Team of Rivals (131 page)

Read Team of Rivals Online

Authors: Doris Kearns Goodwin

BOOK: Team of Rivals
7.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“delirious to the extent…he was doing”: Browning, quoted in Nicolay,
An Oral History of Abraham Lincoln,
p. 2.

“Poor L!…truly deplorable”: James Conkling to Mercy Ann Levering, January 24, 1841, quoted in Wilson, “Abraham Lincoln and ‘That Fatal First of January,’” in Wilson,
Lincoln Before Washington,
p. 117.

was called hypochondriasis: See J. S. Forsyth,
The New London Medical and Surgical Dictionary
(London: Sherwood, Gilbert & Piper, 1826), p. 379; Robley Dunglison, M.D.,
A New Dictionary of Medical Science and Literature, Containing a Concise Account of the Various Subjects and Terms; with the Synonymes in Different Languages; and Formulae for Various Officinal and Empirical Preparations,
Vol. I (Boston: Charles Bowen, 1833), p. 508; German E. Berrios, “Hypochondriasis: History of the Concept,” in Vladan Starcevic and Don R. Lipsitt, eds.,
Hypochondriasis: Modern Perspectives on an Ancient Malady
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 3–20.

“I have, within…to my existence”: AL to John T. Stuart, January 20, 1841, in
CW,
I, p. 228. Dr. Henry did not receive the postmastership of Springfield.

“I am now the most…it appears to me: AL to John T. Stuart, January 23, 1841, in ibid., p. 229.

Hoping medical treatment…“without a personal interview”: Joshua F. Speed to WHH, November 30, 1866, in
HI,
p. 431.

the nadir of Lincoln’s depression…most certainly die: Speed,
Reminiscences of Abraham Lincoln,
p. 39.

“done nothing…desired to live for”: Joshua F. Speed to WHH, February 7, 1866, in
HI,
p. 197.

“ideas of a person’s…perceive him”: William G. Thalmann,
The Odyssey: An Epic of Return. Twayne’s Masterwork Studies,
No. 100 (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1992), p. 39.

“To see memory…thought with others”: Bruce, “The Riddle of Death,” in
The Lincoln Enigma,
p. 141.

“thou midway world…and paradise”: AL to Andrew Johnston, April 18, 1846, in
CW,
I, p. 378.

critical to “avoid being
idle”
: AL to Joshua F. Speed, February 13, 1842, in ibid., p. 269.


business and conversation
…bitterness of death”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, [January 3?, 1842], in ibid., p. 265.

he delivered an eloquent address…“than a gallon of gall”: AL, “Temperance Address. An Address, Delivered before the Springfield Washington Temperance Society,” February 22, 1842, in ibid., p. 273.

“An outstanding…future growth”: George E. Vaillant,
Adaptation to Life
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1977), p. 27.

“quite clear of the hypo…in the fall”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, February 3, 1842, in
CW,
I, p. 268.

“much alone of late…
countenances
me”: MTL to Mercy Ann Levering, June 1841, in Turner and Turner,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
pp. 25, 27.

mutual friends conspired: Baker,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
p. 93.

“worse sort…can realize”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, February 25, 1842, in
CW,
I, p. 280. For correspondence between Lincoln and Speed discussing Speed’s doubts during courtship of Fanny Henning, see AL to Speed, [January 3?], February 3, and February 13, 1842, in ibid., pp. 265–70.

“sailed through clear”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, July 4, 1842, in ibid., p. 289.

“‘Are you now’…impatient to know”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, October 5, 1842, in ibid., p. 303.

and was, in fact, very happy: AL to Joshua F. Speed, March 27, 1842, in ibid., p. 282.

description of the wedding: Baker,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
pp. 97–98; Helm,
The True Story of Mary,
pp. 93–95.

“Nothing new here…of profound wonder”: AL to Samuel D. Marshall, November 11, 1842, in
CW,
I, p. 305.

“Full many a flower”: Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard,” in
The Norton Anthology of Poetry,
3rd edn., ed. Alexander W. Allison, et al. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1983), pp. 249–50.

“His melancholy…as he walked”: Herndon, “Analysis of the Character,”
ALQ
(1941), p. 359.

“No element…profound melancholy”: Whitney,
Life on the Circuit with Lincoln,
p. 146.

“This melancholy…with his brains”: Henry C. Whitney to WHH, June 23, 1887, in
HI,
p. 616.

“his face was…ever looked upon”: Joseph Wilson Fifer, quoted in Rufus Rockwell Wilson,
Intimate Memories of Lincoln
(Elmira, N.Y.: Primavera Press, 1945), p. 155.

“slightly wrinkled…the wrinkles there”: William Calkins, “The First of the Lincoln and Douglas Debates,” quoted in ibid., pp. 169–70.

melancholy does not have: See Jerome Kagan,
Galen’s Prophecy: Temperament in Human Nature,
with the collaboration of Nancy Snidman, Doreen Arcus, and J. Steven Reznick (New York: Basic Books, 1994), pp. 7–8.

“a tendency to…not a fault”: AL to Mary Speed, September 27, 1841, in
CW,
I, p. 261.

“Melancholy…a sense of humor”: Thomas Pynchon, introduction to
The Teachings of Don B.: Satires, Parodies, Fables, Illustrated Stories, and Plays of Donald Barthelme,
ed. Kim Herzinger (New York: Turtle Bay Books, Random House, 1992), p. xviii.

“When he first came…boiled over”: James H. Matheny interview, November 1866, in
HI,
p. 432.

“he emerged…he lived, again”: Whitney,
Life on the Circuit with Lincoln,
p. 147.

“necessary to his…relaxation in anecdotes”: Joshua F. Speed to WHH, December 6, 1866, in
HI,
p. 499.

He laughed, he explained: Whitney,
Life on the Circuit with Lincoln,
p. 148.

“joyous, universal evergreen of life”: AL, quoted in Nicolay,
Personal Traits of Abraham Lincoln,
p. 16.

“to whistle off sadness”: David Davis interview, September 20, 1866, in
HI,
pp. 348, 350.

“Humor, like hope…to be borne”: George E. Vaillant,
The Wisdom of the Ego,
p. 73.

“Humor can be marvelously…corrosive”: Unnamed source, quoted in ibid., p. 73.

to rescue a pig…“his own mind”: AL, quoted in Nicolay,
Personal Traits of Abraham Lincoln,
p. 81.

tortured turtles…“it was wrong”: Nathaniel Grigsby interview, September 12, 1865, in
HI,
p. 112.

He refused to hunt animals: Miller,
Lincoln’s Virtues,
pp. 26–27.

“the never-absent idea”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, March 27, 1842, in
CW,
I, p. 282.

“By the imagination…what he feels”: Adam Smith,
The Theory of Moral Sentiments
(London: A. Millar, 1759; facsimile, New York: Garland Publishing, 1971), pp. 2–3.

“With his wealth…that way themselves”: Nicolay,
Personal Traits of Abraham Lincoln,
pp. 213, 77, 78.

marriage was tumultuous…was harder for Mary:
With Malice Toward None,
pp. 69–70; Strozier,
Lincoln’s Quest for Union,
p. 119; Baker,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
pp. 105–10.

Lincoln helped with the marketing and the dishes: Burlingame,
The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln,
p. 279.

Julia Bates’s early marriage: Darby, “Mrs. Julia Bates” in Bates,
Bates, et al., of Virginia and Missouri,
n.p.; EB to Frederick Bates, June 15 and July 19, 1818, quoted in ibid.

Frances Seward spared household chores: Seward,
An Autobiography,
pp. 62, 382, 466; Patricia C. Johnson, “‘I Could Not be Well or Happy at Home…When Called to the Councils of My Country’: Politics and the Seward Family,”
University of Rochester Library Bulletin
31 [hereafter
URLB
] (Autumn 1978), pp. 42, 47, 49.

Lincolns detached from respective families: Baker,
Mary Todd Lincoln,
pp. 105–07, 111–12.

When Lincoln was away: Ibid., pp. 108–09.

Frances’s family surrounded her: Johnson, “I Could Not be Well or Happy at Home,”
URLB,
p. 42.

Julia Bates’s family in St. Louis: Bates,
Bates, et al., of Virginia and Missouri,
n.p.

“the kindest…was necessary”: MTL interview, September 1866, in
HI,
p. 357.

a gentle and indulgent father: Herndon and Weik,
Herndon’s Life of Lincoln,
p. 344. See also “‘Unrestrained by Parental Tyranny’: Lincoln and His Sons,” chapter 3 in Burlingame,
The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln,
pp. 57–72.

“litterally ran over…their importunities”: Joseph Gillespie to WHH, January 31, 1866, in
HI,
p. 181.

“It is my pleasure…child to its parent”: AL, quoted in MTL interview, September 1866, in ibid., p. 357.

“Now if you should…he is mistaken”: AL to Richard S. Thomas, February 14, 1843, in
CW,
I, p. 307.

“That ‘union is strength’…‘cannot stand’”: “Campaign Circular from Whig Committee,” March 4, 1843, in ibid., p. 315.

“We had a meeting…own dear ‘gal’”: AL to Joshua F. Speed, March 24, 1843, in ibid., p. 319.

his defeat in Sangamon…“family distinction”: AL to Martin S. Morris, March 26, 1843, in ibid., p. 320.

in Pekin…idea of rotating terms: AL, “Resolution Adopted at Whig Convention at Pekin, Illinois,” May 1, 1843, in ibid., p. 322.

Lincoln left nothing to chance: Thomas,
Abraham Lincoln,
p. 105.

He asked friends to share…every precinct: Beveridge,
Abraham Lincoln, 1809–1858,
Vol. II, pp. 74–75.

“a quiet trip…vigilance”: AL to Benjamin F. James, January 14, 1846, in
CW,
I, p. 354.

“That Hardin is talented…‘is fair play’”: AL to Robert Boal, January 7, 1846, in ibid., p. 353.

“not…all other grounds”: AL to John J. Hardin, February 7, 1846, in ibid., p. 364.

“I am not a politician…their ends”: SPC to Charles D. Cleveland, August 29, 1840, reel 5, Chase Papers.

James G. Birney: See Betty Fladeland,
James Gillespie Birney: Slaveholder to Abolitionist
(Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1955), esp. pp. 129–36.

a group of white community leaders: Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 47.

On a hot summer night…continued to publish: Fladeland,
James Gillespie Birney,
pp. 136–37; Blue,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 29.

the mob returned…tarred and feathered: Fladeland,
James Gillespie Birney,
pp. 140–41.

he raced to the hotel…“at any time”: SPC, quoted in Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 48.

“His voice and commanding…right time”: Ibid.

“No man…courage and resolution”: Hart,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 435.

“By dedicating himself…in its pursuit”: Maizlish, “Salmon P. Chase,”
JER
(1998), p. 62.

background of the
Matilda
case: Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 50–51; Hart,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 73–74; Schuckers,
The Life and Public Services of Salmon Portland Chase,
pp. 41–44.

“Every settler…interdicts slavery”: SPC,
Speech of Salmon P. Chase in the Case of the Colored Woman, Matilda: Who was Brought Before the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, Ohio, by Writ of Habeas Corpus, March 11, 1837
(Cincinnati: Pugh & Dodd, 1837), pp. 29, 30, 8.

they were printed in pamphlet form: SPC,
Speech of Salmon P. Chase in the Case of the Colored Woman, Matilda.
110 Chase versus the Garrisonians: Hart,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 50, 55–56, 65.

“a covenant with…agreement with hell”: Quoted in James Brewer Stewart,
William Lloyd Garrison and the Challenge of Emancipation.
American Biographical History Series (Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, 1992), p. 164.

Chase decided, to try for public office…city establishments: Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 57–59.

the
“vital
question of slavery”: SPC to Charles D. Cleveland, August 29, 1840, reel 5, Chase Papers.

Chase and the Liberty Party: Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
pp. 67–70; Eric Foner,
Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party before the Civil War
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1970), pp. 78–81. See also “Liberty Party,” in
The Reader’s Companion to American History,
ed. Foner and Garraty, p. 657.

“to interfere…where it exists”: “Proceedings and Resolutions of the Ohio Liberty Convention,”
Philanthropist,
December 29, 1841, quoted in Niven,
Salmon P. Chase,
p. 68.

“without constitutional warrant”: SPC to Gerrit Smith, May 14, 1842, reel 5, Chase Papers.

“has seen so little…the very first”: SPC to Joshua R. Giddings, January 21, 1842, reel 5, Chase Papers.

Other books

Please Don't Stop The Music by Lovering, Jane
A Year Less a Day by James Hawkins
The Fourth Star by Greg Jaffe
Cuando cae la noche by Cunningham, Michael
This Gulf of Time and Stars by Julie E. Czerneda
Tea and Destiny by Sherryl Woods