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    In the Boyhood of Lincoln (Illustrated Edition)

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    In the Boyhood of Lincoln (Illustrated Edition)

    By Hezekiah Butterworth

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    Abraham Lincoln has become the typical character of American
    institutions, and it is the purpose of this book, which is a true picture
    in a framework of fiction, to show how that character, which so
    commanded the hearts and the confidence of men, was formed. He
    who in youth unselfishly seeks the good of others, without fear or
    favor, may be ridiculed, but he makes for himself a character fit to
    govern others, and one that the people will one day need and honor.
    The secret of Abraham Lincoln’s success was the “faith that right
    makes might.” This principle the book seeks by abundant storytelling
    to illustrate and make clear.
    In this volume, as in the “Log School-House on the Columbia,” the
    adventures of a pioneer school-master are made to represent the
    early history of a newly settled country. The “Log School-House on
    the Columbia” gave a view of the early history of Oregon and
    Washington. This volume collects many of the Indian romances and
    cabin tales of the early settlers of Illinois, and pictures the hardships
    and manly struggles of one who by force of early character made
    himself the greatest of representative Americans.
    The character of the Dunkard, or Tunker, as a wandering schoolmaster,
    may be new to many readers. Such missionaries of the
    forests and prairies have now for the most part disappeared, but
    they did a useful work among the pioneer settlements on the Ohio
    and Illinois Rivers. In this case we present him as a disciple of
    Pestalozzi and a friend of Froebel, and as one who brings the
    German methods of story-telling into his work.
    “Was there ever so good an Indian as Umatilla?” asks an
    accomplished reviewer of the “Log School-House on the Columbia.”
    The chief whose heroic death in the grave of his son is recorded in
    that volume did not receive the full measure of credit for his
    devotion, for he was really buried alive in the grave of his boy. A like
    question may be asked in regard to the father of Waubeno in this
    volume. We give the story very much as Black Hawk himself related it. In Drake’s History of the Indians we find it related in the
    following manner:
    “It is related by Black Hawk, in his Life, that some time before the
    War of 1812 one of the Indians had killed a Frenchman at Prairie des
    Chiens. ‘The British soon after took him prisoner, and said they
    would shoot him next day. His family were encamped a short
    distance below the mouth of the Ouisconsin. He begged permission
    to go and see them that night, as he was to die the next day. They
    permitted him to go, after promising to return the next morning by
    sunrise. He visited his family, which consisted of a wife and six
    children. I can not describe their meeting and parting to be
    understood by the whites, as it appears that their feelings are acted
    upon by certain rules laid down by their preachers!—while ours are
    governed only by the monitor within us. He parted from his wife
    and children, hurried through the prairie to the fort, and arrived in
    time. The soldiers were ready, and immediately marched out and shot
    him down!’ If this were not cold-blooded, deliberate murder on the
    part of the whites I have no conception of what constitutes that
    crime. What were the circumstances of the murder we are not
    informed; but whatever they may have been, they can not excuse a
    still greater barbarity.”
    It belongs, like the story of so-called Umatilla in the “Log School-
    House on the Columbia,” to a series of great legends of Indian
    character which the poet’s pen and the artist’s brush would do well
    to perpetuate. The examples of Indians who have valued honor more
    than life are many, and it is a pleasing duty to picture such scenes of
    native worth, as true to the spirit of the past.
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