The Lincoln Memorial's form like the Parthenon of ancient Athens, a neo classical temple often suggests to some that Lincoln is deified here. But Henry Bacon, Daniel Chester French, the sculptor, Julies Guerin, the artist, all have tried to show us something different. It is true that Lincoln's words are lasting in terms of their power, the significance, their eloquence. But Lincoln was quite human and he's portrayed as such in this memorial. I think the opposite might be true. It is a temple but its purpose is to remind us that if Lincoln, a man with little formal education could achieve the presidency, could lead us through a great civil war and aspire to remind us of what this nation had become and should achieve then any citizen, at any level on our society could do the same. In a nation where the Capitol of the United States is crowned with a statue that reminds us of liberty and freedom in the distance, where the Washington Monument in the foreground reminds us of the father of our country's efforts to create the constitution. Lincoln, at the far end of the pool reminds us of what it took to preserve, all that others had sought in the beginning, what our nation may face again in the future and what any citizen coming here should always be reminded of. Not that Lincoln had all the answers. None of our presidents ever will. But that he participated, he led forces to imagine what our nation should do and should achieve, should preserve and should extend the very liberty that those other symbols remind us of.