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LINCOLN AND THE LAD

While officially resident in Washington during the Civil War, I once had occasion to call upon President Lincoln with the late Senator Henry Wilson, upon an- errand" of a public nature in which we were mutually interested, writes ex-Governor Rice in his memorial-. volume. We were obliged to wait some time in the anteroom before we could be received, and when at length the door was opened to us a small lad, perhaps ten or twelve years old, who had been waiting for admission 'several days without success, slipped in between us and approached the" President in advance. The latter gave "the Senator and myself a cordial but brief salutation, and turning immediately .to the lad, said, 'And who is the little boy?' The boy soon told his story, which was in substance that he had come to Washington seeking employment as a page in the House of Representatives, and he wished tlie President to give him such an appointment. _' _ - « To this the President- replied that such appointments were not at his disposal, and that application must be made to the doorkeeper of the House at the Capitol. ' But, sir,' said the lad, still undaunted, ' I am a good boy, and have a letter from my mother, and one from the supervisors of my town, and one from my Sunday school teacher-, and they all told me that I could earn enough in one session of Congress to keep my mother and the rest of us comfortable all the remainder of the year.' The President took the lad's papers and 'ran his eye over them with that penetrating and absorbent look so familiar to all who knew him, and then took his pen and wrote upon the back of one of them : 'If Captain Goodnow can give a place to this good little boy, I shall be gratified,' and signed it ' A. Lincoln.' The boy's face became radiant with hope, and he walked out of the room with a" step as light as though all the angels were whispering their congratulations. Only after the lad had gone did the President seem to realise that a Senator- and another person had been some time waiting to see him. I Think for a moment of the President of a great nation engaged in one of the most terrible wars ever waged among men, able so far to forget all as to give himself up for the time being to the errand of a little boy who- had brayed an interview uninvited, and of whom he knew nothing but that he had a story to tell of his widowed mother and of his ambition to serve* her 1

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19090311.2.61.4

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume 11, Issue 10, 11 March 1909, Page 397

Word Count
449

LINCOLN AND THE LAD New Zealand Tablet, Volume 11, Issue 10, 11 March 1909, Page 397

LINCOLN AND THE LAD New Zealand Tablet, Volume 11, Issue 10, 11 March 1909, Page 397

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