Barnard's Lincoln, the gift of Mr and Mrs Charles P Taft to the city of Cincinnati; the creation and dedication of George Grey Barnard's statue of Abraham Lincoln, including the address of William Howard Taft . ly stood before him without my hatand have had a severe cold ever since Sunday. • I could not stand before your Lincoln with «? covered head, and with those dear eyes lookingdown as if he woidd say, Well, Harry, howare you, my boy? as he used to o^reet me inthe old days in S]3ringfield. You have given us the only Soulful Lin-coln, and I congratulate 3Ou, and future gen-erations will ble


Barnard's Lincoln, the gift of Mr and Mrs Charles P Taft to the city of Cincinnati; the creation and dedication of George Grey Barnard's statue of Abraham Lincoln, including the address of William Howard Taft . ly stood before him without my hatand have had a severe cold ever since Sunday. • I could not stand before your Lincoln with «? covered head, and with those dear eyes lookingdown as if he woidd say, Well, Harry, howare you, my boy? as he used to o^reet me inthe old days in S]3ringfield. You have given us the only Soulful Lin-coln, and I congratulate 3Ou, and future gen-erations will bless George Grey Barnard, theman who gave us this Lincoln. Mr. Taft andCincinnati have a prize that they well may beproud to have. Your Lincoln without whiskers is the manwe of Springfield loved. Thanking you for the treat you gave meto commune with my friend, I am, sincerelyyours, II. W. 30 BARNARDS LINCOLN JNIy Lincoln of bronze is to me but the foot-prints in a path of clay, as I made my waylooking upon truths above. It may have novalue to others, may express nothing of myjourney in the heart of Lincoln, but I pray itmay carry to others a trace of what I myselfread. Presentation Address. Presentation Address BY The HonorableWilliam Hoavard Taft WHEN we read of the origin of Lin-coln, the squalor of his early sur-roundings, the ignorance and shift-less character of his father, and have so littleknowledge of the traits and intelligence of hismother, it seems as difficult to explain what hedid, what he was, and what he is now in theestimate of his countrymen and of the world,as it is to reconcile the origin and education ofShakespeare and his immortal plays. Yet,when we follow Lincolns life closely, andwhen we accompany this by a study of thepolitics of the period in which he lived, we findthe clue. As we look back now, no matterwhat men then said, no matter what issuesthey then framed, slavery was the disease fromwhicli the nation was suffering, and until by 33 34


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectlincolnstatuecincinn