What do you think?
Rate this book
336 pages, Hardcover
First published March 3, 2020
Lincoln's speeches and state papers seemed puzzling to their readers at first because, unlike the works of more systematically [my emphasis] educated presidents, they popped with catchy phrases and homely ideas. The July 4, 1861, message, for example, included the phrase "sugar-coated," which a government editor and seasoned newspaperman ... urged Lincoln to remove, noting the use of such a term was undignified and unworthy of a state paper of lasting historic importance. ... Lincoln responded, "that the word expressed precisely my idea... . The time will never come ... when people won't know exactly what sugar-coated means." Many highly educated Americans found Lincoln's folksiness embarrassing and ungentlemanly. [my emphasis]From page 105:
[An Illinois lawyer said] "Was there ever such a curious melange of almost supreme greatness and boyish vacuity as was compressed in this unique, uneven and incomprehensible man?" ... Ralph Waldo Emerson [said] "You cannot refine Mr. Lincoln's taste, extend his horizon, or clear his Judgements [sic]; he will not walk dignifiedly through the traditional role of the President of America, but will pop out his head at each railway station and make a little speech, and get into an argument with Squire A or Judge B. He will write letters to... any editor or reporter or saucy party committee that writes to him, and cheapen himself."
May found his style to be clunky and uninspiring.