Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865) — Text, Context, and Why It Endures
Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865) — Text, Context, and Why It Endures
Context
Abraham Lincoln delivered his second inaugural address on March 4, 1865, on the east portico of the Capitol, its newly finished iron dome gleaming above the crowd. The Civil War was nearly over. Richmond would fall within weeks, and Lee would surrender at Appomattox on April 9.
Lincoln had every political reason to deliver a victory speech — to claim vindication, name the enemy, and promise punishment. He did almost none of that. In barely 700 words, the shortest inaugural up to that point, he refused triumph and instead handed the nation a meditation on guilt, judgment, and mercy.
Six weeks later he was dead. The address became, in effect, the closing argument of his life. The full speech runs roughly ~6 minutes (~700 words) when read aloud.
About the Speaker
Lincoln was a self-taught lawyer from frontier Kentucky and Illinois who had read deeply in the King James Bible and Shakespeare, and it shows in the cadence of everything he wrote. By 1865 he was a worn, grief-marked man who had buried a son and presided over the deaths of hundreds of thousands of countrymen.
He wrote this speech himself, in his own hand, and he knew exactly how unwelcome its central idea — shared national guilt — would be to a victorious North.
Key Passages
[context] The opening sets the tone of restraint. Rather than rallying his base, Lincoln deliberately lowers the temperature and signals he will not gloat.
With high hope for the future, no prediction in regard to it is ventured.
[context] The famous structural turn — the moment Lincoln stops narrating the war and starts interpreting it. He distributes responsibility for slavery to the whole nation, North included, treating the war as a reckoning rather than a contest of good men versus bad.
Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes His aid against the other.
[context] The theological heart of the speech, in which Lincoln frames the war as divine judgment that the country has earned and must endure to its bitter end. This is the line that turned a political address into something closer to scripture.
Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk... So still it must be said “the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.”
[context] The closing — the most quoted lines, where Lincoln pivots from judgment to mercy and lays out the terms of reconstruction in a single sentence of extraordinary grace.
With malice toward none, with charity for all... Let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation’s wounds.
Why It Endures
The speech endures because Lincoln did the opposite of what the moment invited. A winner refused to crow. Its power comes from a deliberate structure: he opens flat and modest, narrows to the single cause of the war — slavery — that politicians of the era worked hard to avoid naming, then widens out into a sweeping claim of mutual guilt, and finally releases all that gathered weight into mercy.
Rhetorically, three devices carry it. First, balanced contrast — "Both read the same Bible," "neither party expected," "with malice toward none, with charity for all" — pairs of phrases that hold North and South in the same moral frame. Second, biblical register: the King James cadences lend the argument an authority no ordinary policy speech could claim.
Third, the withheld turn. Lincoln spends most of his words building tension about cause and judgment, then resolves it in one long, forgiving sentence. The unforgettable line — "with malice toward none" — lands harder precisely because everything before it was so severe.
What You Can Borrow
- Refuse the easy emotion. The crowd wanted triumph; Lincoln gave humility. When your audience expects you to take the obvious side, consider what a harder, more generous posture would do. It is almost always more memorable.
- Distribute responsibility instead of assigning blame. "Both read the same Bible" implicated everyone, which is why it disarmed rather than enraged. If you must address a conflict, find the shared cause before you name the fault.
- Build with balanced pairs. Antithesis — two phrases set against each other — is the most portable device here. "With malice toward none, with charity for all" is two beats your ear cannot forget. Write your one key idea as a pair.
- Earn your closing line. The mercy at the end works because the judgment before it was unflinching. Don't open with your warmest sentiment; build to it.
- Say the thing others avoid. Lincoln named slavery as the cause plainly. Naming the real subject, calmly, gives a speaker more authority than any flourish.
- Be short. Seven hundred words outlasted ten thousand longer speeches. Cut until only the load-bearing sentences remain.
Bottom Line
Lincoln’s Second Inaugural is the model for any speech given at a moment of victory, grief, or division: lower your voice, share the blame, and end on mercy. Its lesson is that restraint, not force, is what people remember.