Journalist
After leaving
Belfast in 1851 and studying law in
London, he was the
Crimean War correspondent for the London
Daily News in
Turkey and
Russia and was present at the
Siege of Sevastopol. In 1856, he emigrated to the United States and wrote letters to the
News, giving his impressions of a tour on horseback he made of the southern states of the American Union. He studied law under
David Dudley Field in
New York City, and he was admitted to the bar in 1859. Because of his impaired health, he travelled in Europe in 1860 to 1862. He wrote for the
News and
The New York Times in 1862 to 1865. However, in the 1880s, Godkin became a supporter of
Irish Home Rule and endorsed the position of
Charles Stewart Parnell. That resulted in Godkin becoming engaged in a controversy with
Goldwin Smith, who opposed Home Rule. broke with the
Republican Party in the presidential campaign of 1884, when Godkin's opposition to nominee
James G. Blaine did much to create the so-called
Mugwump party, and his organ became thoroughly independent, as was seen when it attacked the
Venezuelan policy of President
Grover Cleveland, who had, in so many ways, approximated the ideal of the
Post and
Nation. He consistently advocated
currency reform, the
gold standard, a tariff for revenue only, and civil service reform, rendering the greatest aid to the last cause. His attacks on
Tammany Hall were so frequent and so virulent that in 1894, he was sued for
libel because of biographical sketches of certain leaders in that organization; the cases never went to trial. ==Later life==
Legacy
Godkin shaped the lofty and independent policy of the
Post and
The Nation, which had a small but influential and intellectual class of readers. However, he had none of the personal magnetism of
Horace Greeley, for instance, and his superiority to the influence of popular feeling made
Charles Dudley Warner describe
The Nation as "the weekly judgment day". He was an economist of the school of
John Stuart Mill, urged the necessity of the abstraction called economic man, and insisted that socialism, if put into practice, would not improve social and economic conditions in general. In politics, he was an enemy of both sentimentalism and loose theories in government. Godkin had critics. In 1892, after
Benjamin Butler published his memoir, ''Butler's Book'', Godkin criticized it. Butler's biographer
Elizabeth D. Leonard writes that Butler decided that "after decades of being 'the target of a few ignorant, irresponsible, mercenary news writers' — including
The Nation's founder, E. L. Godkin, 'whose malevolence has exhausted the vocabulary of vituperation' — that he would let ''Butler's Book'' 'take care of itself....'" After Godkin's death,
William James wrote that Godkin "was certainly the towering influence in all thought concerning public affairs, and ... his influence has certainly been more pervasive than that of any other writer of the generation." ==Works==
Works
• The History of Hungary and the Magyars. New York: Alexander Montgomery, 1853. • Government, "American Science Series," 1871. • Henry G. Pearson: A Memorial Address delivered June 21, 1894. New York: Privately Printed, 1894. • Reflections and Comments. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1895. • Problems of Modern Democracy. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1897 (1st Pub. 1896). • Unforeseen Tendencies of Democracy. New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Company, 1898. • Life and Letters of Edwin Lawrence Godkin, Vol. 2. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1907. • A Letter on Lincoln. Riverside, Conn.: The Hillacre Bookhouse, 1913. Selected stories • "Anglo-French Alliance and Orsini," The Knickerbocker, Vol. III, No. 1. July 1858. • "French Invasion of England," The Knickerbocker, November 1859. • "Commercial Immorality and Political Corruption," The North American Review, Vol. 107, No. 220, Jul., 1868. • "The Prospects of the Political Art," The North American Review, Vol. 110, No. 227, Apr., 1870. • "The Eastern Question," The North American Review, Vol. 124, No. 254, Jan., 1877. • "The Political Outlook," The Century Magazine, February 1880. • "The Civil Service Reform Controversy," The North American Review, Vol. 134, No. 305, Apr., 1882. • "The Danger of an Office-Holding Aristocracy," The Century Magazine, June 1882. • "American Home Rule." In: Handbook of Home Rule. London: Kegan Paul, Trench & Co., 1887. • "A Lawyer's Objection to Home Rule." In: Handbook of Home Rule. London: Kegan Paul, Trench & Co., 1887. • "American Opinion on the Irish Question," The Nineteenth Century, Vol. XXII, July/December 1887. • "The Republican Party and the Negro," The Forum, Vol. VII, 1889. • "Public Opinion and the Civil Service," The Forum, Vol. VIII, 1889. • "Newspapers Here and Abroad," The North American Review, Vol. 150, No. 399, Feb., 1890. • "Criminal Politics," The North American Review, Vol. 150, No. 403, Jun., 1890. • "Money Interests in Political Affairs," The Forum, Vol. X, 1890. • "A Key to Municipal Reform," The North American Review, Vol. 151, No. 407, Oct., 1890. • "The Economic Man," The North American Review, Vol. 153, No. 419, Oct., 1891. • "Idleness and Immorality," The Forum, Vol. XIII, 1892. • "A Month of Quarantine," The North American Review, Vol. 155, No. 433, Dec., 1892. • "The Duty of Educated Men in a Democracy," The Forum, Vol. XVII, 1894. • "The Problems of Municipal Government," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 4, May, 1894. • "Who Will Pay the Bills of Socialism?," The Forum, Vol. XVII, 1894. • "Diplomacy and the Newspaper," The North American Review, Vol. 160, No. 462, May, 1895. • "The Political Situation," The Forum, Vol. XXI, May 1896. • "The Absurdity of War," The Century Magazine, January 1897. • "The Illiteracy of American Boys," Educational Review, Vol. XIII, January 1897. • "Peculiarities of American Municipal Government," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 80, 1897. • "The Conditions of Good Colonial Government," The Forum, Vol. XXVII, 1899. • "Horrors of War — Fighting Instincts Hereditary," The Advocate of Peace (1894–1920), Vol. 62, No. 2, February 1900. • "The Eclipse of Liberalism," The Nation, Vol. LXXI, 1900. • "Burke." In: The Library of Oratory, Ancient and Modern. New York: Current Literature Pub. Co., 1902. ==See also==