President McKinley’s Latest Utterances
Some of the latest utterances of
President McKinley are certain to become historic, and to be often
quoted in future years. At least, such ought to be the case. If
a hundredth part of the intense fervor is hereafter put into their
consideration and practical application in the national life that
has been exhibited in the public expression of admiration and laudation
of the late President, it will be well indeed for the country. We
cannot conceive of anything which would do more to check the corrupting
tendencies now confessedly prevailing, and to restore a sober and
healthy national spirit, than the serious acceptance and practice
of the principles which lay at the bottom of these utterances. The
nation has done well to quote them, italicized and double-leaded,
and to post them everywhere in conspicuous places; but does the
nation know that it has thereby set the seal of its most solemn
condemnation on much of what it has recently been doing and allowing?
These utterances, we believe, reveal
the real spirit and principles of the late President, which he would
have carried out to the utmost in his official actions but for certain
serious limitations, as we see the matter, criticism of which it
is not here in place to repeat. We are greatly pleased that these
principles, which are the only rational account of so much that
was admirable and lovable in his character and life, made themselves
so conspicuous in his last days.
There were four of these utterances,
two in his last address and two after he was stricken down, each
of which deserves close attention.
His very last understood words were
that it had been his constant prayer that he might live nearer to
his God. Men are very apt, when they speak at all, to give utterance
to their deepest life and purposes when death is at their gates.
Are all those who have lauded Mr. McKinley to the skies—a large
part of the nation—ready to accept and follow this deepest law of
life,—God’s presence and will? What an amazing transformation we
should see in the public character and aims of the people, if this
were done! It is the fashion to-day to be agnostic, to make little
account of God, even to boast of having gotten beyond the need of
Him, to live as if He were not, to ignore the moral significance
of life, or to set up ambitious and mercenary schemes as if they
were the chief end of man, and gaily to set aside the simplest principles
of righteousness and love, on which both in His Word and in the
human heart He has laid the supreme stress. What the nation needs
above all other things at the present hour is to return to simple,
sincere worship of God, and in humiliation to abandon its adoration
of the idols of material wealth, power and position.
Equally worthy of all acceptation
were President McKinley’s words about the assassin by whom he had
been shot down: “Let no one hurt him,” or words to that effect.
Others raved, and swore, and cried for vengeance, and wished they
had been present to blow in pieces the wretch. Throughout the nation
men of sense and Christian conduct, at ordinary times, talked as
if they had never heard of the Christ, and as if the original three
Furies had suddenly entered into them. The stricken President thought
and spoke of the miserable man who had smitten him, in that kindly
and merciful way which made one instinctively think of the Man of
the Cross. Lynching! There were in heart a million lynchers that
day, lawless men of blood, but the President was not one of them.
And if lynching, with kindred forms of lawlessness at home and abroad,
is ever banished from the land, it will only be by the possession
and exhibition of the spirit shown by the lamented President that
day in Buffalo. Every citizen who speaks the praises of McKinley’s
noble conduct at that dark moment, and does not at the same time
abandon in [213][214] toto
this spirit of brutalism and vengeance, is solemnly condemned out
of his own mouth.
In his address the previous day President
McKinley had said, in regard to our commercial relations with foreign
countries: “The period of exclusiveness is past. The expansion of
our trade and commerce is the pressing problem. Commercial wars
are unprofitable. A policy of good-will and friendly trade relations
will prevent reprisals. Reciprocity treaties are in harmony with
the spirit of the times; measures of retaliation are not.”
This is the enunciation of a distinctly
pacific policy, squarely opposed to all commercial war, and in essence
contradictory of much of our proceeding in the past. It will save
the nation from an incalculable amount of friction in its foreign
relations, and at the same time promote the steady prosperity of
the masses of the people, if this advice is taken, and we quit speaking
of other countries and acting towards them in the spirit of commercial
haughtiness, which has too much characterized us in the past, and
which is just now awakening against us alarm and ill-will in more
than one quarter. The adoption of this friendly give-and-take policy,
and the abandonment of our former exclusiveness, would be a much
more worthy memorial to the lamented President than a bronze or
stone monument in every city of the land. The period of exclusiveness
in any sense ought to have passed. A world-power, so-called, thrusting
itself boastfully into the affairs of all parts of the globe, may
be essentially much more exclusive than a nation which minds its
own business and trades and associates, in a spirit of good-will
and friendship, with all. Let the lauders of William McKinley take
seriously to heart this utterance of his.
A still more important passage of
the Buffalo speech was this: “God and man have linked the nations
together. No nation can any longer be indifferent to any other.
And as we are brought more and more in touch with each other, the
less occasion is there for misunderstanding and the stronger the
disposition, when we have differences, to adjust them in the Court
of Arbitration, which is the noblest form for the settlement of
international disputes. Let us ever remember that our real interest
is in concord, not conflict, and that our real eminence rests in
the victories of peace, not those of war.”
These words need little comment, but
they need to be much heeded. They reveal, as we have always believed,
that President McKinley, in spite of the false courses which he
took in subservience to self-seeking and irrational pressure, was
at heart essentially a man of peace. He tried for a long time, we
believe conscientiously, to prevent the Spanish war, which he always
considered unnecessary. He supported with all the strength of his
position the Hague Peace Conference. He offered his good offices
to try to bring to an end the fratricidal South African war; it
has come out since his death that he did this a second time in a
more earnest way than at first. He looked forward with great hopes
to the Pan-American Congress now meeting, and did everything in
his power to prepare for its success. The words that we have quoted
show clearly that, though some of his actions and speeches under
the baneful pressure of circumstances seemed to indicate an opposite
spirit, he yet conceived truly the real mission of our Republic
among the powers of the earth, and likewise the relations of friendship
and mutual service which ought to exist among all the nations.
If the nation, which has fallen in
reverence at his feet, only lays to heart these final utterances,
we shall have a genuine and general revival of godliness, of tenderness
and humaneness of feeling, of Christian respect and consideration
for other peoples, and we shall prepare for concord and the victories
of peace, and not waste our energies and tens of millions of our
resources in preparing the instruments of conflict and of war.
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