Page:Six Months at the White House.djvu/338

Rh classifying facts for thousands of years, Lincoln's peculiar stand-point could give him no advantage of other men's labor. Hence he tore up to the deep foundations all arrangements of facts, and coined and arranged new plans to govern himself. He was compelled, from his peculiar mental organization, to do this. His labor was great, continuous, patient, and all-enduring.

"The truth about this whole matter is that Mr. Lincoln read less and thought more than any man in his sphere in America. No man can put his finger on any great book written in the last or present century that he read.  When young he read the Bible, and when of age he read Shakspeare.  This latter book was scarcely ever out of his mind.  Mr. Lincoln is acknowledged to have been a great man, but the question is what made him great.  I repeat, that he read less and thought more than any man of his standing in America, if not in the world.  He possessed originality and power of thought in an eminent degree.  He was cautious, cool, concentrated, with continuity of reflection; was patient and enduring.  These are some of the grounds of his wonderful success.

"Not only was nature, man, fact, and principle suggestive to Mr. Lincoln, not only had he accurate and exact perceptions, but he was causative, i.e., his mind ran back behind all facts, things, and principles to their origin, history, and first cause,—that point where forces act at once as effect and