Torplexed |
02-05-12 11:46 AM |
According to many accounts Lincoln did have a high-pitched squeaky voice. Shelby Foote mentions it in his trilogy, The Civil War. We have a letter from William Herndon (Lincoln's law partner) written in 1887, saying
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Lincoln's voice was, when he first began speaking, shrill, squeaking, piping, unpleasant; his general look, his form, his pose, the color of his flesh, wrinkled and dry, his sensitiveness, and his momentary diffidence, everything seemed to be against him, but he soon recovered.
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Abram Bergen, who knew Lincoln when they were lawyers together, wrote in his "Intimate Memories of Lincoln"
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But whenever he began to talk his eyes flashed and every facial movement helped express his idea and feeling. Then involuntarily vanished all thought or consciousness of his uncouth appearance, or awkward manner, or even his high keyed, unpleasant voice.
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Both these quotes, although written by people who knew Lincoln, were still written after his death.
Of course, in Disney's Hall of Presidents his voice always sounds deeply erudite and commanding. Oddly enough it's the same voice actor as Henry the Bear in the nearby Country Bear Jamboree. :D
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