Lincoln's Own Writings example essay topic

753 words
Lincoln warned the Southern States in his inaugural address: "In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you... You have no oath registered in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect and defend it". and in his address at Gettysburg, he said. ".. 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 poor power to add or detract.

The world will 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 which they who fought here have thus far so nobly ad-vance d". Examining the whole life of the great American president, the author gives true ac-counts supported by Lincoln's own writings as well as important details of his life that helped him in his struggle to be a leader, to be trusted and to be respected among all people. Giving the outstanding traits of his personality, the author perfectly leaves no question in people's mind about how he succeeded.

This book is a study guide for the ones who want to know about The American Civil War since it contains a good and reliable timeline with background K'ymav 2 information based on formal writings. The Life and Writings of Abraham Lincoln is also a good guide for those who want to study the similarities between Atat " uk and Lincoln (but these similarities are not in the book). In the beginning chapters of the book, the author gives information on Lincoln's an-ces try and his childhood years. He focuses on the family's hard times when they had to move from city to city to make a better living: He is kidnapped by Indians, his mother dies when he is nine, they live in the forest among wild animals in a shelter that was open on one side, he cannot go to school... In the following chapters that are about his early manhood years, the author tells with great care the events that shaped his ideas and helped him see the real face of the United States.

His post in the army as a captain and his eagerness to study law pave the way to his final destination: the seat of the presidency in the White House. The reader's attention is drawn to the fact that he shows his political ability at an early age, he knows how to talk and debate on different issues, which make him superior among others. The next chapters of the book gives good details of how Lincoln gained a political career and how his marriage to Mary Todd in Springfield changed his whole life forever. Put-ting emphasis on his debates with the political opponents, the author celebrates Lincoln's extraordinary genius despite few major defeats.

In the chapters that are about Lincoln's not giving up his political battle and how his strong determination against the opponents make him the victor, the author fully tells the ad-venture on the road to the presidency of the United States enabling the reader to explore the strategies Lincoln followed. The author does not forget to provide the reader with the detailed information on Fort Sumter crisis that led to the Civil War. Because of the fact that the Civil War is the only war fought among Americans on their own land, the book puts emphasis on its importance in the history of the United States. Telling the reasons of the war and the events in a chronological K'ymav 3 order, the author again gives detailed and true accounts of the Emancipation and Gettysburg where the Confederate Army was severely defeated. In the final chapter of the book (as he foreshadowed Lincoln's assassin in the previous chapters), the author tells the reader his death and the insane assassin, John Wilkes Booth. He chooses the words to tell this tragic death carefully.

He ends the book with the coffin's arrival in the city of Springfield saying: "Abraham Lincoln had come home" remembering the reader what Lincoln said before leaving Springfield to start his political career: "I do not know how and when I will come back to this city... .".