From Richard Armour’s Our Presidents.
Abraham Lincoln, 1861–1865
Abe Lincoln was a tall man,
A lanky six-feet-four.
He had to duck a little
When coming through a door,
Yet never was he known to flee
Or duck responsibility.
Abe Lincoln was a strong man,
A wrestler in his youth.
He wrestled with his conscience,
He wrestled with the truth,
And won at splitting rails, at fairs,
When other men were splitting hairs.
Abe Lincoln was a man’s man,
Yet women filled his life:
Nancy Hanks, Ann Rutledge,
And Mary Todd, his wife.
(His face was lined, in part, by God,
In part, they say, by Mary Todd.)
They called him “Honest Abe”
And “Father Abraham,”
“The Great Emancipator,”
“Gorilla,” too, and “Sham,”
And whether it was praise or blame
He always took it much the same.
Abe Lincoln’s sense of humor
Was such a saving grace
It turned the dark to brightness,
Transformed his homely face,
And brought to people, when he spoke,
Large wisdom in a little joke.
Abe Lincoln was a tall man,
A lanky six-feet-four.
He had to duck a little
When coming through a door,
And, strangely, everyone he knew
From knowing him, felt taller too.
Woodrow Wilson, 1913–1921
When Woodrow Wilson set his jaw,
Some looked with fear, some looked with awe,
For it was quite a jaw to set,
A sight you wouldn’t soon forget.
His spine, too, was unbending, stiff.
He was as cozy as a cliff.
Yet if not human, he inclined
To kindliness toward humankind.
Aristocratic democrat,
He often wore a tall silk hat
Upon his head, while in his head
Were books he’d written, books he’d read,
Containing vision, hope, and plan
Whereby to help the little man
Who had no shiny topper tall,
In fact who had no hat at all.
Head in the clouds, he’d sometimes go
A route that baffled men below:
He hated war, hoped wars would cease,
Yet fought a war to keep the peace,
Then having fought, at mortal cost,
Thought he had won when he had lost.
He first taught history, then wrought
More history than he had taught.
Schoolmaster President, his school
Was all the world, and with his rule
He rapped the knuckles of the Kaiser
And left him somewhat sadder, wiser.
But he himself, from things unplanned on,
Was left without a League to stand on,
And, stiffly stubborn to the end,
He broke because he wouldn’t bend.