In the Arena – Abraham Lincoln – He lost the Race That Taught the Country His Name
In the spring of 1832 a tall, penniless young man stood up in New Salem and asked to be sent to the legislature. He called himself young and unknown. He finished eighth in a field of thirteen.
He bought a store on borrowed money and watched it fail. When his partner died he shouldered the whole debt he had no legal duty to pay, called it his national debt with that dry humor that never left him, and paid it down for years—postmaster, surveyor, a man learning law by borrowed light.
In 1858 he ran for the Senate against the most famous politician in the West and lost. But the seven debates had gone out across the country in print, and the argument he made there stayed in front of the nation after the seat was gone. He said he was glad he made the race; it gave him a hearing he could have had in no other way. Two years later the losing campaign, published as a book, carried him to the presidency.
He was not heard in spite of the defeat. He was heard because of it.
The credit belongs to Abraham Lincoln.