The Verdict, and the Opportunity
No man is wholly free either from defects in personal
characteristics or from mistakes of judgment, but when a national
figure passes into history it is a wholesome thing that the larger
emphasis should be placed upon those results of his public work
which have most vitally affected the national welfare. If they have
affected it for the worse, the truth should be frankly told; but
in the present case it may be accurately said of Mr. McKinley’s
administration, as a whole, that it restored financial confidence
and business prosperity, was a unifying force within the nation,
and materially advanced the United States in world-wide influence
and broad opportunity for good. He was not personally the creator
of all this, but he gave the weight of his influence and encouragement
to the side of most of the tenden- [300][301]
cies which brought it to pass. Whatever mistaken steps have been
taken are not irretrievable, and it is in our power to make the
results of the McKinley administration tell with increasing force
for abundant prosperity at home, international peace, and the steady
growth of civilization among the barbaric and backward races.
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