William McKinley
Death makes mourners of us all. There is scarcely an American citizen
but has at some period of time, when visiting the cemetery, shed
a gentle tear upon the green mound raised over the graves of loved
ones gone. Well do we remember when the electric flash brought the
sad news that the “God-like” Webster slept beneath the shades at
Marshfield; again when informed through the same instrumentality
that the clarion voice of Clay was hushed and would no more be heard
amid the councils of the nation, that the Great Harry of the West,
the ablest Senator of them all, lay cold in death at Ashland; and
again when red-handed treason stalked boldly forth in the land and
strong hearts and able minds were needed to pilot the old Ship of
State to safety, we were called to mourn the death of our own loved
Douglas, who sleeps by the Lake, made classic by his own munificent
hand, left to sing a fitting requiem to his memory as wafted by
the gentle winds of heaven on, on to mid-ocean.
These were all great losses to our
nation—there being no one left at the time to take their places—yet
they were given in answer to our heavenly Father’s call; and while
our loss was great, we could but say amen and go forward with bowed
heads and bleeding hearts in the discharge of our duties, as if
nothing of the kind had occurred—but not so in the present emergency.
Multiply our grief a thousand—yes, a thousand times a thousand-fold
over the loss of relatives, friends and statesmen, called in the
regular way, and it will not compare with our loss over the assassination
of the President of the United States. It is not at the loss of
the man we grieve, though great and good he was, but it is the loss
of the President of the United States—to strike a blow at him sends
a thrill of pain to every true American heart. While this is not
the first instance of the kind that has befallen us, yet, if possible,
it is more painful to our people and far more dangerous in tendency
toward the life of the nation. The assassination of President Lincoln
and of General Garfield was the act of the individuals, Booth and
Guiteau. There was no political party or body of people behind either
of them; theirs was the work of a morbid, vitiated mind, maddened
by drink, or a depraved na- [1][2]
ture lost to all self control. Not so in this case. Czolgosz, the
terrible wretch that he is, was only an instrument in the hands
of a political organization of people in this country, who have
by their actions forfeited all right or claim to citizenship and
should be expatriated at the earliest day possible and placed in
captivity on some lonely island far removed from all the rest of
the world and left there to work or starve and enjoy only the company
of themselves.
The fathers in framing the Constitution
of the United States made ample provisions for the country in emergencies
like the present. At the death of Presidents Lincoln and Garfield,
Vice Presidents Johnson and Arthur took the oath of office as President
and entered upon the duties of the high office just as Vice Presidents
Tyler and Fillmore had done at the death of Presidents Harrison
and Taylor. There was no shock to the business or political interests
of the country then, and there should be none now. While this occasion
calls for prompt, rigid, vigorous legislation to prevent its recurrence,
fortunately for our common country we have a president in the person
of Theodore Roosevelt who has the ability, courage and firmness
to rise to the occasion and who will use all the power at his command
to see that adequate laws are enacted by congress to enable him
to crush out Anarchism in the United States, and clothed with that
power, he will discharge his duty to the letter and spirit of the
law; and in the performance of that duty he will be sustained by
all true American citizens regardless of party ties, creeds, or
religions.
If beauty can come from such a terrible
crime as we have just witnessed, it is in the fact of the unanimity
of sentiment of love for our President on the part of the people
of the civilized world. From the far off countries of the Old World,
as well as at home, the South, the North, the East, the West, the
Jew and the Gentile, the Catholic and the Protestant, comes the
universal cry, as if with one voice saying, God save the President!
God have mercy upon the American people!
William McKinley was the obedient
son, the true friend, the good husband, the brave soldier, the able
statesman, “the noblest work of God, an honest man,” respected and
honored by his own political party when living, loved and mourned
by all when dead.
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