POINT
OF VIEW
Lady
Bird’s Journal...
Sunday, March 31, 1968 This day began early because Lynda [Bird
Johnson] was coming in on “the red-eye special” from
California, about 7am, having kissed Chuck [Robb, Lynda’s
husband] good-bye at Camp Pendelton last night as he departed
for Vietnam. I wanted to be right there at the door with open
arms to meet her, but I begged Lyndon not to get up. “No,
I want to,” he insisted. So the operator called us in what
seemed the gray early morning and both of us were downstairs at
the entrance to the Diplomatic Reception Room at 7 when she stepped
out of the car. She looked like a ghost - pale, tall and drooping.
We both hugged her and then we all went upstairs. I took her into
her room, helped get her clothes off, and put her to bed. She’d
had a sedative on the plane, slept a little, not much - and it
was, I think partly emotion and partly the sedative that made
her look so detached, like a wraith from another world. She said,
“Mother, they were awful - they kept on pushing and shoving
to get to us, and they almost ran over a child. And there were
lots of other wives there, saying good-bye to their husbands!”
She meant the press. When I went back to Lyndon’s room,
his face was sagging and there was such pain in his eyes as I
had not seen since his mother died. But he didn’t have time
for grief. Today was a crescendo of a day. At 9 in the evening,
Lyndon was to make his talk to the nation about the war. The speech
was not yet firm. There were still revisions to be made and people
to see. But he began to put on his clothes and got ready to go
to church with Luci and Pat, something he does more and more often.
And I, exhausted, went back to bed, where I half-slept for a couple
of hours. On the way from church, Lyndon stopped to see the Vice
President at his apartment. Hubert and Muriel [Humphrey] are leaving
for Mexico, for a ceremony, sometime during the day. It was a
day of coming and going - and it’s hard to remember when
what happened. Sometime during the morning Buzz [Horace Busby
- Presidential aide] came in, took up his place in the Treaty
Room, and began to work on the speech. I had spent a good part
of Saturday and part of Friday making suggestions on it myself.
I read it over again for what was the umpteenth time, and then
(I believe I was in his bedroom), Lyndon said to Arthur and Mathilde
Krim [Arthur Krim, movie executive and Democratic National Committee
treasurer] and me, “What do you think about this? This is
what I’m going to put at the end of the speech.” And
he read a beautifully written statement which ended, “Accordingly,
I shall not seek and I will not accept the nomination of my party
for another term as your President.” The four of us had
talked about this over and over, and hour after hour, but somehow
we all acted and felt stunned. Maybe it was the calm finality
in Lyndon’s voice, and maybe we believed him for the first
time. Arthur said something like, “You can’t mean
this!” And Mathilde exclaimed in an excited way, “Oh
no, no!” Then we all began to discuss the reasons why, and
why not, over and over again. It was Lyndon who thought to call
Buzz in from the Treaty Room to have something to eat. Mathilde’s
eyes were full of tears, and Luci had obviously been crying forthrightly.
Lyndon seemed to be congealing into a calm, quiet state of mind,
out of reach. And I, what did I feel? … so uncertain of
the future that I would not dare to try to persuade him one way
or the other. There was much in me that cried out to go on, to
call on every friend we have, to give and work, to spend and fight,
right up to the last. And if we lost, well and good - we were
free! But if we didn’t run, we could be free without all
this draining of our friends. I think what was uppermost - what
was going over and over in Lyndon’s mind - was what I’ve
heard him say increasingly these last months: “I do not
believe I can unite this country.” Buzz made a poetic little
explanation of the statement saying Lyndon would not run. Lyndon,
indeed, was the architect and the planner, but I think it was
Buzz who had cloaked it in its final words. Sometime during the
afternoon - the time is very hazy on this day - I think it was
around 3 o’clock, Lyndon went to his office, and I talked
to Lynda and to Luci. Both of them were emotional, crying and
distraught. What does this do to our servicemen? They will think
- What have I been sent out here for? - Was it all wrong? - Can
I believe in what I’ve been fighting for? Lynda and Luci
seemed to feel that Lyndon has been the champion of the soldiers,
and his getting out would be a blow to them. Lynda said, with
an edge of bitterness, “Chuck will hear this on his way
to Vietnam.” Later in the afternoon, I talked to Lyndon
about what the girls had said. He said, “I called in General
Westmoreland last year about that, about how it would affect the
morale of the men. He thinks it will not matter appreciably.”
I felt that Lynda and Luci were looking at it from closer range
as the wives of two young soldiers, and pointed that out to him.
He looked at me rather distantly and said, “I think General
Westmoreland knows more about it than they do.” …
Lyndon, very quiet, sat at his desk. The lines in his face were
deep, but there was a marvelous sort of repose over-all. And the
seconds ticked away. I went to him and said quietly, “Remember
- pacing and drama.” It was a great speech and I wanted
him to get the greatest out of it - and I did not know what the
end would be. At last the decision had been irrevocably stated,
and as well as any human can, we knew our future! First Lady Claudia
Alta “Lady Bird “ TaylorJohnson died this past weekend
in Texas. She was 94.
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