His second Inaugural Address - here's an excellent - 15 paragraphs - short essay from The Public Discourse:
“With malice toward none; with charity for all…” It was a civic gesture as unexpected then as it is needed now.
One hundred and fifty years ago today, Abraham Lincoln stood on the eastern portico of the U.S. Capitol and delivered a few words—703, to be precise—at his Second Inaugural. The speech remains the most celebrated inaugural address in our history. Fredrick Douglass, not always an admirer of Lincoln, called it a “sacred effort.” Lincoln himself acknowledged it was filled with “lots of wisdom” and predicted it would “wear as well as—perhaps even better than—any thing I have produced.” From an otherwise self-deprecating man who had already authored the instantly classic Gettysburg Address, this is no small admission.
Hit the link for the rest of the essay. A great short biography of Lincoln is With Malice Toward None: A Life of Abraham Lincoln . I read it 25 plus years ago.
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