Author’s Preface
ON the day before Major McKinley was nominated for
the Presidency, an artist distinguished for the fetching touch of
his pencil in catching and fixing in a few lines, stood in the door
of a room where the Major was seated, and never having before seen
the famous face, was regarding it with personal and professional
intensity, when an acquaintance approached him and said, “Have you
been introduced to the Governor?” “No,” said the artist; “not yet,
presently gladly. Let me study him a moment unbeknown, just as he
is. Why there is no picture that does him justice. I am right glad
to see him when he has no idea of a possible sketch, and no thought
of himself. I did not think so, but he is a great man. He is splendid,
and there is no one like him in the country. Why did any one ever
say he was not a strong man?” The artist perceived at a glance what
all who study Major McKinley find out—that he is a strong man and
a great one. He is a fortunate combination of excellent, admirable,
and lovable traits and qualities. Alike in his boyish patriotism,
adventure and bravery in war, and the experiences of his mature
years in [iii][iv] the National Congress,
and the straightforward discharge of executive duty as Governor
of a great State, there has been the heroic simplicity, unselfish
and constant, that has attracted the attention and popular favor
of ever-widening circles of his fellow-citizens, until his glory
has become a precious possession of the American people, and inspired
with it they did not wait for the stated organizations to move,
before they proclaimed in many unmistakable ways that he was their
candidate for the Presidency, and the National Convention of the
Republican party, as a representative assembly, ratified the public
will. The life of McKinley shows the stronger and more graceful
lines with greater strength and grace the better it is known. The
office of his biographer is one of grateful satisfaction. His record
is clear. There is no line for love to lament or for charity to
cover—no chapter for the advocate to blot or the diplomat to obscure.
This is one of the rarest of lives, shining in every part with the
inner light of the truth that is honor’s self; and the radiance
of unclouded day reveals only stainless symmetry, and the harmony
of open motives with consummate achievement. He could not advance
to the elevation he occupies without encountering enmity and combating
imputation; but no charge was ever contrived that he had other fault
than that of friendliness perhaps too forgiving, or of confidence
too generous. He is a man who will go on growing in the affection
of the gentle and the estimation of the [iv][v]
judicious. The potency of his character and intellect and the kindliness
of his heart, declare in his presence, that the favorite disparagements
in which his assailants indulge, the conventional accusations of
partisan warfare, are but fictions that are frivolous. The verdict
of the artist, that he is a strong, great man, will be confirmed
by all the people, when the performance of the task they appoint
for him becomes history.
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