Abraham Lincoln
Robert H. Browne, M.D., Abraham Lincoln and the
Men of His Time, Volume II. Copyright 1901, by the
Western Methodist Book Concern, available from
ebooks.google.com, quoting Abraham Lincoln, circa 1851:
“Christ knew better than we that 'No man having
put his hand to the plow and looking back is fit for the
kingdom of God;' nor is many man doing his duty who
shrinks and is faithless to his fellow-men. Now a word
more about Abolitionists and new ideas in Government,
whatever they may be: We are all called Abolitionists now
who desire any restriction of slavery or believe that the
system is wrong, as I have declared for years. We are
called so, not to help out a peaceful solution, but in
derision, to abase us, and enable the defamers to make
successful combinations against us. I never was much
annoyed by these, less now than ever. I favor the best
plan to restrict the extension of slavery peacefully, and
fully believe that we must reach some plan that will do
it, and provide for some method of final extinction of
the evil, before we can have permanent peace on the
subject. On other questions there is ample room for
reform when the time comes; but now it would be folly to
think that we could undertake more than we have on hand.
But when slavery is over with and settled, men
should never rest content while oppressions, wrongs, and
iniquities are in force against them.
“The land, the earth that God gave to
man for his home, his sustenance, and support, should
never be the possession of any man, corporation, society,
or unfriendly Government, any more than the air or the
water, if as much. An individual company or enterprise
requiring land should hold no more in their own right
than is needed for their home and sustenance, and never
more than they have in actual use in the prudent
management of their legitimate business, and this much
should not be permitted when it creates an exclusive
monopoly. All that is not so used should be held for the
free use of every family to make homesteads, and to hold
them as long as they are so occupied.
“A reform like this will be worked out
some time in the future. The idle talk of foolish men,
that is so common now, on 'Abolitionists, agitators, and
disturbers of the peace,' will find its way against it,
with whatever force it may possess, and as strongly
promoted and carried on as it can be by land monopolists,
grasping landlords, and the titled and untitled senseless
enemies of mankind everywhere.”
Extended excerpts are available here for
context.
See also the 90s book translated from French re:
Lincoln, Land and Labor.
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