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Abraham Lincoln |
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| Author
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| Category
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Biography
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| Language
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English
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| Published
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1917
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| Extract
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e momentary reappearances again. Otherwise the whole of Abraham Lincoln's kindred
are now out of the story. They have been disposed of thus hastily at the outset,
not because they were discreditable or slight people, but because Lincoln himself
when he began to find his footing in the world seems to have felt sadly that
his family was just so much to him and no more. The dearest of his recollections
attached to premature death; the next to chronic failure. Rightly or wrongly
(and we know enough about heredity now to expect any guess as to its working
in a particular case to be wrong) he attributed the best that he had inherited
to a licentious connection and a nameless progenitor. Quite early he must have
been intensely ambitious, and discovered in himself intellectual power; but
from his twelfth year to his twenty-first there was hardly a soul to comprehend
that side of him. This chill upon his memory unmistakably influenced the particular
complexion of his melancholy. Unmistakably too he early learnt to thi
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