With Malice Toward None

The Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Exhibition    

{ object_type: 'Exhibit Item',embed_type: 'image',embed_detail: 'http://myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/lincoln/vignettes/ArrivalinWashington/Assets/al0098_thumb.jpg',embed_alt: 'President Buchanan\u0027s Lament',thumbnail: {url: 'http://myloc.gov/_assets/Exhibitions/lincoln/vignettes/ArrivalinWashington/Assets/al0098_thumb.jpg',alt: 'President Buchanan\u0027s Lament',height: '66',width: '125'} }

President Buchanan's Lament

President Buchanan’s Lament (098.00.00)

See Silverlight version of this item » About this item        

Abandoned by friend and foe alike for inaction during a time of crisis, President James Buchanan was the most miserable of men. Bound by oath to uphold the law, his sympathies toward the South and the conflicting demands of conscience and duty resulted in almost complete political paralysis. Writing to Lincoln from his estate near Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the former president made no attempt to hide the suffering he had endured during his tenure of office.

(Transcription)

Sincerely desiring that your administration may prove successful in restoring the union ...


Abandoned by friend and foe alike for inaction during a time of crisis, President James Buchanan was the most miserable of men. Bound by oath to uphold the law, his sympathies toward the South and the conflicting demands of conscience and duty resulted in almost complete political paralysis. Writing to Lincoln from his estate near Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the former president made no attempt to hide the suffering he had endured during his tenure of office.