| [untitled] IT IS A COMMON SAYING OF WRITERS THAT the death of 
              a distinguished public man afflicts a people with a sense of personal 
              loss, but in this case it is no exaggeration. Mr. McKinley had a 
              larger political following than any statesman of our generation 
              and more personal friends than any President who had ever held the 
              office. He possessed the rare qualities that make friends and the 
              rarer qualities that keep them friends in success. But there was 
              no division of politics or friendship in the mourning of the American 
              public last week. The extraordinary pathos of the President’s dying 
              hours, saddened every heart beyond the power of words to express 
              its sadness, and the patience, the magnanimous courage, the Christian 
              faith of the brave gentleman were like a last blessing to the people. 
              It might be said of him in the well-known lines on Addison, that 
              he  
               
                “Taught us how to live, and (oh, too high“The price of knowledge!) taught 
                  us how to die.”
      “It is God’s way, not 
              ours; His will be done,” he said when he was told that death was 
              approaching and then murmured: “Nearer my God to thee, e’en though 
              it be a cross, is my constant prayer.” It will be a long time before 
              the example of this Christian death fades from the minds of the 
              people. |