I’ve been reading Carl
Sandburg’s biography of Abraham Lincoln, and I came across the Gettysburg
Address, and thought it a beautiful piece of writing, which I believe will
rightfully live among the annals of man forever more. It seems especially
appropriate to underscore what is happening in the election season. It moved
me, and here it is:
Fourscore and seven years ago, our fathers
brought forth upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and
dedicated to the proposition that all men are create equal.
Now we are engaged in a great civil war,
testing whether that nation—or any nation, so conceived and so dedicated—can
long endure.
We are met on a great battlefield of that war.
We are met to dedicate a portion of it as the final resting place of those who
have given their lives that that nation might live.
It is altogether fitting and proper that we
should do this.
But, in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we
cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and
dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our power to add or to
detract.
The world will very little note nor long
remember what we say here; but it can never forget what they did here.
It is for us, the living, rather, to be
dedicated, here, to the unfinished work that they have thus far so nobly
carried on. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task
remaining before us; that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to
that cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion; that we
here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that the
nation shall, under God, have a new birth of freedom, and that government of
the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.
The New York Herald
reporter ended his story with: “The air, the trees, the graves are silent. Even
the relic hunters are gone now. And the soldiers here never wake to the sound
of reveille.”
And Carl Sandburg wrote
these beautiful words: In many a country
cottage over the land, a tall old clock in a quiet corner told time in a
tick-tock deliberation. Whether the orchard branches hung with pink-spray
blossoms or icicles of sleet, whether the outside news was seedtime or harvest,
rain or drought, births or deaths, the swing of the pendulum was right and left
and right and left in a tick-tock deliberation.
The face and dial of the clock had known the
eyes of a boy who listened to its
tick-tock and learned to read its minute and hour hands. Aand the boy had seen
years measured off by the swinging pendulum, had grown to man size, had gone
away. And the people in the cottage knew that the clock would stand there and
the boy would never again come into the room and look at the clock with the
query, “What is the time?”
In a row of graves of the Unidentified the boy
would sleep long in the dedicated final resting place at Gettysburg. Why he had
gone away and why he would never come back had roots in some mystery of flags
and drums, of national fate in which individuals sink as in a deep sea, of men
swallowed and vanished in a man-made storm of smoke and steel.
The mystery deepened and moved with ancient
music and inviolable consolation because a solemn Man of Authority had stood at
the graves of the Unidentified and spoken the words “We can not consecrate—we
can not hallow—this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here,
have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract . . . from these
honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the
last full measure of devotion.”
To the backward and forward pendulum swing of
a tall old clock in a quiet corner they might read those cadenced words while
outside the windows the first flurry of snow blew across the orchard and down
the meadow, the beginnings of winter in a gun-metal bloaming to be later arched
with a star-flung sky.
1 comment:
Thhank you for writing this
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