Abraham Lincoln to Andrew Johnston, 18 April 18461
Friend Johnston:
Your letter, written some six weeks since, was received in due course, and also the paper with the parody.2 It is true, as suggested it might be, that I have never seen Poe’s “Raven”; and I very well know that a parody is almost entirely dependent for its interest upon the reader’s acquaintance with the
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original.3 Still there is enough in the polecat, self-considered, to afford one several hearty laughs. I think four or five of the last stanzas are decidedly funny, particularly where Jeremiah “scrubbed and washed, and prayed and fasted.”
I have not your letter now before me; but, from memory, I think you ask me who is the author of the piece I sent you, and that you do so ask as to indicate a slight suspicion that I myself am the author.4 Beyond all question, I am not the author. I would give all I am worth, and go in debt, to be able to write so fine a piece
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as I think that is. Neither do I know who is the author. I met it in a straggling form in a newspaper last summer, and I remember to have seen it once before, about fifteen years ago, and this is all I know about it. The piece of poetry of my own which I alluded to, I was led to write under the following circumstances. In the fall of 1844, thinking I might aid some to carry the State of Indiana for Mr. Clay, I went into the neighborhood in that State in which I was raised, where my mother and only sister were buried, and from which I had been absent about fifteen years.5 That part of the country is, within itself, as unpeotical as any spot of the earth; but still, seeing it and its objects and inhabitants aroused feelings
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in me which were certainly poetry; though whether my expression of those feelings is poetry is quite another question. When I got to writing, the change of subjects divided the thing into four little divisions or cantos, the first only of which I send you now and may send the others hereafter.6
Yours truly,A. Lincoln.
My childhood’s home I see again,
And sadden with the view;
And still, as memory crowds my brain,
There’s pleasure in it too.
O Memory! thou midway world
‘Twixt earth and paradise,
Where things decayed and loved ones lost
In dreamy shadows rise,
And, freed from all that’s earthly vile,
Seem hallowed, pure, and bright,
Like scenes in some enchanted isle
All bathed in liquid light.
As dusky mountains please the eye
When twilight chases day;
As bugle-notes that, passing by,
In distance die away;

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As leaving some grand waterfall,
We, lingering, list its roar—
So memory will hallow all
We’ve known, but know no more.
Near twenty years have passed away
Since here I bid farewell
To woods and fields, and scenes of play,
And playmates loved so well.
Where many were, but few remain
Of old familiar things;
But seeing them, to mind again
The lost and absent brings.
The friends I left that parting day,
How changed, as time has sped!
Young childhood grown, strong manhood gray,
And half of all are dead.
I hear the loved survivors tell
How nought from death could save,
Till every sound appears a knell,
And every spot a grave.
I range the fields with pensive tread,
And pace the hollow rooms,
And feel (companion of the dead)
I’m living in the tombs.7
1Abraham Lincoln wrote and signed the letter. The original manuscript text being unavailable, the editors have created this transcription from a transcription in an early version of the Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln.
John G. Nicolay and John Hay, eds., Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln, new and enlarged ed. (New York: Francis D. Tandy, 1905), 1:288-92.
2“The Pole-Cat,” a parody of Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven,” was published in the Quincy Whig on March 18, 1846.
Quincy Whig (Illinois), 18 March 1846, 1:2-3.
3Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” was first published in the United States in January 1845. According to John T. Stuart, Lincoln later memorized the poem and recited it on numerous occasions.
Edgar Allen Poe, The Raven (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1884), 11; John T. Stuart Interview, 20 December 1866, Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis, eds., Herndon’s Informants: Letters, Interviews, and Statements about Abraham Lincoln (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998), 519.
4On February 24, Lincoln wrote Johnston and enclosed a poem, which was likely “Mortality” by William Knox.
5Abraham Lincoln reference to Indiana and Henry Clay related to his work to get Clay elected president in the 1844 presidential election.
6Lincoln later sent two more pieces of poetry to Johnston.
7This piece was published anonymously in the May 5, 1847 Quincy Whig under the titled “The Return, Part I: Reflection.”

Printed Transcription, 5 page(s), John G. Nicolay and John Hay, eds., Complete Works of Abraham Lincoln, new and enlarged ed. (New York: Francis D. Tandy, 1905), 1:288-92.