Edward Everett.
Among the more eminent of eminent men stands Edward Everett in the annals of American history. We do not give his history to show how he struggled through
privations, overcoming all obstacles, until victory at last crowned his efforts, as so many of our great men have been obliged to do, but we do delineate his
achievements to illustrate what hard work will do, provided a man has ability to develop. Yes, to show what hard work will do. But some will say, 'Well, that
does sound well, but I guess if Edward Everett had been an ordinary man no amount of hard work would have made him the Edward Everett of history'; another
may say, 'That's so, it is foolish to argue as you do, and hold up such men as examples, intimating that their success is the result of hard work'; and still
another may say, 'Say what you will, you cannot gain-say the factor of opportunities, of 'luck,' if you choose to so designate it.'
We do not gain-say anything; we simply point to history; read for yourself.
Take eminent men, read their lives, and see if seven-tenths, at least, of our
great men did not acquire success through their own effort. Read carefully and
see if they did not largely MAKE their own opportunities. True, all cannot be
Everetts or Clays, but by extraordinary effort and careful thought, any one will
better his or her condition. Sickness may come, they will be the better
prepared. Losses will be more easily met and[327] discharged. No man ever succeeded by waiting for
something to turn up. The object of this work is not to make people delude
themselves by any conceited ideas, but to encourage, to inspire, to enkindle
anew the fires of energy laying dormant. The point is, it is not a 'slumbering
genius' within people that it is our desire to stimulate, but a 'slumbering
energy.' We are content that others should take care of the 'genius'; we are
satisfied that any influence, no matter from what source it comes, that will
awaken dormant energies will do the world more good than ten times the same
amount of influence trying to prove that we are fore ordained to be somebody or
nobody.
Mr. Everett was a man who fully comprehended and appreciated this fact. All
great men understand that it is the making the most of one's talents that makes
the most of our chances which absolutely tells. Rufus Choate believed in hard
work. When some one said to him that a certain fine achievement was the result
of accident, he exclaimed: "Nonsense. You might as well drop the Greek alphabet
on the ground and expect to pick up the Illiad." Mr. [Henry Ward] Beecher has well said that
every idle man has to be supported by some industrious man. Hard labor prevents
hard luck. Fathers should teach their children that if any one will not work
neither shall he attain success. Let us magnify our calling and be happy, but
strive to progress. As before said, Mr. Everett fully understood all this and
great men innumerable could be quoted in support of this doctrine.
The year 1794 must ever be memorable, as the year in which Mr. Everett was
ushered into the world, in which he was to figure as so prominent a factor. We
have written a long preamble, but it is hoped that the[328] reader has taken enough interest
thus far to fully take in the points which we have endeavored to make, and it is
further hoped that such being the case, the reader will, by the light of those
ideas, read and digest the wonderful character before us.
Undoubtedly Everett possessed one of the greatest minds America has ever
produced, but if he had rivaled Solomon in natural ability, he could not have
entered Harvard College as a student at the age of thirteen had he not been an
indefatigable worker, and will any man delude himself into the belief that he
could have graduated from such a school at the age of only seventeen, and at the
head of his class, had he not exercised tremendous energy. Still further do any
of the readers who chance to read this volume think that he was picked up bodily
and placed in the ministerial chair vacated by the gifted Buckminister when he
was only nineteen because he was lucky? A city preacher at nineteen! Occupying
one of the first pulpits in the land at nineteen! "Why, he was gifted." Of
course he was, and he was a tremendous worker. Thus was his success enhanced.
At twenty he was appointed to a Greek professorship in Harvard College, and
qualified himself by travel in Europe for four years. During that time he
acquired that solid information concerning the history and principles of law,
and of the political systems of Europe, which formed the foundation of that
broad statesmanship for which he was afterward distinguished. During his
residence in Europe his range of study embraced the ancient classics, the modern
languages, the history and principles of the civil and public law, and a
comprehensive examination of the existing political systems of Europe. He
returned home, and from that time until[329] his death he was recognized as one of the
greatest orators of his time. In 1825 to 1835 he was a distinguished member of
the national congress. He then served three successive terms as governor of
Massachusetts. In 1814 he was appointed minister to the English court. It was an
important mission, for the relations of his government with that of England,
then wore a grave aspect. His official career in London was a marked success.
His personal accomplishments made him a friend and favorite with the leading men
and families of England. After this he was sent as a commissioner to China, and
after his return from abroad, he was at once chosen President of Harvard
College.
He entered upon the duties of this new office with his characteristic energy
and enthusiasm, but ill-health compelled his resignation at the end of three
years. Upon the death of his bosom friend, Daniel Webster, he was appointed to
succeed to Webster's position at the head of President Fillmore's cabinet.
Before the close of his duties as Secretary of State, he was chosen by the
Massachusetts State Legislature to a seat in the National Senate. Once more
overwork compelled his withdrawal from active responsibility, and in May, 1854,
under the advice of his physician, he resigned his seat. But he was content to remain idle only a few months when he entered with great zeal upon a new enterprise.
The project of purchasing Mount Vernon and beautifying it as a memento of
esteem to the 'Nation's father' attracted his attention, and his efforts in
behalf of the association to raise money for the above-named object netted over
$100,000, besides his valuable time, and paying his own expenses. He afterwards
raised many more thousands of dollars for the benefit of numerous [330]charitable societies and objects.
Emerging from private life at the opening of the civil war he gave himself
incessantly to the defense of the Union. He died on the 14th of January, 1865,
and was mourned throughout the whole North. Eulogies innumerable were called
forth by the death of this intellectual phenomenon of the nineteenth century.
Memorial for Edward Everett