Lincoln as Poet
Lincoln's oldest surviving verses, written when he was between fifteen and
seventeen years old, appear in his arithmetic book. They are little more than
doggerel.
Abraham Lincoln
his hand and pen
he will be good but
god knows When1
*****
Abraham Lincoln his hand and pen he will be good
but god knows When Time What an emty vaper
tis and days how swift they are swift as an Indian arr[ow]
fly on like a shooting star the presant moment Just [is here]
then slide away in h[as]te that we [can] never say they['re ours]
but
[only say] th[ey]'re past
*****
Abraham Lincoln is my nam[e]
And
with my pen I wrote the same
I wrote in both hast and speed
and left it here for fools to read
Lincoln's most serious poetry was written in 1846. The limited information
that exists about their composition comes from comes from Lincoln's correspondence
with Andrew Johnston, a fellow lawyer
and Whig politician from Quincy, Illinois. In a
letter to Johnston on February 24, 1846, Lincoln wrote:
Feeling a little poetic this evening, I have concluded to redeem my
promise this evening by sending you the piece you expressed the wish to
have.2 You find it enclosed.
I wish I could think of something else to say; but I believe I can not. By
the way, would you like to see a piece of poetry of my
own making? I have a piece that is almost done, but I find a deal of trouble
to finish it.3
The poem Lincoln alluded to is "My Childhood-Home I See Again." It
was completed shortly after Lincoln's message to Johnston.
[View
Transcript]
Page One Page
Two Page
Three Page
Four
When Lincoln later edited the poem, he divided it into two sections, or cantos.
He sent the first canto to Johnston in an April 18, 1846 letter, noting that
it was intended to be the first section of a larger poem he was working
on. In the letter, Lincoln
preceded the text of the canto by describing
the circumstances that led him to write it:
In the fall of 1844, thinking I might aid some to carry the State
of Indiana for Mr. Clay, I went into the neighborhood in that State in which
I
was raised, where my mother and sister were buried, and from which I had
been absent about fifteen years. That part of the country is, within itself,
as
unpoetical as any spot of the earth; but still, seeing it and its objects
and inhabitants aroused feelings in me which were certainly poetry; though
whether
my expression of those feelings is poetry is quite another question. When
I got to writing, the change of subjects divided the think into four little
divisions
or cantos, the first only of which I send you now and may send the others
hereafter.4
Lincoln sent the second canto to Johnston in his letter of September 6, 1846.
Lincoln introduced the canto to Johnston in the following manner:
You remember when I wrote you from Tremont last spring, sending you
a little canto of what I called poetry, I promised to bore you with another
some time. I now fulfil the promise. The subject of the present one is
an insane man. His name is Matthew Gentry. He is three years older than I,
and when we
were boys we went to school together. He was rather a bright lad, and the
son of the rich man of our very poor neighbourhood. At the age of nineteen
he unaccountably
became furiously mad, from which condition he gradually settled down into
harmless insanity. When, as I told you in my other letter I visited my old
home in the
fall of 1844, I found him still lingering in this wretched condition. In
my poetizing mood I could not forget the impression his case made upon me.5
Transcriptions of both cantos (under the title "My Childhood's Home I
See Again") as they appeared in Lincoln's letters to Johnston can be read
online through the Representative
Poetry Online web site.
At the end of Lincoln's September 6 letter, he told Johnston that "if
I should ever send another [poem], the subject will be a "Bear
Hunt."6
In the next letter Lincoln sent Johnston (February 25, 1847) Lincoln did in
fact send Johnston another poem. Replying to Johnston's offer to publish the
first two cantos of his poems, Lincoln wrote: "To say the least, I am
not at all displeased with your proposal to publish the poetry, or doggerel,
or whatever else it may be called, which I sent you. I consent that it may
be done, together which the third canto, which I now send you."7 It
is probable that the third canto Lincoln sent to Johnston was "The
Bear Hunt."
Lincoln continued to compose poems in subsequent years, though none as substantial
as those written in 1846. On September 28, 1858, Lincoln wrote the following
verses "in the autograph album of Rosa Haggard, daughter of the proprietor
of the hotel at Winchester, Illinois, where he stayed when speaking at that
place on the same date":8
To Rosa—
You are young, and I am older;
You are hopeful, I am not—
Enjoy life, ere it grow colder—
Pluck the roses ere they rot.
Teach your beau to heed the lay—
That sunshine soon is lost in shade—
That now's as good as any day—
To take thee, Rose, ere she fade.9
Similarly, on September 30, 1858, Lincoln wrote the following verse to Rosa's
sister Linnie Haggard:
To Linnie—
A sweet plaintive song did I hear,
And I fancied that she was the singer—
May emotions as pure, as that song set a-stir
Be the worst that the future shall bring her.10
Lincoln's last documented verse was written July 19, 1863, in response to
the North's victory in the Battle of Gettysburg:
Verse
on Lee's Invasion of the North11
Gen. Lees invasion of the
North written by himself—
In eighteen sixty three, with pomp,
and mighty swell,
Me and Jeff's Confederacy, went
forth to sack Phil-del,
The Yankees the got arter us, and
giv us particular hell,
And we skedaddled back again,
And didn't sack Phil-del.
There has been recent
news that a poem entitled "The Suicide's Soliloquy," published
in the August 25, 1838 issue of the Sangamo Journal, may
have been written by Lincoln. While many scholars believe Lincoln is
indeed the author of the poem, consensus has not yet been
reached. The announcement of the poem's possible author first appeared in the
2004 Spring newsletter of
the Abraham Lincoln Association. The text of the poem, along with the introduction
that precedes it in the Sangamo Journal, follows below.
THE SUICIDE'S SOLILOQUY.
The following lines were said to have been found
near the bones of a man supposed
to have committed
suicide, in a deep forest, on the Flat Branch of the
Sangamon, some time ago.
Here, where the lonely hooting owl
Sends forth his midnight moans,
Fierce wolves shall o'er my carcase growl,
Or buzzards pick my bones.
No fellow-man shall learn my fate,
Or where my ashes lie;
Unless by beasts drawn round their bait,
Or by the ravens' cry.
Yes! I've resolved the deed to do,
And this the place to do it:
This heart I'll rush a dagger through,
Though I in hell should rue it!
Hell! What is hell to one like me
Who pleasures never know;
By friends consigned to misery,
By hope deserted too?
To ease me of this power to think,
That through my bosom raves,
I'll headlong leap from hell's high brink,
And wallow in its waves.
Though devils yell, and burning chains
May waken long regret;
Their frightful screams, and piercing pains,
Will help me to forget.
Yes! I'm prepared, through endless night,
To take that fiery berth!
Think not with tales of hell to fright
Me, who am damn'd on earth!
Sweet steel! come forth from our your sheath,
And glist'ning, speak your powers;
Rip up the organs of my breath,
And draw my blood in showers!
I strike! It quivers in that heart
Which drives me to this end;
I draw and kiss the bloody dart,
My last—my only friend!
Notes
1. The text of Lincoln's three childhood verses
is taken from The
Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, ed. Roy P. Basler, vol. 1
(New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1953), 1. Catalog
Record
2. William Knox's "Mortality,
or Oh, Why Should the Spirit of Mortal Be Proud?" which was
Lincoln's favorite poem.
3. Basler, 366-367.
4. Ibid., 378.
5. Ibid., 384-385.
6. Ibid., 386.
7. Ibid., 392. Both cantos were published in the May 5, 1847
issue of the Quincy Whig, which Johnston co-owned, under the title "The
Return." Canto
one was subtitled "Part I—Reflection," canto
two "Part
II—The Maniac." Basler notes that the Whig did
not publish the third canto (likely "The Bear-Hunt"),
perhaps because Johnston "concluded
that it was unsuitable for printing as a companion piece
to the other cantos."
8. The Collected
Works of Abraham Lincoln,
ed. Roy P. Basler, vol. 3 (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University
Press, 1953), 203. Catalog
Record
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., 204.
11. The Collected Works of
Abraham Lincoln. Supplement, 1832-1865, ed. Roy
P. Basler (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1974),
194.
|