The President’s Wife
THE calmness with which the President asked, “Am I shot?” the lack
of excitement or of any other expression, the evident absence of
any kind of fear of what might be before him in the next hour, is
the kind of bravery that sends a feeling of pride in their chief
officer through the veins of all Americans. Whatever else Mr. McKinley
is, he is a brave man—a man who has exhibited in this critical moment
the dignity of a Christian and a soldier.
Very few, if any of us, can begin
to appreciate the devotion and affection of Mrs. McKinley for her
husband. More than once the President has actually saved her life
by his influence over her. She believes in him so thoroughly that
whatever he tells her she knows to be true. Her ill-health, the
strain of constantly recurring nervous attacks, would long ago have
forced her to give up the struggle, but relying on her husband,
filled with absolute confidence and affection for him, she has held
on to life. And now when he lies near death the sick woman has borne
the news of his danger, and is ministering to him with as calm attention
as any one of those about him. There is something here that is as
old as the hills, but that never fails to seem new and fine, because
it shows a little of the beautiful and the true side of humanity.
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