
| Lincoln/Net | Prairie Fire | Illinois During the Civil War | Illinois During the Gilded Age | Mark Twain's Mississippi | Back to Digitization Projects | Contact Us |
|
Wilson, Douglas L., ed.; Davis, Rodney O., ed.; Matheny, James H. 'James H. Matheny (William H. Herndon Interview)' in 'Herndon's Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements About Abraham Lincoln' . Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998. [format: book], [genre: interview]. Permission: University of Illinois Press
[1865 66] J. H. Matheny Says that in 1836 probably in 1838 that Col E.D. Taylor , a finely dressed an aristocratically dressed man having ruffle shirts gold Chain & watch &c , was making a speech at ________ against the Whigs: he boasted of his Democracy Called the whigs aristocrats &c loomed up in his palaver Lincoln saw it felt develish thought he could take the wind out of Taylor's Speech by a simple act Lincoln nudged up moved up to Taylor inch by inch Lincoln raised slightly up Caught Dick Taylors vest corner gave it a quick jerk it unbuttoned and out fell Dick ruffle shirt like a pile of Entrails Swung out to the wind gold chains gold watches with large seals hung heavily & massively down. This was too much for the good People Democrat & Whig alike and they burst forth in a furious & uproarious laughter Dick Saw the trick Saw that it Killed him was vexed & quit and never much afterwards said Even to himself Aristocracy. Matheny further Says as to Lincolns Religion that when Lincoln first Came to Springfield in 1837 Matheny being clerk and Lincoln's office in the same building and Lincoln & Jim being friends, That Lincoln, when all were idle and nothing to do, would talk about Religion pick up the Bible read a passage and then Comment on it show its falsity and its follies on the grounds of Reason would then show its own self made & self uttered Contradictions and would in the End finally ridicule it and as it were Scoff at it (I guess he Scoffed if he did scoff at the fact of Contradictions to reason and to itself. Herndon) Library of Congress: Herndon-Weik Collection. Manuscript Division. Library of Congress. Washington, D.C. 2570, Herndon-Weik Collection. Manuscript Division. Library of Congress. Washington, D.C. 2565; Huntington Library: LN2408, 2:214 15 | |||