McKinley-Roosevelt
THE two names associated such a little while ago as candidates
on a Presidential ticket, and in a partizan [sic] sense,
are associated now in a new sense as successive Presidents of our
country in circumstances of tragic import.
McKinley the candidate, the President,
now takes his place in history among the American Presidents whose
assumption of public duty led to a shocking and murderous end. His
last hours threw back on his career a strong light. Even those of
his countrymen who had conscientiously criticized many of his acts
and measures felt a patriotic pride in those noble traits of character
which shone bright in the time of suffering and calamity. His magnanimity
toward a treacherous assassin, his consideration for friends, his
quick regret at having brought embarrassment to the enterprise at
Buffalo which it was his errand to assist, his calm fearlessness
and resignation in the face of death—all these but glorify those
engaging personal characteristics which have continuously been felt
by those nearest the late President. McKinley’s critics have believed
that his geniality was sometimes the occasion of error in action;
that the fine “quality” had its “defect”: but every one recognizes
now that his amiability was genuine and ineradicable; that his kind-heartedness
was never a mere pose, but that it was so deep in his nature that
the most trying, the most terrible events could only intensify it,
and make it conspicuous and splendid—as it was profoundly pathetic—in
the eyes of the whole world.
It is satisfactory to his fellow-countrymen,
regardless of political predilections, to realize that President
McKinley’s very last public utterance was on an unusually exalted
plane. His speech at the Pan-American Exposition the day before
he was shot was an enthusiastic expression of the higher meanings
of that gathering of American nations. The President’s outlook upon
the world was lofty, generous, humane; his words breathed the spirit
of fraternity and peace. That speech should be regarded as his political
testament, and might well serve as the platform for the administration
of his constitutional successor; and indeed the words uttered by
President Roosevelt on the very day on which he assumed his new
office may be held to imply this exact intention. Said President
McKinley:
Let us ever remember that our
interest [that of the nations of the New World] is in concord,
not conflict, and that our real eminence rests in the victories
of peace, not those of war. We hope that all who are represented
here may be moved to higher and nobler effort for their own
and the world’s good, and that out of this city may come not
only greater commerce and trade for us all, but, more essential
than these, relations of mutual respect, confidence, and friendship
which will deepen and endure. Our earnest prayer is that God
will graciously vouchsafe prosperity, happiness, and peace to
all our neighbors, and like blessings to all the peoples and
powers of earth.
As to our new President, there can
be no fear that the higher interests of the nation will suffer in
his hands.
This is true not only because the
manner of his accession is so harrowing and sobering; not only because
the tremendous power and dignity of the office must ever impose
a solemn mood upon its occupant; not only because, as Napoleon said
of himself in a great crisis of his career, he is no longer young;
not only because of his extraordinary training and special knowledge
derived from experience in legislation, in the national Civil Service
Commission, in municipal administration (both as the chairman of
the Roosevelt Commission of Inquiry and in the Police Commission
of New York), derived too from his experience in State administration,
in navy administration, and in the exigencies of an army in the
field; not only because of his wide range of acquaintance with affairs
of the East and of the West, but because Theodore Roosevelt, from
the beginning of his career to this present hour, through whatever
mistakes of temperament and of judgment, has ever had as his ideal
all that is noblest in American citizenship. From the time when,
an enthusiastic youth fresh from the Harvard of Emerson and Lowell,
he rushed into the fierce battle of New York politics, to the moment
when, with a great pang at his heart, but with unflinching courage
and determination, he took the oath of office as chief magistrate
of the United States, he has striven to do his whole duty as a servant
and, at the same time, a leader of the people. Honesty and courage,
fraternity and justice, have been his sincere watchwords.
Roosevelt has been the subject of
criticism by not a few who thought that in practice he sometimes
carried his theory of “common sense” beyond the bounds of legitimate
compromise to the point of actual surrender. But those who have
been nearest him have held that his executive actions have been
throughout consistent with his own views of duty and his always
announced endeavor to obtain in result, if not the very best, at
least as near the best as a brave and sensible [148][149]
administrator could reach. Few, if any, who have been in a position
to know all the facts in mooted cases have for a moment doubted
the sincerity and devotion of the man, even if they have continued
to doubt the rightness of a given decision.
Whatever apprehensions concerning
his course which at any time even his friends may have cherished
have all arisen from the possession of a temperament one of the
most phenomenal existing among the public men of modern times. From
this temperament come a physical and mental energy and a power of
endurance most remarkable. If he were noted merely for abounding
physical courage, impetuosity, love of conflict, mental alertness
and ability, tremendous industry in administrative work, and for
political success, he would still be a striking figure in public
life. But the interesting and important thing about Theodore Roosevelt
is that he puts all the resources of this extraordinary temperament—all
his chivalric bravery and exhaustless energy—at the service of high
political ideals. In the still active ranks of statesmen he was
among the first to see that the full and frank adoption of the merit
system is an absolute requisite of good government. He fought valiantly
for this system when he was a member of the national Civil Service
Commission; he put civil service reform into practice when President
of the New York Police Board; and as Governor of New York he saw
to it that the legislature should enact the best State laws on the
subject in vogue in all the States of the Union.
The hopes cherished by his well-wishers—and
in this great emergency they should be the men of right feeling
everywhere—are based upon their belief that he is fully able to
resist the temptation to compromise principle, and that—now that
the accidents which made him Vice-President and President, against
his wish, have given him the highest position to which his ambition
could aspire—he will rise to the level of the best impulses and
actions of his unique career. They believe, too, that he is honest
in his reiterated declarations of the fundamental creed of his political
life. This creed he has preached over and over in words no less
precise than eloquent, and nowhere more clearly than in the following
pregnant sentences:
There can be no meddling with
the laws of righteousness, of decency, of morality. We are in
honor bound to put into practice what we preach; to remember
that we are not to be excused if we do not; and that in the
last resort no material prosperity, no business acumen, no intellectual
development of any kind, can atone in the life of a nation for
the lack of the fundamental qualities of courage, honesty, and
common sense.
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