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342 charity for imperfect man, and let us imitate his great life in this.

"'But was not Mr. Lincoln a man of great humanity?' asks a friend at my elbow, a little angrily; to which I reply, 'Has not that question been answered already?' Let us suppose that it has not.  We must understand each other.  What do you mean by humanity?  Do you mean that he had much of human nature in him?  If so, I will grant that he was a man of humanity.  Do you mean, if the above definition is unsatisfactory, that Mr. Lincoln was tender and kind?  Then I agree with you.  But if you mean to say that he so loved a man that he would sacrifice truth and right for him, for love's sake, then he was not a man of humanity.  Do you mean to say that he so loved man, for love's sake, that his heart led him out of himself and compelled him to go in search of the objects of his love, for their sake?  He never, to my knowledge, manifested this side of his character.  Such is the law of human nature, that it cannot be all head, all conscience, and all heart at one and the same time in one and the same person. Our Maker made it so, and where God through reason blazed the path, walk therein boldly. Mr. Lincoln's glory and power lay in the just combination of head, conscience, and heart, and it is here that his fame must rest, or not at all.

"Not only were Mr. Lincoln's perceptions good; not only was nature suggestive to him; not only