Lincoln’s Lost Love (April 1972 | Volume: 23, Issue: 3)

Lincoln’s Lost Love

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April 1972 | Volume 23, Issue 3

With spring rolling around again, it is pleasant to include some note of romance in our pages, even if rather reluctant romance. And there are few documents in American history to equal Abraham Lincoln’s own account of his “romance” with—in fact, engagement to—a young Kentucky lady named Mary Owens.

In 1836, when all this started, Lincoln was twenty-seven, a lawyer and member of the Illinois state legislature, and an obviously susceptible bachelor. Mary Owens was twenty-eight, less than a year older (Lincoln’s opinion to the contrary notwithstanding)—but let’s not get ahead of our story.

Some scattered letters from Abe to Mary Owens have been preserved, but the story is best told in a letter written after the, fact, m April of 1838. At that time Lincoln recounted the tale, step by wry step, to Eliza Caldwell Browning, one of his most valued confidantes and the wife of his close friend Orville Browning. It is obvious that already in his twenties our sixteenth President could tell a funny story, even when it was on himself, and even if his spelling was distinctly youthful.

Springfield, April 1, 1838.

Dear Madam:

Without appologising for being egotistical, I shall make the history of so much of my own life, as has elapsed since I saw you, the subject of this letter. And by the way I now discover, that, in order to give a full and inteligible account of the things I have done and suffered since I saw you, I shall necessarily have to relate some that happened before .

It was, then, in the autumn of 1836, that a married lady of my acquaintance, and who was a great friend of mine, being about to pay a visit to her father and other relatives residing in Kentucky, proposed to me, that on her return she would bring a sister of hers with her, upon condition that I would engage to become her brother-in-law with all convenient dispach. I, of course, accepted the proposal; for you know I could not have done otherwise, had I really been averse to it; but privately between you and me, I was most confoundedly well pleased with the project. I had seen the said sister some three years before, thought her inteligent and agreeable, and saw no good objection to plodding life through hand in hand with her. Time passed on, the lady took her journey and in due time returned, sister in company sure enough. This stomached me a little; for it appeared to me, that her coming so readily showed that she was a trifle too willing; but on reflection it occured to me, that she might have been prevailed on by her married sister to come, without any thing concerning me ever having been mentioned to her; and so I concluded that if no other objection presented itself, I would consent to