Prøve GULL - Gratis

A Sorrow So Deep

Guideposts

|

February 2018

In the great president’s eyes,

I recognized at once what we both shared

- Elizabeth Sherrill

A Sorrow So Deep

It was my grandfather who gave me a lifelong love of Abraham Lincoln, one that was to help me in a way he could never have imagined. As a boy of seven, Grandfather had seen the funeral train carrying Lincoln’s body home to Springfield, Illinois. From that moment, sobbing by the tracks, he’d taken Lincoln as the model for his own life of battling injustice.

I was seven when Grandfather gave me my first book about Lincoln. In Abraham Lincoln, the Backwoods Boy, I read about the son of a near-illiterate farmer, walking miles through the snow to borrow a book. Straining his eyes to read by firelight because he had to work in the fields in the daytime. Starting to write and getting whipped when his father caught him “scribbling” instead of feeding the pigs. Lincoln went right on writing. This determined boy became my model too. I started writing, and when I had to stop to set the dinner table I was sure Lincoln would have understood my feelings.

At eight, I went to a new school. I remember going for the first time to its library, much bigger than the one in my old school, with quiet signs on the tables and portraits on the walls. Over the librarian’s desk was a color photograph of the president, Franklin Roosevelt, seated at his desk. On the right wall was a painting of George Washington standing by a cannon; on the left was one of Thomas Jefferson, holding the Declaration of Independence.

But it was the picture over the door, when I turned to leave with my new library card, that stopped me. It was a photograph, this one black-and-white: a tall, thin man with his hand on a table and with the saddest, most pain-filled face I’d ever seen.

The gold letters on the frame said Abraham Lincoln.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Guideposts

Guideposts

Guideposts

A Preview From Walking in Grace 2026

Ours was not a musical family. Dad had a guitar he never played. We kids plucked at the strings, but none of us thought to learn to play it ourselves. As part of a music program in school, I took up the recorder. The hope was to graduate to clarinet and join the band. I liked the recorder and practiced regularly. But my family could not afford a clarinet, and I stopped.

time to read

1 min

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

His Cardinal Rule

Why this man has crafted hundreds of redbirds out of wood and given them away

time to read

4 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

Their Scrappy Christmas

It looked like they wouldn't have much of a holiday that year

time to read

3 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

Blankets for Baby Jesus

Could I get my young son to understand the reason for the season?

time to read

3 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

The Legend of Zelda

How learning to play a video game unexpectedly helped this mom in her grief journey

time to read

6 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

The Popover Promise

My first Christmas as a mother had me longing for childhood Christmases with my mom

time to read

4 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

Stitched With Love

If the Lord is willing and the creek don't rise, I know exactly where I'll be every Monday at 3 P.M.

time to read

4 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

A Hundred Shades of Green

Day by day, I was losing my daddy to dementia. What would be left of him?

time to read

5 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

“MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM HEAVEN”

Four nights before Christmas, and my tree was bare.

time to read

2 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Guideposts

Guideposts

The Memory Ornament

I sat at the dining room table, surrounded by craft supplies, putting the finishing touches on my mom's Christmas gift—an ornament that opened like a jar and held slips of paper with handwritten memories of the year.

time to read

1 mins

Dec/Jan 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size