Thank you all very much. Thanks for the warm welcome.
Laura and I are so very grateful for your generous
invitation to be here. Mr. Speaker, thank you for your
incredibly warm words. I appreciate your leadership, I
appreciate your friendship and so do the people of
Illinois.
I am so honored to be here to dedicate a great
institution honoring such a great American. The Abraham
Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum was a long time
coming. But as many speakers have said, it's really
worth the wait. Laura and I were just given a tour by
Richard - appreciate his leadership, by the way. I guess
the best way to describe what we saw is a superb
collection; a superb resource for scholars; and an
invitation for all, especially the young, to rediscover
Lincoln for themselves.
The mission of this library is essential to our
country, because to understand the life and the
sacrifice of Abraham Lincoln is to understand the
meaning and promise of America. Most of you all know,
the First Lady was a librarian. Any time she can get me
into a library is a pretty good deal, as far as she's
concerned.
I want to thank your Governor and Patti, for their
hospitality. Thank you, Lieutenant Governor. I thank the
two United States senators from Illinois, Senator Durbin
and Obama. I appreciate the members of the United States
Congressional delegation who are here. I particularly
want to pay my respects to Ray LaHood, who has worked so
hard on this project. I want to thank all the members of
the State House who are here. I appreciate the Mayor,
Mayor Davlin. I appreciate the Secretary of State and
Treasurer, I appreciate you all for coming.
It's an honor to be here with our fellow citizens. I
particularly want to say thanks to my friend, Jim Edgar,
for his leadership to get this museum going. I want to
thank Brian Lamb - C-SPAN happens to be one of my
mother's favorite networks. I particularly want to thank
Mihan Lee for standing up in front of us and expressing
her words so eloquently about living in a free society.
I thank Reverend McLean for his prayers. And I thank you
all for coming. All of us have come here today because
of our great appreciation for the 16th President of the
United States.
In a small way, I can relate to the rail-splitter
from out West because he had a way of speaking that was
not always appreciated by the newspapers back East.
(Laughter and applause.) A New York Times story on his
first inaugural address reported that Mr. Lincoln was
lucky "it was not the constitution of the English
language and the laws of English grammar that he was
called upon to support." I think that fellow is still
writing for the Times.
In Washington, D.C., where Lincoln served America and
where he was assassinated, we honor his influence in a
great temple of democracy. Here in Springfield, in
Illinois, where he lived along with Mary, and where
their sons were born and where the funeral train ended
its journey 140 years ago, we honor his good life in a
more personal way. Here we can walk through his house,
see his belongings, and read the Gettysburg Address in
his own hand. And even across the mounting years, we can
sense the power of his mind, the depth of his
convictions, and the decency that defined his entire
life.
Abraham Lincoln started life in the last month of
Thomas Jefferson's presidency, with no early advantages
other than curiosity and character. Before history took
notice, he earned money as a storekeeper, a surveyor and
a post master. He taught himself the law. He established
a successful legal practice and rose in a new political
party on the power of his words. Those who knew him
remembered his candor, his kindness and his searching
intellect - his combination of frontier humor with the
cadences of Shakespeare and the Holy Bible. As a state
legislator in Springfield, a congressman, and a debater
on the stump, Lincoln embodied the democratic ideal -
that leadership and even genius are found among the
people themselves, and sometimes in the most unlikely
places.
Young Lincoln didn't worry much about how he looked
or what he wore. He took great care of the things he
said, and Americans took notice beyond the borders of
Illinois. In New York City, an eyewitness at his Cooper
Union Speech in 1860 said this: "His face lighted up as
with an inward fire; the whole man was transfigured. I
forgot his clothes, his personal appearance, and his
individual peculiarities. Presently forgetting myself, I
was on my feet with the rest, cheering this wonderful
man."
An ambitious young Lincoln was heard to lament that
the great work of the American Revolution was all in the
past. When he departed Springfield as President-elect,
he spoke of duties perhaps even greater than George
Washington faced. Events proved him correct. His very
election as President was regarded as a cause for war.
And as he sent legions of men to death and sacrifice,
Lincoln's own burden began to show in a lined and tired
face. Without really knowing, the American people had
chosen perhaps the only man who could preserve our unity
and assure our future as a great nation. He was the
relentless enemy of secession - without hatred or malice
toward those who seceded. He grieved every day at the
ruin and waste of war - yet he knew that even this
tragedy could be redeemed by the renewal of American
ideals. On Good Friday, 1865, Lincoln did not know it
was his last day on Earth. But on that day, he knew that
all the sacrifices and the sorrow across the land had
meaning, and the Union had been saved.
When his life was taken, Abraham Lincoln assumed a
greater role in the story of America than man or
President. Every generation has looked up to him as the
Great Emancipator, the hero of unity, and the martyr of
freedom. Children have learned to follow his model of
integrity and principle. Leaders have read and quoted
his words, and have hoped to find a measure of his
wisdom and strength. In all this, Lincoln has taken on
the elements of myth. And in this case, the myth is
true. In the character and convictions of this one man,
we see all that America hopes to be.
Lincoln's career and contributions were founded on a
single argument: That there are no exceptions to the
ringing promises of the Declaration of Independence;
that all of us who share the human race are created
equal. At a campaign stop in Chicago, Lincoln said, "If
that Declaration is not the truth, let us get out the
statute book, in which we find it and tear it out. Who
is so bold as to do it? Let us stick to it then, let us
stand firmly by it then." This led him over time to
confront the great tension in America's founding between
the promise of liberty and the fact of slavery. Lincoln
was morally offended by what he called "the monstrous
injustice of slavery itself." And he believed the
permanent acceptance of the institution of slavery would
represent the end of the American ideal. He would not
accept that our new world of hope and freedom must
forever be a prison for millions. And so with the
relentless logic and clarity of Lincoln, he pushed his
countrymen to choose: Live up to the truth written into
human nature by our Creator, or disavow the freedom our
Forefathers had earned.
President Lincoln sought every reasonable political
compromise that might avoid war - but he did not believe
America could surrender its founding commitments and
remain the same country. As his presidency unfolded,
this conviction gathered force and urgency until the day
he freed millions by signing a proclamation. And then he
looked up and said, "That will do." Days before his
death in April, 1865, Lincoln spoke from a White House
window and declared that the right to vote should be
extended to some freed men and African Americans who had
fought for the Union. In that audience was a man named
Booth, who vowed, this is "the last speech he will ever
make."
Lincoln's voice was silenced, but he, more than any
other American, had spoken to all the ages and his words
have haunted and driven our history. His authority was
asserted after the war as we corrected our Constitution
and finally ended the great national sin of slavery.
Citizens enlisted Lincoln's principles in the fight to
bring the vote to women and to end Jim Crow laws. When
Martin Luther King, Jr. called America to redeem the
promissory note of the Declaration, he stood on the
steps of the Lincoln Memorial - and Lincoln was behind
him in more ways than one. From the lunch counter to the
school house door to the Army barracks, President
Lincoln has continued to hold this nation to its
promises. And we will never relent - we will never rest
until those promises are met.
The convictions that have guided our history are also
at issue in our world. We also face some questions in
our time: Do the promises of the Declaration apply
beyond the culture that produced it? Are some, because
of birth or background, destined to live in tyranny - or
do all, regardless of birth or background, deserve to
live in freedom? Americans have no right or calling to
impose our own form of government on others. Yet,
American interests and values are both served by
standing for liberty in every part of the world.
Our interests are served when former enemies become
democratic partners - because free governments do not
support terror or seek to conquer their neighbors. Our
interests are served by the spread of democratic
societies - because free societies reward the hopes of
their citizens, instead of feeding the hatreds that lead
to violence. Our deepest values are also served when we
take our part in freedom's advance - when the chains of
millions are broken and the captives are set free,
because we are honored to serve the cause that gave us
birth.
Sometimes the progress of liberty comes gradually,
like water that cuts through stone. Sometimes progress
comes like a wildfire, kindled by example and courage.
We see that example and courage today in Afghanistan and
Kyrgystan, Ukraine, Georgia and Iraq. We believe that
people in Zimbabwe and Iran and Lebanon and beyond have
the same hopes, the same rights, and the same future of
self-government. The principles of the Declaration still
inspire, and the words of the Declaration are forever
true. So we will stick to it; we will stand firmly by
it.
Every generation strives to define the lessons of
Abraham Lincoln, and that is part of our tribute to the
man himself. None of us can claim his legacy as our own,
but all of us can learn from the faith that guided him.
He trusted in freedom and in the wisdom of the Founders,
even in the darkest hours. That trust has helped
Americans carry on, even after the second day of
Gettysburg; even on December 8, 1941; even on September
the 12th, 2001. Whenever freedom is challenged, the
proper response is to go forward with confidence in
freedom's power.
Lincoln also trusted in the ways of Providence, the
working of an unseen power. He knew the course of
Providence is not always what we hope, or ask, or expect
- but he trusted still. In his example, we are reminded
to be patient and humble, knowing that God's purpose and
God's justice will break forth in time.
Abraham Lincoln had a streak of melancholy in him. He
said our short lives are like "the break of the wave."
But the wave of his life is still felt in our world. The
Union he saved still thanks him. The people he freed
still honor him. And here in the place he called home,
Springfield, Illinois, we proudly dedicate the Abraham
Lincoln Library and Museum.
May God bless you all.