his own conscious
single-heartedness. I found I was studying him
irresistibly, as one of the sweet problems of childhood
that the world is blessed with in rare places; and
the news of his death (I was absent from Washington,
on a visit to my own children, at the time) came to
me like a knell heard unexpectedly at a merry-making.
“On the day of the funeral I
went before the hour, to take a near farewell look
at the dear boy; for they had embalmed him to send
home to the West to sleep under the sod
of his own valley and the coffin-lid was
to be closed before the service. The family had
just taken their leave of him, and the servants and
nurses were seeing him for the last time and
with tears and sobs wholly unrestrained, for he was
loved like an idol by every one of them. He lay
with eyes closed his brown hair parted
as we had known it pale in the slumber of
death; but otherwise unchanged, for he was dressed
as if for the evening, and held in one of his hands,
crossed upon his breast, a bunch of exquisite flowers a
message coming from his mother, while we were looking
upon him, that those flowers might be preserved for
her. She was lying sick in her bed, worn out
with grief and over-watching.
“The funeral was very touching.
Of the entertainments in the East Room the boy had
been for those who now assembled more especially a
most life-giving variation. With his bright face,
and his apt greetings and replies, he was remembered
in every part of that crimson-curtained hall, built
only for pleasure of all the crowds, each
night, certainly the one least likely to be death’s
first mark. He was his father’s favorite.
They were intimates often seen hand in hand.
And there sat the man, with a burden on his brain
at which the world marvels bent now with
the load at both heart and brain staggering
under a blow like the taking from him of his child!
His men of power sat around him McClellan,
with a moist eye when he bowed to the prayer, as I
could see from where I stood; and Chase and Seward,
with their austere features at work; and senators,
and ambassadors, and soldiers, all struggling with
their tears great hearts sorrowing with
the President as a stricken man and a brother.
That God may give him strength for all his burdens
is, I am sure, at present the prayer of a nation.”
This sketch was very much admired
by Mrs. Lincoln. I copy it from the scrap-book
in which she pasted it, with many tears, with her own
hands.