The Plain Truth [excerpt]
President Roosevelt has often been
charged, in the course of his remarkable public career, with a tendency
to immoderation in speech and impulsiveness in conduct. But his
severest critics can have no fault to find with him in the trying
and delicate situation in which he has recently been placed. From
the moment that he was first apprised of the foul deed at Buffalo,
Mr. Roosevelt has conducted himself in a manly, dignified, and characteristically
straightforward way. His discretion has been equaled only by his
kindness and sympathy. No one has ever had reason to doubt Mr. Roosevelt’s
absolute sincerity or the high quality and genuineness of his moral
and intellectual attributes. Neither can any deny to him now that
quality of self-control so essential to one who aspired to be a
national leader and who has become so now by force of circumstance.
——————————
A strange note of discord, and the
only one in the universal sympathy expressed for President McKinley,
while he lay upon a bed of pain, came from Ireland. The common council
of the city of Cork listened to a resolution of sympathy for the
President, proposed by Sir John Scott. It had to be withdrawn because
a labor member, Alderman Cave, opposed it, on the ground that President
McKinley had been a friend of Great Britain but not of Ireland.
Thousands of Irish-Americans, who held distinguished public offices
under President McKinley, testify to the friendship the late President
always manifested for the oppressed of all races. He was, indeed,
a friend of Great Britain, but he was the friend of every enlightened
nation. It is doubtful if any other Republican President ever received
as many votes from the Irish-American element of the country as
did President McKinley. The churlish opposition of the Cork alderman,
therefore, deserves the general contempt with which it was received.
——————————
Fate is peculiar. It knows better
than we do what is best for us. It fixes our destiny without our
knowledge, and often against our will. William McKinley’s most vigorous
battle was his contest for the speakership with Thomas B. Reed,
in 1890, which Reed won. According to custom, Mr. Reed made his
distinguished opponent chairman of the Ways and Means committee,
and thus it was that the protective-tariff measure drafted by that
committee, largely through the influence of Mr. McKinley, came to
be popularly known as “the McKinley bill.” This made McKinley the
champion of the working masses, the candidate of his party for President,
and finally gave him a triumphant election and re-election for the
office of chief magistrate. At the Republican National Convention
at Philadelphia, a little over a year ago, the party leaders of
New York insisted that Governor Roosevelt must accept the tender
of the Vice-Presidency. He resolutely declined, insisting that he
was entitled to re-election to the Governorship. The party leaders
of New York, aided by those of Pennsylvania and several other States,
forced the nomination of Roosevelt, and then compelled his reluctant
acceptance. Scarcely six months have elapsed since his inauguration,
and he is now the President of the United States, with nearly a
full term to serve. This is destiny, and who shall say that the
Fates are always unkind?
|