Presented here is a combination of those two speeches.
My friend and fellow living historian, Fred Priebe (who portrays President Lincoln), read this speech at a recent reenactment. I had never heard it before and found it fascinating, for I have read the Bible, but never as a history book.
What really grabbed my attention here is that this is social history, and if you love social history as much as I do, I believe you'll find the following fascinating:
Fishes, birds, beasts, and
creeping things are not miners, but feeders and lodgers, merely.
Beavers build houses, but they build them in nowise differently, or
better now, than they did five thousand years ago. Ants and
honey-bees provide food for winter, but just in the same way they
did when Solomon referred the sluggard to them as patterns of
prudence.
Man is not the only one who labors; but he is the only one who improves his workmanship. This improvement, he effects by Discoveries, and Inventions. His first important discovery was the fact that he was naked, and his first invention was the fig-leaf-apron. This simple article, the apron made of leaves, seems to have been the origin of clothing---the one thing for which nearly half of the toil and care of the human race has ever since been expended.
Man is not the only one who labors; but he is the only one who improves his workmanship. This improvement, he effects by Discoveries, and Inventions. His first important discovery was the fact that he was naked, and his first invention was the fig-leaf-apron. This simple article, the apron made of leaves, seems to have been the origin of clothing---the one thing for which nearly half of the toil and care of the human race has ever since been expended.
The
most important improvement ever made in connection with clothing was
the invention of spinning and weaving. The spinning jenny and
power-loom, invented in modern times, though great improvements, do
not, as inventions, rank with the ancient arts of spinning and
weaving. Spinning and weaving brought into the department of clothing
such abundance and variety of material. Wool, the hair of several
species of animals, hemp, flax, cotton, silk, and perhaps other
articles, were all suited to it, affording garments not only adapted
to wet and dry, heat and cold, but also susceptible of high degrees
of ornamental finish. Exactly when, or where, spinning and weaving
originated is not known. At the first interview of the Almighty with
Adam and Eve, after the fall, He made ``coats of skins, and clothed
them'' (Genesis 3-21).
The
Bible makes no other allusion to clothing before the flood.
Soon after the deluge Noah's two sons covered him with a garment; but of what material the garment was made is not mentioned (Genesis 9-23).
Soon after the deluge Noah's two sons covered him with a garment; but of what material the garment was made is not mentioned (Genesis 9-23).
Abraham
mentions ``thread'' in such connection as to indicate that spinning
and weaving were in use in his day (Genesis 14.23) and soon after,
reference to the art is frequently made. "Linen breeches" are
mentioned (Exodus 28.42) and it is said "all the women that were
wise hearted, did spin with their hands'' (35-25). The work of the
``weaver'' is mentioned--- (35-35).
In the book of Job, the ``weavers shuttle'' is mentioned.
In the book of Job, the ``weavers shuttle'' is mentioned.
The
above mention of ``thread'' by Abraham is the oldest recorded
allusion to spinning and weaving; and it was made about two thousand
years after the creation of man, and now, near four thousand years
ago.
The
discovery of the properties of iron and the making of iron tools
must have been among the earliest of important discoveries and
inventions. We can scarcely conceive the possibility of making much
of anything else, without the use of iron tools. How could the "gopher wood'' for the Ark have been gotten out without an axe?
Corresponding with the prime necessity for iron, we find at least one
very early notice of it. Tubal-cain was “an instructor of every
artificer in brass and iron” (Genesis 4-22). Tubal-cain was the
seventh in decent from Adam; and his birth was about one thousand
years before the flood. After the flood, frequent mention is made of
iron, and instruments made of iron. Thus "instrument of iron'' at
Numbers: 35-16; "bed-stead of iron'' at Deuteronomy 3-11 - "the iron
furnace" at 4-20 and "iron tool'' at 27-5.
At 19-5, very distinct mention of ``the ax to cut down the tree'' is made; and also at 8-9, the promised land is described as "a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig brass.''
At 19-5, very distinct mention of ``the ax to cut down the tree'' is made; and also at 8-9, the promised land is described as "a land whose stones are iron, and out of whose hills thou mayest dig brass.''
Transportation - the removal of
person, and goods from place to place - would be an early object,
if not a necessity, with man. By his natural powers of locomotion,
and without much assistance from Discovery and Invention, he could
move himself about with considerable facility; and even, could carry
small burdens with him. But very soon he would wish to lessen the
labor. For this object, wheel-carriages, and water-crafts - wagons
and boats - are the most important inventions. The use of the wheel & axle has been so long known, that it is difficult, without
reflection, to estimate it at it's true value.
The
oldest recorded allusion to the wheel and axle is the mention of a
``chariot'' (Genesis 41-43). This was in Egypt, upon the occasion of
Joseph being made Governor. It was about twenty-five hundred years
after the creation of Adam.
That the chariot then mentioned was a wheel-carriage drawn by animals is sufficiently evidenced by the mention of chariot-wheels, at Exodus 14-25, and the mention of chariots in connection with horses, in the same chapter, verses 9 & 23.
That the chariot then mentioned was a wheel-carriage drawn by animals is sufficiently evidenced by the mention of chariot-wheels, at Exodus 14-25, and the mention of chariots in connection with horses, in the same chapter, verses 9 & 23.
As
to transportation by water, the boat is indispensable to navigation.
It is not probable that the philosophical principle upon which the
use of the boat primarily depends, to wit, the principle, that any
thing will float which can not sink without displacing more than
it's own weight of water, was known, or even thought of, before the
first boats were made. The sight of a crow standing on a piece of
drift-wood floating down the swollen current of a creek or river,
might well enough suggest the specific idea to a man, that he could
himself get upon a log, or on two logs tied together, and somehow
work his way to the opposite shore of the same stream. Such a
suggestion, so taken, would be the birth of navigation. The leading
idea was thus caught; and whatever came afterwards, were but
improvements upon it.
As
man is a land creature, it might be expected he would learn to travel
by land somewhat earlier than he would by water. Still the crossing
of streams, somewhat too deep for wading, would be an early necessity
with him. If we pass by the Ark, which may be regarded as belonging
rather to the miraculous than to human invention, the first notice we
have of water-craft, is the mention of ``ships'' by Jacob (Genesis
49-13).
As man’s food - his first
necessity - was to be derived from the vegetation of the earth, it
was natural that his first care should be directed to the assistance
of that vegetation. And accordingly we find that, even before the
fall, the man was put into the Garden of Eden "to dress it, and to
keep it.'' And when afterwards, in consequence of the first
transgression, labor was imposed on the race, as a penalty - a
curse - we find the first born man - the first heir of the
curse - was ``a tiller of the ground.'' This was the beginning of
agriculture; and although, both in point of time, and of importance,
it stands at the head of all branches of human industry, it has
derived less direct advantage from Discovery and Invention, than
almost any other. The plow, of very early origin; and reaping, and
threshing, machines, of modern invention are, at this day, the
principle improvements in agriculture. And even the oldest of these,
the plow, could not have been conceived of until a precedent
conception had been caught and put into practice. I mean the
conception or idea of substituting other forces in nature for
man's own muscular power. These other forces, as now used, are
principally the strength of animals and the power of the wind, of
running streams, and of steam.
Climbing
upon the back of an animal, and making it carry us might not occur
very readily. The earliest instance of it mentioned is when "Abraham rose up early in the morning, and saddled his donkey (Genesis 22-3), preparatory to sacraficing Isaac as a burnt-offering; but
the allusion to the saddle indicates that riding had been in use some
time, for it is quite probable they rode bare-backed awhile, at
least before they invented saddles.
The
idea, being once conceived, of riding one species of animals, would
soon be extended to others. Accordingly we find that when the servant
of Abraham went in search of a wife for Isaac, he took ten camels
with him; and, on his return trip, "Rebekah arose, and her damsels,
and they rode upon the camels, and followed the man'' (Genesis 24-61).
The
horse, too, as a riding animal, is mentioned early. The Red Sea being
safely passed, Moses and the children of Israel sang to the Lord "the horse, and his rider hath he thrown into the sea.'' (Exodus 15-1).
Seeing
that animals could bear man upon their backs, it would soon occur
that they could also bear other burdens. Accordingly we find that
Joseph's brethren, on their first visit to Egypt, "laden their
donkeys with the corn, and departed thence'' (Genesis 42-26).
Also
it would occur that animals could be made to draw burdens after them,
as well as to bear them upon their backs; and hence plows and
chariots came into use early enough to be often mentioned in the
books of Moses (Deuteronomy 22-10, Genesis 41-43, Genesis 46-29, Exodus 14-25).
Of
all the forces of nature, I should think the wind contains the
largest amount of motive power - that is, power to move things. Take
any given space of the earth's surface, for instance, Illinois,
and all the power exerted by all the men, and beasts, and
running-water, and steam, over and upon it, shall not equal the one
hundredth part of what is exerted by the blowing of the wind over and
upon the same space. And yet it has not, so far in the world's
history, become proportionably valuable as a motive power. It is
applied extensively, and advantageously, to sail-vessels in
navigation. Add to this a few wind-mills and pumps and you have
about all.
That, as yet, no very successful mode of controlling, and directing the wind has been discovered; and that, naturally, it moves by fits and starts doubtless have been the insurmountable difficulties. As yet, the wind is an untamed and unharnessed force; and quite possibly one of the greatest discoveries hereafter to be made, will be the taming and harnessing of the wind. That the difficulties of controlling this power are very great is quite evident by the fact that they have already been perceived, and struggled with more than three thousand years; for that power was applied to sail-vessels, at least as early as the time of the prophet Isaiah.
That, as yet, no very successful mode of controlling, and directing the wind has been discovered; and that, naturally, it moves by fits and starts doubtless have been the insurmountable difficulties. As yet, the wind is an untamed and unharnessed force; and quite possibly one of the greatest discoveries hereafter to be made, will be the taming and harnessing of the wind. That the difficulties of controlling this power are very great is quite evident by the fact that they have already been perceived, and struggled with more than three thousand years; for that power was applied to sail-vessels, at least as early as the time of the prophet Isaiah.
In
speaking of running streams, as a motive power, I mean it's
application to mills and other machinery by means of the "water
wheel'' - a thing now well known, and extensively used, but of
which no mention is made in the bible, though it is thought to have
been in use among the Romans. The language of the Saviour "Two women
shall be grinding at the mill &c.,'' indicates that even in the
populous city of Jerusalem, at that day, mills were operated by
hand - having, as yet had no other than human power applied to them.
The
advantageous use of Steam-power is, unquestionably, a modern
discovery.
And
yet, as much as two thousand years ago the power of steam was not
only observed, but an ingenious toy was actually made and put in
motion by it, at Alexandria in Egypt.
It is quite certain that ever since water has been boiled in covered vessels, men have seen the lids of the vessels rise and fall a little, with a sort of fluttering motion by force of the steam. But so long as this was not specially observed, and reflected and experimented upon, it came to nothing. At length however, after many thousand years, some man observes this long-known effect of hot water lifting a pot-lid, and begins a train of reflection upon it. He says ``Why, to be sure, the force that lifts the pot-lid, will lift any thing else, which is no heavier than the pot-lid. And, as man has much hard lifting to do, can not this hot-water power be made to help him?'' He has become a little excited on the subject, and he fancies he hears a voice answering ``Try me.'' He does try it, and the observation, reflection, and trial gives to the world the control of that tremendous, and now well known agent, called steam-power. This is not the actual history in detail, but the general principle.
It is quite certain that ever since water has been boiled in covered vessels, men have seen the lids of the vessels rise and fall a little, with a sort of fluttering motion by force of the steam. But so long as this was not specially observed, and reflected and experimented upon, it came to nothing. At length however, after many thousand years, some man observes this long-known effect of hot water lifting a pot-lid, and begins a train of reflection upon it. He says ``Why, to be sure, the force that lifts the pot-lid, will lift any thing else, which is no heavier than the pot-lid. And, as man has much hard lifting to do, can not this hot-water power be made to help him?'' He has become a little excited on the subject, and he fancies he hears a voice answering ``Try me.'' He does try it, and the observation, reflection, and trial gives to the world the control of that tremendous, and now well known agent, called steam-power. This is not the actual history in detail, but the general principle.
What appears strange is that
neither the inventor of the toy nor any one else, for so long a time
afterwards, should perceive that steam would move useful machinery as
well as a toy.
But
was this first inventor of the application of steam, wiser or more
ingenious than those who had gone before him? Not at all. Had he not
learned much of them, he never would have succeeded - probably never
would have thought of making the attempt. To be fruitful in
invention, it is indispensable to have a habit of observation and
reflection; and this habit, our steam friend acquired, no doubt, from
those who, to him, were old fogies. But for the difference in habit
of observation, why did Yankees, almost instantly, discover gold in
California, which had been trodden upon, and over-looked by Indians
and Mexicans for centuries? Gold-mines are not the only mines
overlooked in the same way. There are more mines above the Earth's
surface than below it. All nature, the whole world, material, moral,
and intellectual, is a mine; and, in Adam's day, it was a wholly
unexplored mine. Now, it was the destined work of Adam's race to
develop, by discoveries, inventions, and improvements, the hidden
treasures of this mine.
The
inclination to exchange thoughts with one another is probably an
original impulse of our nature. If I be in pain I wish to let you
know it, and to ask your sympathy and assistance; and my pleasurable
emotions also I wish to communicate to, and share, with you. But to
carry on such communication, some instrumentality is indispensable.
Accordingly, speech - articulate sounds rattled off from the
tongue - was used by our first parents, and even by Adam, before the
creation of Eve. He gave names to the animals while she was still a
bone in his side; and he broke out quite volubly when she first stood
before him, the best present of his Maker. From this it would appear
that speech was not an invention of man, but rather the direct gift
of his Creator. Of the organs of speech, the tongue is the principal,
and if we shall test it, we shall find the capacities of the tongue,
in the utterance of articulate sounds, absolutely wonderful. You can
count from one to one hundred quite distinctly in about forty
seconds. In doing this two hundred and eighty three distinct sounds
or syllables are uttered, being seven to each second; and yet there
shall be enough difference between every two, to be easily recognized
by the ear of the hearer. What other signs to represent things could
possibly be produced so rapidly? or, even, if ready made, could be
arranged so rapidly to express the sense? Motions with the hands are
no adequate substitute. Marks for the recognition of the
eye - writing - although a wonderful auxiliary for speech, is no
worthy substitute for it. In addition to the more slow and laborious
process of getting up a communication in writing, the
materials---pen, ink, and paper---are not always at hand. But one
always has his tongue with him, and the breath of his life is the
ever-ready material with which it works. Speech, then, by enabling
different individuals to interchange thoughts, and thereby to combine
their powers of observation and reflection, greatly facilitates
useful Discoveries and Inventions. What one observes, and would
himself infer nothing from, he tells to another, and that other at
once sees a valuable hint in it. A result is thus reached which
neither alone would have arrived at.
And
this reminds me of what I passed unnoticed before, that the very
first invention was a joint operation, Eve having shared with Adam in
the getting up of the apron. And, indeed, judging from the fact that
sewing has come down to our times as ``woman's work'' it is very
probable she took the leading part; he, perhaps, doing no more than
to stand by and thread the needle. That proceeding may be reckoned as
the mother of all ``Sewing societies''.
But
speech alone, valuable as it ever has been, and is, has not advanced
the condition of the world much. This is abundantly evident when we
look at the degraded condition of all those tribes of human creatures
who have no considerable additional means of communicating thoughts.
Writing - the art of communicating thoughts to the mind, through the
eye - is the great invention of the world. Great in the astonishing
range of analysis and combination which necessarily underlies the
most crude and general conception of it. Great, very great in
enabling us to converse with the absent, and the unborn, at all
distances of time and of space. And great, not only in its direct
benefits, but greatest help, to all other inventions. Suppose the
art, with all conception of it, were this day lost to the world, how
long, think you, would it be, before even Young America could get up
the letter A with any adequate notion of using it to advantage? The
precise period at which writing was invented is not known, but it
certainly was as early as the time of Moses, from which we may safely
infer that it's inventors were very old fogies.
Webster,
at the time of writing his Dictionary, speaks of the English Language
as then consisting of seventy or eighty thousand words. If so, the
language in which the five books of Moses were written must, at that
time, now thirty-three or four hundred years ago, have consisted of
at least one quarter as many, or twenty thousand. When we remember
that words are sounds merely, we shall conclude that the idea of
representing those sounds by marks, so that whoever should at any
time after see the marks, would understand what sounds they meant,
was a bold and ingenius conception, not likely to occur to one man of
a million in the run of a thousand years. And, when it did occur, a
distinct mark for each word, giving twenty thousand different marks
first to be learned, and afterwards remembered, would follow as the
second thought and would present such a difficulty as would lead to
the conclusion that the whole thing was impracticable. But the
necessity still would exist, and we may readily suppose that the idea
was conceived, and lost, and reproduced, and dropped, and taken up
again and again, until at last the thought of dividing sounds into
parts, and making a mark, not to represent a whole sound, but only a
part of one, and then of combining these marks, not very many in
number, upon the principles of permutation, so as to represent any
and all of the whole twenty thousand words, and even any additional
number was somehow conceived and pushed into practice. This was the
invention of phonetic writing, as distinguished from the clumsy
picture writing of some of the nations. That it was difficult of
conception and execution is apparent, as well by the foregoing
reflections, as by the fact that so many tribes of men have come down
from Adam's time to ours without ever having possessed it. It's
utility may be conceived by the reflection that to it we owe
everything which distinguishes us from others. Take it from
us, and the Bible, all history, all science, all government, all
commerce, and nearly all social intercourse, go with it.
The
great activity of the tongue, in articulating sounds, has already
been mentioned; and it may be of some passing interest to notice the
wonderful powers of the eye, in conveying ideas to the mind from
writing. Take the same example of the numbers from one to one
hundred, written down, and you can run your eye over the list, and be
assured that every number is in it, in about one half the time it
would require to pronounce the words with the voice; and not only so,
but you can, in the same short time, determine whether every word is
spelled correctly, by which it is evident that every separate letter,
amounting to eight hundred and sixty four, has been recognized, and
reported to the mind, within the incredibly short space of twenty
seconds, or one third of a minute.
But,
to return to the consideration of printing, it is plain that it is
but the other half - and in real utility, the better half - of
writing, and that both together are but the assistants of speech in
the communication of thoughts between man and man. When man was
possessed of speech alone, the chances of invention, discovery, and
improvement, were very limited; but by the introduction of each of
these, they were greatly multiplied. When writing was invented, any
important observation likely to lead to a discovery, had at least a
chance of being written down, and consequently, a better chance of
never being forgotten; and of being seen and reflected upon by a
much greater number of persons; and thereby the chances of a valuable
hint being caught, proportionably augmented. By this means the
observation of a single individual might lead to an important
invention, years, and even centuries after he was dead. In one word,
by means of writing, the seeds of invention were more permanently
preserved, and more widely sown. And yet, for the three thousand
years during which printing remained undiscovered after writing was
in use, it was only a small portion of the people who could write, or
read writing; and consequently the field of invention, though much
extended, still continued very limited. At length printing came. It
gave ten thousand copies of any written matter, quite as cheaply as
ten were given before; and consequently a thousand minds were brought
into the field where there was but one before. This was a great gain;
and history shows a great change corresponding to it, in point of
time. I will venture to consider it, the true termination of that
period called ``the dark ages.''
Discoveries, inventions, and improvements followed rapidly, and have been increasing their rapidity ever since. The effects could not come all at once. It required time to bring them out, and they are still coming. The capacity to read could not be multiplied as fast as the means of reading. Spelling-books just began to go into the hands of the children, but the teachers were not very numerous, or very competent so that it is safe to infer they did not advance so speedily as they do now-a-days. It is very probable - almost certain - that the great mass of men, at that time, were utterly unconscious, that their conditions or their minds were capable of improvement. They not only looked upon the educated few as superior beings, but they supposed themselves to be naturally incapable of rising to equality. To emancipate the mind from this false and under estimate of itself is the great task which printing came into the world to perform. It is difficult for us, now and here, to conceive how strong this slavery of the mind was, and how long it did, of necessity, take to break it's shackles and to get a habit of freedom of thought established. It is, in this connection, a curious fact that a new country is most favorable - almost necessary - to the emancipation of thought and the consequent advancement of civilization and the arts. The human family originated, as is thought, somewhere in Asia, and have worked their way principally Westward. Just now, in civilization and the arts, the people of Asia are entirely behind those of Europe, those of the East of Europe behind those of the West of it, while we, here in America, think we discover and invent and improve, faster than any of them. They may think this is arrogance, but they can not deny that Russia has called on us to show her how to build steam-boats and railroads, while in the older parts of Asia they scarcely know that such things as steamboats and railroads exist. In anciently inhabited countries, the dust of ages - a real downright old-fogyism - seems to settle upon and smother the intellects and energies of man. It is in this view that I have mentioned the discovery of America as an event greatly favoring and facilitating useful Discoveries and Inventions.
Discoveries, inventions, and improvements followed rapidly, and have been increasing their rapidity ever since. The effects could not come all at once. It required time to bring them out, and they are still coming. The capacity to read could not be multiplied as fast as the means of reading. Spelling-books just began to go into the hands of the children, but the teachers were not very numerous, or very competent so that it is safe to infer they did not advance so speedily as they do now-a-days. It is very probable - almost certain - that the great mass of men, at that time, were utterly unconscious, that their conditions or their minds were capable of improvement. They not only looked upon the educated few as superior beings, but they supposed themselves to be naturally incapable of rising to equality. To emancipate the mind from this false and under estimate of itself is the great task which printing came into the world to perform. It is difficult for us, now and here, to conceive how strong this slavery of the mind was, and how long it did, of necessity, take to break it's shackles and to get a habit of freedom of thought established. It is, in this connection, a curious fact that a new country is most favorable - almost necessary - to the emancipation of thought and the consequent advancement of civilization and the arts. The human family originated, as is thought, somewhere in Asia, and have worked their way principally Westward. Just now, in civilization and the arts, the people of Asia are entirely behind those of Europe, those of the East of Europe behind those of the West of it, while we, here in America, think we discover and invent and improve, faster than any of them. They may think this is arrogance, but they can not deny that Russia has called on us to show her how to build steam-boats and railroads, while in the older parts of Asia they scarcely know that such things as steamboats and railroads exist. In anciently inhabited countries, the dust of ages - a real downright old-fogyism - seems to settle upon and smother the intellects and energies of man. It is in this view that I have mentioned the discovery of America as an event greatly favoring and facilitating useful Discoveries and Inventions.
According to the Smithsonian, Lincoln wrote his own speeches. And considering the above written speech was from before he was elected President, I have no doubt he wrote this one as well; numerous web sites (including the Smithsonian's site) and books, including Lincoln's Gettysburg Address: Echoes of the Bible and Book of Common Prayer by A. E. Elmore, state, quite plainly, that Lincoln's knowledge of the Bible was "legion," and he could quote long passages by memory.
I find it wonderful that he took the time to concisely give us a history lesson unlike most others.
Pretty awesome, if you ask me.
~I must take a moment here to thank Mr. Fred Priebe for not only being my friend, but for helping to bring Lincoln "back to life" again. I have had the pleasure of witnessing his historical speeches on many occasions and I always felt as if I were actually in the company of Lincoln himself each time. And it was through this experience that I first heard the speech included here.
By the way, that's Fred in the pictures in this week's postings.
Pretty awesome is right!~
.
I find it wonderful that he took the time to concisely give us a history lesson unlike most others.
Pretty awesome, if you ask me.
~I must take a moment here to thank Mr. Fred Priebe for not only being my friend, but for helping to bring Lincoln "back to life" again. I have had the pleasure of witnessing his historical speeches on many occasions and I always felt as if I were actually in the company of Lincoln himself each time. And it was through this experience that I first heard the speech included here.
By the way, that's Fred in the pictures in this week's postings.
Pretty awesome is right!~
.
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