President McKinley
I suppose that enough
has been said to meet the requirements of this occasion, but the
audience gathered here is of a peculiar character; it is not an
ordinary audience of citizens; it is an audience largely made up
of the students of the University, and my relation is such to them
that it justifies me in saying, at least, a few words to them.
While these lessons of wisdom have
been laid before you, I can not forget the fact that the body of
our departed president lies yonder in an Ohio town, waiting for
burial; and I can not but feel and almost say in the language and
spirit of the Roman orator “my heart is in the coffin there and
I must pause till it come back to me.” I can not talk to you with
the glib and ready tongue that I should perhaps have on other occasions.
I must talk to you not from the intellect, but from the heart. The
nation mourns; the great republic, that in these last few years
of her life has listened to the wise counsel and judgment that have
placed her among the nations of the earth, mourns; the great and
good leader has been struck down and the people mourn. Lessons there
are and many of them on every hand, but first of all it seems to
me that President McKinley [459][460]
was not only a great man, but a good man; and he was so great
and so good that we should not ever have known it, had he not died
in this way. You have been told that he did not possess the matchless
eloquence of a Webster, the deep learning of a Sumner, and the unique
power of a Lincoln, but that he was an all-round, symmetrical man
with his faculties completely under his power; a born leader; a
clean gentleman, so that after he became president he grew and developed
himself and has exhibited a power in his actions that no one could
foresee at the time of his election. Who thought when he took charge
of this government’s affairs in a time of profound peace and prosperity
that his term would be one of such momentous importance? At the
stern behests of our people McKinley led us into a war with Spain;
we conquered Spain; we took the Philippines; we annexed Hawaii;
we appeased China; we settled the money question—all these problems
and the great work of his administration seemed complete and then
in the moment of his highest glory and complete achievement he is
struck down by the bullet of an assassin.
On the morning of the 16th of April,
1865, as I was walking down Chapel Street in New Haven, I was met
by a breathless messenger who said that Lincoln had been shot and
the secretary of state, Seward, had barely escaped assassination.
At such news the heart of the nation stood still, first in a moment
of anger, then in the agony of indescribable sorrow such as this
nation had never known before. But the slaves were free and the
great principles for which this glorious government stands were
secure. Lincoln, whose great heart had been full of sorrow for four
[460][461] years, bearing upon his
heart, as he did, the death of fathers, brothers, and friends, had
gone out in the evening for recreation and relief from duty and
at that hour the bullet of the assassin reaches him and he dies.
On the 2nd of July, 1881 James A. Garfield, president of the United
States, walks the platform in the depot of the city of Washington,
rejoicing in the peace of the moment, as only such a man as he could
rejoice, in the prospect of going back to Williams College which
he dearly loved, to receive the congratulations that would not fail
to be poured upon him by his friends, and it is in that moment of
supreme joy that he is shot down, and you all know how the nation
waited weeks and months in an agony of sorrow and anxiety as he
went slowly down into the valley of the shadow of death.
Less than two weeks ago in the great
Exposition at Buffalo the people of the country had gathered, not
only to see the Exposition, but to meet and enjoy the genial presence
of the president of the United States. Surrounded by the American
people, loyal almost every one of them to their heart’s core, President
McKinley was struck down by the bullet of an assassin and in less
than two weeks is dead.
I am not here this afternoon to discuss
the policy of the country. Friends, I believe in the United States
of America; I believe in my country with all my heart. Born in the
patriotism, religion, and wisdom of the fathers and saved by the
sacrifices of the men and women whose souls were filled with such
principles and honor as made our Union possible, it has been preserved
and will be preserved by the loyal hearts of nearly 80,000,000
of people and will be sanctified by these national sorrows. I have
no fear [461][462] for its future.
But I want to live in a country where there is law; I want
to live in a country where liberty is not license; where plots to
murder are recognized as crime and are punished as crime. I do not
believe that conspiracies to murder either the humblest citizen
or the president of the republic are any part of the liberty for
which our country stands.
I have said that President McKinley
was a great man. I will not follow that thought further, but I wish
to emphasize the thought that President McKinley was a good man,
a good man. He honored his mother, that venerable lady that
shared in the glory of his first inauguration; that had taught him
from the first the principles of the Bible, and he honored her to
the end of his life. He was a man who had no idea of gaining anything
but in a right way; he was a man who would have scorned a gain or
act of selfishness as dishonorable and disgraceful to himself, and
it would have been.
Young men, you are going out into
life soon, into its activities. Remember there is no path that leads
to the highest honor but the path of rectitude; do that which is
right; stand up always for the things that are good, pure, and true;
do your part in bringing on the reign of righteousness; be something;
be a power always for good; know what is right and stand
for it every time, and your influence will be felt in the world.
How many of the 80,000,000 of our people have such a standard God
only can tell; but if the young men of the country will take the
path to glory which is not through selfish and dishonorable ways,
but is the path followed by, and marked out by the Lord Jesus Christ,
there is a glorious future for this country, more glory than is
possible for any [462][463] other country
to attain, for our fathers have established a country of peace and
freedom to every one who wishes liberty and justice. What privileges
are not yours—there are none whatever. The nation is to-day in its
spirit and loyalty to truth as liberal, as just, as beneficent as
in the days of the fathers, and as such it will undoubtedly continue
to be. A nation that honors the name of our blessed Lincoln is a
nation that is going to maintain in their purity the institutions
of the fathers. I have no fears for my country, for I believe in
the people of the country, and I know that they will preserve what
the fathers died to establish. The government goes on. Into McKinley’s
place steps a young man forty-three years old and takes the executive
chair; the youngest man that has ever been president of the United
States; a man eminently worthy to take the place, and eminently
able to fill the place that McKinley filled and to carry out the
policy laid down by McKinley; a scholar, a college man, a man trained
intellectually; a man who, when he had been trained, never forgot
that he owed something to his country; who did not join the self-satisfied
critics who find fault with the work of others, and do nothing to
help; a man who will maintain the same political standard of honor
as in the past, and will resolutely maintain law and order; he has
proved himself eminently fitted to fill every position to which
he has been called, and to meet any responsibility which may be
laid upon him.
I deplore with the deepest sorrow
the great calamity that has come upon us in the death of our good,
grand, and dear President, but I thank God from the bottom of my
heart for Theodore Roosevelt; I thank God for his life. He has been
my ideal of the scholar [463][464]
in politics; he has been an inspiration to me; he is destined to
be an inspiration to me in the future, and I pray now in this closing
moment that the blessings of God may be showered upon him and rest
upon him in this sad and trying hour, and in the days to follow
that God may guard him from the weapons of the assassin and make
him a blessing to the country. God save the republic and make it
great, grand, and good, and may the memory of our dear President,
whose body to-day is to be laid in its last resting place, abide
with us in all future time as an inspiration to a true and manly
life in the service of our country.
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