Saturday, November 10, 1860.Springfield, IL.
| Lincoln writes to Truman Smith, of Connecticut. Smith urged
Lincoln to "speak out" against a group that called Lincoln "the undisguised
enemy of the peace and safety of the Union." While he understands Smith's
concern, Lincoln explains, "I could say nothing which I have not already said,
and which is . . . open for the inspection of all. To press a repetition of
this upon those who have listened, is useless; to press it upon
those who have refused to listen . . . would be wanting in
self-respect." Truman Smith to Abraham Lincoln, 7 November
1860, Abraham Lincoln Papers, Library of Congress, Washington, DC;
Abraham Lincoln to Truman Smith, 10
November 1860, CW, 4:138-39. He buys tonic and "Hair Balsam" at his drug store. Pratt, Personal Finances,
153. |