William McKinley
THE dawn of the twentieth century finds eighty millions
of American people bowed in grief. A citizen has fallen; the parting
scene is past; the bells have tolled; a sob of sorrow and a groan
of pain have gone up from the grief-torn bosom of the world; and
the funeral train with mournful aspect has borne to its last resting
place the body of our beloved president, William McKinley. While
on a mission of peace and good will [sic] he was shot down by a
treacherous assassin. He has departed, leaving a fruitful heritage.
He has gone to his reward wearing a martyr’s crown.
Born in 1843 in an obscure town in
Ohio, his early life fostered the inherited ideals which later found
expression in a full-orbed character. Struggling for an education,
battling with the rigorous conditions of pioneer life, mindful of
his obligations to constituted authority, William McKinley laid
the foundations of a manhood which shall speak to the ages in the
persuasive eloquence of a noble life. At the age of seventeen we
see him leaving a country school, in which he was teacher, to enter
the ranks of the Union army. Three years later we find him a brave
and respected officer, having been gradually promoted from a private
to a major for gallant and meritorious conduct upon the field of
battle.
The crisis of 1861 was fraught with
momentous consequences. Defeat meant the death of the union. The
attack upon Fort Sumpter [sic] was the call which led young McKinley
to shoulder a musket in the defense of the life and honor of the
nation. He battled for justice to the down-trodden, for the integrity
of the flag, for the rights of man, for the majesty of law, for
the dignity of labor and for the glory of the Constitution which
guarantees to all men the right to life, liberty and pursuit of
happiness. He championed the cause of the black man—the despised,
the hated, the hunted slave—nor did he rest until the ill-treated
negro, from whom victory wrenched the shackles of serfdom, was,
in every sense, a free citizen of the commonwealth.
During those dark rebellious days
this Ohio soldier boy won universal respect. By his courageous devotion
to country, by the magnificence of his bearing and the splendor
of his example, by his willingness to sacrifice, if necessary, himself,
his life, his all, for the nation, his name was enshrined in the
hearts of a grateful people—in the esteem of fellow-officers, in
the affection of soldier and citizen, in the respect of all the
world.
As a representative of the people,
whose rights he championed and welfare he guarded, he was faithful
and incorruptible, an ideal leader. Once recognizing his duty he
never wavered from its execution. He shrank from no responsibility
and nothing could shake his courage or lessen his faith in the cause
for which he was contending. It was their confidence in his inherent
genius for public administration that led the people to elect him
successively Prosecuting Attorney, Member of Congress, and Governor
of his native state. It was the same faith which made his counsels
respected in the political organization which owes much of its prestige
to his services. Swept out of public life by the reaction which
followed the enactment of the law which bears his name, he proved
himself magnificent in defeat. To politicians who doubted, he wrote:
“Keep up your courage—home and country will triumph in the end.”
Although defeated, his faith in the ultimate triumph of the principles
embodied in the law was [77][78] never
shaken; and in the succeeding years of life he labored to realize
those ideals.
The story of his career as president
comes like a benediction into one of the most stirring epochs of
our nation’s history. In those days when strong men trembled and
brave men feared, when the nation were an aspect of somberness and
anxiety, when both statesman and financier feared the events of
a day, and when the horizon of our future was obscured by a cloud
of doubt, William McKinley stood calm, courageous and steadfast—a
bulwark of loyalty, honor and devotion, against which the arrows
of opposition were as ineffectual as the darts of a Lilliput. Opposed
by partisan and politician and aided by only a few faithful advisers,
almost single-handed and alone, he guided the ship of state through
the tempestuous breakers of malice and reproach into the calm harbor
of peace.
Though urged to hasty action by over-zealous
compatriots, though maligned by jealous rivals and captious critics,
though falsely accused by impatient fanatics, and misrepresented
and villified [sic] by a cabal of petty and plotting politicians,
whose poisonous arrows wounded naught but his noble and sensitive
soul, he listened patiently to all who caught his ear, calmly weighed
their arguments and in the sincerity of dispassionate reason announced
his conviction with a serenity and deliberation born of a purity
of ideals and loyalty of soul. No pressure of friends, no assault
of enemies, no temptation of ambition could sway him from the path
of duty. Despising disloyalty and pretence [sic] he stood throughout
those days which tried men’s souls, patient and resourceful, with
a confidence begotten of a clear conscience, and with a firm trust
that the God of nations would justify his course in the events of
the future.
Patriotism, not imperialism, determined
his foreign policy. The consequences of war he accepted with the
same singleness of purpose with which he had sought to avert the
calamities of international strife. The new relations resulting
from the war meant new opportunities for the exercise of Christian
statesmanship. When negotiations of peace were pending his every
impulse was the inspiration of the largest generosity. His unreserved
and single aim toward foreign powers was to advance their civilization
and to aid them in securing greater freedom than they had heretofore
known. In the recent international episode in China it was through
his policy that the intervention of Secretary Hay elevated the standard
of diplomacy and brought the United States to be the moral leader
of the nations. His state papers, which will live as imperishable
monuments to his wisdom and patriotism, are re-enforced by that
farewell speech which appealed to Providence to sustain the nations
in their struggle for higher civilization.
No president except Lincoln has had
to face more difficult problems involving the unity of the people
and the prosperity of the country than did William McKinley. Yet
since the days of Washington no president had fewer personal enemies.
There is an entire lack of bitterness toward the late head of the
nation; for his beautiful character there is an admiration not limited
by the artificial boundary of class or party. Behind McKinley the
president stood McKinley the man. In all his public life, whether
as soldier, lawyer or statesman, whether as a representative, governor
or president, he was an exemplary citizen. There was not a time
when he could not look the world in the face and say, these hands
are clean.
The president revealed his true character
in the very struggle for his own life, when, looking upon his assassin,
with Christlike charity he said, “May God forgive him,” then with
words breathing the spirit of fraternity and peace, “Let no man
hurt him.” Shame forever upon those pulpits which cried, “Lynch
the assassin.” Is that not the very spirit of anarchy? As the death
of Lincoln sounded the knell of chattel slavery and the passing
of Garfield focused public attention upon the evils of the spoils
system, so may the martyrdom of William McKinley arouse the public
conscience to resist the encroachments of anarchy and disorder.
May every patriot seek to establish the ideals of our martyred president
and to banish the evils which threaten national stability. If these
ideals are to triumph it necessitates deeper moral education, stricter
obedience to law, more uniformity in its enforcement and a more
consistent devotion to the principles of true democracy. World-wide
and as enduring as the centuries are the principles of courtesy,
fidelity [78][79] and honesty, which
actuated him in public and private life. Well might his example
become the inspiration of every man that loves his country.
But he was more than a master-builder,
whose constructive statesmanship will live to the end of time, he
was a Christian—a man who believed in God and trusted His Providence.
How simple that child-like faith—how quietly submissive the trust
in God’s goodness which spake in every action of those last sad
hours! Every form of anguish, every torture of body, every pang
of suffering was borne with Christian fortitude. From the time he
was wounded until the hour of his death no word of complaint, no
murmur, no censure passed his lips, only a great hope that he might
live to further serve the people that he loved.
The place and time are altogether
too sacred to lift the curtain upon the last sad interview between
the heroic president and his stricken wife. We only know that when
the inevitable was realized, the faithful husband, whose unselfish
anxiety had been for the loved and loving wife, clasped her hand
and, with the unconscious sublimity of a noble soul whispered, “Not
our will, but God’s be done,” and as the last ray of life-light
was slowly fading, whispered with a voice of faith, “Nearer my God
to Thee.” Fearlessly and in a full confidence of a blessed hereafter,
he died as he had lived. The American people—his people—with grief
fathomless in its depths, yea, with breaking hearts, bore him through
the valley of the shadow from which he passed to Lincoln and Garfield,
forming America’s immortal Trinity of Martyred Presidents.
The morning and the evening of that
noble life gather up within their embrace the grandest and mose
[sic] fruitful years in the annals of our history, years fraught
with greatest opportunities and laden with unparallelled [sic] achievements.
Through this era[,] with its vast and varied duties, passed our
lamented president, with garments unspotted, leaving a priceless
heritage, the example of a life rich in its loyal devotion to conviction
and even richer in its record of heroic self-sacrifice. The memory
of William McKinley, president and patriot, soldier and statesman,
citizen and Christain [sic], martyr and man, will be perpetuated
in Truth’s immortal volume, and his name, emblazoned upon the pages
of history, will forever shine on the stars of the firmament—an
inspiration to noble deeds.
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