SEWARD’S OFFICE,
STATE DEPARTMENT
Seward sits at his
grand desk, looking on with an anxious scowl. Lincoln sits on the edge of
Seward’s desk. Yeaman sits in a chair facing him.
GEORGE YEAMAN:
I can’t vote for the
[13th] amendment, Mr. Lincoln.
LINCOLN:
I saw a barge once,
Mr. Yeaman, filled with colored men in chains, heading down the Mississippi to
the New Orleans slave markets. It sickened me, ’n more than that, it brought a
shadow down, a pall around my eyes. (BEAT)
Slavery troubled me,
as long as I can remember, in a way it never troubled my father, though he
hated it. In his own fashion. He knew no smallholding dirt farmer could compete
with slave plantations. He took us out from Kentucky to get away from ’em. He
wanted Indiana kept free. He wasn’t a kind man, but there was a rough moral
urge for fairness, for freedom in him. I learnt that from him, I suppose, if
little else from him. We didn’t care for one another, Mr. Yeaman.
GEORGE YEAMAN
(EMBARRASSED):
I ... Well, I’m
sorry to hear that—
LINCOLN:
Lovingkindness, that
most ordinary thing, came to me from other sources. I’m grateful for that.
GEORGE YEAMAN:
I hate it, too, sir,
slavery, but—but we’re entirely unready for emancipation. There’s too many
questions—
LINCOLN (LAUGHS):
We’re unready for
peace too, ain’t we? When it comes, it’ll present us with conundrums and
dangers greater than any we’ve faced during the war, bloody as it’s been. We’ll
have to extemporize and experiment with what it is when it is. Lincoln moves
from the desk to take the seat beside Yeaman, no longer towering over him. He
leans forward and rests a hand on Yeaman’s knee.
LINCOLN (CONT’D):
I read your speech,
George. Negroes and the vote, that’s a puzzle.
GEORGE YEAMAN:
No, no, but, but,
but—But Negroes can’t, um, vote, Mr. Lincoln. You’re not suggesting that we
enfranchise colored people[?]
LINCOLN:
I’m asking only that
you disenthrall yourself from the slave powers. I’ll let you know when there’s
an offer on my desk for surrender. There’s none before us now. What’s before us
now, that’s the vote on the Thirteenth Amendment. It’s going to be so very
close. You see what you can do. [Lincoln leaves Yeaman, considering.]
From: <https://www.scriptslug.com/assets/uploads/scripts/lincoln-2012.pdf>
Here is a short biography of George Yeaman: <https://bioguideretro.congress.gov/Home/MemberDetails?memIndex=Y000015>.
Seth Barrett Tillman, George Yeaman in Spielberg’s Lincoln, New Reform Club (June 12, 2020, 4:24 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2020/06/george-yeaman-in-spielbergs-lincoln.html>;
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