A CLASH OF GIANTS
Elsie secured from the Surgeon-General
temporary passes for the day, and sent her friends
to the hospital with the promise that she would not
leave the White House until she had secured the pardon.
The President greeted her with unusual
warmth. The smile that had only haunted his sad
face during four years of struggle, defeat, and uncertainty
had now burst into joy that made his powerful head
radiate light. Victory had lifted the veil from
his soul, and he was girding himself for the task
of healing the Nation’s wounds.
“I’ll have it ready for
you in a moment, Miss Elsie,” he said, touching
with his sinewy hand a paper which lay on his desk,
bearing on its face the red seal of the Republic.
“I am only waiting to receive the passes.”
“I am very grateful to you,
Mr. President,” the girl said feelingly.
“But tell me,” he said,
with quaint, fatherly humour, “why you, of all
our girls, the brightest, fiercest little Yankee in
town, so take to heart a rebel boy’s sorrows?”
Elsie blushed, and then looked at
him frankly with a saucy smile.
“I am fulfilling the Commandments.”
“Love your enemies?”
“Certainly. How could one
help loving the sweet, motherly face you saw yesterday.”
The President laughed heartily. “I see of
course, of course!”
“The Honourable Austin Stoneman,”
suddenly announced a clerk at his elbow.
Elsie started in surprise and whispered:
“Do not let my father know I
am here. I will wait in the next room. You’ll
let nothing delay the pardon, will you, Mr. President?”
Mr. Lincoln warmly pressed her hand
as she disappeared through the door leading into Major
Hay’s room, and turned to meet the Great Commoner
who hobbled slowly in, leaning on his crooked cane.
At this moment he was a startling
and portentous figure in the drama of the Nation,
the most powerful parliamentary leader in American
history, not excepting Henry Clay.
No stranger ever passed this man without
a second look. His clean-shaven face, the massive
chiselled features, his grim eagle look, and cold,
colourless eyes, with the frosts of his native Vermont
sparkling in their depths, compelled attention.
His walk was a painful hobble.
He was lame in both feet, and one of them was deformed.
The left leg ended in a mere bunch of flesh, resembling
more closely an elephant’s hoof than the foot
of a man.
He was absolutely bald, and wore a
heavy brown wig that seemed too small to reach the
edge of his enormous forehead.
He rarely visited the White House.
He was the able, bold, unscrupulous leader of leaders,
and men came to see him. He rarely smiled, and
when he did it was the smile of the cynic and misanthrope.
His tongue had the lash of a scorpion. He was
a greater terror to the trimmers and time-servers
of his own party than to his political foes.
He had hated the President with sullen, consistent,
and unyielding venom from his first nomination at
Chicago down to the last rumour of his new proclamation.
In temperament a fanatic, in impulse
a born revolutionist, the word conservatism was to
him as a red rag to a bull. The first clash of
arms was music to his soul. He laughed at the
call for 75,000 volunteers, and demanded the immediate
equipment of an army of a million men. He saw
it grow to 2,000,000. From the first, his eagle
eye had seen the end and all the long, blood-marked
way between. And from the first, he began to plot
the most cruel and awful vengeance in human history.
And now his time had come.
The giant figure in the White House
alone had dared to brook his anger and block the way;
for old Stoneman was the Congress of the United States.
The opposition was too weak even for his contempt.
Cool, deliberate, and venomous alike in victory or
defeat, the fascination of his positive faith and
revolutionary programme had drawn the rank and file
of his party in Congress to him as charmed satellites.
The President greeted him cordially,
and with his habitual deference to age and physical
infirmity hastened to place for him an easy chair near
his desk.
He was breathing heavily and evidently
labouring under great emotion. He brought his
cane to the floor with violence, placed both hands
on its crook, leaned his massive jaws on his hands
for a moment, and then said:
“Mr. President, I have not annoyed
you with many requests during the past four years,
nor am I here to-day to ask any favours. I have
come to warn you that, in the course you have mapped
out, the executive and legislative branches have come
to the parting of the ways, and that your encroachments
on the functions of Congress will be tolerated, now
that the Rebellion is crushed, not for a single moment!”
Mr. Lincoln listened with dignity,
and a ripple of fun played about his eyes as he looked
at his grim visitor. The two men were face to
face at last the two men above all others
who had built and were to build the foundations of
the New Nation Lincoln’s in love and
wisdom to endure forever, the Great Commoner’s
in hate and madness, to bear its harvest of tragedy
and death for generations yet unborn.
“Well, now, Stoneman,”
began the good-humoured voice, “that puts me
in mind ”
The old Commoner lifted his hand with
a gesture of angry impatience:
“Save your fables for fools.
Is it true that you have prepared a proclamation restoring
the conquered province of North Carolina to its place
as a State in the Union with no provision for negro
suffrage or the exile and disfranchisement of its
rebels?”
The President rose and walked back
and forth with his hands folded behind him before
answering.
“I have. The Constitution
grants to the National Government no power to regulate
suffrage, and makes no provision for the control of
’conquered provinces.’”
“Constitution!” thundered
Stoneman. “I have a hundred constitutions
in the pigeonholes of my desk!”
“I have sworn to support but one.”
“A worn-out rag ”
“Rag or silk, I’ve sworn
to execute it, and I’ll do it, so help me God!”
said the quiet voice.
“You’ve been doing it
for the past four years, haven’t you!”
sneered the Commoner. “What right had you
under the Constitution to declare war against a ‘sovereign’
State? To invade one for coercion? To blockade
a port? To declare slaves free? To suspend
the writ of habeas corpus? To create the
State of West Virginia by the consent of two states,
one of which was dead, and the other one of which
lived in Ohio? By what authority have you appointed
military governors in the ‘sovereign’ States
of Virginia, Tennessee, and Louisiana? Why trim
the hedge and lie about it? We, too, are revolutionists,
and you are our executive. The Constitution sustained
and protected slavery. It was ’a
league with death and a covenant with hell,’
and our flag ‘a polluted rag!’”
“In the stress of war,”
said the President, with a far-away look, “it
was necessary that I do things as Commander-in-Chief
of the Army and Navy to save the Union which I have
no right to do now that the Union is saved and its
Constitution preserved. My first duty is to re-establish
the Constitution as our supreme law over every inch
of our soil.”
“The Constitution be d d!”
hissed the old man. “It was the creation,
both in letter and spirit, of the slaveholders of the
South.”
“Then the world is their debtor,
and their work is a monument of imperishable glory
to them and to their children. I have sworn to
preserve it!”
“We have outgrown the swaddling
clothes of a babe. We will make new constitutions!”
“‘Fools rush in where
angels fear to tread,’” softly spoke the
tall, self-contained man.
For the first time the old leader
winced. He had long ago exhausted the vocabulary
of contempt on the President, his character, ability,
and policy. He felt as a shock the first impression
of supreme authority with which he spoke. The
man he had despised had grown into the great constructive
statesman who would dispute with him every inch of
ground in the attainment of his sinister life purpose.
His hatred grew more intense as he
realized the prestige and power with which he was
clothed by his mighty office.
With an effort he restrained his anger,
and assumed an argumentative tone.
“Can’t you see that your
so-called States are now but conquered provinces?
That North Carolina and other waste territories of
the United States are unfit to associate with civilized
communities?”
“We fought no war of conquest,”
quietly urged the President, “but one of self-preservation
as an indissoluble Union. No State ever got out
of it, by the grace of God and the power of our arms.
Now that we have won, and established for all time
its unity, shall we stultify ourselves by declaring
we were wrong? These States must be immediately
restored to their rights, or we shall betray the blood
we have shed. There are no ‘conquered provinces’
for us to spoil. A nation cannot make conquest
of its own territory.”
“But we are acting outside the
Constitution,” interrupted Stoneman.
“Congress has no existence outside
the Constitution,” was the quick answer.
The old Commoner scowled, and his
beetling brows hid for a moment his eyes. His
keen intellect was catching its first glimpse of the
intellectual grandeur of the man with whom he was grappling.
The facility with which he could see all sides of
a question, and the vivid imagination which lit his
mental processes, were a revelation. We always
underestimate the men we despise.
“Why not out with it?”
cried Stoneman, suddenly changing his tack. “You
are determined to oppose negro suffrage?”
“I have suggested to Governor
Hahn of Louisiana to consider the policy of admitting
the more intelligent and those who served in the war.
It is only a suggestion. The State alone has
the power to confer the ballot.”
“But the truth is this little
‘suggestion’ of yours is only a bone thrown
to radical dogs to satisfy our howlings for the moment!
In your soul of souls you don’t believe in the
equality of man if the man under comparison be a negro?”
“I believe that there is a physical
difference between the white and black races which
will forever forbid their living together on terms
of political and social equality. If such be
attempted, one must go to the wall.”
“Very well, pin the Southern
white man to the wall. Our party and the Nation
will then be safe.”
“That is to say, destroy African
slavery and establish white slavery under negro masters!
That would be progress with a vengeance.”
A grim smile twitched the old man’s lips as
he said:
“Yes, your prim conservative
snobs and male waiting-maids in Congress went into
hysterics when I armed the negroes. Yet the heavens
have not fallen.”
“True. Yet no more insane
blunder could now be made than any further attempt
to use these negro troops. There can be no such
thing as restoring this Union to its basis of fraternal
peace with armed negroes, wearing the uniform of this
Nation, tramping over the South, and rousing the basest
passions of the freedmen and their former masters.
General Butler, their old commander, is now making
plans for their removal, at my request. He expects
to dig the Panama Canal with these black troops.”
“Fine scheme that on
a par with your messages to Congress asking for the
colonization of the whole negro race!”
“It will come to that ultimately,”
said the President firmly. “The negro has
cost us $5,000,000,000, the desolation of ten great
States, and rivers of blood. We can well afford
a few million dollars more to effect a permanent settlement
of the issue. This is the only policy on which
Seward and I have differed ”
“Then Seward was not an utterly
hopeless fool. I’m glad to hear something
to his credit,” growled the old Commoner.
“I have urged the colonization
of the negroes, and I shall continue until it is accomplished.
My emancipation proclamation was linked with this
plan. Thousands of them have lived in the North
for a hundred years, yet not one is the pastor of
a white church, a judge, a governor, a mayor, or a
college president. There is no room for two distinct
races of white men in America, much less for two distinct
races of whites and blacks. We can have no inferior
servile class, peon or peasant. We must assimilate
or expel. The American is a citizen king or nothing.
I can conceive of no greater calamity than the assimilation
of the negro into our social and political life as
our equal. A mulatto citizenship would be too
dear a price to pay even for emancipation.”
“Words have no power to express
my loathing for such twaddle!” cried Stoneman,
snapping his great jaws together and pursing his lips
with contempt.
“If the negro were not here
would we allow him to land?” the President went
on, as if talking to himself. “The duty
to exclude carries the right to expel. Within
twenty years we can peacefully colonize the negro in
the tropics, and give him our language, literature,
religion, and system of government under conditions
in which he can rise to the full measure of manhood.
This he can never do here. It was the fear of
the black tragedy behind emancipation that led the
South into the insanity of secession. We can
never attain the ideal Union our fathers dreamed, with
millions of an alien, inferior race among us, whose
assimilation is neither possible nor desirable.
The Nation cannot now exist half white and half black,
any more than it could exist half slave and half free.”
“Yet ‘God hath made of
one blood all races,’” quoted the cynic
with a sneer.
“Yes but finish the
sentence ’and fixed the bounds of
their habitation.’ God never meant that
the negro should leave his habitat or the white man
invade his home. Our violation of this law is
written in two centuries of shame and blood.
And the tragedy will not be closed until the black
man is restored to his home.”
“I marvel that the minions of
slavery elected Jeff Davis their chief with so much
better material at hand!”
“His election was a tragic and
superfluous blunder. I am the President of the
United States, North and South,” was the firm
reply.
“Particularly the South!”
hissed Stoneman. “During all this hideous
war they have been your pets these rebel
savages who have been murdering our sons. You
have been the ever-ready champion of traitors.
And you now dare to bend this high office to their
defence ”
“My God, Stoneman, are you a
man or a savage!” cried the President. “Is
not the North equally responsible for slavery?
Has not the South lost all? Have not the Southern
people paid the full penalty of all the crimes of
war? Are our skirts free? Was Sherman’s
march a picnic? This war has been a giant conflict
of principles to decide whether we are a bundle of
petty sovereignties held by a rope of sand or a mighty
nation of freemen. But for the loyalty of four
border Southern States but for Farragut
and Thomas and their two hundred thousand heroic Southern
brethren who fought for the Union against their own
flesh and blood, we should have lost. You cannot
indict a people ”
“I do indict them!” muttered the old man.
“Surely,” went on the
even, throbbing voice, “surely, the vastness
of this war, its titanic battles, its heroism, its
sublime earnestness, should sink into oblivion all
low schemes of vengeance! Before the sheer grandeur
of its history our children will walk with silent lips
and uncovered heads.”
“And forget the prison pen at Andersonville!”
“Yes. We refused, as a
policy of war, to exchange those prisoners, blockaded
their ports, made medicine contraband, and brought
the Southern Army itself to starvation. The prison
records, when made at last for history, will show
as many deaths on our side as on theirs.”
“The murderer on the gallows
always wins more sympathy than his forgotten victim,”
interrupted the cynic.
“The sin of vengeance is an
easy one under the subtle plea of justice,”
said the sorrowful voice. “Have we not had
enough bloodshed? Is not God’s vengeance
enough? When Sherman’s army swept to the
sea, before him lay the Garden of Eden, behind him
stretched a desert! A hundred years cannot give
back to the wasted South her wealth, or two hundred
years restore to her the lost seed treasures of her
young manhood ”
“The imbecility of a policy
of mercy in this crisis can only mean the reign of
treason and violence,” persisted the old man,
ignoring the President’s words.
“I leave my policy before the
judgment bar of time, content with its verdict.
In my place, radicalism would have driven the border
States into the Confederacy, every Southern man back
to his kinsmen, and divided the North itself into
civil conflict. I have sought to guide and control
public opinion into the ways on which depended our
life. This rational flexibility of policy you
and your fellow radicals have been pleased to call
my vacillating imbecility.”
“And what is your message for the South?”
“Simply this: ‘Abolish
slavery, come back home, and behave yourself.’
Lee surrendered to our offers of peace and amnesty.
In my last message to Congress I told the Southern
people they could have peace at any moment by simply
laying down their arms and submitting to National authority.
Now that they have taken me at my word, shall I betray
them by an ignoble revenge? Vengeance cannot
heal and purify: it can only brutalize and destroy.”
Stoneman shuffled to his feet with impatience.
“I see it is useless to argue
with you. I’ll not waste my breath.
I give you an ultimatum. The South is conquered
soil. I mean to blot it from the map. Rather
than admit one traitor to the halls of Congress from
these so-called States I will shatter the Union itself
into ten thousand fragments! I will not sit beside
men whose clothes smell of the blood of my kindred.
At least dry them before they come in. Four years
ago, with yells and curses, these traitors left the
halls of Congress to join the armies of Catiline.
Shall they return to rule?”
“I repeat,” said the President,
“you cannot indict a people. Treason is
an easy word to speak. A traitor is one who fights
and loses. Washington was a traitor to George
III. Treason won, and Washington is immortal.
Treason is a word that victors hurl at those who fail.”
“Listen to me,” Stoneman
interrupted with vehemence. “The life of
our party demands that the negro be given the ballot
and made the ruler of the South. This can be
done only by the extermination of its landed aristocracy,
that their mothers shall not breed another race of
traitors. This is not vengeance. It is justice,
it is patriotism, it is the highest wisdom and humanity.
Nature, at times, blots out whole communities and
races that obstruct progress. Such is the political
genius of these people that, unless you make the negro
the ruler, the South will yet reconquer the North
and undo the work of this war.”
“If the South in poverty and
ruin can do this, we deserve to be ruled! The
North is rich and powerful the South a land
of wreck and tomb. I greet with wonder, shame,
and scorn such ignoble fear! The Nation cannot
be healed until the South is healed. Let the
gulf be closed in which we bury slavery, sectional
animosity, and all strifes and hatreds. The good
sense of our people will never consent to your scheme
of insane vengeance.”
“The people have no sense.
A new fool is born every second. They are ruled
by impulse and passion.”
“I have trusted them before,
and they have not failed me. The day I left for
Gettysburg to dedicate the battlefield, you were so
sure of my defeat in the approaching convention that
you shouted across the street to a friend as I passed:
‘Let the dead bury the dead!’ It was a
brilliant sally of wit. I laughed at it myself.
And yet the people unanimously called me again to
lead them to victory.”
“Yes, in the past,” said
Stoneman bitterly, “you have triumphed, but mark
my word: from this hour your star grows dim.
The slumbering fires of passion will be kindled.
In the fight we join to-day I’ll break your back
and wring the neck of every dastard and time-server
who fawns at your feet.”
The President broke into a laugh that
only increased the old man’s wrath.
“I protest against the insult of your buffoonery!”
“Excuse me, Stoneman; I have
to laugh or die beneath the burdens I bear, surrounded
by such supporters!”
“Mark my word,” growled
the old leader, “from the moment you publish
that North Carolina proclamation, your name will be
a by-word in Congress.”
“There are higher powers.”
“You will need them.”
“I’ll have help,”
was the calm reply, as the dreaminess of the poet and
mystic stole over the rugged face. “I would
be a presumptuous fool, indeed, if I thought that
for a day I could discharge the duties of this great
office without the aid of One who is wiser and stronger
than all others.”
“You’ll need the help of Almighty God
in the course you’ve mapped out!”
“Some ships come into port that
are not steered,” went on the dreamy voice.
“Suppose Pickett had charged one hour earlier
at Gettysburg? Suppose the Monitor had
arrived one hour later at Hampton Roads? I had
a dream last night that always presages great events.
I saw a white ship passing swiftly under full sail.
I have often seen her before. I have never known
her port of entry, or her destination, but I have always
known her Pilot!”
The cynic’s lips curled with
scorn. He leaned heavily on his cane, and took
a shambling step toward the door.
“You refuse to heed the wishes of Congress?”
“If your words voice them, yes.
Force your scheme of revenge on the South, and you
sow the wind to reap the whirlwind.”
“Indeed! and from what secret
cave will this whirlwind come?”
“The despair of a mighty race
of world-conquering men, even in defeat, is still
a force that statesmen reckon with.”
“I defy them,” growled the old Commoner.
Again the dreamy look returned to
Lincoln’s face, and he spoke as if repeating
a message of the soul caught in the clouds in an hour
of transfiguration:
“And I’ll trust the honour
of Lee and his people. The mystic chords of memory,
stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave
to every living heart and hearthstone all over this
broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union,
when touched again, as they surely will be, by the
better angels of our nature.”
“You’ll be lucky to live to hear that
chorus.”
“To dream it is enough.
If I fall by the hand of an assassin now, he will
not come from the South. I was safer in Richmond,
this week, than I am in Washington, to-day.”
The cynic grunted and shuffled another
step toward the door.
The President came closer.
“Look here, Stoneman; have you
some deep personal motive in this vengeance on the
South? Come, now, I’ve never in my life
known you to tell a lie.”
The answer was silence and a scowl.
“Am I right?”
“Yes and no. I hate the
South because I hate the Satanic Institution of Slavery
with consuming fury. It has long ago rotted the
heart out of the Southern people. Humanity cannot
live in its tainted air, and its children are doomed.
If my personal wrongs have ordained me for a mighty
task, no matter; I am simply the chosen instrument
of Justice!”
Again the mystic light clothed the
rugged face, calm and patient as Destiny, as the President
slowly repeated:
“With malice toward none, with
charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God
gives me to see the right, I shall strive to finish
the work we are in, and bind up the Nation’s
wounds.”
“I’ve given you fair warning,”
cried the old Commoner, trembling with rage, as he
hobbled nearer the door. “From this hour
your administration is doomed.”
“Stoneman,” said the kindly
voice, “I can’t tell you how your venomous
philanthropy sickens me. You have misunderstood
and abused me at every step during the past four years.
I bear you no ill will. If I have said anything
to-day to hurt your feelings, forgive me. The
earnestness with which you pressed the war was an
invaluable service to me and to the Nation. I’d
rather work with you than fight you. But now that
we have to fight, I’d as well tell you I’m
not afraid of you. I’ll suffer my right
arm to be severed from my body before I’ll sign
one measure of ignoble revenge on a brave, fallen
foe, and I’ll keep up this fight until I win,
die, or my country forsakes me.”
“I have always known you had
a sneaking admiration for the South,” came the
sullen sneer.
“I love the South! It is
a part of this Union. I love every foot of its
soil, every hill and valley, mountain, lake, and sea,
and every man, woman, and child that breathes beneath
its skies. I am an American.”
As the burning words leaped from the
heart of the President the broad shoulders of his
tall form lifted, and his massive head rose in unconscious
heroic pose.
“I marvel that you ever made
war upon your loved ones!” cried the cynic.
“We fought the South because
we loved her and would not let her go. Now that
she is crushed and lies bleeding at our feet you
shall not make war on the wounded, dying, and the
dead!”
Again the lion gleamed in the calm gray eyes.