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224 pages, Hardcover
Published November 23, 2021
He rarely quoted or made any direct application of his sources; instead, he made the insights and phraseology his own to such an extent that he could refigure and transpose them, like a musician whose innumerable borrowings and variations are bodied forth in new and unexpected forms. Through the compressive power of his mind, Lincoln metamorphizes his sources. (p. 9)
It’s important for us to remember that the freedom Lincoln heralds is an infant freedom, in need of further maturation. In part, this means freedom will grow and spread as it did with the adoption of the 15th, 19th, and 26th Amendments. But maturation also means the acquisition of moral and intellectual virtue through the disciplines of habit and study. As a nation, we have done better in extending freedom than in educating for it. In any case, as Lincoln foresees, there will always be plenty for future generations to do. This may be one of the reasons the Gettysburg Address is so beloved. It rallies us today just as it rallied the nation then. (p. 107-108)