Publication information |
Source: Atlantic Monthly Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “The Death of the President” Author(s): Perry, Bliss Date of publication: October 1901 Volume number: 88 Issue number: 527 Pagination: 432b-32d |
Citation |
Perry, Bliss. “The Death of the President.” Atlantic Monthly Oct. 1901 v88n527: pp. 432b-32d. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination; McKinley assassination (public response); William McKinley (legacy). |
Named persons |
Edmund Burke; James A. Garfield; Abraham Lincoln; William McKinley; Walt Whitman. |
Notes |
Credit for authorship appears in a later published Atlantic Monthly index rather than with the article itself. |
Document |
The Death of the President
For the third time within the memory of men who
still feel themselves young, the President of the United States has been struck
down by an assassin. Each of these crimes was as wanton as it was remediless.
No shadow of excuse or palliation—except upon the charitable presumption of
insanity—can be found for the vainglorious actor, the disappointed office seeker,
and the self-confessed anarchist, who treacherously took the lives of Lincoln,
Garfield, and McKinley. Lincoln’s death was like the close of a great, mysterious
tragedy. Garfield’s had its own peculiar note of pathos; and though Lincoln’s
ever increasing fame has done something to eclipse the memory of the second
“martyr President,” the grief of the nation in 1881 was no less genuine, and
naturally more widespread, than in the discordant days of 1865. But the circumstances
of President McKinley’s assassination have been such as to cause even more general
and poignant sorrow to the nation as a whole. United as never before, enjoying
an era of political good feeling, and universally attracted by the lovable personal
qualities of their President, the citizens of the United States, without regard
to sectional or party differences, have been stunned and sickened by his murder.
The behavior of our people during the days that
intervened between the firing of the fatal shot and the death of the President
has been thoroughly characteristic. The first shock and amazement were followed
by an outburst of anger against anarchists of every stripe. Even the clergy,
upon the first Sunday after that ill-starred Friday, made use of ill-considered
appeals to the mere spirit of revenge. This mood passed with calmer second thoughts,
and with those swiftly mounting expectations—American-like in their optimism,
but alas, how futile!—of the President’s recovery. Then came the sudden change
for the worse, the abandonment of hope, the hours of hushed waiting for the
end, and at last, in those moving words written by Whitman on the night of Garfield’s
passing:—
“The sobbing of the bells, the sudden death-news everywhere,
The slumberers rouse, the rapport of the People,
(Full well they know that message in the darkness,
Full well return, respond within their breasts, their brains, the sad reverberations.)
The passionate toll and clang—city to city, joining, sounding, passing,
Those heart-beats of a Nation in the night.”
The heart-beats were those of a nation always swiftly responsive to generous
emotions, stirred now beyond its wont by tender sympathy, and thrilled by the
parting words that fell, with such incomparable felicity, from the lips of the
dying President. His quiet courage and simple trust were contagious, and upon
Sunday, the 15th, the public’s mood had changed from one of blind anger and
dismay to faith in the perpetuation of our system of self-government and faith
in God.
But that the situation is in some respects very
grave is generally realized. So far as the American people can protect the life
of their Chief Magistrate against the common enemies of all governments, no
effort will be spared to do so. A stricter enforcement of existing legislation,
possibly new legislation looking to the closer supervision of the speech and
action of suspicious elements in the community, is likely to follow. A blow
directed against our President is a menace to each one of us, and we have full
right to take every precaution against the foes of established order. But in
[432b][432c] a democracy like ours, founded upon
free opinion and free speech, choosing its rulers from the ranks, and desiring
those rulers to mingle more or less freely, during their term of office, with
their fellow citizens, it becomes difficult and probably impossible to surround
the life of an American President with those safeguards with which European
sovereigns have grown sadly familiar. In witnessing the slaying of our Chief
Magistrate by an anarchist, we are sharing in the evil inheritance of Old World
tyranny and absolutism, without being able to utilize those defensive measures
which absolutism makes possible. The only permanently effective weapon against
anarchy, in a self-governing republic, is respect for law. Fortunately, this
weapon is within the reach of every citizen of the American commonwealth; and
we believe that the untimely death of the President has already resulted in
a profound popular reaction against lawlessness in every form.
Sorrow over the murder of the Chief Magistrate
is thus naturally tinged with resentment against its cause, and with solicitude
for the future. But it was the rare fortune of Mr. McKinley to endear himself
personally to all classes of his countrymen, so that indignation against the
attack on our government is merged into a keen sense of individual bereavement.
Few men, except his assassin, have stood in that gracious presence without feeling
kindly sentiments toward such a courteous and noble nature. Throughout a full
life passed in the heat of party conflict, and under the constant misrepresentation
and detraction which are the lot of every servant of the public, Mr. McKinley
maintained a sweetness of temper, a cheerfulness of converse, an almost womanly
tact and sympathy, which turned his most casual acquaintances into friends.
Death simplifies things and men with strange swiftness, and while, in this hour
of national bereavement, many are thinking of the dead statesman, more, we believe,
are remembering only the man, who in every relation of life and post of service
kept clean hands and a pure heart. During those terrible days in Buffalo his
thoughts seemed to be for the comfort and happiness of others, not of himself,
and there was surely no theatric display in the words of unaffected piety and
resignation which were the last to move his lips.
The hour of a statesman’s death is never the day
of judgment of his services to his country. In recent American history Mr. McKinley
has played a great part. It was reviewed not long ago in this magazine by a
writer who enjoyed the President’s confidence and was in full sympathy with
his policy. The story does not need to be told again. Nor do we believe that
its full significance can be appreciated at the present moment. The stream of
world-life into which America has been guided is running with too swift a current,
and our national sense of exhilaration and mastery is too strong to make us
patient with an analysis of motives or with a precise inventory of gain and
loss. All this must be left to the slow but irreversible verdict of time. Yet
it seems to us certain that future historians will assign to McKinley a high
place among the Presidents of the United States. They will credit him, we believe,
with uncommon endowments, which he utilized with consummate skill; with views
of our national opportunity and destiny which grew steadily broader until his
very latest public utterance; and with a lifelong devotion, in war and peace,
to what he believed to be the good of the American people. It must be remembered
that the vexed questions temporarily identified with his name, as for instance
the tariff or the policy of the country toward contiguous or distant foreign
territory, are questions of constant recurrence and debate under constitutional
governments like ours. The permanence of these themes of discus- [432c][432d]
sion, if there were nothing more, would serve to keep McKinley’s name before
the public mind. But when one adds to this the fact that his presidency fell
in a period of unexampled material prosperity and of new and vital relations
between this country and foreign powers, there is no fear, even were his personal
attributes less notable, that William McKinley’s career will not be held in
perpetual memory.
Yet for the moment all such thoughts of his present
and future fame are effaced by pity and sheer manly pride: pity for his cruel
death, and pride in the tranquillity with which he faced it. He passed away
as he had lived, in chivalrous devotion to those dear to him and in peace both
with his own conscience and with the will of God. Such an example, brought home
as it has been to every household by the public press—a service which outweighs
a thousand evils of newspaper publicity—not only knits us together by the bonds
of a common brotherhood of sorrow, but deepens the national faith in the reality
of spiritual things. Without such faith in spiritual realities there can be
no self-government worthy of the name. “The worthy gentleman who has been snatched
from us,” said Burke, in the well-known passage upon the sudden death of his
rival in the Bristol election, “has feelingly told us what shadows we are and
what shadows we pursue.” But the death of the foremost citizen of our republic
has served rather to remind us of the enduring fabric of the life of man. His
own life was grounded in faith and hope and love. These abide, and even in this
time of mourning the faith and hope and love of the American people are greater
than ever before. The assault upon democratic institutions has strengthened
the popular loyalty to them. A sane hope in the future of the United States
was never more fully justified than at this hour. The boundless love of the
plain people for one of their own number has been not only deeply touching,
but infinitely reassuring.
The new President, who has taken the oath of office
under such solemn circumstances, is a man of character and force, of varied
experience, high standards, and tried patriotism. Every good citizen will wish
him well in the great responsibilities which he has been called to assume, and
will pray that, like his beloved predecessor, he may fulfill his duties with
serenity of spirit, and face the inscrutable chances of the future without fear.