McKinley Memorial Address
MY friends, I am an active, enthusiastic Democrat.
But with men of all parties, North and South, I stand today as an
American at the grave of the Nation’s Chief.
Another sun that shone so long in
our national skies has gone down and death is enshrouding us with
his chilly shadows. As a great nation, we are again halted here
along life’s mysterious highway and in the silent gloaming, stand
gazing into the dark beyond. We are all come once more to the great
parting of the ways. A distinguished fellow traveler, warm in heart,
resplendent in intellect, but mortally wounded and worn out and
exhausted by the awful march, has taken his last faltering step,
made his last gasp for life and then dropped dead in the weary road.
We cluster close about him. We see his familiar form, the clayey
tenement in which he dwelt, but he himself is absent. In silent
wonder we gaze at one another and each reads in his fellow’s face
the dread question, “Whither has our brother gone?” But no answer
comes from there. In the deepening twilight we look all about us
to see naught else save a single sign board [sic] on which
is painted the iron finger of death, pointing immovably into the
black and pathless abyss beyond, and the great question presses
down upon our hearts—for reason now lags behind—“If a man die, shall
he live again?”
From out this stilly hush there come
three voices giving answer to this momentous question.
The first voice says: “As to whether
your brother’s spirit is dead or still alive, we have not sufficient
evidence; we do not know; we cannot decide. It may be that a brighter
day has dawned, and in the warming sunlight the bud has burst and
died that a fadeless flower may grow, or it may be that unending
night has come and the bud is wrapped in the icy frost of eternal
death; we have not sufficient evidence; we do not know; we cannot
decide. It may be that he who loved [40][41]
companionship so well is now in the rich fruition of his fondest
hopes ’midst spirits just and angels bright, or it may be that like
some luckless star suddenly losing his moorings, he has plunged
out into boundless space, there to wander on forever, lone and unattended
in the pathless void. We have not sufficient evidence; we do not
know; we cannot decide.”
Oh! Agnosticism, is this the only
solace thou canst bring? Is this the only drink thou canst give
to a soul athirst? Is this the cold rock to which hapless Prometheus
must be forever bound, whilst the ever forming vitals of hope are
in turn to be plucked out by the eagle of despair? In the dread
solitude of an hour like this is indecision, the nervous old parent
of mental torment, the only companion thou canst suggest?
There comes another voice, more cheerless
than the first. It says: “Your brother, mind and body, is dead.
As the lighted candle burns itself out and as a candle is obliterated
forever, so he has passed away. He will never think, or love, or
feel again. Reason ever fresh with conquest shall still march on,
but he who fought so knightly amidst her quivering plumes shall
never poise his lance again; your brother’s intellect is dead. Love,
sweet goddess, filling human hearts with bliss, shall still abide,
but he who loved so truly shall never love again; your brother’s
heart is dead. Music, harmony of the universe, shall still roll
on, but he whose soul was stirred so deeply by its rapturous swell,
will ne’er be thrilled again; your brother’s soul, if soul it could
be called, is dead.”
We may not know just why, but whatever
we may have said at other times, some resistless power deep within
us, now cries out, “Stand aside, Atheism; oh, stand aside! Thou
shalt not place the black cap of annihilation upon the noble brow
that sleeps before us.”
“Blessed be that great and Holy Spirit
who breathed us into being and made us immortal like Himself,” there
comes another voice. It is nature’s voice, prompted to speak by
nature’s God. In this night of life, in which we have lost our way,
it is the caged bird of paradise singing darkling in every human
breast and telling us that anon the morn shall rise. Yes, it is
more than this. To us, athwart whose favored skies the beckoning
lights of revelation have been swung, it is the “still small voice”
of the religion of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. This voice says,
“William McKinley still lives—lives where clouds shall never lower
and suns shall set no more.” [41][42]
With uncovered heads, we bend today
above his open grave. These yearnings for immortality for him and
for ourselves, burning now within our breasts like undying fires,
assure us that more of life than of death is here, while this awe
unspeakable remids [sic] us that the boundaries of two worlds
have well nigh touched, and that the winged attendants of the King
of Glory are not far away. In life’s awful battle, fought where
dusky twilight holds perpetual sway, heaven’s messengers of mercy
cease not to search the pallid field of death, pressing the water
of life to the lips of the dying and bearing the ransomed dead to
their eternal home. As visitors from the unseen world lingered about
the Savior’s tomb, so some voice is whispering now that God’s convoys
are tarrying here while we say good-bye to our brother’s soul. Midst
this holy hush we almost feel upon our tear-wet cheeks the downy
fanning of angel wings. Ere we know it, our hearts have left us
and are mounting upward, following Jehovah’s chariots through the
skies. As young eagles reared where the sunlight never comes, when
tossed by the parent bird from out their craggy nest beside some
murky mountain gorge and left to fly or perish on the rocks beneath,
follow their instincts and on intrepid wing mount upward till they
look the blazing king of day directly in the face; so we, thrown
out today above the black vortex of the unknowable, will follow
that holy instinct, common to our race, and mount upward to that
loving God whose radiant face our sins have hidden from our view.
And we can rest assured that He who deceives not the young eagles,
but brings them to the blazing realms for which their eyes were
formed, will never deceive us. If we will but trust Him, not only
with nature’s lamp, but by His Word and Holy Spirit, He will bring
us to the light for which we yearn and for which our souls were
made.
Oh, yes, yes; if we will but trust
in God and in His Holy Son as William McKinley did, some day we
shall meet him on the bright shore to which he’s gone—that Beulah
land where sin and assassination and suffering and death shall come
no more. Some day, some sweet day, we shall walk with him the golden
streets of that Eternal City, where bells never toll, but are chiming
and chiming on forever. Some day, some rapturous day, we shall enjoy
with him the endless rest of unending activity, for disembodied
spirits shall never tire. Some day, some glorious day, we also “shall
be satisfied” when we shall “awake in his likeness.”
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