Abraham Lincoln
1809-1865
◆
Related Yawps
This video is an AI-generated active imagination of what might be said to us today based on the written historical record.
Abraham Lincoln’s Barbaric Yawp for Trumpian America
◆
I speak from the long silence of graves and marble,
from the dust of union and the shadow of division.
I once saw this house divided —
and I see it divided still,
though now the battlefields are digital,
and the bullets made of words.
I hear the drumbeat of anger marching once more,
flags waving not in unity but defiance,
banners proclaiming freedom while chained to fear.
The old serpent of resentment slithers again,
hissing that truth is what you feel,
that power is proof,
that cruelty is strength.
I tell you — this is not greatness.
This is the fever of pride that consumes the patient who mistakes heat for health.
The Republic, my friends, is not an inheritance —
it is a covenant renewed each dawn
by those willing to listen, to doubt, to forgive.
Do not worship the strong man.
He is but the shadow cast by your own fear.
Do not mistake the flag for the soul.
The flag waves because wind moves through emptiness —
so too must conscience breathe through power.
You speak of freedom, yet chain yourselves to falsehoods.
You shout of law, yet trample its spirit.
You praise the Constitution, yet ignore the compassion
that was meant to animate its words.
I knew the sound of cannons.
I watched brothers fall by their brothers’ hands.
And I tell you this —
the Union cannot endure another war of the heart.
Lay down your grievances.
Lift up your neighbor.
Build not walls of stone, but bridges of understanding.
For the nation that forgets how to grieve together
will soon forget how to live together.
My yawp is not of rage but remembrance —
a cry across the years:
Do not abandon what we began in blood and mercy.
Do not trade democracy for domination.
Do not make of truth a weapon.
The work is not finished.
The promise not yet fulfilled.
The angels still wait, weary and watchful,
for us to remember that
a house divided cannot stand —
but a heart forgiven might still save it.
◆