The Day After Presidents’ Day

A collaboration between Lewis McLain & AI

Washington, Lincoln, and the Work That Remains

Presidents’ Day passes quietly.

The sales end. The long weekend dissolves. The banners come down. By Tuesday morning, the marble figures return to their pedestals, and the Republic resumes its ordinary rhythm — traffic lights blinking, council meetings convening, paperwork accumulating.

And yet something deeper lingers.

Presidents’ Day is not simply a celebration of personalities. It is a reminder of two different kinds of leadership embodied most clearly in George Washington and Abraham Lincoln.

Washington represents restraint.
Lincoln represents moral endurance.

Together they frame the American experiment.

Washington: The Discipline of Restraint

Washington’s greatest act was not winning a war. It was relinquishing power.

In his Farewell Address, he warned the young nation about the dangers of faction, the seduction of foreign entanglements, and the slow corrosion of civic virtue. He feared that partisan spirit would divide citizens into camps more loyal to party than to country. He urged unity not as sentiment, but as structural necessity.

Here is his counsel in poetic form:


Washington’s Farewell

A Poetic Rendering

Friends and fellow citizens,
The hour approaches
When you must choose again
The bearer of executive trust.

I will not be among the candidates.

Not from indifference—
But from conviction
That no republic should depend
Too long upon one man.

Cherish the Union.

You are one people—
Bound not by region,
But by shared sacrifice
And shared destiny.

In unity is strength.
In division, vulnerability.

Beware the spirit of party.

Faction flatters,
Then divides.
It inflames passions,
Distorts truth,
And opens doors
To foreign influence.

Cultivate virtue.

Liberty without moral restraint
Cannot stand.

Promote knowledge.
Respect the Constitution.
Let change come lawfully.
Keep power within its bounds.

Trade with all.
Entangle with none.

If I have erred,
Count it human frailty.

May the Union endure—
Not by force of one,
But by restraint of all.


Washington feared instability born of excess ambition. His genius was sobriety.

But history would test the Union more severely than even he imagined.

Lincoln: The Burden of Mercy

If Washington guarded the structure, Lincoln confronted its fracture.

The Civil War forced the nation to confront its founding contradiction — liberty proclaimed, slavery practiced. Lincoln did not speak with Washington’s caution. He spoke with grief, gravity, and moral resolve.

Here is Lincoln’s voice rendered in verse, drawn from Gettysburg and the Second Inaugural:


Lincoln’s Counsel

A Poetic Rendering

Four score and seven years ago
A nation was born—
Conceived in liberty,
Dedicated to equality.

That proposition
Was tested by war.

Brother against brother.
Fields turned red.
A Union strained
To the breaking.

Both prayed to the same God.
Both asked victory
Of the same Heaven.

The prayers could not both be answered.

If every drop drawn by the lash
Must be repaid
By another drawn by the sword—
So be it.

Justice is not hurried.
It is measured.

But hear this:

With malice toward none,
With charity for all,
With firmness in the right
As God gives us to see the right—

Let us bind up the nation’s wounds.

Care for him who bore the battle.
Finish the work.

Government of the people,
By the people,
For the people—
Shall not perish—

If the people
Choose endurance
Over bitterness.


Lincoln’s greatness was not only in preserving the Union, but in insisting that reconciliation must accompany victory.

Washington taught restraint.
Lincoln taught mercy.

The Day After

So what happens the day after Presidents’ Day?

The Republic does not survive on marble.

It survives on habits.

On citizens who prefer limits over applause.
On leaders who accept lawful boundaries.
On neighbors who argue without dissolving.
On voters who remember that unity is not sentimental — it is structural.

The presidency is powerful. But the republic is larger.

The real ceremony begins when no one is watching.

When contracts are honored.
When power pauses because law requires it.
When disagreement does not become dehumanization.
When conscience tempers conviction.

Presidents’ Day is not about nostalgia. It is about continuity.

Washington reminds us that ambition must yield to constitutional order.
Lincoln reminds us that justice must be pursued without malice.

And Tuesday morning reminds us that the experiment continues.

Not by force of one.

But by restraint, mercy, and discipline in us all.

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