Abraham Lincoln is one of the best-known presidents in the
history of the United States so most people are familiar with the story of his
life. They know about the poverty of
Lincoln’s boyhood, the prodigious strength he developed as a teen, his debate
skills and presidency during the Civil War, and his tragic end. The most common gap in most peoples’ Lincoln
biography is the one during which he was a young lawyer and aspiring Whig
politician – the 1830s and 1840s.
Stephen Harrigan’s novel, A Friend
of Mr. Lincoln spans precisely this period of the young Lincoln’s
life.
The “friend” of Lincoln’s referenced in the book’s title is the
fictional “Cage” Weatherby, an aspiring poet from Massachusetts who has made
his way to Springfield, Illinois. As yet
unpublished, Weatherby derives his income largely from the small boardinghouse
he owns in the soon-to-be state capitol.
Weatherby and Lincoln have much in common: a deep love of poetry, reaching
young manhood penniless, an uneasy way with the young women of the day, and a
deep desire to leave their marks on the world rather than just passing through
it. As a result, the two become fast
friends almost from the moment they first meet.
And they will remain good friends until the day that Mary Todd marries
Lincoln and decides that Weatherby can no longer be part of Lincoln’s life.
Even as a young lawyer, Lincoln was a man consumed by
political ambition. Already a veteran of
the Indian wars, he stood out in any crowd he was a part of, and that was just as
attributable to his never ending supply of funny stories as it was to his
unusually tall frame. Harrigan’s plot,
though, reminds us that Lincoln and Weatherby were young men who faced, and
often succumbed to, the very same temptations that all young men encounter at
that point of their lives. Lincoln has
as many vulgar stories to tell his male friends in private as he has stories
suitable for mixed company – and he enjoys telling them maybe even more than
his audience loves hearing them. Early
on, Mr. Lincoln envisioned himself in Washington D.C. as a Whig congressman – a
dream that finally came true for him.
The Abraham Lincoln of A
Friend of Mr. Lincoln is a young man easily smitten by a pretty face and
even more easily intimidated by a woman strong enough and bold enough to take
the initiative in a relationship. He is
also a man so prone to clinical depression that, on at least two occasions,
romantic encounters left him so suicidal that Cage Weatherby and others placed
him under literal suicide watches.
Stephen Harrigan |
But it is the portion
of the book that recounts Lincoln’s months spent on the Illinois legal circuit,
during which he and a small team of lawyers and judges road horses from town to
town trying court cases under rather primitive conditions, that is the most
memorable. During this period, Cage
Weatherby learns that Lincoln is very much a man of his time and place. He is willing to make whatever backdoor
political deals might get him closer to Washington; he is as willing to take
the cases of slave owners as he is to defend escaped slaves; and he will
abandon his best friend in order to keep peace at home with his wife.
Cage Weatherby, however, is the true central character of A Friend of Mr. Lincoln, and he is a man
who proves to be every bit as interesting as Lincoln during this period of
Lincoln’s life. Both men are busy living
their “real lives” while portraying themselves to the public as something other
than what they are. Harrigan has written
a coming of age novel for both men, one that fans of historical fiction will very
much enjoy.
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