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lincoln's second inaugral address

March 10th, 2010 Posted in portal.juzhang.com | edit
  • why was lincoln's second inaugral address important?


  • Dear cisco34-ga; Thank you for allowing me an opportunity to answer your interesting question. By the time President Abraham Lincoln gave his second inaugural speech on March 4, 1865 it was already evident that the Union would emerge victorious from the Civil War. Unlike the temper of his first inaugural speech, this time the stage was set for Lincoln to summarize the ravages of war and set the new course for our nation?s future. Civil War scholar James Tackach, a professor of English at Roger Williams University, a prolific author of Civil War books and an avid student of the era explained the significance of Lincoln?s speech this way in his book LINCOLN'S MORAL VISION: THE SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS: "The 701-word Second Inaugural is in many ways the more revealing, if not the more stylistically pleasing speech?More revealing because the later speech discloses Lincoln's thinking, at the end of his life, on key issues with which he had grappled throughout his political career: slavery, race, the meaning of nationhood, the purpose of government, the role of God in the Universe." UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI http://www.upress.state.ms.us/news/lincolns_moral_vision.html Journalist Noah Brooks, an eyewitness to the speech, published this description of the events that may have led to the memorable legacy of the speech, and if true would certainly have moved a great number of listeners simply by virtue of strange atmospheric anomaly: "?a roar of applause shook the air, and, again and again repeated, finally died away on the outer fringe of the throng, like a sweeping wave upon the shore. Just at that moment the sun, which had been obscured all day, burst forth in its unclouded meridian splendor, and flooded the spectacle with glory and with light." ON THIS DAY. MARCH 4, 1865 -- LINCOLN'S SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/856539/posts Aside from that, Lincoln?s speech as considered especially poignant for a variety of reasons. Some have argued that the speech was almost theological in content and context. Others have suggested that the speech was probably more significant in its message than the Gettysburg Address and that it was in fact the greatest speech of his Presidency (Lincoln himself is said to have shared this belief about this particular speech). Ronald C. White's (LINCOLN'S GREATEST SPEECH - Simon & Schuster, 2002) points out that this historical moment was an expression of Lincoln's deepest thoughts on the causes of the Civil War, his ideas about the course the country should take at the War's conclusion and his explanation of what God's role in the Civil War was as he understood and believed it. Lincoln tried to console the nation in his unusually brief address (only twenty-five sentences) and to convey to the nation that while hope was once again alive and well, the tragedy and horrors of war was a burden that had been necessary for the country to carry, to endure and to survive. Those in attendance, and indeed the world, did not expect to hear what the President ultimately had to say. They wanted to hear positive, perhaps even festive rhetoric from the leader of our nation and hear positive news about the progress and eventual outcome of the war. I would imagine that some even anticipated a fiery, in your face, podium pounding pep rally about how the Union was winning the war and how those who were responsible would be brought to justice and how every man, woman and child affected by the war would have their pound of flesh in vengeance. Conversely, Lincoln?s speech boldly defied expectation and dismissed the questions of war and peace almost entirely choosing instead to address what was happening ?here an now?. He believed that American slavery was the nation's sin and that God Almighty would seek retribution against those who pursued it. Frederick Douglas, who attended the speech, even noted that Lincoln?s speech sound more like a sermon that an inaugural address and applauded the speech as "a sacred effort". A frail and gaunt looking Lincoln clearly exhausted from his tumultuous first term as President (civil war, health problems, the death on one of his sons and his wife reported mental illness) rose to the podium and in a passive voice, hushed the listening throng of some forty thousand in attendance. He chose his words carefully, so as not to inflame the aroused passions the people, many of them soldiers. After suggesting that the war was unavoidable due to a higher power (?and war came?) Lincoln revealed the subject of his speech by noting the paradox that each side sought God's aid against the other, and concluding, "The Almighty has His own purposes." This was the rhetorical center of his second inaugural address in which he forced his listeners to examine the overall righteousness of the war and for each to determine IN HIS OWN mind who, or what, was to blame. In the end Lincoln sent stunned his listeners away in virtual silence with this final statement: ?With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.? In doing so he announced, in almost Biblical fashion and in stark contrast to the rants of war heard previously on every corner of our country, that hatred, divisiveness and death were no longer to be the fashionable focus of our nation and that these should give way to the new uniform of the day: forgiveness, generosity, and charity. Below you will find that I have carefully defined my search strategy for you in the event that you need to search for more information. By following the same type of searches that I did you may be able to enhance the research I have provided even further. I hope you find that my research exceeds your expectations. If you have any questions about my research please post a clarification request prior to rating the answer. Otherwise, I welcome your rating and your final comments and I look forward to working with you again in the near future. Thank you for bringing your question to us. Best regards; Tutuzdad ? Google Answers Researcher OTHER INFORMATION SOURCES LINCOLN'S SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS http://www.juntosociety.com/hist_speeches/lincolns2nd.html A CRITIQUE OF GARY WILLS' ESSAY, 'LINCOLN'S GREATEST SPEECH?" http://wps.ablongman.com/long_behrens_saw_1/0%2C5312%2C86436-%2C00.html LINCOLN'S GREATEST SPEECH http://www.gospelcom.net/chi/books/books009.shtml LINCOLN'S GREATEST SPEECH: THE SECOND INAUGURAL - BOOK REVIEW http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2004/is_3_49/ai_107760857 SEARCH STRATEGY SEARCH ENGINES USED: Google ://www.google.com SEARCH TERMS USED: LINCOLN SECOND INAUGURAL ADDRESS







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