Friday, November 7, 2008

Abraham Lincoln and Melancholia


Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky on February 12th, 1809. He was our president during the Civil War. His mother died early in his life, and his father was a fronteirsman. Lincoln was mostly self educated, and he became a lawyer in 1837. Later, he served four terms in the Illinois House Of Representatives. In 1842, Abe Lincoln married Mary Todd, and they had four sons. Only one of them, Robert, survived into adulthood. Abraham Lincoln became our sixteenth president on March 4, 1861. He was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth on April 14, 1865.

Lincoln had severe depression throughout his life, starting when his mother died. The death of his younger sister led him to feel like he was alone in the world. The death of his first girlfriend, Ann Rutledge, in 1835, along with his tense relations with Mary Todd led him to at times become suicidal. The stress of the presidency and of the war also contributed to his depression. His favorite son, Willie, died in 1862. Lincoln's depression came during periods of intense depression, followed by larger spans of more mild depression.

I believe that depression, otherwise known as melancholia, is a very serious disease; not only can it cause you to turn inward and lose your friends and happiness, it can cost you your job and reputation, and if it is severe enough, your life. Lincoln was an exceptional man. He was able to rein in his severe depression throughout his life and become one of our country's great presidents. Lincoln's condition was only known to his close friends. Suprisingly, given the severity of his depression, he was able to keep it in check and hide it from the public. The fact that he was able to do this by sheer force of will without any of the modern anti-depressant drugs is truly amazing.

5 comments:

  1. hey! i liked your background info a lot. and i think you did well describing your feelings towards depression though i think you could have expanded more on how depression affected lincoln's life. good job though! 100 :)

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  2. I liked the amount of information you gave, but it seemed like you were just listing facts. You should try to flow more throughout your paper. Other than that it was very good and I learned alot!
    94/100

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  3. Good Job on explaining Linclon's backround and how he acquired and overane his depression. I think you could go into detail little more on how the depression had affected him.

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  4. Good job on describing Lincoln's background information. It's strange that Abe Lincoln had depression and it's never talked about. Nice blog!

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  5. I think it's inspirational that Lincoln could overcome depression to succeed so much. I also think it probably contributed to his empathy for the southerners and his desire to reunite the country. Great blog, I learned something

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