Tuesday, August 7, 1860.Springfield, IL.
| A New York Herald newspaper reporter visits with
Lincoln and writes, "After a pretty thorough investigation, I find that there
is not a man in this region who says a word against [his] honesty . . . They
like his sociability and his familiarity." The correspondent notes that Mary
Lincoln added "some brilliant flashes of wit and good nature" to the "lively .
. . conversation." He adds, "[Lincoln's] features may appear rugged to the
casual observer, but when engaged in earnest and entertaining conversation they
assume an aspect at once pleasing and engaging. . . . Lincoln . . . looks the
man, acts the gentleman, and mirrors at once the keenness of the astute
statesman." New York Herald, 13 August 1860,
5:2-3. |