HISTORIC SPEECHES
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
Temperance Address
February 22, 1842
Although the Temperance cause has been in progress for near
twenty years, it is apparent to all, that it is, just now, being crowned
with a degree of success, hitherto unparalleled.
The list of its friends is daily swelled by the additions of fifties,
of hundreds, and of thousands. The cause itself seems suddenly
transformed from a cold abstract theory, to a living, breathing,
active, and powerful chieftain, going forth "conquering and to conquer."
The citadels of his great adversary are daily being stormed
and dismantled; his temple and his altars, where the rites of his
idolatrous worship have long been performed, and where human
sacrifices have long been wont to be made, are daily desecrated and
deserted. The trump of the conqueror's fame is sounding from hill
to hill, from sea to sea, and from land to land, and calling millions
to his standard at a blast.
For this new and splendid success, we heartily rejoice. That that
success is so much greater now than heretofore, is doubtless owing
to rational causes; and if we would have it continue, we shall
do well to inquire what those causes are. The warfare heretofore
waged against the demon Intemperance, has, somehow or other,
been erroneous. Either the champions engaged, or the tactics they
adopted have not been the most proper. These champions for the
most part have been Preachers, Lawyers, and hired agents. Between
these and the mass of mankind, there is a want of approachability,
if the term be admissible, partially, at least, fatal to their
success. They are supposed to have no sympathy of feeling or
interest, with those very persons whom it is their object to convince
and persuade.
And again, it is so common and so easy to ascribe motives to men
of these classes, other than those they profess to act upon. The
preacher, it is said, advocates temperance because he is a fanatic,
and desires a union of the Church and State; the lawyer, from his pride
and vanity of hearing himself speak; and the hired agent, for his
salary. But when one, who has long been known as a victim of
intemperance bursts the fetters that have bound him, and appears
before his neighbors "clothed, and in his right mind," a redeemed
specimen of long-lost humanity, and stands up with tears of joy
trembling in his eyes, to tell of the miseries once endured, now to be
endured no more forever; of his once naked and starving children,
now clad and fed comfortably; of a wife long weighed down with
woe, weeping, and a broken heart, now restored to health,
happiness, and a renewed affection; and how easily it is all done, once it is
resolved to be done; how simple his language, there is a logic,
and an eloquence in it, that few, with human feelings, can resist.
They cannot say that he desires a union of church and state, for he
is not a church member; they cannot say he is vain of hearing
himself speak, for his whole demeanor shows he would gladly
avoid speaking at all; they cannot say he speaks for pay for he
receives none, and asks for none. Nor can his sincerity in any way be
doubted; or his sympathy for those he would persuade to imitate
his example be denied.
In my judgment, it is to the battles of this new class of champions
that our late success is greatly, perhaps chiefly, owing. But, had the
old school champions themselves, been of the most wise selecting,
was their system of tactics, the most judicious? It seems to me, it
was not. Too much denunciation against dram sellers and dram
drinkers was indulged in. This, I think, was both impolitic and unjust.
It was impolitic, because, it is not much in the nature of man
to be driven to anything; still less to be driven about that which is
exclusively his own business; and least of all, where such driving is
to be submitted to, at the expense of pecuniary interest, or burning
appetite. When the dram-seller and drinker, were incessantly told,
not in accents of entreaty and persuasion, diffidently addressed
by erring man to an erring brother; but in the thundering tones of
anathema and denunciation, with which the lordly Judge often
groups together all the crimes of the felon's life, and thrusts them
in his face just ere he passes sentence of death upon him, that they
were the authors of all the vice and misery and crime in the land;
that they were the manufacturers and material of all the thieves
and robbers and murderers that infested the earth; that their
houses were the workshops of the devil; and that their persons
should be shunned by all the good and virtuous, as moral pestilences --
I say, when they were told all this, and in this way, it is
not wonderful that they were slow, very slow, to acknowledge the
truth of such denunciations, and to join the ranks of their
denouncers in a hue and cry against themselves.
To have expected them to do otherwise than they did -- to have
expected them not to meet denunciation with denunciation,
crimination with crimination, and anathema with anathema, was to
expect a reversal of human nature, which is God's decree, and never
can be reversed. When the conduct of men is designed to be
influenced, persuasion, kind, unassuming persuasion, should ever be
adopted. It is an old and a true maxim, that a "drop of honey
catches more flies than a gallon of gall." So with men. If you would
win a man to your cause, first convince him that you are his
sincere friend. Therein is a drop of honey that catches his heart,
which, say what he will, is the great highroad to his reason, and
which, when once gained, you will find but little trouble in convincing
his judgment of the justice of your cause, if indeed that
cause really be a just one. On the contrary, assume to dictate to his
judgment, or to command his action, or to mark him as one to be
shunned and despised, and he will retreat within himself, close all
the avenues to his head and his heart; and though your cause be naked
truth itself, transformed to the heaviest lance, harder than steel,
and sharper than steel can be made, and though you throw it with
more than Herculean force and precision, you shall be no more be
able to pierce him, than to penetrate the hard shell of a tortoise
with a rye straw.
Such is man, and so must he be understood by those who would
lead him, even to his own best interest.
On this point, the Washingtonians greatly excel the temperance
advocates of former times. Those whom they desire to convince and
persuade, are their old friends and companions. They know they
are not demons, nor even the worst of men. They know that
generally, they are kind, generous, and charitable, even beyond the
example of their more staid and sober neighbors. They are practical
philanthropists; and they glow with a generous and brotherly zeal,
that mere theorizers are incapable of feeling. Benevolence and
charity possess their hearts entirely; and out of the abundance of
their hearts, their tongues give utterance. "Love through all their
actions runs, and all their words are mild." In this spirit they speak
and act, and in the same, they are heard and regarded. And when
such is the temper of the advocate, and such of the audience, no
good cause can be unsuccessful.
But I have said that denunciations against dram-sellers and
dram-drinkers are unjust as well as impolitic. Let us see.
I have not enquired at what period of time the use of intoxicating
drinks commenced; nor is it important to know. It is sufficient that
to all of us who now inhabit the world, the practice of drinking
them, is just as old as the world itself, -- that is, we have seen the
one, just as long as we have seen the other. When all such of us, as
have now reached the years of maturity, first opened our eyes upon
the stage of existence, we found intoxicating liquor, recognized by
everybody, used by every body, and repudiated by nobody. It commonly
entered into the first draught of the infant, and the last
draught of the dying man. From the sideboard of the parson, down
to the ragged pocket of the houseless loafer, it was constantly found.
Physicians prescribed it in this, that, and the other disease.
Government provided it for soldiers and sailors; and to have a rolling
or raising, a husking or hoe-down, any where about without it, was
positively insufferable.
So too, it was every where a respectable article of manufacture
and merchandise. The making of it was regarded as an honorable
livelihood; and he who could make most, was the most enterprising
and respectable. Large and small manufactories of it were every
where erected, in which all the earthly goods of their owners were
invested. Wagons drew it from town to town -- boats bore it from
clime to clime, and the winds wafted it from nation to nation; and
merchants bought and sold it, by wholesale and retail, with
precisely the same feelings, on the part of the seller, buyer, and
bystander, as are felt at the selling and buying of flour, beef, bacon,
or any other of the real necessaries of life. Universal public opinion
not only tolerated, but recognized and adopted its use.
It is true, that even then, it was known and acknowledged, that
many were greatly injured by it; but none seemed to think the
injury arose from the use of a bad thing, but from the abuse of a very
good thing. The victims of it were pitied, and compassionated, just
as now are the heirs of consumptions, and other hereditary diseases.
Their failing was treated as a misfortune, and not as a crime,
or even as a disgrace.
If, then, what I have been saying be true, is it wonderful, that
some should think and act now as all thought and acted twenty
years ago? And is it just to assail, contemn, or despise them, for
doing so? The universal sense of mankind, on any subject, is an argument,
or at least an influence not easily overcome. The success of
the argument in favor of the existence of an over-ruling Providence,
mainly depends upon that sense; and men ought not, in justice,
to be denounced for yielding to it, in any case, or giving it
up slowly, especially, where they are backed by interest, fixed
habits, or burning appetites.
Another error, as it seems to me, into which the old reformers
fell, was, the position that all habitual drunkards were utterly
incorrigible, and therefore, must be turned adrift, and damned
without remedy, in order that the grace of temperance might abound
to the temperate then, and to all mankind some hundred years
thereafter. There is in this something so repugnant to humanity, so
uncharitable, so cold-blooded and feelingless, that it never did, nor
ever can enlist the enthusiasm of a popular cause. We could not
love the man who taught it -- we could not hear him with patience.
The heart could not throw open its portals to it. The generous man
could not adopt it. It could not mix with his blood. It looked so
fiendishly selfish, so like throwing fathers and brothers overboard,
to lighten the boat for our security -- that the noble minded shrank
from the manifest meanness of the thing.
And besides this, the benefits of a reformation to be effected by
such a system, were too remote in point of time, to warmly engage
many in its behalf. Few can be induced to labor exclusively for
posterity; and none will do it enthusiastically. Posterity has done
nothing for us; and theorize on it as we may, practically we shall do
very little for it, unless we are made to think, we are, at the same
time, doing something for ourselves. What an ignorance of human
nature does it exhibit, to ask or expect a whole community to rise
up and labor for the temporal happiness of others after themselves
shall be consigned to the dust, a majority of which community take
no pains whatever to secure their own eternal welfare, at a no
greater distant day? Great distance, in either time or space, has
wonderful power to lull and render quiescent the human mind.
Pleasures to be enjoyed, or pains to be endured, after we shall be
dead and gone, are but little regarded, even in our own cases, and
much less in the cases of others.
Still, in addition to this, there is something so ludicrous in
promises of good, or threats of evil, a great way off, as to render the
whole subject with which they are connected, easily turned into
ridicule. "Better lay down that spade you are stealing, Paddy; --if
you don't you'll pay for it at the day of judgment." "Be the powers,
if ye'll credit me so long, I'll take another, jist."
By the Washingtonians, this system of consigning the habitual
drunkard to hopeless ruin, is repudiated. They adopt a more
enlarged philanthropy. They go for present as well as future good.
They labor for all now living, as well as all hereafter to live. They
teach hope to all -- despair to none. As applying to their cause, they
deny the doctrine of unpardonable sin. As in Christianity it is
taught, so in this they teach, that
"While the lamp holds out to burn,
The vilest sinner may return."
And, what is a matter of more profound gratulation, they, by
experiment upon experiment, and example upon example, prove
the maxim to be no less true in the one case than in the other. On
every hand we behold those, who but yesterday, were the chief of
sinners, now the chief apostles of the cause. Drunken devils are
cast out by ones, by sevens, and by legions; and their unfortunate
victims, like the poor possessed, who was redeemed from his long
and lonely wanderings in the tombs, are publishing to the ends of
the earth, how great things have been done for them.
To these new champions, and this new system of tactics, our late
success is mainly owing; and to them we must mainly look for the
final consummation. The ball is now rolling gloriously on, and none
are so able as they to increase its speed, and its bulk -- to add to its
momentum, and its magnitude. Even though unlearned in letters,
for this task, none are so well educated. To fit them for this
work, they have been taught in the true school. They have been in
that gulf, from which they would teach others the means of escape.
They have passed that prison wall, which others have long declared
impassable; and who that has not shall dare to weigh opinions with them,
as to the mode of passing.
But if it be true, as I have insisted, that those who have suffered
by intemperance personally, and have reformed, are the most
powerful and efficient instruments to push the reformation to ultimate
success, it does not follow, that those who have not suffered, have
no part left them to perform. Whether or not the world would be
vastly benefitted by a total and final banishment from it of all
intoxicating drinks, seems to me not now an open question.
Three-fourths of mankind confess the affirmative with their
tongues, and, I believe, all the rest acknowledge it in their hearts.
Ought any, then, to refuse their aid in doing what the good of the
whole demands? Shall he, who cannot do much, be, for that reason,
excused if he do nothing? "But," says one, "what good can I do by
signing the pledge? I never drink even without signing." This question
has already been asked and answered more than millions of
times. Let it be answered once more. For the man suddenly, or in
any other way, to break off from the use of drams, who has
indulged in them for a long course of years, and until his appetite for
them has become ten or a hundred fold stronger, and more craving,
than any natural appetite can be, requires a most powerful moral
effort. In such an undertaking, he needs every moral support and
influence, that can possibly be brought to his aid, and thrown
around him. And not only so; but every moral prop, should be
taken from whatever argument might rise in his mind to lure him
to his backsliding. When he casts his eyes around him, he should
be able to see, all that he respects, all that he admires, and all that
[he?] loves, kindly and anxiously pointing him onward; and none
beckoning him back, to his former miserable "wallowing in the mire."
But it is said by some, that men will think and act for
themselves; that none will disuse spirits or anything else, merely
because his neighbors do; and that moral influence is not that
powerful engine contended for. Let us examine this. Let me ask the man
who could maintain this position most stiffly, what compensation he
will accept to go to church some Sunday and sit during the sermon
with his wife's bonnet upon his head? Not a trifle, I'll venture. And
why not? There would be nothing irreligious in it: nothing immoral,
nothing uncomfortable. Then why not? Is it not because
there would be something egregiously unfashionable in it? Then it
is the influence of fashion; and what is the influence of fashion, but
the influence that other people's actions have [on our own?] actions,
the strong inclination each of us feels to do as we see all our
neighbors do? Nor is the influence of fashion confined to any
particular thing or class of things. It is just as strong on one subject as
another. Let us make it as unfashionable to withhold our names
from the temperance cause as for husbands to wear their wives
bonnets to church, and instances will be just as rare in the one case
as the other.
"But," say some, "we are no drunkards; and we shall not
acknowledge ourselves such by joining a reformed drunkard's society,
whatever our influence might be." Surely no Christian will
adhere to this objection. If they believe, as they profess, that
Omnipotence condescended to take on himself the form of sinful
man, and, as such, to die an ignominious death for their sakes,
surely they will not refuse submission to the infinitely lesser
condescension, for the temporal, and perhaps eternal salvation, of a
large, erring, and unfortunate class of their own fellow creatures.
Nor is the condescension very great.
In my judgment, such of us as have never fallen victims, have
been spared more by the absence of appetite, than from any mental
or moral superiority over those who have. Indeed, I believe, if
we take habitual drunkards as a class, their heads and their hearts
will bear an advantageous comparison with those of any other
class. There seems ever to have been a proneness in the brilliant,
and warm-blooded to fall into this vice. The demon of intemperance
ever seems to have delighted in sucking the blood of genius
and of generosity. What one of us but can call to mind some dear
relative, more promising in youth than all his fellows, who has
fallen a sacrifice to his rapacity? He ever seems to have gone forth,
like the Egyptian angel of death, commissioned to slay if not the
first, the fairest born of every family. Shall he now be arrested in
his desolating career? In that arrest, all can give aid that will; and
who shall be excused that can, and will not? Far around as human
breath has ever blown, he keeps our fathers, our brothers, our sons,
and our friends, prostrate in the chains of moral death. To all the
living every where we cry, "come sound the moral resurrection
trump, that these may rise and stand up, an exceeding great army" --
"Come from the four winds, O breath! and breathe upon these
slain, that they may live."
If the relative grandeur of revolutions shall be estimated by the
great amount of human misery they alleviate, and the small
amount they inflict, then, indeed, will this be the grandest the
world shall ever have seen. Of our political revolution of '76, we all
are justly proud. It has given us a degree of political freedom, far
exceeding that of any other nation of the earth. In it the
world has found a solution of the long mooted problem, as to the
capability of man to govern himself. In it was the germ which has
vegetated, and still is to grow and expand into the universal liberty
of mankind.
But with all these glorious results, past, present, and to come, it
had its evils too. It breathed forth famine, swam in blood and rode
in fire; and long, long after, the orphan's cry, and the widow's
wail, continued to break the sad silence that ensued. These were the
price, the inevitable price, paid for the blessings it bought.
Turn now, to the temperance revolution. In it, we shall find a
stronger bondage broken; a viler slavery, manumitted; a greater
tyrant deposed. In it, more of want supplied, more disease healed,
more sorrow assuaged. By it no orphans starving, no widows weeping.
By it, none wounded in feeling, none injured in interest. Even
the dram-maker, and dram seller, will have glided into other occupations
so gradually, as never to have felt the change; and
will stand ready to join all others in the universal song of gladness.
And what a noble ally this, to the cause of political freedom.
With such an aid, its march cannot fail to be on and on, till every
son of earth shall drink in rich fruition, the sorrow quenching
draughts of perfect liberty. Happy day, when, all appetites
controlled, all poisons subdued, all matter subjected, mind, all
conquering mind, shall live and move the monarch of the world.
Glorious consummation! Hail fall of Fury! Reign of Reason, all hail!
And when the victory shall be complete -- when there shall be
neither a slave nor a drunkard on the earth -- how proud the title
of that Land, which may truly claim to be the birth-place and the
cradle of both those revolutions, that shall have ended in that
victory. How nobly distinguished that People, who shall have planted,
and nurtured to maturity, both the political and moral freedom of
their species.
This is the one hundred and tenth anniversary of the birth-day of
Washington. We are met to celebrate this day. Washington is
the mightiest name of earth -- long since mightiest in the cause of
civil liberty; still mightiest in moral reformation. On that name, an
eulogy is expected. It cannot be. To add brightness to the sun, or
glory to the name of Washington, is alike impossible. Let none
attempt it. In solemn awe pronounce the name, and in its naked
deathless splendor, leave it shining on.

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