President Roosevelt
Mr. Roosevelt is now President of
the United States. In this grave crisis there was not a moment’s
hesitation, a moment’s uncertainty, or a moment’s suspense. All
men knew, even in the first shock and consternation of an awful
crime, that, while a President had fallen, not only was the Government
undisturbed, but that the administration of its laws would go on
without break or change. This is the noble heritage of political
character gained by a thousand years of living under free institutions,
and by the example and leadership of hosts of statesmen who, like
President McKinley, have held their own wills subordinate to the
will of the Nation, and the will of the Nation subordinate to the
will of God.
There is a deeper and more vital continuity
than that of policy; it is the continuity of character. No more
impressive illustration of faith, sincerity, and beauty of character
has been seen in modern times than that which was witnessed by those
who stood about the death-bed of President McKinley. Stainless amid
all the temptations of public life, without blot under the fierce
light which has beat upon him in these recent years, with a devotion
to his wife as dignified and touching as anything in the annals
of chivalry, President McKinley, in the first place of the Nation,
stood for the noblest qualities of the men of the English-speaking
race. He had the purity of Washington and the sweetness of Lincoln;
and in the supreme hour his dignity and strength sustained at the
highest levels the tradition of personal character which has never
departed from the White House.
That tradition will be continued unbroken
by Mr. Roosevelt. There will be no change in the character of the
President of the United States. Of a different stock from that which
flowered in the industry, the integrity, and the indomitable patience
of Mr. McKinley, Mr. Roosevelt is as genuine an American. Eight
generations of honorable men, prominent again and again in the affairs
of the city and the State of New York, link him with the earliest
colonial times. His family history has been an unbroken tradition
of integrity and public usefulness; and whatever impetus and impulse
come from the legacy of an honorable ancestry have borne their fruit
in Mr. Roosevelt. No one has ever questioned either his integrity
or his courage. Entering upon a public life at one of the most depressing
and discouraging periods in the history of the country, he has stood
from the first for integrity of private character and for independence
and competency in public action. But one principle has governed
him: a passionate desire to do the work of the State without fear
and in the best possible way. In the Legislature of the State, in
the Civil Service Commission at Washington, as Police Commissioner
in the city of New York, as Assistant Secretary of the Navy on the
eve of the war with Spain, and as Governor of New York, his course
has been marked, not by passive honesty, but by resolute and aggressive
integrity. Whether the work to be done was outside of or within
the public gaze, whether it was apparently of small or of great
moment, it has been done with an enthusiasm for righteousness in
public action which has been an inspiration to the younger men of
the country. A gentleman in the best sense of a much-abused word;
a man of honor upon whose reputation, in spite of the bitterest
criticism, not a shadow rests; a man of proven courage, Mr. Roosevelt
will continue in the Presidency the very highest traditions of integrity
and independence which are associated with the place.
Although the youngest man who has
ever become President, Mr. Roosevelt has had an unusual preparation
for the position. He was fortunate, to begin with, in having the
opportunities of a thorough training. He has supplemented university
education by a life of study no less than by a life of action. When
he entered college his health was very uncertain; but, instead of
yielding to the limitations of his condition, he made a resolute
and intelligent attempt to overcome them, with the result that he
has become a man of exceptional strength and endurance. This achievement
is typical of his spirit and his career. His whole life has been
an energetic and persistent [158][159]
effort to increase his power as an instrument for public service.
He had been out of college but a single year when he entered the
Assembly at Albany and at once awakened the interest and the antagonism
of ring and routine politicians by his straightforwardness and his
determination to make public office a public trust. At Albany he
learned the ways of the politician and the methods of legislative
action; in Washington, as a member of the United States Civil Service
Commission, he rapidly mastered one of the most difficult and perplexing
problems presented to the General Government and became familiar
with the whole administrative field; as Police Commissioner in this
city he studied the municipal problem at first hand, and formed
the acquaintance of all classes of people; as Assistant Secretary
of the Navy he not only foresaw what most men failed to foresee,
the approaching war with Spain, but he set about preparing for it
with resolution and energy and a quick eye for the weak points and
for essential developments which went a long way towards placing
the navy in the state of efficiency which astonished the world at
the breaking out of the war.
The story of his courage, his coolness,
his humanity, and his efficiency in the field need not be recalled.
As Governor he was not only intrepid and frank, but he was also
cautious and conservative, dealing with the largest matters affecting
the interests of the State with clearness of judgment as well as
with independence of view. The difficulties of his position were
very great, but in the face of them he rendered services to the
State so conspicuous that the machine politicians were bent upon
forcing him to accept the nomination for the Vice-Presidency, in
order to get him out of the way. Never in the history of politics
has there been a more signal and disastrous reversal of the plans
of small men; for the attempt to remove Mr. Roosevelt from the direction
of affairs in New York has made him President; while his successor,
Governor Odell, has developed, not only capacity of a high order,
but the ability to rise above the aims and standards of machine
politics. Mr. Roosevelt, therefore, carries to the White House a
great fund of experience. He has, fortunately, the energy, the courage,
and the faith of a young man; but he has had twenty years of public
service; he has been in contact with public affairs from different
points of approach; he has studied public problems close at hand
from different points of view, and he goes into the White House
with a very unusual practical training for the work awaiting him
there. Mr. Roosevelt is not only a man of courage and a man of action,
he is also a man of great sensitiveness and generosity of nature.
The circumstances under which he has been called to the Presidency
must weigh upon him with almost crushing force. He enters upon a
great place and upon the most arduous duties without any of the
enthusiasm of a recent popular election behind him, and without
the elation of personal triumph. A tragic event has laid an imperative
duty upon him; no one who knows him can doubt for a moment the spirit
with which he will discharge that duty. He ought to be made to feel
in peculiar measure, in view of these extraordinary circumstances,
the confidence and affection of the people which is already finding
widespread and warm-hearted expression. He will continue unbroken
the tradition of character which comes to him from Mr. McKinley,
without spot or blemish; he will also continue beyond doubt the
policy which Mr. McKinley lived long enough to define, to incorporate
into action, or to foreshadow with great distinctness. That he will
carry that policy to its logical conclusions we do not for a moment
doubt; and in that confidence the country ought to give him not
only solid but sympathetic support.
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