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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), A noble life. (search)
tter is, Change the question before the public from the one upon slavery for a, question upon Union or Disunion. The letter did not come to light for years, and Seward might well say, as he did, that Lincoln had a cunning that was genius. See Don Piatt, in Reminiscences of Lincoln (page 487). McClure's Lincoln, etc., says (page 9): Chase was the most irritating fly in the Lincoln ointment. Miss Ida Tarbell, in McClure's Magazine for January, 1899, says: But Mr. Chase was never able to reaand he draws a pitiful picture (pages 113 to 115) of Lincoln as he saw him, in fits of abject depression during a considerable time after his second nomination, when he and all the leaders of the Republican party thought his defeat inevitable. Don Piatt depicts (Reminiscences of Lincoln, page 493), in curious contrast to the above, Lincoln's extraordinary insensibility to the ills of others. After such an array of the concessions against him quoted and referred to above, it is worth while
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 27. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.52 (search)
tter is, Change the question before the public from the one upon slavery for a, question upon Union or Disunion. The letter did not come to light for years, and Seward might well say, as he did, that Lincoln had a cunning that was genius. See Don Piatt, in Reminiscences of Lincoln (page 487). McClure's Lincoln, etc., says (page 9): Chase was the most irritating fly in the Lincoln ointment. Miss Ida Tarbell, in McClure's Magazine for January, 1899, says: But Mr. Chase was never able to reaand he draws a pitiful picture (pages 113 to 115) of Lincoln as he saw him, in fits of abject depression during a considerable time after his second nomination, when he and all the leaders of the Republican party thought his defeat inevitable. Don Piatt depicts (Reminiscences of Lincoln, page 493), in curious contrast to the above, Lincoln's extraordinary insensibility to the ills of others. After such an array of the concessions against him quoted and referred to above, it is worth while