the land, where another President of the United States
would refer to him as "the Great Heart of the White House." If any one
could have looked ahead fifty years to see all this, and could have told
Nancy Hanks Lincoln, she would not have believed it. After her own
life of toil and hardship it would have seemed to her "too good to be
true." But in the centuries following the humble yet beautiful career of
"the Backwoods Boy" from the hut to the White House, history keeps
the whole world saying with bated breath, "the half was never told!"
AN OLD MAN'S STORY OF SAVING ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S
LIFE
Austin Gollaher, grown to manhood, still living in his old log cabin
near the Lincoln house in Knob Creek nearly twenty years after
Lincoln's assassination, and gave the following account of an adventure
he had with the little Lincoln boy:
"I once saved Lincoln's life. We had been going to school together one
year; but the next year we had no school, because there were so few
scholars to attend, there being only about twenty in the school the year
before.
"Consequently Abe and I had not much to do; but, as we did not go to
school and our mothers were strict with us, we did not get to see each
other very often. One Sunday morning my mother waked me up early,
saying she was going to see Mrs. Lincoln, and that I could go along.
Glad of the chance, I was soon dressed and ready to go. After my
mother and I got there, Abe and I played all through the day.
"While we were wandering up and down the little stream called Knob
Creek, Abe said: 'Right up there'--pointing to the east--'we saw a covey
of partridges yesterday. Let's go over.' The stream was too wide for us
to jump across. Finally we saw a foot-log, and decided to try it. It was
narrow, but Abe said, 'Let's coon it.'
"I went first and reached the other side all right. Abe went about half
way across, when he got scared and began trembling. I hollered to him,
'Don't look down nor up nor sideways, but look right at me and hold on
tight!' But he fell off into the creek, and, as the water was about seven
or eight feet deep (I could not swim, and neither could Abe), I knew it
would do no good for me to go in after him.
"So I got a stick--a long water sprout--and held it out to him. He came
up, grabbing with both hands, and I put the stick into his hands. He
clung to it, and I pulled him out on the bank, almost dead. I got him by
the arms and shook him well, and then I rolled him on the ground,
when the water poured out of his mouth.
"He was all right very soon. We promised each other that we would
never tell anybody about it, and never did for years. I never told any
one of it till after Lincoln was killed."
Abraham Lincoln's parents were religious in their simple way. The boy
was brought up to believe in the care of the Father in Heaven over the
affairs of this life. The family attended camp meetings and preaching
services, which were great events, because few and far between, in
those primitive days. Abe used afterward to get his playmates together
and preach to them in a way that sometimes frightened them and made
them cry.
No doubt young Lincoln learned more that was useful to him in after
life from the wandering preachers of his day than he did of his teachers
during the few months that he was permitted to go to school. But his
best teacher was his mother. She would have been proud to have her
boy grow up to be a traveling minister or exhorter, like Peter
Cartwright, "the backwoods preacher."
Nancy Hanks Lincoln "builded better than she knew." She would have
been satisfied with a cabin life for her son. She little knew that by her
own life and teaching she was raising up the greatest man of his age,
and one of the grandest men in all history, to become the ruler of the
greatest nation that the world has ever seen. She did her duty by her
little boy and he honored her always during her life and afterward. No
wonder he once exclaimed when he thought of her:
"All I am or hope to be I owe to my sainted mother."
And out of her poor, humble life, that devoted woman
"Gave us Lincoln and never knew!"
CHAPTER IV
LEARNING TO WORK
The little Lincoln boy learned to help his father and mother as soon
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